Sorry for you, that you are unable to admit that you are equating two pics that are both wrong.
It's a weakness, isn't it.
The 'brothers' in Egypt? This from Berman's 'Terror and Liberalism.'
a. In 1981, President Sadat was
assassinated by an Islamist cell in the Egyptian army.
b. While
the Muslim Brotherhood infiltrated and dominated the professional guilds, such as doctors, lawyers, engineers, etc., it oversaw the birth of two more radical branches, the Islamist Group of Sheikh Omar Abdel Rahman, and the
Islamic Jihad of Dr. Ayman al-Zawahiri: the wanted nothing to do with modernity, so, of course, they murdered secular intellectuals.
c. They also launched repeated violent attacks on Coptic Christians. And tourists, such as the massacre of 58 tourists at Luxor in Â’97.
d. Searching for Jews to attack, they thought a group of 18 Greek tourists in Cairo were Jews, and were duly massacred. Such is the urge to
cleanse Muslim lands of foreign impurities.
e. Not actually in Egypt, Sheikh Rahman had fled to Brooklyn, where he conceived of a new hobby, murdering New Yorkers randomly.
Did you see the hand of the ' international finance Jew wanting to push the region into another war'?
Or perhaps the psychotic doctrines of Qutb and the clones of the 'brotherhood'?
And perhaps you would explain the reference to "the last black
brothers in Egypt."
Don't you mean "green," so prevalent in the Islamist movements...
"The
most influential Arab party to follow the Nazi model was Young Egypt, known also as the Green Shirts, in tribute to the Nazi Jung Deutschland and the Brown Shirts of the SA. The party was founded by Ahmed Hussein in October 1933, and followed the German model down to the raised hand greeting. There were stormtroopers, torch processions, Nazi slogans including a literal translation into Arabic of "one folk, one party, one leader" as well as "Egypt over all." Bands of hooligans were formed for thesuppression of opponents and, of course, Ahmed Hussein took the role of Fuhrer. Nazi anti-Semitism was emulated in every detail, from a boycott of Jewish businesses to physical attacks and anti-Semitic incitement. Indeed, Nazi anti-Semitic theory, practice and policy fitted the needs of Arab nationalism of the 1930s like a glove."
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