Author Topic: Operation Gaddafi  (Read 3629 times)

90sRetroFan

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Re: Operation Gaddafi
« Reply #15 on: June 08, 2021, 10:34:05 pm »
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-9648477/Author-visited-Muslim-mosques-Britain-reveals-no-areas-white-men.html

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Whalley Range: The 'no-go area for white men'

Two white men who were locals of Blackburn told Ed Whalley Range was a 'no-go area'.

The suburb, according to the 2011 census, is 30 per cent British Asian and 38 per cent White.
...
He also saw are posters for al-Aqsa Mosque and a gathering about liberating Jerusalem from Israel.
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In nearby Bradford, Ed was amazed by the lack of white English people in the city, and asked a Muslim taxi driver 'where they are'.

He was told they had all 'gone with the wind.'
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He also visited The Islam Bradford Centre and heard a sermon from an Imam who commands worshipers to avoid the 'innovations of the modern world.'
...
During a trip to Didsbury, he visited the town's mosque, which was a church before it was purchased in 1967 by Syrian Arabs.

He came across people hauling banners and Palestinian flags into the mosque and, once inside, found posters urging support for an aid organisation accused of links with extremists.
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One of the books on display in the mosque was by Khurshid Ahmad, an ideologue of the Jamaat-e-Islami and other Islamist groups in Pakistan who has advocated for the creation of an Islamic state.

Ahmad has referred to members of al-Qaeda as 'brethren' and refused to acknowledge their role in the 9/11 attacks.
...
At Edinburgh's Central Mosque, Ed found it was guarded by security wearing high-vis jackets.

He spotted a poster for a 'Politics and Media Masterclass', which promised to focus on who regulates the media, how to challenge it and how legislation is made.

It was sponsored by MEND (Muslim Engagement and Development), a controversial group.

The group is an NGO that aims to encourage British Muslim communities to be more involved in British media and politics.

The advocacy group also ardently opposes the government's anti-radicalisation strategy. In 2017, it was accused of 'promoting extremism'.

The founder, Mr Ismail has previously caused upset when he claimed, after MPs voted to recognise Palestine, that it was 'the first vote lost by the Israeli lobby in parliament for 300 years'.

All we need is more of the same, and the British nuclear arsenal will one day be ours.