Hamas won the UK elections

Delightful multiculturalism! Note the the mayors of Birmingham, Leeds, Blackburn, Sheffield, Oxford, Oldham and Rochdale.

“This is for Gaza”, Galloway said. The left-wing populist blowhard took away Labour’s two decades of dominance in Rochdale, the former Manchester-area textile town scene of the infamous child abuse scandal, in which Pakistani immigrants committed horrific sex crimes against teenage girls working class white women for many years.

Labour’s candidate, Azhar Ali, told a party meeting that Israel had “allowed” the October 7 Hamas massacre to take place, to give it the “green light” to invade Gaza.

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Ex-Ontario nuclear power plant worker denied bail after allegedly leaking secret information

A former Ontario nuclear power plant worker charged with leaking secret information to a foreign entity or terrorist group (opens in a new tab)has been denied bail.

The decision was handed down at an Oshawa, Ont. courtroom on Monday following two lengthy bail hearings totalling five-and-a-half hours in length.

James Mousaly, 36, is charged with one count of communicating safeguarded information under the Security of Information Act, the RCMP confirmed last week.

Mousaly indicates an origin in Iraq.

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Some fears about Islam are entirely rational

A ‘phobia’ is an irrational fear, as in claustrophobia, agoraphobia or arachnophobia, all conditions deserving of sympathy. But fear can be rational, too. An infantryman in a First World War trench would have every reason to fear going over the top. To accuse him of a ‘phobia’ would be uncharitable, to say the least. An Australian suspected of arachnophobia might point out that spiders with a dangerous bite are not rare. In Britain, there’s much less to fear from spiders, so my fear of them could fairly be called arachnophobia. Is there a group of people who, like Australians in the case of spiders, have good reason to fear certain aspects of Islam? If such a group exists, I suggest it would be found among Muslims themselves.

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Does France hold the key to cracking down on Islamist extremism?

When you post soldiers in your streets out of fear then you have an Islam problem.

Are we being ‘poisoned’ by extremism? The Prime Minister seems to think so. His speech on the steps of Downing Street following the Rochdale by-election described a country where values of tolerance and civility were being deliberately undermined by Islamists and the far right. ‘Islamist extremists and the far right feed off and embolden each other,’ he warned. But in conflating those two threats, the Prime Minister made the same mistake as his predecessors.

Sunak followed the script, endorsed by too many institutions in Britain, that the big threat to our way of life comes in two equal halves. Yet treating the far right and Islamist terror as two sides of the same coin defies all the realities of who is in custody, who is in the graveyard and what makes up 75 per cent of the terror caseload. The equity obsession seems designed to comfort the sensibilities of a progressive audience rather than respond to what the data says. Islamist extremism is by some margin the biggest terrorist threat in this country. Sunak could, and should, have been much clearer on this point, about the extremism that has rocketed levels of antisemitic hate and infiltrated both pro-Palestinian marches and our electoral process. Seeking to leaven these uncomfortable facts with false equivalence is dangerous.

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Terrorism charges laid against man accused in Edmonton City Hall attack

Bezhani Sarvar muslim terrorist

Mounties announced terrorism charges Monday against a man accused of firing a gun and igniting a Molotov cocktail at Edmonton City Hall in January.

Bezhani Sarvar, who is 28, is charged with counselling commission of a terrorism offence and possession of property for terrorist purposes, said the RCMP Federal Policing Integrated National Security Enforcement Team.

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Groups ‘undermining’ British values to be guilty of extremism

Ministers are to broaden the government’s definition of extremism as part of a crackdown on people and groups “undermining” Britain’s institutions and values.

Rishi Sunak has asked Michael Gove, the levelling up secretary, to update the government’s definition of extremism, which was first set out more than a decade ago. It defines extremism as “vocal or active opposition to fundamental British values” and is seen by the government as no longer being fit for purpose.

A new definition, which is still being finalised, is expected to cover those whose actions more broadly “undermine” the country’s institutions or values.

