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CAIR Hitches Ride on Japanese Internment Demonstration

Fri, May 16, 2008 at 8:53:23 am PDT

The Saudi-funded, Hamas-linked radical Islamic front group CAIR is now exploiting the WWII internment of Japanese Americans to advance their bogus “victimhood” agenda: Pilgrimage to site of WWII internment camp uniting communities.

The program, titled ‘‘Continuing the Legacy,’’ particularly emphasized the striking correlation between historical injustices done to Japanese-Americans and the religious and racial persecution facing Muslim-Americans post-Sept 11.

Representatives from the Council on American-Islamic Relations and more than 100 members of the Islamic community came to learn about the Japanese-American experience, show support, and strengthen ties between the two communities.

Rizwan Yusuf, a 19-year-old student, heard about the pilgrimage and wanted to see the gathering firsthand. He came on a bus from Orange County with several of his young friends.

‘‘This part of our history really affected me, especially being Muslim American,’’ he told Kyodo News. ‘‘I’m able to relate to the issue a lot more. I’d like to learn from the Japanese people.’’

With the current political climate, many worry that the cycle of history could repeat itself unless there is an active attempt to make friendships and promote understanding among all Americans.

‘‘I think it’s a natural connection when two communities of color are subject to forms of persecution that they form a bond,’’ said speaker Bruce Embry, son of famous internee Sue Kunitomi Embry, a community activist and one of the first to make the pilgrimage 39 years ago. ‘‘It’s really important that we stand with them.’’

121 comments

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1 Occasional Reader  5/16/08 8:54:45 am reply quote

I'm sorry, I must have missed the part where we rounded up tens of thousands of Muslims in America and interned them after 9/11.

2 Alouette  5/16/08 8:55:08 am reply quote

What would CAIR say about establishing "Islamophobia-free zones of refuge"?

3 NoSubmission  5/16/08 8:55:29 am reply quote

Because former Japanese Internment Camps are the 1,978,098,987,908th holiest site in Islam?

4 yesandno  5/16/08 8:55:36 am reply quote

Everyone is a victim.........everyone.

5 Spiny Norman  5/16/08 8:55:46 am reply quote
...the striking correlation between historical injustices done to Japanese-Americans and the religious and racial persecution facing Muslim-Americans post-Sept 11.

Ohgivemeafuckingbreak.

6 Occasional Reader  5/16/08 8:55:58 am reply quote
Representatives from the Council on American-Islamic Relations and more than 100 members of the Islamic community came to learn about the Japanese-American experience, show support, and strengthen ties between the two communities.

The verbs "infilitrate" and "subvert" are missing from this sentence.

7 rorschach  5/16/08 8:56:03 am reply quote

Too many people swallowed Goebbels's distortions as reality.

CAIR speaks directly to them and their ilk.

8 Dianna  5/16/08 8:56:04 am reply quote

Were I a former internee, or a descendant, I would take this very badly. I might even be insulted.

9 The Pulchritudinous Patriot  5/16/08 8:56:05 am reply quote

re: #1 Occasional Reader

I'm sorry, I must have missed the part where we rounded up tens of thousands of Muslims in America and interned them after 9/11.


Me too. Perhaps it was because we were too busy listening to President Bush say that Islam was a religion of Peace while we mourned.

10 jcm  5/16/08 8:56:10 am reply quote

And the parallels are....... ?

11 Alouette  5/16/08 8:56:14 am reply quote

re: #4 yesandno

Everyone is a victim.........everyone.

Except for Jooz, they were never victims.

12 The Pulchritudinous Patriot  5/16/08 8:56:19 am reply quote

re: #3 NoSubmission

Because former Japanese Internment Camps are the 1,978,098,987,908th holiest site in Islam?

ROFL

13 Iron Fist  5/16/08 8:56:46 am reply quote

Except for the little problem that the Mohammedans haven't been persecuted. They actually think that they are entitled to support terrorism.

