‘Death to Jews’: Inside the Home of 2 SJP Leaders at George Mason University, Police Find Guns, Ammo, and Terrorist Flags
Gee. They seem nice. @fancypants_s https://t.co/7Godu3va8o
— Auntie Polly (@auntie_polly) December 11, 2024
h/t Auntie Polly
‘Death to Jews’: Inside the Home of 2 SJP Leaders at George Mason University, Police Find Guns, Ammo, and Terrorist Flags
Gee. They seem nice. @fancypants_s https://t.co/7Godu3va8o
— Auntie Polly (@auntie_polly) December 11, 2024
h/t Auntie Polly

The British jihadists who could be freed from Syrian camps
Dozens of Isis fighters, brides and children from Britain are still living in the squalid camps and prisons of northeast Syria.
The rebels’ successful march on Damascus has led experts to warn of the security risk to the UK if the remaining adult Britons escape or are freed in the resulting chaos.
Sir Alex Younger, the former head of MI6, said the end of Bashar al-Assad’s regime risked a “serious spike” from the threat of “a very large number” of newly freed Isis prisoners. Experts have also warned that the conditions in the prisons and camps of Kurdish-controlled northeast Syria make them a breeding ground for radicalisation.

After cheers rang out in Damascus this weekend at the toppling of brutal Syrian dictator Bashar Assad, there came another sound: that of countries slamming the door on Syrian refugees. On Monday, 15 European nations declared that they would no longer grant them asylum. Some, like Austria, are discussing deportations; German politicians are suggesting that the country charter aircraft and offer financial incentives for people to leave. The United Kingdom has similarly put on a pause on asylum claims from Syrian refugees.

OTTAWA – Immigration Minister Marc Miller says Canada will continue evaluating the asylum claims of people who have fled Syria, even as some European countries are pausing those claims after the Assad regime’s fall.
Miller says Canada’s asylum system isn’t seeing the same pressure as European counterparts such as Germany and Austria.
Syrian President Bashar Assad fled the country on Sunday, and is reportedly in Russia, after opposition forces seized the capital Damascus.

First Uyghur refugee arrives under Canadian effort to resettle persecuted minority groups from China
A Uyghur woman is the first refugee from China’s persecuted minority groups to arrive in Canada under a federal government resettlement effort launched in 2023.
The Canadian government has committed to bring in Uyghurs and other Turkic minorities who have fled repression in China. This follows from a February, 2023, vote in the House of Commons where MPs voted unanimously in favour of Motion M-62, which called on Ottawa to accept 10,000 Uyghurs and other minorities, and a February, 2021, vote where MPs also backed a declaration that Beijing’s treatment of these people amounted to genocide.
I bet our China class told the boys “here’s a sure fire way to suck up to Xi”. So Justin said to Xi “You got a Muslim problem? Ship em’ to Canada we ALWAYS need more stabby Muslims.”
h/t Patti Jo

Shamima Begum’s hopes of returning to the UK have been “bolstered” by the fall of Bashar al-Assad, her lawyer has told The Telegraph.
Begum, one of three schoolgirls who travelled to Syria in 2015 to join Islamic State, has been languishing in a detention camp in north-eastern Syria for at least five years.
Now aged 25, she has lodged a series of legal claims in the UK courts in an attempt to return but has lost on grounds of national security and the threat posed to the British public.

