This Syrian refugee rescued an American student after she was assaulted in Cologne

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All these crimes, actions & behaviors against the West, raping, groping, beating, torture, defecating & masturbating in public pools isn't being done by all refugees, Syrians, Muslims, etc. They are being done by an extremist group of terrorists. This is NOT a cultural or belief thing. This IS a deliberate attack that is meant to induce fear & panic of their opponents. It's called psychological war and they're winning

I think also, small incidents are being magnified in the news with little context to help understand them. Among the refugees and assylum seekers you have people from all over - Africa, Middle East, Afghanistan etc etc. You have people from many walks of life and cultures, who have in many cases probably been through hell and you most likely have some damaged people as well as outright criminals.
 
no, just round them up, cut off certain body parts & stuff em down their throats while being skinned alive. Although they will still win as martyrs for their cause, and those 72 virgins.....
 
A bunch of Syrians had to groped her so two Syrians could save her? Good story about not bowing to peer pressure, but little else.
 
Unfortunately, the story isn't so widely spread because it doesn't get headline profits. And if that's not enough, it doesn't feed the fear needed to perpetuate war.

I think it's awesome they did step up to help her. There are more good people out there, we just don't get to see or hear about it and we need to.

On this, you are bonkers.

The reason the story hasn't been widely massively circulated, is the same reason "Girl finds missing dog!" isn't the top headlines.

The people... the public... isn't peaked by happy joy joy Teddy Bears and Flowers stories.

If you have three news papers, and one says "No evidence for imminent global warming catastrophe", "Scientists find no conclusive results" and "Scientists warn of dooming the entire planet to a global desert!"

Which one is going to sell?

Same with health care. How many millions of people have been treated and cured of horrible disease, and yet which paper is the public going to buy: "90 year old treated and released!" "Aunt Edna cured of cancer!" or "US spend 15% more than any other country on Health care! Experts say system must change!"

Which is going to fly off the shelves?

It's not some moronic garbage about "the evil news companies are intentionally doing....." blaw blaw blaw.

It's the public. Obviously if it was some grand conspiracy, and "we have to feed the fear to promote war!" and blaw blaw blaw blaw... then *YOU* wouldn't know the story right now... would you? The reason you know about it, is because it was reported by the media.

The public focuses on the bad. They always have, and they always will.
 
How is it stories like this get ignored?

This Syrian refugee rescued an American student after she was assaulted in Cologne

PRI's The World

Caitlin Duncan was terrified. She'd already been assaulted, twice, by the mobs that gathered near Cologne's train station on New Year's Eve.


Then she heard a voice in German. He was a Syrian refugee.


He was coming to her aid.


"He came up to me and said, 'Kann ich dir helfen?' which in German is 'Can I help you?'" Duncan says. "He made sure to keep a distance between us, and he looked really concerned."


To say she was uncertain would be an understatement. "At this point, I had been attacked for the second time by this larger group, groped all over my body, my hair pulled."


The world knows of the attacks on scores of women as Cologne brought in the New Year. But the story of 5-foot-2 American neuroscience student — and her Muslim rescuers — stands out.


At that moment, she was sobbing, disheveled, distraught. Separated from her German boyfriend and her cellphone. And it became clear to her new Syrian protector that she knew limited German. So the Syrian man went to get his friend, Hesham Ahmad Mohammad, who spoke English.


The men volunteered to help Duncan locate her boyfriend.


"They first said, 'OK, you can use our phone,'" she says, adding that in the craziness of the moment she couldn't remember her boyfriend's number.


Then they went one step further: They offered Duncan 70 euros for a taxi back to her boyfriend's home. But she wanted to stay and keep looking for her friend.


"I helped her because she was alone, and she was crying," says Hesham Ahmad Mohammad. "I take hand of Caitlin. I make Caitlin behind me and I speak with high voice, saying, 'If you want problem, I can make problem.' My friends hear my voice, they came to me, to be beside me. First of all I say to them, 'We must make circle about Caitlin because somebody tried to kiss her or to touch her, she didn't need that again.' Because I am Muslim, I cannot leave anybody who needs help alone. From my story people know there are good refugees, good people. They will help anybody."

rest of story at link

cologne.jpg

A Syrian refugee that speaks fluent German?

That's actually not all that surprising.

Germany actually has government funded free German classes, to teach immigrants, how to speak German.