And this is supposed to convince us that they aren't terrorist supporters?

14 MandyManners  5/16/08 8:56:54 am reply quote

We've locked up massive numbers of Muslims just for being Muslims?

15 Dianna  5/16/08 8:56:58 am reply quote

I shall have to ask my friend, whose father was an internee as a teenager.

16 David Simon  5/16/08 8:57:11 am reply quote
‘‘This part of our history really affected me, especially being Muslim American,’’ he told Kyodo News. ‘‘I’m able to relate to the issue a lot more. I’d like to learn from the Japanese people.’’

If I were a Japanese person, I would spit in your face. You've got a lot of fucking nerve.

17 jcm  5/16/08 8:57:19 am reply quote

re: #14 MandyManners

We've locked up massive numbers of Muslims just for being Muslims?

Shhhhh!

18 The Pulchritudinous Patriot  5/16/08 8:57:32 am reply quote

re: #11 Alouette

Except for Jooz, they were never victims.

That's right...the Jooz are the victimizers.
/

19 Jimmy The Clam  5/16/08 8:58:27 am reply quote

In Defense of Internment: The World War II Round-Up and What It Means For America's War on Terror
A good book worth reading, especially when the historical revisionists come out to play.

20 Alouette  5/16/08 8:58:42 am reply quote

re: #16 David Simon

‘‘This part of our history really affected me, especially being Muslim American,’’ he told Kyodo News. ‘‘I’m able to relate to the issue a lot more. I’d like to learn from the Japanese people.’’

First learn about the Japanese-Americans who volunteered to fight in the war, and served honorable and bravely in the ETO.

21 BeerDrinking_VictoryMonkey  5/16/08 8:58:52 am reply quote

Even pretending that we did start rounding up muslims & placing them in internment camps, do you think they'd respond like the Japanese-Americans did?

22 rorschach  5/16/08 8:59:14 am reply quote
...and strengthen ties between the two communities.

The Japanese are just as infidel-ish as we are. What's in this for them?

23 maddogg  5/16/08 8:59:34 am reply quote

Ritht or wrong, the Japanese internment says we were damn serious about winning WWII, and we did win it. You don't win wars by being "nice".

24 The Pulchritudinous Patriot  5/16/08 8:59:35 am reply quote

re: #14 MandyManners

We've locked up massive numbers of Muslims just for being Muslims?


Well the did in that movie that Tony Shaloub was in with Denzel Washington and Annette Benning...I think it was called "Seige" or something.

Everyone knows that Bushco would lock up all of the Mohammedians if he thought he could get away with it.
/

25 Nevergiveup  5/16/08 8:59:44 am reply quote

Michelle Malkin would go ballistic over this.

26 MandyManners  5/16/08 8:59:56 am reply quote

re: #17 jcm

Shhhhh!

Oops.

27 galloping granny  5/16/08 9:00:00 am reply quote

Puh-lease! I don't see those Japanese-Americans out there commemorating the Trail of Tears or the Long Walk. Crocodile tears.

/BTW - Obama is going to make a live statement about Bush's "attack" on him. . . . . Fox.

28 jcm  5/16/08 9:00:28 am reply quote

Some Japanese proved a point during WWII.

442nd Regimental Combat Team

One of the most decorated soldiers in World War II. The 100th had the dubious distinction of being called the "Purple Heart Battalion" because almost everyone who served in the 100th had at least one Purple Heart. Like the Tuskeegee Airmen, the 100th Battalion/ 442nd Regimental Combat Team had to fight two wars, one in Europe and one at home.

CAIR, where are the muslims standing up and saying, "I AM AN AMERICAN!"?

29 Hengineer  5/16/08 9:00:33 am reply quote

re: #20 Alouette

First learn about the Japanese-Americans who volunteered to fight in the war, and served honorable and bravely in the ETO.

Not to mention the hoops and LEGAL hurdles they had to go through, to push through in order to be able to at least join the military!

