Decoding Obamas Speech Reveals Some Startling Revelations

Hossfly

ZIONIST
Gold Supporting Member
Dec 5, 2008
49,240
32,829
2,645
Ft Worth,TX
Ever wonder why Obama uses the term "ISIL" Instead of ISIS?


In one press conference after another, when referring to the Muslim terror super-group ISIS, United States President Barack Obama will use the term ISIL instead of their former name ISIS or current name Islamic State. Have you ever wondered about that? We have.

ISIL stands for the Islamic State of Iraq and Levant. Now, to us Westerners we don’t really make much of a distinction, do we? No, honestly from our perspective its all about the same. But how would a Muslim living in the Middle East view it? Just what is the Levant anyway? Let’s take a look.

The geographical term LEVANT refers to a multi-nation region in the Middle East. It’s a land bridge between Turkey to the north and Egypt to the south. If you look on a map, however, in the near exact middle of the nations that comprise the Levant, guess what you see? Come on, guess!

It’s Israel.



The Coded Message Obama Delivers When He Says ISIL Instead Of ISIS Now The End Begins Now The End Begins
 
Ever wonder why Obama uses the term "ISIL" Instead of ISIS?


In one press conference after another, when referring to the Muslim terror super-group ISIS, United States President Barack Obama will use the term ISIL instead of their former name ISIS or current name Islamic State. Have you ever wondered about that? We have.

ISIL stands for the Islamic State of Iraq and Levant. Now, to us Westerners we don’t really make much of a distinction, do we? No, honestly from our perspective its all about the same. But how would a Muslim living in the Middle East view it? Just what is the Levant anyway? Let’s take a look.

The geographical term LEVANT refers to a multi-nation region in the Middle East. It’s a land bridge between Turkey to the north and Egypt to the south. If you look on a map, however, in the near exact middle of the nations that comprise the Levant, guess what you see? Come on, guess!

It’s Israel.



The Coded Message Obama Delivers When He Says ISIL Instead Of ISIS Now The End Begins Now The End Begins
Are you serious? I don`t think that Obama is aware of that and it does not matter if US airplanes drop supplies to ISIL, ISIS, Daesh or to the Islamic State.
 
Ever wonder why Obama uses the term "ISIL" Instead of ISIS?


In one press conference after another, when referring to the Muslim terror super-group ISIS, United States President Barack Obama will use the term ISIL instead of their former name ISIS or current name Islamic State. Have you ever wondered about that? We have.

ISIL stands for the Islamic State of Iraq and Levant. Now, to us Westerners we don’t really make much of a distinction, do we? No, honestly from our perspective its all about the same. But how would a Muslim living in the Middle East view it? Just what is the Levant anyway? Let’s take a look.

The geographical term LEVANT refers to a multi-nation region in the Middle East. It’s a land bridge between Turkey to the north and Egypt to the south. If you look on a map, however, in the near exact middle of the nations that comprise the Levant, guess what you see? Come on, guess!

It’s Israel.



The Coded Message Obama Delivers When He Says ISIL Instead Of ISIS Now The End Begins Now The End Begins
Are you serious? I don`t think that Obama is aware of that and it does not matter if US airplanes drop supplies to ISIL, ISIS, Daesh or to the Islamic State.
Don't be naive. Obama knows exactly what he's doing.

Screen-Shot-2015-02-18-at-6.27.48-PM.png
 
Ever wonder why Obama uses the term "ISIL" Instead of ISIS?


In one press conference after another, when referring to the Muslim terror super-group ISIS, United States President Barack Obama will use the term ISIL instead of their former name ISIS or current name Islamic State. Have you ever wondered about that? We have.

ISIL stands for the Islamic State of Iraq and Levant. Now, to us Westerners we don’t really make much of a distinction, do we? No, honestly from our perspective its all about the same. But how would a Muslim living in the Middle East view it? Just what is the Levant anyway? Let’s take a look.

The geographical term LEVANT refers to a multi-nation region in the Middle East. It’s a land bridge between Turkey to the north and Egypt to the south. If you look on a map, however, in the near exact middle of the nations that comprise the Levant, guess what you see? Come on, guess!

It’s Israel.



The Coded Message Obama Delivers When He Says ISIL Instead Of ISIS Now The End Begins Now The End Begins
Are you serious? I don`t think that Obama is aware of that and it does not matter if US airplanes drop supplies to ISIL, ISIS, Daesh or to the Islamic State.
Don't be naive. Obama knows exactly what he's doing.

Screen-Shot-2015-02-18-at-6.27.48-PM.png
Obama might be a small Muslim in his (probably damaged) brain but he only continues the course that was initiated by the Bush Adminstration.

www.newyorker.com/magazine/2007/03/05/the-redirection
 
Obama is known to be a great diplomat and the perfect example is "Yes We Can" which stands for "Yes" in three languages - English French and Hebrew.
 
Here's a breakdown of the key terms, and the debates that swirl around them:

Islamic State
This is the term used by the organization itself these days, and it speaks to their ambitions.