Unlike the multi-cultural crap that's been going on in the US, in Germany, that try and teach people the culture of Germany. So that they can integrate into society.

Instead of trying to live like you are in a Muslim country, get fired from Cargil for not working, and then claim you are discriminated against.

It doesn't surprise me at all that many Syrians have started learning German fluently.

I generally don't support government spending on many programs, but on this one, I agree with. We should offer english classes to immigrants, to teach them English. "That's ethno-centric arrogance". No, it's called helping people be American. Which is the best thing for them, if they intend to live in America.

Instead of having them think they can be Egyptian, walk off the job to pray, get fired, and think somehow they have been wronged.
 
I get to listen to a lot of non-headline news when I'm driving - PRI's The World is a good source. I've heard a lot of interesting small stories and they frequently involve more human depth than headline news that just skims the surface.

Welcome to Democracy dude. Democracy is always a rule by the lowest common denominator of society.... aka.. the mass media headlines.
 
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I get to listen to a lot of non-headline news when I'm driving - PRI's The World is a good source. I've heard a lot of interesting small stories and they frequently involve more human depth than headline news that just skims the surface.

Welcome to Democracy dude. Democracy is always a rule by the lowest common denominator of society.... aka.. the mass media headlines.

You noticed?
 
How is it stories like this get ignored?

This Syrian refugee rescued an American student after she was assaulted in Cologne

PRI's The World

Caitlin Duncan was terrified. She'd already been assaulted, twice, by the mobs that gathered near Cologne's train station on New Year's Eve.


Then she heard a voice in German. He was a Syrian refugee.


He was coming to her aid.


"He came up to me and said, 'Kann ich dir helfen?' which in German is 'Can I help you?'" Duncan says. "He made sure to keep a distance between us, and he looked really concerned."


To say she was uncertain would be an understatement. "At this point, I had been attacked for the second time by this larger group, groped all over my body, my hair pulled."


The world knows of the attacks on scores of women as Cologne brought in the New Year. But the story of 5-foot-2 American neuroscience student — and her Muslim rescuers — stands out.


At that moment, she was sobbing, disheveled, distraught. Separated from her German boyfriend and her cellphone. And it became clear to her new Syrian protector that she knew limited German. So the Syrian man went to get his friend, Hesham Ahmad Mohammad, who spoke English.


The men volunteered to help Duncan locate her boyfriend.


"They first said, 'OK, you can use our phone,'" she says, adding that in the craziness of the moment she couldn't remember her boyfriend's number.


Then they went one step further: They offered Duncan 70 euros for a taxi back to her boyfriend's home. But she wanted to stay and keep looking for her friend.


"I helped her because she was alone, and she was crying," says Hesham Ahmad Mohammad. "I take hand of Caitlin. I make Caitlin behind me and I speak with high voice, saying, 'If you want problem, I can make problem.' My friends hear my voice, they came to me, to be beside me. First of all I say to them, 'We must make circle about Caitlin because somebody tried to kiss her or to touch her, she didn't need that again.' Because I am Muslim, I cannot leave anybody who needs help alone. From my story people know there are good refugees, good people. They will help anybody."

rest of story at link

cologne.jpg
Good story and I'm glad those 2 guys saved her.

It doesn't change what the others did that forced her to be saved though.

It isn't meant to - but people tar an entire group by the actions of those.


If you import that group, you get those actions.

That not all of that group commit those actions does not change that.

And your being oh so careful to be fair to those members of that group does not make the streets of Cologne any safer.
 
All these crimes, actions & behaviors against the West, raping, groping, beating, torture, defecating & masturbating in public pools isn't being done by all refugees, Syrians, Muslims, etc. They are being done by an extremist group of terrorists. This is NOT a cultural or belief thing. This IS a deliberate attack that is meant to induce fear & panic of their opponents. It's called psychological war and they're winning

I think also, small incidents are being magnified in the news with little context to help understand them. Among the refugees and assylum seekers you have people from all over - Africa, Middle East, Afghanistan etc etc. You have people from many walks of life and cultures, who have in many cases probably been through hell and you most likely have some damaged people as well as outright criminals.

NO, repeatedly we see the response of the establishment AND the media is to cover up these NOT SMALL incidents and to try to avoid giving the correct context so as to misinform their publics about the true costs of their polices.
 
The take away I get is... isn't it the left that claims Europe is so freakin awesome and perfect?

