More shootings in a country that bans guns! I'm sure it has nothing to do with Islam. Welcome to the new norm, brought to you by the delusional left.
I'm not going to read all fifty pages of posts, but I have a question.
It took the second post of this topic for someone to automatically assume this was ISIS.
How many more pages did it take for our racist xenophobes to realize the shooter is a right wing nutcase like them?
Hell. He was probably wearing a "Make Germany Great Again" Tshirt.
Don't get ahead of yourself, the guy is a Muslim and witnesses said they heard him yelling "Allahuakbar" while aiming at kids.
To repeat:
"
There was a single Allahu Ackbar, and that was in the video where one guy shoots after leaving McDonalds, and the Allahu Ackbar came from one of the guys fleeing and not the shooter, and you can hear that the guys fleeing and filming the video don't seem to be native Germans.
Allahu Ackbar is not always negative, it is the equivalent to "oh my god", like "oh my god why is this happening" or "oh my god this is horrible". This seems to be case here."
You seem to have a problem with the truth. The killer was a Muslim who yelled Allahuakbar as all Jihadi animals do before they slaughter innocent people.
Funny sources...
a. A guy who only read one-sixth of the Koran. Maybe the truth is in the other five-sixths?
The
Takbīr (تَكْبِير), also transcribed
Tekbir or
Takbeer, is the term for the
Arabic phrase
Allāhu Akbar (
الله أكبر), usually translated as "God is [the] greatest".
[1][2] It is a common
Islamic Arabic expression, used in various contexts by
Muslims; in formal
prayer, in the call for prayer (
adhān),
[3] as an informal expression of
faith, in times of distress, or to express resolute determination or defiance.
The form
Allāhu is the
nominative of
Allah, meaning "
God". In the context of Islam, it is the
proper name of God.
[4][5] The form
akbar is the
elative of the adjective
kabīr, meaning "great", from the
Semitic root k-b-r. As used in the Takbīr it is usually translated as "greatest", but some authors prefer "greater".
[6][7][8]
The term
Takbīr itself is the stem II
verbal noun (
tafʿīlun) of the
triliteral root k-b-r, meaning "great", from which
Akbar "greater" is derived.
b. Actually, not a source. It's a Taiwanese news aggregator. So we have one guy talking.
c. lol...wrong attack.