"They're claiming to represent all Muslims everywhere — they have declared the establishment of a new caliphate," Blank says. "So if they are to actually own this term, that'll be a huge propaganda victory for them."

Outside of the group and its supporters, the phrase isn't widely used in the Middle East, Blank says.

"My sense is that it's not very widely accepted at all, because to Muslims everywhere, the Islamic State has a real meaning," he says. "It means the caliphate — it means a universal, legitimate, Islamic rule. And very few Muslims anywhere see this group as legitimate."

Meanwhile, many Western media outlets have adopted this phrase, or the abbreviation IS — Blank says he's seen its usage increase over the past two months.

(NPR's policy is to initially call the group "the self-declared Islamic State" or some equivalent phrase, use ISIS in later references and, when necessary, explain that ISIL is another widely used acronym.)

"I think that for a lot of journalists [IS] is just easier. It takes up less space in a headline. It's what the group actually calls itself, so it has that benefit," Blank says. Plus, it avoids the complications and confusions of the acronyms ISIS and ISIL.

ISIS
ISIS, for instance, stands for the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria. That's a direct translation of the group's full name in Arabic, but "Syria" in this case means "Greater Syria" — not the modern nation by that name.

"It refers to Syria, Lebanon, parts of Turkey, parts of what are now Jordan," Blank explains. "The 'S' in the Arabic is "al-Sham."

Al-Sham, as The New York Times explained in June, "is the classical Arabic term for Damascus and its hinterlands, and over time, it came to denote the area between the Mediterranean and the Euphrates, south of the Taurus Mountains and north of the Arabian desert."

It's a bit confusing: the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria-but-not-just-"Syria."

ISIL
The phrase preferred by the Obama administration translates "al-Sham" as "the Levant," another name for the same region — one that isn't as misleading as "Syria."

"That's partly why I think the president prefers ISIL," Blank says. "It doesn't have the lengthy explanation that I've just gone into."

The word "Levant" isn't very common today.
 
Here's a breakdown of the key terms, and the debates that swirl around them:

Islamic State
This is the term used by the organization itself these days, and it speaks to their ambitions.

"They're claiming to represent all Muslims everywhere — they have declared the establishment of a new caliphate," Blank says. "So if they are to actually own this term, that'll be a huge propaganda victory for them."

Outside of the group and its supporters, the phrase isn't widely used in the Middle East, Blank says.

"My sense is that it's not very widely accepted at all, because to Muslims everywhere, the Islamic State has a real meaning," he says. "It means the caliphate — it means a universal, legitimate, Islamic rule. And very few Muslims anywhere see this group as legitimate."

Meanwhile, many Western media outlets have adopted this phrase, or the abbreviation IS — Blank says he's seen its usage increase over the past two months.

(NPR's policy is to initially call the group "the self-declared Islamic State" or some equivalent phrase, use ISIS in later references and, when necessary, explain that ISIL is another widely used acronym.)

"I think that for a lot of journalists [IS] is just easier. It takes up less space in a headline. It's what the group actually calls itself, so it has that benefit," Blank says. Plus, it avoids the complications and confusions of the acronyms ISIS and ISIL.

ISIS
ISIS, for instance, stands for the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria. That's a direct translation of the group's full name in Arabic, but "Syria" in this case means "Greater Syria" — not the modern nation by that name.

"It refers to Syria, Lebanon, parts of Turkey, parts of what are now Jordan," Blank explains. "The 'S' in the Arabic is "al-Sham."

Al-Sham, as The New York Times explained in June, "is the classical Arabic term for Damascus and its hinterlands, and over time, it came to denote the area between the Mediterranean and the Euphrates, south of the Taurus Mountains and north of the Arabian desert."

It's a bit confusing: the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria-but-not-just-"Syria."

ISIL
The phrase preferred by the Obama administration translates "al-Sham" as "the Levant," another name for the same region — one that isn't as misleading as "Syria."

"That's partly why I think the president prefers ISIL," Blank says. "It doesn't have the lengthy explanation that I've just gone into."

The word "Levant" isn't very common today.
The term ISIL merely means that Israel is not recognized as an entity. As if Israel doesn't exist. That is how a devout Muslim such as Obama thinks of Israel. The use of certain terms does convey deeper meanings.
 
Here's a breakdown of the key terms, and the debates that swirl around them:

Islamic State
This is the term used by the organization itself these days, and it speaks to their ambitions.

"They're claiming to represent all Muslims everywhere — they have declared the establishment of a new caliphate," Blank says. "So if they are to actually own this term, that'll be a huge propaganda victory for them."

Outside of the group and its supporters, the phrase isn't widely used in the Middle East, Blank says.

"My sense is that it's not very widely accepted at all, because to Muslims everywhere, the Islamic State has a real meaning," he says. "It means the caliphate — it means a universal, legitimate, Islamic rule. And very few Muslims anywhere see this group as legitimate."

Meanwhile, many Western media outlets have adopted this phrase, or the abbreviation IS — Blank says he's seen its usage increase over the past two months.