My issue though, is whatever problem we have with a few immigrants is a tiny fraction compared to the crime committed by our own people.

If we dealt with our own crime problem, immigrant crime would both be less, and largely irrelevant.
 
Unfortunately, the story isn't so widely spread because it doesn't get headline profits. And if that's not enough, it doesn't feed the fear needed to perpetuate war.

I think it's awesome they did step up to help her. There are more good people out there, we just don't get to see or hear about it and we need to.

On this, you are bonkers.

The reason the story hasn't been widely massively circulated, is the same reason "Girl finds missing dog!" isn't the top headlines.

The people... the public... isn't peaked by happy joy joy Teddy Bears and Flowers stories.

If you have three news papers, and one says "No evidence for imminent global warming catastrophe", "Scientists find no conclusive results" and "Scientists warn of dooming the entire planet to a global desert!"

Which one is going to sell?

Same with health care. How many millions of people have been treated and cured of horrible disease, and yet which paper is the public going to buy: "90 year old treated and released!" "Aunt Edna cured of cancer!" or "US spend 15% more than any other country on Health care! Experts say system must change!"

Which is going to fly off the shelves?

It's not some moronic garbage about "the evil news companies are intentionally doing....." blaw blaw blaw.

It's the public. Obviously if it was some grand conspiracy, and "we have to feed the fear to promote war!" and blaw blaw blaw blaw... then *YOU* wouldn't know the story right now... would you? The reason you know about it, is because it was reported by the media.

The public focuses on the bad. They always have, and they always will.

No I'm not 'bonkers', but I am 'Just Another Nut'. Now that we have that out of the way.......My post hadn't meant to imply the media as evil and I do agree it is the bloodthirsty public driving sales. No argument there.

The comment made of 'feeding the fear to perpetuate war' is about how the extremist Muslims/Islamic terrorists actions are being done, knowing the media & that same public will drink it up all the while fear & panic become widespread. YES??? It's not that hard to understand anyone who is plotting destruction of a society or country, a good way to do so would be to destroy it from the inside thru fear. Is not those of us who do know about the incidents in Germany afraid? Afraid it will happen here? They are coming by the droves. And if you deny that, it is you who are An Dyllusion al
.
If you don't think the actions being done in Germany, Sweden & elsewhere isn't the beginnings of an act of war I do think you are sadly mistaken. The terrorists are setting us up for this and it's happening. Do you know Germany has lost track of a million refugees? They don't know where they are and are unaccounted for? Even the US admitted it can't keep track of thousands of them. What do you think they are doing? Having a latte at Starbucks discussing the weather???

IMVHO, I do think they (terrorists) are getting into position for wreaking more havoc whether it's Europe, USA or elsewhere. It IS coming whether any of us like it or not. Sooner or later there will be a government that will stand against them and fight back and THAT will be war.
And if I'm wrong? Awesome, I'll take a double iced mocha, please.......kinda cold in the east heh?

and btw, I do think we need more 'fluff & stuff' stories, it helps to calm the savage beast
 
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How is it stories like this get ignored?

This Syrian refugee rescued an American student after she was assaulted in Cologne

PRI's The World

Caitlin Duncan was terrified. She'd already been assaulted, twice, by the mobs that gathered near Cologne's train station on New Year's Eve.


Then she heard a voice in German. He was a Syrian refugee.


He was coming to her aid.


"He came up to me and said, 'Kann ich dir helfen?' which in German is 'Can I help you?'" Duncan says. "He made sure to keep a distance between us, and he looked really concerned."


To say she was uncertain would be an understatement. "At this point, I had been attacked for the second time by this larger group, groped all over my body, my hair pulled."


The world knows of the attacks on scores of women as Cologne brought in the New Year. But the story of 5-foot-2 American neuroscience student — and her Muslim rescuers — stands out.


At that moment, she was sobbing, disheveled, distraught. Separated from her German boyfriend and her cellphone. And it became clear to her new Syrian protector that she knew limited German. So the Syrian man went to get his friend, Hesham Ahmad Mohammad, who spoke English.


The men volunteered to help Duncan locate her boyfriend.


"They first said, 'OK, you can use our phone,'" she says, adding that in the craziness of the moment she couldn't remember her boyfriend's number.


Then they went one step further: They offered Duncan 70 euros for a taxi back to her boyfriend's home. But she wanted to stay and keep looking for her friend.