30 Nevergiveup  5/16/08 9:00:34 am reply quote

re: #19 Jimmy The Clam

In Defense of Internment: The World War II Round-Up and What It Means For America's War on Terror
A good book worth reading, especially when the historical revisionists come out to play.

Yes very good.

31 MandyManners  5/16/08 9:00:47 am reply quote

re: #24 The Pulchritudinous Patriot

Well the did in that movie that Tony Shaloub was in with Denzel Washington and Annette Benning...I think it was called "Seige" or something.

Everyone knows that Bushco would lock up all of the Mohammedians if he thought he could get away with it.
/

I thought about that movie just a few minutes ago on the DT.

32 yesandno  5/16/08 9:00:53 am reply quote

DISTORTION..........

The game played by everyone particularly when dealing with historical fact.

"It bends, it twists, it can be use to your advantage...get a game today!"

33 NoSubmission  5/16/08 9:01:00 am reply quote

These are the same people who deny the Holocaust.

34 MandyManners  5/16/08 9:01:11 am reply quote

re: #23 maddogg

Ritht or wrong, the Japanese internment says we were damn serious about winning WWII, and we did win it. You don't win wars by being "nice".

Word.

35 Spiny Norman  5/16/08 9:01:13 am reply quote

re: #22 rorschach

The Japanese are just as infidel-ish as we are. What's in this for them?

Wedge. Hammer.

36 BeerDrinking_VictoryMonkey  5/16/08 9:01:43 am reply quote

re: #27 galloping granny

Puh-lease! I don't see those Japanese-Americans out there commemorating the Trail of Tears or the Long Walk. Crocodile tears.

/BTW - Obama is going to make a live statement about Bush's "attack" on him. . . . . Fox.

Oh, so that's why it's so dark around here. The sun's been revolving around Obama.

37 Occasional Reader  5/16/08 9:01:51 am reply quote

I'm guessing the Japanese Internment is one of these phenomena in which the grandchildren of the people it happened to are far more "outraged" than were the actual people it happened to.

(I still recall a conversation with an acquaintance of Japanese origin whose dad had been interned. She compared it to Auschwitz, of course, then showed me a group photo of her dad, with a bunch of other guys, all wearing shorts and t-shirts. Uh, who are all those guys? "That was his volleball team in the camp." Um... not to defend what was done here, but do you really think there were volleyball teams at Auschwitz? She also was convinced that we dropped the A-bomb on Japan instead of Germany because of "racism". My pointing out that Germany had already surrendered when we finally developed the bomb... well, no need to let inconvenient facts get in the way of a nice feeling of victimhood.)

38 David Simon  5/16/08 9:02:10 am reply quote

re: #20 Alouette

First learn about the Japanese-Americans who volunteered to fight in the war, and served honorable and bravely in the ETO.

Good point. It's also an insult to the Arab-Americans who volunteered to serve this country. Something that simpering twat would never do.

39 Hengineer  5/16/08 9:02:22 am reply quote

re: #33 NoSubmission

These are the same people who deny the Holocaust.

Exactly, I don't see any Muslims going to Auschwitz or any other internment or death camps the Germans did against the "jooooz" and saying how they can relate.

40 Spiny Norman  5/16/08 9:02:24 am reply quote

re: #33 NoSubmission

These are the same people who deny the Holocaust.

Or claim "Zionists" are responsible... to gain "sympathy", you see?

41 The Pulchritudinous Patriot  5/16/08 9:02:28 am reply quote

re: #31 MandyManners

I thought about that movie just a few minutes ago on the DT.

Isn't it funny how Tony Shaloub's name keeps cropping up today.

Kinda spooky! ;)

42 alegrias  5/16/08 9:02:52 am reply quote

On another 60th anniversary,the Smithsonian Institution's leftists tried to display the Enola Gay bomber plane as a WMD used at Hiroshima & Nagasaki by evil America against 'innocent' Japan--for NO REASON at all of course, that would be mentioned in their exhibition.