In Qardaha, in the Alawite lands of Latakia on the Mediterranean, stands the sumptuous and pristine marble mausoleum worthy of an Arab monarch. It is here the founder of the brutal Assad dynasty, Hafez al-Assad, is buried in magnificence.
Assad was not the original family name. Hafez’s grandfather was a powerful character known as Sulayman al-Wahhish—the al-Wahhish meaning the wild beast—for his strength; one of his sons was Ali, another formidable figure, a farmer and leader known for his toughness, he had eleven children; Hafez was his ninth son. His nickname was al-Assad—the Lion—and he adopted that as his family’s name.
Off to the usual start …
Christians in Syria captured by Islamic terrorists. pic.twitter.com/vVVs1hICmH
— RadioGenoa (@RadioGenoa) December 9, 2024
I hope all of Trudeau’s Syrians will return home so they can get their fill of torturing Christians and Kurds.
Councilwoman Tania Fernandes Anderson, who broke the glass ceiling by becoming the first former African illegal alien and Muslim woman to serve on the Boston City Council, now became the first African Muslim illegal alien councilwoman to be arrested for kickbacks.
I’ve been exposing this lying psychotic fraud Boston City Councillor Tania Fernandes Anderson for years. Today she was arrested by the FBI. Here she was in 2022 defending her alleged rapist friend Ricardo Arroyo who was running for DA. “What the fuck do I have to do in this… pic.twitter.com/H6iq7czFNd
— Aidan Kearney (@DoctorTurtleboy) December 6, 2024

Earlier this year, activist and blogger Michael Stürzenberger became the victim of an Islamist attack because of his harsh criticism of Islam. Now, six months later, he has been convicted for incitement to hatred and given a fine by a regional court in Hamburg – also because of his harsh criticism of Islam.

The Oxford Union has a reputation as one of the world’s most prestigious debating societies and is a bastion of free speech.
But it has found itself at the centre of a censorship row after publishing muted footage of a debate on genocide.
Jonathan Sacerdoti, a Jewish journalist and Oxford alumnus, was heckled and abused during a speech opposing a student motion branding Israel an ‘apartheid state responsible for genocide’.
Wow! @fancypants_s https://t.co/TP8gUagJLK
— Auntie Polly (@auntie_polly) December 7, 2024
h/t Auntie Polly

A 60-day ceasefire deal between Israel and the Shiite Muslim terrorist group Hezbollah is now in force after months of a full-scale war between the two sworn enemies. However, it would be delusional to think that this deal will keep the Jewish state safe from an army of genocidal jihadists whose hybrid-guerilla warfare methods inspired fellow Iran proxy, Hamas, to carry out the October 7 massacre. If anything, this temporary truce offers Hezbollah much-needed respite from the pummeling it has received at the hands of the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) since September.

A court case might finally reveal if the Council of American-Islamic Relations has been the recipient of terrorist funding.
The Council of American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) has long been suspected of receiving funding from terrorist groups and terror-supporting countries. Now, a federal magistrate has ruled that it must open its donor files and books on its assets as part of a discovery request in a lawsuit by a former employee.
Surprisingly little news coverage followed America’s first terror attack by an illegal border-crossing immigrant on U.S. soil. On Saturday, 22-year-old Mauritanian Sidi Mohamed Abdallahi was found dead of an apparent hanging suicide in his Cook County, Illinois jail cell. America must learn from this to prevent the next attacks on U.S. soil by border-infiltrating jihadists.
Abdallahi illegally jumped the border from Tijuana to San Diego in March 2023 and was freed by U.S. Border Patrol. Under orders from the Biden-Harris Department of Homeland Security, Border Patrol has released millions of illegal entrants into the United States in the last four years.

The 70th annual session of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, held Nov. 22-25 in Montreal, hit a snag on its first evening when violent activists tried to disrupt the event.
Metropolitan police were unprepared for the organized assault. So was Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who seems to have had no inkling of the possible security risks that a NATO summit in his country might present. No, the Canadian leader wasn’t out to lunch. He was at a Taylor Swift concert in Toronto.
An invitation by a mosque in Germany for girls as young as thirteen to take part in a “preparatory marriage course,” has sparked a huge backlash, with centre-right and right-wing parties demanding an explanation.
The invitation was sent out by a mosque in the western city of Mannheim for an event entitled “Girls’ Evenings in the Mosque.” This is part of a series of seminars whose aim is to prepare “girls and women from the age of 13” for marriage. The flyer includes a quote by 10th-century Islamic scholar Al-Tabarani, according to which: “He who marries has completed half of his faith.”