"I helped her because she was alone, and she was crying," says Hesham Ahmad Mohammad. "I take hand of Caitlin. I make Caitlin behind me and I speak with high voice, saying, 'If you want problem, I can make problem.' My friends hear my voice, they came to me, to be beside me. First of all I say to them, 'We must make circle about Caitlin because somebody tried to kiss her or to touch her, she didn't need that again.' Because I am Muslim, I cannot leave anybody who needs help alone. From my story people know there are good refugees, good people. They will help anybody."

rest of story at link

cologne.jpg
Good story and I'm glad those 2 guys saved her.

It doesn't change what the others did that forced her to be saved though.

It isn't meant to - but people tar an entire group by the actions of those.


If you import that group, you get those actions.

That not all of that group commit those actions does not change that.

And your being oh so careful to be fair to those members of that group does not make the streets of Cologne any safer.

Right - I keep forgetting there was no rape in Germany before refugees arrived.
 
How is it stories like this get ignored?

This Syrian refugee rescued an American student after she was assaulted in Cologne

PRI's The World

Caitlin Duncan was terrified. She'd already been assaulted, twice, by the mobs that gathered near Cologne's train station on New Year's Eve.


Then she heard a voice in German. He was a Syrian refugee.


He was coming to her aid.


"He came up to me and said, 'Kann ich dir helfen?' which in German is 'Can I help you?'" Duncan says. "He made sure to keep a distance between us, and he looked really concerned."


To say she was uncertain would be an understatement. "At this point, I had been attacked for the second time by this larger group, groped all over my body, my hair pulled."


The world knows of the attacks on scores of women as Cologne brought in the New Year. But the story of 5-foot-2 American neuroscience student — and her Muslim rescuers — stands out.


At that moment, she was sobbing, disheveled, distraught. Separated from her German boyfriend and her cellphone. And it became clear to her new Syrian protector that she knew limited German. So the Syrian man went to get his friend, Hesham Ahmad Mohammad, who spoke English.


The men volunteered to help Duncan locate her boyfriend.


"They first said, 'OK, you can use our phone,'" she says, adding that in the craziness of the moment she couldn't remember her boyfriend's number.


Then they went one step further: They offered Duncan 70 euros for a taxi back to her boyfriend's home. But she wanted to stay and keep looking for her friend.


"I helped her because she was alone, and she was crying," says Hesham Ahmad Mohammad. "I take hand of Caitlin. I make Caitlin behind me and I speak with high voice, saying, 'If you want problem, I can make problem.' My friends hear my voice, they came to me, to be beside me. First of all I say to them, 'We must make circle about Caitlin because somebody tried to kiss her or to touch her, she didn't need that again.' Because I am Muslim, I cannot leave anybody who needs help alone. From my story people know there are good refugees, good people. They will help anybody."

rest of story at link

cologne.jpg
Good story and I'm glad those 2 guys saved her.

It doesn't change what the others did that forced her to be saved though.

It isn't meant to - but people tar an entire group by the actions of those.


If you import that group, you get those actions.

That not all of that group commit those actions does not change that.

And your being oh so careful to be fair to those members of that group does not make the streets of Cologne any safer.

Right - I keep forgetting there was no rape in Germany before refugees arrived.

Deflection doesn't change the fact that the mass sexual assault is a direct result of the Government Policy of high Muslim Immigration.

Deflection does not change the fact that if that policy had not been in place over the last couple of decades that those mass assaults would not have taken place.

That thousand sex offenders? They are still in Germany.

Do you think that mass sex assault was a one time fluke and now they will settle down and be good little GErmans?

DO you think that that extreme behavior does not reflect more widespread cultural differences that will be manifested in other ways that will affect negatively Germans and Germany?
 
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  • #35
How is it stories like this get ignored?

This Syrian refugee rescued an American student after she was assaulted in Cologne

PRI's The World

Caitlin Duncan was terrified. She'd already been assaulted, twice, by the mobs that gathered near Cologne's train station on New Year's Eve.


Then she heard a voice in German. He was a Syrian refugee.


He was coming to her aid.


"He came up to me and said, 'Kann ich dir helfen?' which in German is 'Can I help you?'" Duncan says. "He made sure to keep a distance between us, and he looked really concerned."


To say she was uncertain would be an understatement. "At this point, I had been attacked for the second time by this larger group, groped all over my body, my hair pulled."


