Posted on 09/12/2014 8:22:22 AM PDT by Sean_Anthony
Young girls (some as young as 11) kept in bondage to a sexual-slave ring run out of Rotherham, UK
It isnt so much that liberals are ignorant. Its just that they know so many things that arent so.Ronald Reagan (1911-2004), 40th POTUS
They were the ones turning a blind eye to the rape. And why were they turning a blind eye? Because of the ethnicity of the rapists. ...The girls were abandoned only partly because so many made a cowardly choice to let a crime go unreported when they could not think of a non-racist way to describe it. They were also abandoned because of the way that these agencies tried to do good.
(Excerpt) Read more at canadafreepress.com ...
It is not just Rotherham, they were traded back and forth all over the UK. It might be 1,400 in Rotherham but how many was it in London or Manchester?
No they did not, they were complicit. They aided and abetted the rape gangs and they all belong in prison.
No more excuses for these people.
AMERICANS BEWARE!!!
Those who maintain that understanding jihad as a holy war constitutes a sort of deviation from the true Islamic tradition are therefore not telling the truth, and history sadly demonstrates that violence has characterized Islam since its origin, and that Mohammed himself systematically.
But the biggest difference between Christianity and Islam concerns the crucial issue of understanding the human person. This is shown by the fact that many Islamic countries have not accepted the declaration of human rights promulgated by the United Nations in 1948, or have done so with the reservation of excluding the norms that conflict with Quranic law which means practically all of them.
In Islamic tradition, in fact, the concept of the equality of all human beings does not exist, nor does, in consequence, the concept of the dignity of every human life. Sharia is founded upon a threefold inequality: between man and woman, between Muslim and non-Muslim, and between freeman and slave.
Christianity and Islam in History by Monsignor Walter Brandmüller, president of the Pontifical Committee for Historical Sciences.
http://catholiceducation.org/articles/history/world/wh0110.html
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