Fortunately there were quite a few average WWII veterans who knew otherwise, about say the Bataan force marches, or the unpleasantness at Nanking perpetrated by Emperor Hirohito's peaceloving subjects.

43 Morganfrost  5/16/08 9:02:53 am reply quote

Were I Japanese, I would be outraged at this example of adding insult to injury. Bad enough to be interned, but to have someone else come in and use your issue as a soapbox for their own made-up grievances is outrageous.

Radical Muslims. Is there anything they won't hijack?

44 MandyManners  5/16/08 9:02:57 am reply quote

re: #32 yesandno

DISTORTION..........

The game played by everyone particularly when dealing with historical fact.

"It bends, it twists, it can be use to your advantage...get a game today!"

Call right now and get the DVD "How to Seethe 101" for FREE!

Operators are standing by.

45 OldLineTexan  5/16/08 9:03:01 am reply quote

I had a neighbor who was a Navy vet of WW2 and a former "guest" of the Imperial Japanese Navy.

Would any of these CAIR fools care to make a pilgrimage to his "internment camp", I wonder?

46 Ringo the Gringo  5/16/08 9:03:07 am reply quote

When I think of correlations between the Japanese during WWII and Islamists today, suicide missions are the first thing that springs to my mind.

47 jorline  5/16/08 9:03:24 am reply quote

OT And he lives in the US?

"The site is believed to be the brainchild of a 22-year-old American Samir Khan of Charlotte, N.C."

"When the blog, also called "The Ignored Puzzle Pieces of Knowledge," listed its top "scholars of Islam" and people to "take knowledge from," it wasn't hard to notice that the list of 63 names contained mostly known terrorists — including Usama bin Laden and Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. The site provides links to their works, all translated into English."

"Revolution.Muslimpad's sleek, modern style includes collections of the latest videos of U.S. military Humvees exploding from roadside bombs in Iraq, as well as pro-jihad messages aimed at radicalizing readers."

Trash link below

[Link: revolution.muslimpad.com...]

48 Sharmuta  5/16/08 9:03:57 am reply quote
...the religious and racial persecution facing Muslim-Americans post-Sept 11

What persecution?

49 Occasional Reader  5/16/08 9:04:02 am reply quote

re: #24 The Pulchritudinous Patriot

Well the did in that movie that Tony Shaloub was in with Denzel Washington and Annette Benning...I think it was called "Seige" or something.

Everyone knows that Bushco would lock up all of the Mohammedians if he thought he could get away with it.
/

Today apparently is Tony Shaloub day here at LGF!

50 coquimbojoe  5/16/08 9:04:02 am reply quote

I am so sick of all the attentions whores on the left. Hey moron, it was a democrat that interned people! Hey CAIR, no one can see your point unless you are likening it to perhaps Arab Muslims are treating Non-Arab Muslims, Christians and animists in southern Sudan....

51 madisonsfriend  5/16/08 9:04:13 am reply quote

re: #39 Hengineer

Exactly, I don't see any Muslims going to Auschwitz or any other internment or death camps the Germans did against the "jooooz" and saying how they can relate.

well, those places don't really exist

52 joncelli  5/16/08 9:04:21 am reply quote

ISLAM. ISN'T. A. RACE. How many times does it have to be said?

53 Killgore Trout  5/16/08 9:04:27 am reply quote

re: #28 jcm

Good point.

54 MandyManners  5/16/08 9:04:35 am reply quote

re: #41 The Pulchritudinous Patriot

Isn't it funny how Tony Shaloub's name keeps cropping up today.

Kinda spooky! ;)

What can it mean?

55 Occasional Reader  5/16/08 9:05:05 am reply quote

re: #46 Ringo the Gringo

When I think of correlations between the Japanese during WWII and Islamists today, suicide missions are the first thing that springs to my mind.

No comparison. The kamikaze pilots fought for the wrong cause, but at least they attacked legitimate military targets that could shoot back at them. Not like the scumbags of 9/11.

