DO YOU REMEMBER WHEN HE APPEARED AT THE U.N. AND BANGED HIS SHOE ON THE PODIUM?
HERE IS HIS ENTIRE QUOTATION:
WE'RE ALMOST THERE!
AND GETTING CLOSER THAN EVER BEFORE!
DO YOU REMEMBER WHEN HE APPEARED AT THE U.N. AND BANGED HIS SHOE ON THE PODIUM? HERE IS HIS ENTIRE QUOTATION: WE'RE ALMOST THERE! AND GETTING CLOSER THAN EVER BEFORE!
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Islamic terror groups training on U.S. soil and may be training in a neighborhood near you. The following article was recently shared with me and after some quick research I found the information easily validated and felt that it would be of interest to you.
A Muslim Terrorist Enclave Grows in Mahmoudberg, Texas February 18, 2014 by Daniel Greenfield Ryan Mauro at the Clarion Project brings us the story of a little terrorist town named Mahmoudberg in Texas. A Clarion Project investigation has discovered a jihadist enclave in Texas where a deadly shooting took place in 2002… The enclave belongs to the network of Muslims of the Americas, a radical group linked to a Pakistani militant group called Jamaat ul-Fuqra. Its members are devoted followers of Sheikh Mubarak Ali Gilani, an extremist cleric in Pakistan. The organization says it has a network of 22 “villages” around the U.S., with Islamberg as its main headquarters in New York. The Clarion Project obtained secret MOA footage showing female members receiving paramilitary training at Islamberg… A second MOA tape released by Clarion shows its spokesman declaring the U.S. to be a Muslim-majority country. A 2007 FBI record states that MOA members have been involved in at least 10 murders, one disappearance, three firebombings, one attempted firebombing, two explosive bombings and one attempted bombing. The MOA compound in Texas, described by the FBI as an “enclave” and “communal living site,” is in Brazoria county along County Road 3 near Sweeny. The MOA referred to its Texas commune as “Mahmoudberg” in online instructions for a parade in New York in 2010. Locals told the ACT members that they have heard gunfire coming from the commune. Interviewed residents all agreed that the MOA members are private, yet when the ACT members were spotted in the area, they were immediately and repeatedly approached. At one point, a commune resident gave them a final warning to leave, despite the fact that they were not trespassing or harassing MOA members. “It was definitely very threatening and menacing,” an ACT member told me. Locals told the ACT members that government investigators had visited the area a few times and the commune residents refused to talk to them. According to one local, two ambulances were denied entry earlier this year until the police intervened. So why is MOA/JUF allowed to operate in the country? The answer is that the State Department has not designated MOA/Jamaat ul-Fuqra as a Foreign Terrorist Organization. The group is thus permitted to organize in the U.S. until that happens. That’s only a small part of the larger article and it’s also a reminder that No Go Zones already exist in America and that they can form even more easily in rural areas than in cities. These are base communities meant to serve as an expansion point for future Emirates as Islamic settlements in the United States grow and Jihadist activity rises. The violence begins with terrorism, moves on to guerrilla warfare and then to a conventional war when they have the population numbers. About Daniel Greenfield Daniel Greenfield, a Shillman Journalism Fellow at the Freedom Center, is a New York writer focusing on radical Islam. He is completing a book on the international challenges America faces in the 21st century. Islamberg, New York From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Islamberg is a rural village in Hancock, Delaware County, New York.[1] It was founded by Imam Al Sheik Mubarik Ali Shah Jilani Hashimi, a Pakistani Sufi cleric more generally known as Mubarak Ali Gilani, and is a branch of Muslims of the Americas, a U.S. organization formed in 1980. Gilani, who refers to himself as "the sixth Sultan Ul Faqr", has been accused of being linked to Jamaat ul-Fuqra or "community of the impoverished". A documentary video on YouTube purports to show a network of Islamberg-like camps in the United States, specifically the compound in New York State and Sheikh Gilani forming the "Soldiers of Allah".[2] The village was founded in the late 1980s, when, reportedly inspired by Gilani, a group of primarily African American Muslims left New York City to escape crime, poverty and racism. They built a community of some 40 family houses, with its own grocery store and bookstore. Some of the founders and later inhabitants are former federal prisoners who converted through the prison system's chaplaincy. Islamberg is the first of a number of villages set up under the direction and tutelage of Gilani. Similar communities have been founded in almost two dozen other areas. According to the group's website, Islamberg has been seeking donations to complete its mosque.[citation needed] According to locals, the land previously belonged to a woman from Deposit, New York, who opened up her home in the late 1970s or early 1980s to disadvantaged young people.[3] Although relations with neighboring communities are reportedly cooperative, including World Peace rallies, multifaith celebrations of the life and influence of Jesus, and relief efforts including floods in upstate New York, Hurricane Katrina, and 9/11, Islamberg has been in the media on multiple occasions when reporters and film makers have been rebuffed by villagers who generally do not give interviews or permit media filming on the properties. Al Arabiya was allowed to do an investigative report on Islamberg and the claims against it. Al Arabiya interviewed the leaders of the community, filmed the community and was invited into the villagers' homes.[4] In 2007, a blogger made negative comments about the community and claimed he had later been threatened over the phone.[5] |