(NPR's policy is to initially call the group "the self-declared Islamic State" or some equivalent phrase, use ISIS in later references and, when necessary, explain that ISIL is another widely used acronym.)

"I think that for a lot of journalists [IS] is just easier. It takes up less space in a headline. It's what the group actually calls itself, so it has that benefit," Blank says. Plus, it avoids the complications and confusions of the acronyms ISIS and ISIL.

ISIS
ISIS, for instance, stands for the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria. That's a direct translation of the group's full name in Arabic, but "Syria" in this case means "Greater Syria" — not the modern nation by that name.

"It refers to Syria, Lebanon, parts of Turkey, parts of what are now Jordan," Blank explains. "The 'S' in the Arabic is "al-Sham."

Al-Sham, as The New York Times explained in June, "is the classical Arabic term for Damascus and its hinterlands, and over time, it came to denote the area between the Mediterranean and the Euphrates, south of the Taurus Mountains and north of the Arabian desert."

It's a bit confusing: the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria-but-not-just-"Syria."

ISIL
The phrase preferred by the Obama administration translates "al-Sham" as "the Levant," another name for the same region — one that isn't as misleading as "Syria."

"That's partly why I think the president prefers ISIL," Blank says. "It doesn't have the lengthy explanation that I've just gone into."

The word "Levant" isn't very common today.
The term ISIL merely means that Israel is not recognized as an entity. As if Israel doesn't exist. That is how a devout Muslim such as Obama thinks of Israel. The use of certain terms does convey deeper meanings.
Says who? Some crazed religious nutcase in Israel?
 
Here's a breakdown of the key terms, and the debates that swirl around them:

Islamic State
This is the term used by the organization itself these days, and it speaks to their ambitions.

"They're claiming to represent all Muslims everywhere — they have declared the establishment of a new caliphate," Blank says. "So if they are to actually own this term, that'll be a huge propaganda victory for them."

Outside of the group and its supporters, the phrase isn't widely used in the Middle East, Blank says.

"My sense is that it's not very widely accepted at all, because to Muslims everywhere, the Islamic State has a real meaning," he says. "It means the caliphate — it means a universal, legitimate, Islamic rule. And very few Muslims anywhere see this group as legitimate."

Meanwhile, many Western media outlets have adopted this phrase, or the abbreviation IS — Blank says he's seen its usage increase over the past two months.

(NPR's policy is to initially call the group "the self-declared Islamic State" or some equivalent phrase, use ISIS in later references and, when necessary, explain that ISIL is another widely used acronym.)

"I think that for a lot of journalists [IS] is just easier. It takes up less space in a headline. It's what the group actually calls itself, so it has that benefit," Blank says. Plus, it avoids the complications and confusions of the acronyms ISIS and ISIL.

ISIS
ISIS, for instance, stands for the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria. That's a direct translation of the group's full name in Arabic, but "Syria" in this case means "Greater Syria" — not the modern nation by that name.

"It refers to Syria, Lebanon, parts of Turkey, parts of what are now Jordan," Blank explains. "The 'S' in the Arabic is "al-Sham."

Al-Sham, as The New York Times explained in June, "is the classical Arabic term for Damascus and its hinterlands, and over time, it came to denote the area between the Mediterranean and the Euphrates, south of the Taurus Mountains and north of the Arabian desert."

It's a bit confusing: the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria-but-not-just-"Syria."

ISIL
The phrase preferred by the Obama administration translates "al-Sham" as "the Levant," another name for the same region — one that isn't as misleading as "Syria."

"That's partly why I think the president prefers ISIL," Blank says. "It doesn't have the lengthy explanation that I've just gone into."

The word "Levant" isn't very common today.
The term ISIL merely means that Israel is not recognized as an entity. As if Israel doesn't exist. That is how a devout Muslim such as Obama thinks of Israel. The use of certain terms does convey deeper meanings.
Says who? Some crazed religious nutcase in Israel?
No, dear. Muslims.
 
Do not mistake being stubborn, immovable, and ignorant with being wise or knowledgeable

"Don't let your alligator mouth overload your hummingbird ass."
~~Confucius
Somebody should tell you how ridiculous you look in that outfit.
Along with every veteran who belongs to a military association. It's for men.
Old men dressing up is as silly as little girls and boys dressing up, Except the little boys and girls have the excuses of youth.

Your posing reminds of a cross between Baron Munchausen and Jonathan Winters in The Russians Are Coming
 
Do not mistake being stubborn, immovable, and ignorant with being wise or knowledgeable

"Don't let your alligator mouth overload your hummingbird ass."
~~Confucius
Somebody should tell you how ridiculous you look in that outfit.
Along with every veteran who belongs to a military association. It's for men.
Old men dressing up is as silly as little girls and boys dressing up, Except the little boys and girls have the excuses of youth.

Your posing reminds of a cross between Baron Munchausen and Jonathan Winters in The Russians Are Coming
Don't bother going to a Veterans Day ceremony on November 11. You might get stepped on.
 

Forum List

Back
Top