56 yesandno  5/16/08 9:05:15 am reply quote

re: #44 MandyManners

Call right now and get the DVD "How to Seethe 101" for FREE!

Operators are standing by.

LOL

57 Dianna  5/16/08 9:05:30 am reply quote

re: #37 Occasional Reader

My very good friend is Japanese-Jewish (plus assorted other ethnicities; those are just the two most recent). She'd slap anyone who said that.

58 OldLineTexan  5/16/08 9:05:38 am reply quote

re: #48 Sharmuta

What persecution?

The shocking and insensitive lack of ritual footbaths, of course.

An exact correlation to being yanked out of your home, imprisoned, and having your neighbors (in many cases) take over your property.

/

59 Spiny Norman  5/16/08 9:05:41 am reply quote

re: #46 Ringo the Gringo

When I think of correlations between the Japanese during WWII and Islamists today, suicide missions are the first thing that springs to my mind.

The kamikazis were far more rational than today's jihadis.

60 opnion  5/16/08 9:05:52 am reply quote

"Religious and racial persecution of Muslim Americans post 9/11?"
Say what? Where is this taking place?

61 BeerDrinking_VictoryMonkey  5/16/08 9:05:55 am reply quote

re: #41 The Pulchritudinous Patriot

Isn't it funny how Tony Shaloub's name keeps cropping up today.

Kinda spooky! ;)

Today is Tony Shaloub Day on LGF!

62 jorline  5/16/08 9:06:14 am reply quote

Sorry for being so rude and posting without saying good morning...please forgive me.

Good Morning All!

63 The_Vig  5/16/08 9:06:53 am reply quote

German Americans didn't have it so good during WW2 either. They didn't get locked up, but they we're watched.

64 The Pulchritudinous Patriot  5/16/08 9:07:01 am reply quote

re: #54 MandyManners

What can it mean?

I doan know..maybe, like his Alexander Minion charater in the SpyKids movies, he is really the mastermind behind his being the topic of conversation today. Maybe he has some beam or something, or has figured out a way to make Carl Rove's Tsunami/Hurricane/Global Atmoshere Heating machine work for his nefarious purposes?

65 alegrias  5/16/08 9:07:23 am reply quote

re: #46 Ringo the Gringo

When I think of correlations between the Japanese during WWII and Islamists today, suicide missions are the first thing that springs to my mind.

* * *
Except Japanese Air Force pilots wore uniforms & used their own planes to go splodey on us.

66 Shr_Nfr  5/16/08 9:08:00 am reply quote

Say, aren't these folks being guilty of violating that portion of the Suna where it says not to associate with the Kafir? I am sure that the Japanese will have a special place cut out for them in the Caliphate. Six feet deep. They can't even become Dhimmis. Dissimilitude thy name is CAIR.

67 jamgarr  5/16/08 9:08:03 am reply quote

re: #20 Alouette

First learn about the Japanese-Americans who volunteered to fight in the war, and served honorable and bravely in the ETO.

Just saw something last night that indicated that those units were the most decorated.

68 NoSubmission  5/16/08 9:09:04 am reply quote

re: #65 alegrias

* * *
Except Japanese Air Force pilots wore uniforms & used their own planes to go splodey on us.


And except for the fact that many of the Japanese on those missions felt that suicide was a shameful and unethical way to prosecute a war.

69 Izzy Dunne  5/16/08 9:09:05 am reply quote

re: #14 MandyManners

We've locked up massive numbers of Muslims just for being Muslims?

You know, if we're gonna get blamed for doing that anyway, why don't we go ahead and do it?


"If you're gonna do the time, might as well do the crime".

70 Athos  5/16/08 9:09:13 am reply quote

re: #48 Sharmuta

What persecution?

Why, Patriot Act and Gitmo, of course.

/channeling Code Pink nitwits.......

