Saturday, February 14, 2009

from NY to Israel Sultan Reveals The Stories Behind the News






from NY to Israel Sultan Reveals The Stories Behind the News


Link to Sultan Knish





Breaking the Peace


Posted: 13 Feb 2009 01:48 PM PST


"This stuff some sources sling around about America wanting to
stay out of the war and not wanting to fight is a lot of baloney!
Americans love to fight, traditionally."

General Patton, 1944


Anyone following the Flight 93 "Crescent" memorial, filled with Islamic
symbolism, probably wouldn't be shocked by anything coming out of the
Flight 93 Memorial Project, nevertheless Alec Rawls finally brought
them to affirm their actual agenda.

The fact that the Circle of Embrace is really a broken circle means
two things. First, it means that the giant crescent is still there.
Architect Paul Murdoch always described the Crescent of Embrace
as a broken circle. Our circle of peace was broken on 9/11, with the
unbroken part of the circle, what was symbolically left standing in
the wake of 9/11, being the giant Islamic shaped crescent.

Adding an extra arc of trees that explicitly represents a broken off
part of the circle leaves the unbroken part unchanged. What is
symbolically left standing on the Flight 93 crash site is still a giant
Islamic-shaped crescent, still pointing to Mecca.

At the Memorial Project meeting last summer, however, Alec Rawls
was able to pigeon-hole Memorial Project Manager Jeff Reinbold and
Deputy Superintendent Keith Newlin.

“You can’t just say it was ‘the flight path’ that broke the circle”
Rawls admonished.

“This is a story of human action. So who did it? In your depiction,
who is breaking the circle?”

“The passengers and crew,” said Reinbold.

“But the circle is a symbol of peace,” Rawls continued.
“Who broke the peace? It was the TERRORISTS who broke the
peace on 9/11.”

Reinbold countered that that the circle is also a Druid symbol,
and a Christian symbol.

“But it is still a symbol of peace,” said Rawls, especially as the
Memorial Project is using it, with the circle being broken on
9/11, “so who breaks it?”

“It was the passengers and crew,” Newlin repeated, elaborating
that: “They are the one’s who brought the plane down.”

This is not at all surprising when you understand the cultural
mindset that of postmodern liberalism. The moral equation
between all forms of violence, regardless of the source or the
context is here. So is the elevation and the celebration of the
culture and beliefs of the enemy.

The construction of memorials that do not actually memorialize
the dead as persons or remember the courage of their virtues,
but instead try to make some sort of abstract statement about
the world and the act that killed them, has become commonplace.

The Crescent of Embrace takes this to a new level by
embracing the Islamic interpretation of the events,
and laying it down as a memorial for the dead,
the terrorists and their victims and those who fought them.
It is as if the Viet Cong's perspective on the Vietnam War had led to
the design of the Vietnam Memorial, or if a Holocaust memorial
had been built designed as a giant Swastika.

But Jeff Reinbold's explanation of the Flight 93 Memorial
has yet another
side to it. Our side. In the view of the
Memorial Project, it is the passengers and crew who broke
the circle. When Reinhold talks about them breaking the peace,
the equation between the symbol of Islam and Peace is fairly
clear. To the Dhimmi, Islam means Peace. To the Muslim,
Islam means Peace through Submission. Where the circle
symbolizes wholeness and completeness, when it is broken
what is left behind is Islam. A shattered mockery of peace.

The "peace" that the hijackers sought to impose on the
Flight 93 passengers and on America, was the
"peace of submission", the Peace of Islam.
When the passengers and crew fought back against them, they
broke the peace. They broke the Islamic plot to fly Flight 93
into the White House by fighting back.

Breaking the Peace can be a great thing indeed, because there
are two kinds of peace. There is the peace with security that
comes from a vigilant citizenry. And there is the peace of
submission that comes from surrendering to your
enemies. The passengers and crew of Flight 93 did indeed break
that second
kind of peace, a false peace, just as the crescent is a false
circle.

They broke the peace by choosing to stand up and fight back.
Just as America chose to break the peace by taking on the likes of
Hitler, Stalin, Osama and Saddam. We could have stayed where we are
doing nothing. Instead we chose to resist. We chose not to submit.
The Crescent is a blood red scar on our landscape. A reminder of the
ravages of Islam and the domestic treason of the Dhimmis who cry peace,
while
embracing the terrorists. It is a reminder of what must be done
to blot
out the evil that it symbolizes. A scar that can only be
removed when
the terrorists and their aiders and abettors are
removed as well.

What, drawn, and talk of peace! I hate the word, As
I hate hell...

Canker'd with peace, If ever you disturb our streets
again, Your
lives shall pay the forfeit of the
peace.

Shakespeare

There is no peace in Islam or with Islam.
There is only a false peace that must be broken by
resisting the enemy, an example that the Flight 93
crew would set by refusing to do what so many others have done
across
the world, bow their knees to the blade of Islamofascist
terrorism.

When Britain deported Geert Wilders, they kept the
peace... just as Neville
Chamberlain kept the peace when he
turned over Czechoslovakia to Hitler.

"We have brought back peace for a generation," he proclaimed,
when all
around him the war had already begun.

When Israel surrendered to the Peace Process, there was no
"peace", but there
was a great deal of false peace. America's
new foreign policy conducted out of a White House rife with
terrorist sympathies will bring that same kind of false peace
as well.

It was this sort of false peace that the passengers and crew
broke. It is why the Project 93 gang will demonize them for
breaking that false peace with Islam.

It is an old argument among Americans.

Many thought Patrick Henry had the last word roughly 234
years ago, when he said, "Gentlemen may cry, Peace, Peace--
but there is no peace. The war is actually begun! ...What is it
that gentlemen wish? What would they have?

Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the
price of chains
and slavery? Forbid it, Almighty God! I know
not what course others may take; but as for me, give me liberty or
give me death!"

The passengers and crew of Flight 93 did it his way. Like
many of those in
America and across the world who have fought
for liberty and civilization, they died. They died breaking the
peace of tyranny and slavery.

They refused to submit and in doing so broke the peace.

Here is to those who keep oaths and break peace. Their true
memorials are not carved in stone or earth, but in true and brave
deeds. And greatest of all is that final knowledge that they were
willing to do what so few are, to risk their lives, rather than
bow their heads.

May we one day live to see the Crescent of Islam broken, in
Pennsylvania and across America and the world.












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