The world knows of the attacks on scores of women as Cologne brought in the New Year. But the story of 5-foot-2 American neuroscience student — and her Muslim rescuers — stands out.


At that moment, she was sobbing, disheveled, distraught. Separated from her German boyfriend and her cellphone. And it became clear to her new Syrian protector that she knew limited German. So the Syrian man went to get his friend, Hesham Ahmad Mohammad, who spoke English.


The men volunteered to help Duncan locate her boyfriend.


"They first said, 'OK, you can use our phone,'" she says, adding that in the craziness of the moment she couldn't remember her boyfriend's number.


Then they went one step further: They offered Duncan 70 euros for a taxi back to her boyfriend's home. But she wanted to stay and keep looking for her friend.


"I helped her because she was alone, and she was crying," says Hesham Ahmad Mohammad. "I take hand of Caitlin. I make Caitlin behind me and I speak with high voice, saying, 'If you want problem, I can make problem.' My friends hear my voice, they came to me, to be beside me. First of all I say to them, 'We must make circle about Caitlin because somebody tried to kiss her or to touch her, she didn't need that again.' Because I am Muslim, I cannot leave anybody who needs help alone. From my story people know there are good refugees, good people. They will help anybody."

rest of story at link

cologne.jpg
Good story and I'm glad those 2 guys saved her.

It doesn't change what the others did that forced her to be saved though.

It isn't meant to - but people tar an entire group by the actions of those.


If you import that group, you get those actions.

That not all of that group commit those actions does not change that.

And your being oh so careful to be fair to those members of that group does not make the streets of Cologne any safer.

Right - I keep forgetting there was no rape in Germany before refugees arrived.

Deflection doesn't change the fact that the mass sexual assault is a direct result of the Government Policy of high Muslim Immigration.

Deflection does not change the fact that if that policy had not been in place over the last couple of decades that those mass assaults would not have taken place.

That thousand sex offenders? They are still in Germany.

Do you think that mass sex assault was a one time fluke and now they will settle down and be good little GErmans?

DO you think that that extreme behavior does not reflect more widespread cultural differences that will be manifested in other ways that will affect negatively Germans and Germany?

I think there are criminals in every culture.

Go after the criminals.

Novel idea that.
 
How is it stories like this get ignored?

This Syrian refugee rescued an American student after she was assaulted in Cologne

PRI's The World

Caitlin Duncan was terrified. She'd already been assaulted, twice, by the mobs that gathered near Cologne's train station on New Year's Eve.


Then she heard a voice in German. He was a Syrian refugee.


He was coming to her aid.


"He came up to me and said, 'Kann ich dir helfen?' which in German is 'Can I help you?'" Duncan says. "He made sure to keep a distance between us, and he looked really concerned."


To say she was uncertain would be an understatement. "At this point, I had been attacked for the second time by this larger group, groped all over my body, my hair pulled."


The world knows of the attacks on scores of women as Cologne brought in the New Year. But the story of 5-foot-2 American neuroscience student — and her Muslim rescuers — stands out.


At that moment, she was sobbing, disheveled, distraught. Separated from her German boyfriend and her cellphone. And it became clear to her new Syrian protector that she knew limited German. So the Syrian man went to get his friend, Hesham Ahmad Mohammad, who spoke English.


The men volunteered to help Duncan locate her boyfriend.


"They first said, 'OK, you can use our phone,'" she says, adding that in the craziness of the moment she couldn't remember her boyfriend's number.


Then they went one step further: They offered Duncan 70 euros for a taxi back to her boyfriend's home. But she wanted to stay and keep looking for her friend.


"I helped her because she was alone, and she was crying," says Hesham Ahmad Mohammad. "I take hand of Caitlin. I make Caitlin behind me and I speak with high voice, saying, 'If you want problem, I can make problem.' My friends hear my voice, they came to me, to be beside me. First of all I say to them, 'We must make circle about Caitlin because somebody tried to kiss her or to touch her, she didn't need that again.' Because I am Muslim, I cannot leave anybody who needs help alone. From my story people know there are good refugees, good people. They will help anybody."

rest of story at link

cologne.jpg
Good story and I'm glad those 2 guys saved her.

It doesn't change what the others did that forced her to be saved though.

It isn't meant to - but people tar an entire group by the actions of those.


If you import that group, you get those actions.

That not all of that group commit those actions does not change that.