71 Kosh's Shadow  5/16/08 9:09:16 am reply quote

re: #65 alegrias

* * *
Except Japanese Air Force pilots wore uniforms & used their own planes to go splodey on us.

And they attacked military targets using aircraft which were identifiably military. No hiding as civilians, and attacking civilian targets.
Their targets could and did shoot back.

72 BeerDrinking_VictoryMonkey  5/16/08 9:09:27 am reply quote

re: #55 Occasional Reader

No
comparison. The kamikaze pilots fought for the wrong cause, but at
least they attacked legitimate military targets that could shoot back
at them. Not like the scumbags of 9/11.


And at least the Japanese developed their own suicide planes. The jihadis can only hijack & steal.

73 galloping granny  5/16/08 9:09:32 am reply quote

re: #36 BeerDrinking_VictoryMonkey

Oh, so that's why it's so dark around here. The sun's been revolving around Obama.

Yup. No criticism of the Obamasiah, his opinions or the folks that he hangs out with is allowed you know. Anything at all like that is racist and divisive, rather than uniting the country behind the great Obamasiah.

My daughter dug up his voting record earlier this morning. You would not believe the huge number of "NOVotes" (as in either not there at all or voted only "present") he has entered. There are entire huge categories that he has flatly refused to cast a vote one way or the other about.

[Link: votesmart.org...]

74 BeerDrinking_VictoryMonkey  5/16/08 9:10:33 am reply quote

re: #67 jamgarr

Just saw something last night that indicated that those units were the most decorated.

The 442 Regimental Combat Team was the most decorated unit in American history.

75 Spiny Norman  5/16/08 9:10:35 am reply quote

re: #49 Occasional Reader

re: #24 The Pulchritudinous Patriot
Well the did in that movie that Tony Shaloub was in with Denzel Washington and Annette Benning...I think it was called "Seige" or something.

Everyone knows that Bushco would lock up all of the Mohammedians if he thought he could get away with it.
/

Today apparently is Tony Shaloub day here at LGF!

You sonofabitch! Do you have any idea how much that stings?!?

76 Athos  5/16/08 9:10:44 am reply quote

re: #63 The_Vig

German Americans didn't have it so good during WW2 either. They didn't get locked up, but they we're watched.

Thousands were. Japanese-Americans weren't the only ones interned. German-Americans and Italian-Americans thought to be strong threats and lived in 'sensitive' areas were also interned. Though, German-Americans in WW2 did get treated a lot better than they did during WW1.

77 alegrias  5/16/08 9:11:00 am reply quote

Is there even Taqqiya in Bushido?

78 Shr_Nfr  5/16/08 9:11:02 am reply quote

re: #63 The_Vig

They did not have it good in World War 1 either according to my father who served in the Submarine Corps during that war.

79 chinesearithmetic  5/16/08 9:11:35 am reply quote

With the current political climate, many worry that the cycle of history could repeat itself unless there is an active attempt to make friendships and promote understanding among all Americans.

Glippy gloop gloopy ninny nonny noopy na na na na noo no
Sobby sibby somma noony anna nana na na na noo no
Dooby obby walla dooby alla dalla early morning singin' song!

80 Render  5/16/08 9:11:51 am reply quote

re: #63 The_Vig

Actually, a fair number of German-American and Italian-Americans were interned for the duration of the war.

Notably, the leadership of the fascist German-American Bund, among others.

All nations directly involved in WW2 interned or otherwise imprisoned foreign nationals on their soil.

ALL,
R

81 madisonsfriend  5/16/08 9:11:52 am reply quote

re: #60 opnion

"Religious and racial persecution of Muslim Americans post 9/11?"
Say what? Where is this taking place?


The continuing existence of non-Muslims in the US constitutes persecution. Our churches, synagogues and temples and freedom to worship as we please(or not), along with our uncovered, unmutilated women, dogs allowed to live and walk on the street- all persecution of Muslim Americans

82 jcm  5/16/08 9:12:01 am reply quote

re: #62 jorline

Sorry for being so rude and posting without saying good morning...please forgive me.