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Britain Again Has a Choice: Civilization or Savagery

Just as the Brits chose to fight Hitler, so it must choose to fight his heirs.

If anyone had doubts as to the seriousness of the threat to the West and its heritage of political freedom, what happened this last week in the “Mother of Parliaments” should be enough to dispel them.

When Pim Fortuyn was assassinated two decades ago in Holland, largely because of his opposition to multiculturalism, most shrugged it off as unimportant. When Islamists went on a rampage of murder after a Parisian satirical magazine published a satirical cartoon that offended many Muslims’ sensibility, that seemed like an isolated incident and why stir up trouble anyway? We wrote off concerns about radical political Islamism as racist, xenophobic, whatever, when they spawned political reactions in Switzerland, Sweden, and Hungary.


Muslims represent about 6.7% of the population in England. In Canada about 4.7%. Both figures are based on 2021 census data.

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Jihadists execute about 170 people in Burkina Faso village attacks, official says

About 170 people were “executed” in attacks on three villages in northern Burkina Faso a week ago, a regional prosecutor has said, as jihadist violence flares in the junta-ruled country.

On that same day, 25 February, separate attacks on a mosque in eastern Burkina and a Catholic church in the north left dozens more dead.

Aly Benjamin Coulibaly said he had received reports of the attacks on the villages of Komsilga, Nodin and Soroe in Yatenga province, with a provisional toll of “around 170 people executed”.

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Jewish man stabbed in Zurich in suspected antisemitic attack

An Orthodox Jewish man was stabbed in a suspected antisemitic hate crime in the Selnau area of Zurich, Switzerland shortly after Shabbat ended on Saturday evening, according to the Zurich canton police.

A 15-year-old Swiss assailant stabbed a 50-year-old Orthodox Jew, critically wounding him. The wounded man was hospitalized, and the assailant was arrested at the scene of the alleged crime. Police had come to the scene after initial reports that there was an argument between several people.

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WARMINGTON: Pro-Hamas protesters shut down Trudeau-Meloni gala, target synagogue

The loud protesters who chanted “there is only one solution, intifada revolution” — and even attempted to injure a federal cabinet minister — at Toronto’s Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO) Saturday night must feel like they’re in charge.

Just like that, there would be no gala dinner for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his Italian counterpart, Giorgia Meloni, inside the art gallery. Outside, cabinet minister Ahmed Hussen, who represents a Toronto riding, had something thrown at him twice by Pro-Hamas protesters as he unsuccessfully attempted to enter.


They eat their own, at roughly the 18 second mark one of the protesters lobs something at Hussen’s head.

It’s evident the TPS have been told “hands off” and will only pursue Hamas miscreants if a significant public outcry occurs.

I doubt tossing garbage at Hussen qualifies for investigation. Some crimes are best left unsolved.

Meanwhile in Thornhill.

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Dossier reveals hate-filled rants by preachers in Britain’s mosques

The Charity Commission is examining a fresh series of concerns about “utterly repugnant” sermons in British mosques, The Telegraph has learned.

The sermons were given in the weeks and months following Hamas’ invasion of southern Israel on October 7, 2023.

It comes after the Prime Minister warned about a “shocking increase” in extremism as he urged the public to “face down the extremists who would tear us apart”.

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Will Tower Hamlets follow Rochdale? Local politicians are enflaming racial tensions

The Palestinians flags come in clusters. They may dominate entire streets, hanging high on lampposts out of the reach of a stepladder should anyone be tempted to take them down. Or they gather outside shops, communal buildings and particularly around schools. Come to Tower Hamlets and you’ll soon understand the swirling mess of Britain’s politics. It is here, not Rochdale, that a community has been renamed “Little Palestine”.

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The long campaign to brand Britain Islamophobic has distorted politics

Like the protests against The Satanic Verses 35 years ago, today’s rolling anti-Israel demonstrations will come to be seen as a staging post in British politics. The late 1980s was when the public first noticed political Islam in Britain. The past few months were when they noticed that the politics of Islam has changed the way we are governed forever.

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