And your being oh so careful to be fair to those members of that group does not make the streets of Cologne any safer.

Right - I keep forgetting there was no rape in Germany before refugees arrived.
------------------------------ why import more dirty muslim rapists Coyote ??
 
How is it stories like this get ignored?

This Syrian refugee rescued an American student after she was assaulted in Cologne

PRI's The World

Caitlin Duncan was terrified. She'd already been assaulted, twice, by the mobs that gathered near Cologne's train station on New Year's Eve.


Then she heard a voice in German. He was a Syrian refugee.


He was coming to her aid.


"He came up to me and said, 'Kann ich dir helfen?' which in German is 'Can I help you?'" Duncan says. "He made sure to keep a distance between us, and he looked really concerned."


To say she was uncertain would be an understatement. "At this point, I had been attacked for the second time by this larger group, groped all over my body, my hair pulled."


The world knows of the attacks on scores of women as Cologne brought in the New Year. But the story of 5-foot-2 American neuroscience student — and her Muslim rescuers — stands out.


At that moment, she was sobbing, disheveled, distraught. Separated from her German boyfriend and her cellphone. And it became clear to her new Syrian protector that she knew limited German. So the Syrian man went to get his friend, Hesham Ahmad Mohammad, who spoke English.


The men volunteered to help Duncan locate her boyfriend.


"They first said, 'OK, you can use our phone,'" she says, adding that in the craziness of the moment she couldn't remember her boyfriend's number.


Then they went one step further: They offered Duncan 70 euros for a taxi back to her boyfriend's home. But she wanted to stay and keep looking for her friend.


"I helped her because she was alone, and she was crying," says Hesham Ahmad Mohammad. "I take hand of Caitlin. I make Caitlin behind me and I speak with high voice, saying, 'If you want problem, I can make problem.' My friends hear my voice, they came to me, to be beside me. First of all I say to them, 'We must make circle about Caitlin because somebody tried to kiss her or to touch her, she didn't need that again.' Because I am Muslim, I cannot leave anybody who needs help alone. From my story people know there are good refugees, good people. They will help anybody."

rest of story at link

cologne.jpg







One swallow does not a summer make. Or in this case one muslim out of thousands who tries to help does not prove the thousands are the same as him
 
How is it stories like this get ignored?

This Syrian refugee rescued an American student after she was assaulted in Cologne

PRI's The World

Caitlin Duncan was terrified. She'd already been assaulted, twice, by the mobs that gathered near Cologne's train station on New Year's Eve.


Then she heard a voice in German. He was a Syrian refugee.


He was coming to her aid.


"He came up to me and said, 'Kann ich dir helfen?' which in German is 'Can I help you?'" Duncan says. "He made sure to keep a distance between us, and he looked really concerned."


To say she was uncertain would be an understatement. "At this point, I had been attacked for the second time by this larger group, groped all over my body, my hair pulled."


The world knows of the attacks on scores of women as Cologne brought in the New Year. But the story of 5-foot-2 American neuroscience student — and her Muslim rescuers — stands out.


At that moment, she was sobbing, disheveled, distraught. Separated from her German boyfriend and her cellphone. And it became clear to her new Syrian protector that she knew limited German. So the Syrian man went to get his friend, Hesham Ahmad Mohammad, who spoke English.


The men volunteered to help Duncan locate her boyfriend.


"They first said, 'OK, you can use our phone,'" she says, adding that in the craziness of the moment she couldn't remember her boyfriend's number.


Then they went one step further: They offered Duncan 70 euros for a taxi back to her boyfriend's home. But she wanted to stay and keep looking for her friend.


"I helped her because she was alone, and she was crying," says Hesham Ahmad Mohammad. "I take hand of Caitlin. I make Caitlin behind me and I speak with high voice, saying, 'If you want problem, I can make problem.' My friends hear my voice, they came to me, to be beside me. First of all I say to them, 'We must make circle about Caitlin because somebody tried to kiss her or to touch her, she didn't need that again.' Because I am Muslim, I cannot leave anybody who needs help alone. From my story people know there are good refugees, good people. They will help anybody."

rest of story at link

cologne.jpg
Good story and I'm glad those 2 guys saved her.

It doesn't change what the others did that forced her to be saved though.

It isn't meant to - but people tar an entire group by the actions of those.