Good Morning All!

Morning! Cream and sugar or black?

83 Athos  5/16/08 9:12:25 am reply quote

re: #73 galloping granny

When one only votes present, it makes it difficult for one to attack his position. I hope the GOP does make this an issue. The more he is pressed to provide specifics, the more his inexperience and hard left tendencies will be exposed.

84 opnion  5/16/08 9:12:42 am reply quote

Muslim activism gets so confusing. They flop around between heroic posturing & then go right into victimhood.
Do they intend to be our overlords or professional victims?

85 alegrias  5/16/08 9:12:58 am reply quote

re: #73 galloping granny

Yup. No criticism of the Obamasiah, his opinions or the folks that he hangs out with is allowed you know. Anything at all like that is racist and divisive, rather than uniting the country behind the great Obamasiah.

My daughter dug up his voting record earlier this morning. You would not believe the huge number of "NOVotes" (as in either not there at all or voted only "present") he has entered. There are entire huge categories that he has flatly refused to cast a vote one way or the other about.

[Link:

86 galloping granny  5/16/08 9:14:16 am reply quote

re: #60 opnion

"Religious and racial persecution of Muslim Americans post 9/11?"
Say what? Where is this taking place?

You mean that you haven't noticed the way that every single muslim at any airport in the country is taken out of line and strip searched publicly and subjected to dogs before they magically disappear? Oh, no, silly me - it is 87 year old WWII vets in wheelchairs who are taken out of line and made to take off their shoes . . . .

87 BeerDrinking_VictoryMonkey  5/16/08 9:14:17 am reply quote

I remember the mass internments of Grenadian-Americans back in '83.
/

88 Kosh's Shadow  5/16/08 9:15:19 am reply quote

re: #36 BeerDrinking_VictoryMonkey

Oh, so that's why it's so dark around here. The sun's been revolving around Obama.


The left thinks the Sun shines out Obama's ass.

89 alegrias  5/16/08 9:16:11 am reply quote

re: #84 opnion

Muslim activism gets so confusing. They flop around between heroic posturing & then go right into victimhood.
Do they intend to be our overlords or professional victims?

* * *
In the USA, professional victims first, through the courts & PR, THEN overlords.

That was a softball question.

90 Spiny Norman  5/16/08 9:16:52 am reply quote

re: #71 Kosh's Shadow

re: #65 alegrias re:
#46 Ringo the Gringo

When I think of correlations between the Japanese during WWII and Islamists today, suicide missions are the first thing that springs to my mind.

Except Japanese Air Force pilots wore uniforms & used their own planes to go splodey on us.

And they attacked military targets using aircraft which were identifiably military. No hiding as civilians, and attacking civilian targets.
Their targets could and did shoot back.

True. I've never heard any arguments that the kamikazi missions were outside the rules of war (lots of other things they did most certainly were) and the Japanese used that tactic as a last resort. The jihadis used suicide bombing disguised as a civilian as a tactic of first choice.

91 opnion  5/16/08 9:17:27 am reply quote

re: #86 galloping granny

You mean that you haven't noticed the way that every single muslim at any airport in the country is taken out of line and strip searched publicly and subjected to dogs before they magically disappear? Oh, no, silly me - it is 87 year old WWII vets in wheelchairs who are taken out of line and made to take off their shoes . . . .


I think that the best way to get through airport security unmolested is to wear a turban , with a copy of the Koran under one arm & a stinger missle under the other.
You would get ushered right through & upgraded on the flight.

92 nyc redneck  5/16/08 9:17:36 am reply quote

this isn't abt. moslems having empathy for japanese people. this is abt. moslems tying to use and get mileage out of the plight of japanese people. in the final analysis moslems will see the japanese as they see all non moslems, simply as infidels who they wish to conquer.

"verily the infidels are your undoubted enemies" koran, surah 4:100.

