Thursday, July 5, 2012
Muslim Witch Hunts
In response to Congressman Peter King’s hearings on Islamic radicalization, Muslim Brotherhood stooge Suhail Khan
authored an article denouncing the hearings as a “witch hunt.” He was
echoed by Ibrahim Hooper of CAIR who also branded the hearings a “witch
hunt.”
The Washington Post’s Eugene Robinson caught on to this original
idea, declaring the hearings, “Peter King’s Modern Day Witch Hunt.” Bob
Herbert at the New York Times joined him in branding the hearings a
“witch hunt.” At USA Today, an op-ed weighed in on “The Danger of a
Muslim Witch Hunt.”
Democratic pols also got in on the act. Congressman Keith Ellison
declared the hearings a “witch hunt” and Congresswoman Judy Chu
complained that a “witch hunt for Muslim radicals will do little to make
our nation safer.”
Wherever you turned, from CNN to Jon Stewart, the consensus of Muslim
terrorists and their media collaborators was that investigating
Islamism was just like hunting for witches. Except that terrorists exist
and witches don’t—a minor fact that was lost on the progressive camp
which often mistakes its own talking points for magic spells that alter
the nature of reality.
The United States doesn’t hunt witches. It’s the Muslim world that has an unfortunate propensity for engaging in witch hunts.
While the progressive media complex was whipping itself into a frenzy
denouncing any investigation of Saudi mosques and organizations as a
witch hunt—the Saudis were conducting actual witch hunts. While
Congressman King was trying to fight the War on Terror— they were
declaring a War on Sorcery.
In Washington D.C. witch hunts might be a metaphor, but in Riyadh,
they’re a top priority. While the Saudis operate a revolving door for
Islamic terrorists, including the ones we send over to them for
rehabilitation, they take important things like witchcraft seriously. A
Saudi Al-Qaeda terrorist can expect to spend a little time at a plush
rehabilitation facility before being set free to head off to the next
conflict zone. But Saudi witches and sorcerers mercilessly have their
heads chopped off in car parks.
A Saudi witch hunt is not a committee hearing; it is an actual unit
of the Islamic religious police which is tasked with fighting witches
and sorcerers, who according to the authorities, in the absence of the
Jews, are responsible for most of the problems in the land. While
American liberals insist that Islam is as modern as microprocessors and
as moderate as vanilla ice cream, in the holy land of Islam, Sharia
thugs are storming the dens of palm-readers, faith-healers and old women
with too many cats around the premises in a 7th century witch hunt conducted with 21st century technology.
Muslim witch hunts aren’t only limited to Saudi Arabia. In Iran,
Ahmadinejad’s allies have been accused of being sorcerers. In Pakistan,
witch hunts end the old fashioned away, with a bonfire. One woman,
accused of burning the Koran in a magical ritual, had her fingers cut
off, her eyes poked out and gasoline poured all over her body. “She
burnt the Koran, so we burnt her,” was the explanation.
In the Maldives, Sheikh Abdullah Bin Mohamed called for the passage
of an Anti-Sorcery Act. The Maldives already has its own witch hunts and
in 1993 arrested a witch for giving magic scrolls to a presidential
candidate to help him win an election—a novel form of electoral fraud.
It doesn’t however mandate the death penalty for witches, which is what
the Sheikh is calling for, in line with Sharia law. “Sorcery has become
a social plague in the Maldives which needs to be cured,” he said. And
Islam has a reliable way of curing things by chopping their heads off.
Black magic is also a serious problem in the United Arab Emirates. In
non-Muslim countries airport security personnel screen for Muslim
terrorists carrying explosives and weapons; but in Muslim countries, the
local equivalent of the TSA searches for magic wands and potions.
Vigilant security personnel at Abu Dhabi International Airport caught
one such would-be Harry Potter trying to enter the UAE.
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