By those in the majority, don't forget that word or it will show that you are an appeaser. Just as you do when it is a solitary Jew that does something wrong, then you tar and blacken every Jew
Good story and I'm glad those 2 guys saved her.

It doesn't change what the others did that forced her to be saved though.

It isn't meant to - but people tar an entire group by the actions of those.


If you import that group, you get those actions.

That not all of that group commit those actions does not change that.

And your being oh so careful to be fair to those members of that group does not make the streets of Cologne any safer.

Right - I keep forgetting there was no rape in Germany before refugees arrived.

Deflection doesn't change the fact that the mass sexual assault is a direct result of the Government Policy of high Muslim Immigration.

Deflection does not change the fact that if that policy had not been in place over the last couple of decades that those mass assaults would not have taken place.

That thousand sex offenders? They are still in Germany.

Do you think that mass sex assault was a one time fluke and now they will settle down and be good little GErmans?

DO you think that that extreme behavior does not reflect more widespread cultural differences that will be manifested in other ways that will affect negatively Germans and Germany?

I think there are criminals in every culture.

Go after the criminals.

Novel idea that.






And when the muslims have all been sorted out then we can go for the lesser criminals. As in the 20% that are not immigrants as shown by the stats of prison populations.
 
The take away I get is... isn't it the left that claims Europe is so freakin awesome and perfect?

My issue though, is whatever problem we have with a few immigrants is a tiny fraction compared to the crime committed by our own people.

If we dealt with our own crime problem, immigrant crime would both be less, and largely irrelevant.






BULLSHIT the evidence shows that the majority of serious crime is committed by immigrants and not by home grown criminals. The prison population is showing that 80% of all crime is done by immigrants who are less than 20% of the population. In the last year the crime figures have increased dramatically due to a massive influx of mainly muslim immigrants.
 
How is it stories like this get ignored?

This Syrian refugee rescued an American student after she was assaulted in Cologne

PRI's The World

Caitlin Duncan was terrified. She'd already been assaulted, twice, by the mobs that gathered near Cologne's train station on New Year's Eve.


Then she heard a voice in German. He was a Syrian refugee.


He was coming to her aid.


"He came up to me and said, 'Kann ich dir helfen?' which in German is 'Can I help you?'" Duncan says. "He made sure to keep a distance between us, and he looked really concerned."


To say she was uncertain would be an understatement. "At this point, I had been attacked for the second time by this larger group, groped all over my body, my hair pulled."


The world knows of the attacks on scores of women as Cologne brought in the New Year. But the story of 5-foot-2 American neuroscience student — and her Muslim rescuers — stands out.


At that moment, she was sobbing, disheveled, distraught. Separated from her German boyfriend and her cellphone. And it became clear to her new Syrian protector that she knew limited German. So the Syrian man went to get his friend, Hesham Ahmad Mohammad, who spoke English.


The men volunteered to help Duncan locate her boyfriend.


"They first said, 'OK, you can use our phone,'" she says, adding that in the craziness of the moment she couldn't remember her boyfriend's number.


Then they went one step further: They offered Duncan 70 euros for a taxi back to her boyfriend's home. But she wanted to stay and keep looking for her friend.


"I helped her because she was alone, and she was crying," says Hesham Ahmad Mohammad. "I take hand of Caitlin. I make Caitlin behind me and I speak with high voice, saying, 'If you want problem, I can make problem.' My friends hear my voice, they came to me, to be beside me. First of all I say to them, 'We must make circle about Caitlin because somebody tried to kiss her or to touch her, she didn't need that again.' Because I am Muslim, I cannot leave anybody who needs help alone. From my story people know there are good refugees, good people. They will help anybody."

rest of story at link

cologne.jpg
Good story and I'm glad those 2 guys saved her.

It doesn't change what the others did that forced her to be saved though.

It isn't meant to - but people tar an entire group by the actions of those.


If you import that group, you get those actions.

That not all of that group commit those actions does not change that.

And your being oh so careful to be fair to those members of that group does not make the streets of Cologne any safer.

Right - I keep forgetting there was no rape in Germany before refugees arrived.




You keep forgetting that the numbers were so low as to be manageable and the punishment meted out was a deterrent. Now the numbers are uncontrollable other than to deport all immigrants and close borders, the muslims have no self control and use rape as a terror tactic so they can take over in the long run. Look at the facts and not at the propaganda and you may be swayed to stop defending muslims when they do something wrong.
 

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