93 jorline  5/16/08 9:17:49 am reply quote

re: #82 jcm

Morning! Cream and sugar or black?

Straight up...

94 opnion  5/16/08 9:18:00 am reply quote

re: #89 alegrias

* * *
In the USA, professional victims first, through the courts & PR, THEN overlords.

That was a softball question.

I know

95 alegrias  5/16/08 9:18:32 am reply quote

re: #87 BeerDrinking_VictoryMonkey

I remember the mass internments of Grenadian-Americans back in '83.
/

* * *
Yes well, like at GITMO, Panamian Americans were housed at the ZOO when we fought Manuel Noriega the Pineapple Strongman! (Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute at Barro Colorado)

96 galloping granny  5/16/08 9:18:44 am reply quote

re: #83 Athos

When one only votes present, it makes it difficult for one to attack his position. I hope the GOP does make this an issue. The more he is pressed to provide specifics, the more his inexperience and hard left tendencies will be exposed.

My daughter compared his record to Hillary's and to our Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders. Hillary has many fewer "NOVOTES." Bernie has turned in just FIVE NOVOTEs in the entire time he has been in Congress.

The pattern of his refusal to vote on certain subjects leads me to believe that he is deliberately trying to obfuscate what he truly believes.

97 debutaunt  5/16/08 9:18:50 am reply quote

re: #46 Ringo the Gringo

When I think of correlations between the Japanese during WWII and Islamists today, suicide missions are the first thing that springs to my mind.

Yes! I've always thought that the jihadis have a lot in common with them.

98 NoSubmission  5/16/08 9:19:15 am reply quote

Japan is now our friend and a major economic force. Something these feckless whiners will never be.

99 Occasional Reader  5/16/08 9:20:03 am reply quote

re: #87 BeerDrinking_VictoryMonkey

I remember the mass internments of Grenadian-Americans back in '83.
/

The Panamanian Internment of '89 was pretty bad, too!

(I attempted to "intern" a couple of panameñas at the time, and they threw drinks in my face)

100 nyc redneck  5/16/08 9:20:38 am reply quote

re: #98 NoSubmission

hey no sub, i love those photos you put of your mom on mother's day. so lovely.

101 jorline  5/16/08 9:23:42 am reply quote

WOW...he closed that link quickly.

When clicking on the link this is what you get now...are the lizards in NC running him out of the state?


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102 E tan e epi tan  5/16/08 9:24:19 am reply quote

#96

Obama did the same thing in the Illinois Senate. Lots of "present" votes.

103 NoSubmission  5/16/08 9:25:19 am reply quote

re: #100 nyc redneck

hey no sub, i love those photos you put of your mom on mother's day. so lovely.


Thank you! She's amazing, my mother. :)

104 Sharmuta  5/16/08 9:27:19 am reply quote

It must be the persecution of living among infidels who haven't submitted to dhimmi status yet. The poor things!

105 sparrowlake  5/16/08 9:33:26 am reply quote

re: #97 debutaunt

re: #46 Ringo the Gringo
When I think of correlations between the Japanese during WWII and Islamists today, suicide missions are the first thing that springs to my mind.


Yes! I've always thought that the jihadis have a lot in common with them.

Were the Japanese suicide missions directed at innocent civilians, or are you referring to the banzai pilots who dived their Zeros into the navy ships? High-yield suicide missions in wartime against military targets are IMO not comparable to today's terrorists.

106 Terp Mole  5/16/08 9:33:39 am reply quote
‘‘I think it’s a natural connection when two communities of color are subject to forms of persecution that they form a bond,’’ said speaker Bruce Embry

ahem... what color are Muslims again?

Natural Connection #1: Shinto-fascism had Tokyo Rose-- Islamo-fascism has CAIR.

Natural Connection #2: Leftists must explain why they're against pacifying Islamo-fascism the way FDR and Truman pacified Shinto-fascism-- w/o pity or remorse.

107 maddogg  5/16/08 9:36:07 am reply quote