In this mailing:
- Drieu Godefridi: Has France Been
Bought by a State Sponsor of Islamic Terrorism?
- Burak Bekdil: Victims of
Turkey's Islamization: Women
by Drieu Godefridi • August 31,
2017 at 5:00 am
- It
is through these tax breaks that the Qataris are buying the
"jewels" of France. The U.S. is not selling its
defense companies to Qatar.
- Thanks
to its huge gas and oil reserves, Qatar has the highest per
capita income in the world and huge reserves of cash to invest
everywhere, whereas France, thanks to 40 years of socialism,
is in dire need of cash.
France's
then-President Nicolas Sarkozy (left) greets Qatar's then-Prime
Minister Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim bin Jabor al-Thani (right) on
March 19, 2011 in Paris, France. (Photo by Franck Prevel/Getty
Images)
The state of Qatar has been officially labelled as a
"state sponsor of terrorism", and an active supporter of
Islamic terrorist organizations such as the Muslim Brotherhood,
al-Qaeda and the Islamic State -- not by Western governments, but
by Saudi Arabia, the cradle of Islamic faith, and the other Islamic
regimes of the region.
Knowing the facts of Qatar -- 11000km2,
one-third the size of Belgium, population 2.5 million -- the
question may seem far-fetched: How could France, the great France,
possibly be bought by a tiny state such as Qatar?
For the single reason that, thanks to its huge gas
and oil reserves, Qatar has the highest per capita income in the
world and huge reserves of cash to invest everywhere, whereas
France, thanks to 40 years of socialism, is in dire need of cash
and has a tradition of corruptible officials, to say nothing of a
propensity for "collaboration".
by Burak Bekdil • August 31, 2017
at 4:00 am
- "Women
should know their place.... Gender equality is against human
nature." — Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
- According
to the ministry's findings, physical violence is the most
common form of abuse: 70% of women reported they have been
physically assaulted.
- One
of the suspects made a deal with K.C.'s family: he paid a sum
of about $5,700 to the family and agreed to marry K.C. The
family arranged a bogus wedding ceremony, took pictures and
presented them to the court to save the man. Under pressure
from her family, the rapist had suddenly become her fiancé.
Turkish
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan once proudly said that "Women
should know their place," and that "Gender equality is
against human nature". (Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images)
On Feb. 6, 1935, Turkish women were allowed to vote
in national elections for the first time, and eighteen female
candidates were elected to parliament – a decade or more before
women even in Western countries such as France, Italy and Belgium.
Eight decades later, Turkish women look like unwilling passengers
on H.G. Wells' Time Machine traveling back to their
great-grandmothers' Ottoman lives.
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