Posted on 12/31/2014 7:46:16 AM PST by Jan_Sobieski
The Department of Veteran's Affairs announced last March that the centenary of the Battle of Broken Hill on 1 January 2014 would not be formally commemorated by the Australian Government.
That decision will now be seen in hindsight by many as a wise one indeed following the fallout resulting from the horrific Martin Place siege perpetrated by self-styled Islamic cleric Man Haron Monis just two weeks ago - that claimed his life and those of two innocent civilians...
(Excerpt) Read more at israelnationalnews.com ...
American Islamic Terror started on February 28, 1989.
Global islamic terror started when mohamed (p!$$ be all over him) drew his first fetid breath.
The Saudis deal with terrorists very quickly and those terrorists DON'T repeat their crime.
Osama bin Laden was tossed out of Saudi Arabia even though his family was wealthy and important. The KSA had no time for his brand of terrorism.
He had to go to other countries and bribe himself into their country.
Every Friday morning the Saudis mete out justice in their local town squares. All are invited.
We COULD have witnessed a head-chopping but...we declined. The guy had murdered.
No one else is to blame but the people who commit those horrific crimes/sins. There is no such thing as "the devil made me do it." We all do indeed have free will.
If someone is threatened by terrorism against his family, then that poor soul is really between a rock and a hard place.
That position doesn't USUALLY come out of the blue. There are always warning signs.
Mohammed himself was a terrorist, brigand, and desert pirate. Everyone who aspires to him and his religion is transformed into his likeness...;-(
Agreed! Piss be upon him and his moon god!
Broken Hill, not the most populous spot in NSW! Waaay back in the day before I acquired half-good sense, met a gal from Broken Hill. Mention of the place at the end of the year brings her to mind and what was and what might have been.
Thanks to their prophet, they knew in advance about the persecution moslems were going to face, and started protesting.
There are striking parallels between the Broken Hill massacre a century ago, and the recent Martin Place siege.
In both cases the media puzzled over the motivation of the attackers. The Barrier Miner wrote in 1915 “The question has been asked over and over again, and by many people since yesterday morning’s tragic occurrence, as to the motive of the men in attacking the picnic train with its load of women and children...”
The attackers in both cases had resided for many years in Australia and were well-known in their communities.
Both attacks were individual acts; although the 1915 attack by two individuals working together, they were not part of a larger network of jihadis, but were merely combining their individual efforts.
In both cases the attackers subscribed to the dogmas of jihad in the path of Allah, and martyrdom in Holy War.
In both cases, attackers were mobilized in response to a global call to jihad: in 1915 issued by the Ottoman Caliphate; in 2014 issued by Islamic State.
Both global calls to jihad had specifically invited Muslims around the world to commit individual acts of jihad by killing infidels (see here on the Islamic State’s call to Muslims to run over infidels with their cars).
In both cases the perpetrators had been experiencing difficulties with the law: in the 1915 massacre, Mullah Abdullah had been convicted days before for slaughtering sheep on an unlicensed premises. In the Martin Place siege, Hojat al-Islam Muhammad Hassan Manteqi (AKA ‘Sheikh’ Man Haron Monis) was facing criminal charges as an accessory to the murder of his ex-wife and had a history of convictions for serious offenses.
There were also similarities in the way the wider community and the media responded:
In both cases the media took pains to point out that the majority of people in the Muslim community abhorred the killings, and reported that no-one from the Muslim community wished to claim the bodies (see here and here).
In both cases there were no reprisals against Muslims.
However the Broken Hill German Club was burned down in 1915; the killings were considered to be linked to the World War I conflict as a whole, rather than as manifestations of individual jihadism.
http://www.meforum.org/4947/one-hundred-years-of-jihad-in-australia
The key is, insufficient response from the rest of society, or more accurately, THE society failed to act appropriately against the anti-social group.
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