Bfgrn
Gold Member
- Apr 4, 2009
- 16,829
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I am most definitely keeping that in mind.
What I find disturbing is how you dont wish to keep in mind the fact that our administration and state department opted to blame one exercising their right to free speech as the cause of the deaths as opposed to admitting it was a lapse in security.
What I find disturbing is how you can just ignore that the 'one exercising their right to free speech' YouTube clip caused riots in 20 countries, including Libya.
What I find disturbing is you CHOOSE to ignore what the Republican chairman of the House intelligence committee SAID:
Representative Mike Rogers, a Michigan Republican and chairman of the House intelligence committee, told CNN there was no sign of intelligence chatter leading up to the Benghazi consulate attack that would have warned U.S. officials to take extra precautions.
And...What YOU should find disturbing is the terrorists and rioters are ultraconservative Islamists.
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Anti-US protests spread to
20 countries throughout
Muslim world
From ASSOCIATED PRESS
Last Updated: 2:29 PM, September 14, 2012
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Protesters shout slogans during a demonstration near the US embassy in Amman against a film
they claim was insulting to Prophet Mohammad.
CAIRO Angry protests over an anti-Islam film spread across the Muslim world Friday, with demonstrators scaling the walls of US embassies in Tunisia and Sudan and torching part of a German embassy. Amid the turmoil, Islamic militants waving black banners and shouting God is great stormed an international peacekeepers base in Egypts Sinai and battled troops, wounding four Colombians.
The day of protests, which spread to around 20 countries, started small and mostly peacefully in countries such as Indonesia, Malaysia, India, Afghanistan and Pakistan. The most violent demonstrations took place in the Middle East. In many places, only a few hundred took to the streets, mostly ultraconservative Islamists but the mood was often furious.
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Jordanian protesters burn a US flag in front of the Kurdi Mosque near the USA embassy in Amman.
The demonstrators came out after weekly Friday Muslim prayers, where many clerics in their mosque sermons urged congregations to defend their faith, denouncing the obscure movie produced in the United States that denigrated the Prophet Muhammad. It was a dramatic expansion of protests that began earlier this week and saw assaults on the US embassies in Egypt and Yemen and the storming of the US Consulate in Benghazi, Libya.
Several thousand battled with Tunisian security forces outside the US Embassy in Tunis. Protesters rained down stones on police firing volleys of tear gas and shooting into the air. Some protesters scaled the embassy wall and stood on top of it, planting the Islamist flag that has become a symbol of the wave of protests: A black banner with the Islamic profession of faith, There is no god but Allah and Muhammad is his prophet.
Police chased them off the wall and took the flag down. Two protesters were killed and 29 people were wounded, including police.
The heaviest violence came in Sudan, where a prominent sheik on state radio urged protesters to march on the German Embassy to protest alleged anti-Muslim graffiti on mosques in Berlin and then to the US Embassy to protest the film.
America has long been an enemy to Islam and to Sudan, Sheik Mohammed Jizouly said.
Soon after, several hundred Sudanese stormed into the German Embassy, setting part of an embassy building aflame along with trash bins and a parked car. Protesters danced and celebrated around the burning barrels as palls of black smoke billowed into the sky until police firing tear gas drove them out of the compound. Some then began to demonstrate outside the neighboring British Embassy, shouting slogans.
Several thousand then moved on the American Embassy, on the capitals outskirts. They tried to storm the mission, clashing with Sudanese police, who opened fire on some who tried to scale the compounds wall. It was not clear whether any protesters made it into the embassy grounds.
Egypt's Morsi said his TV address that "it is required by our religion to protect our guests and their homes and places of work," he said.
He called the killing of the American ambassador in Libya unacceptable in Islam. "To God, attacking a person is bigger than an attack on the Kaaba," he said, referring to Islam's holiest site in Mecca.
His speech came after President Obama spoke with Morsi by telephone. The Obama administration has been angered by Morsi's slow response to the attack Tuesday night on the US Embassy in Cairo. He made little more than vague statements about it for days without an outright condemnation of the breach, in which police did nothing to stop protesters from climbing the embassy walls.
His silence reflected the heavy pressure that Morsi, a longtime figure from the Muslim Brotherhood, faces from Egypt's powerful ultraconservative Islamists. They are using the film issue to boost their own political prominence while challenging Morsi's religious credentials.
Leaders of Egypt's Jihad group, a former militant organization, held a conference in the Egyptian city of Alexandria and said anyone involved in "defamation" of the prophet should be killed. They called on Morsi to cut relations with US
"I appeal to President Mohammed Morsi to cut our relations with those monkeys and pigs," said Rifaei Taha, a leading member of the group.
Several hundred people, mainly ultraconservatives, protested in Cairo's Tahrir Square after weekly Muslim Friday prayers and tore up an American flag, waving the Islamist flag. A firebrand ultraconservative Salafi cleric blasted the film in his sermon in Tahrir, saying Muslims must defend Islam and its prophet.
Anti-US protests spread to 20 countries throughout Muslim world - NYPOST.com
Dumb ass deflection.
Your cut and pasting is useless.
Cya.
Translation: you can't deny the truth, so you cut & run.