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Judge Goes Soft on Saudi Who Kept Housekeeper "Virtual Slave"
Amerisrael ^
Posted on 02/26/2011 9:45:32 AM PST by Amerisrael
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To: Amerisrael
How about we give his sex slave a high powered weapon, and one clear shot at the perp.?
2
posted on
02/26/2011 9:50:46 AM PST
by
Northern Yankee
(Where Liberty dwells, there is my Country. - Benjamin Franklin)
To: Amerisrael
3
posted on
02/26/2011 9:51:12 AM PST
by
Lazlo in PA
(Now living in a newly minted Red State.)
To: Amerisrael
Ummm, doesn’t the Saudi king have more immediate, more pressing problems to worry about? Like, oh, I don’t know, a nasty little “revolution” brewing on his own turf?
To: Amerisrael
al-Turki's incarceration is perceived as unjust in his home country ...where slavery and sexual abuse of housekeepers is regarded as normal behavior sanctioned by the queer'ann.
5
posted on
02/26/2011 9:53:59 AM PST
by
null and void
(We are now in day 767 of our national holiday from reality. - It's almost 3 AM)
To: Amerisrael
Chief Deputy District Attorney Ann Tomsic argued that the longer sentence was appropriate because it punishes al-Turki for the years of abuse on the victim, who was in her early 20s and didn't speak English or know the laws and customs of the U.S.Can't wait for the diversity card to be played and the bring on Sharia Law chants. Whatever happened with the woman? Is she still in America or was she sent back and promptly stoned?
6
posted on
02/26/2011 9:54:33 AM PST
by
bgill
(Kenyan Parliament - how could a man born in Kenya who is not even a native American become the POTUS)
To: Amerisrael
I wonder how much blood money was slipped to the judge.
7
posted on
02/26/2011 9:55:11 AM PST
by
soupbone1
To: Impala64ssa
When the revolution begins here, we will be playing cowboys and muslims. No closed season, no bag limit.
8
posted on
02/26/2011 9:55:53 AM PST
by
Concho
(-)
To: Amerisrael
So American law, is now under the influence of Foreign Nations, and any national can now ask for his countries way of life to be honored and respected here under their own laws???
sigh, I would call that a fail, and as such, we do not have to fight islamic overthrow in our court system, it is already upheld.
Wonder when the stoning and honor killing free passes are to be given out.
EL
9
posted on
02/26/2011 9:56:17 AM PST
by
Eureka_Lead
(No political party has ever become a dictatorship when the citizens have firearms - Stay Vigilant)
To: Northern Yankee
Our judicial system is becomming a Sharia joke.
10
posted on
02/26/2011 9:56:44 AM PST
by
SeaWolf
(Orwell must have foreseen the 21st Century US Congress when he wrote 1984)
To: Amerisrael
11
posted on
02/26/2011 9:57:30 AM PST
by
junta
(S.C.U.M. = State Controlled Unreliable Media)
To: Amerisrael
Is this guy a U.S citizen? If not, he should be deported.
If he is a citizen, then the issue isn't so much about punishment as protecting society from his predispositions. That's what the judge should be concerned about - the safety of innocent people, not how much punishment is good/bad punishment.
12
posted on
02/26/2011 10:00:14 AM PST
by
Jim W N
To: Amerisrael
This is outrageous. Here is a guy simply expressing his rich Islamic culture like he would do back home and he gets punished by the racist American judicial system. What ever happened to multi-culturalism? Sheesh.
13
posted on
02/26/2011 10:00:24 AM PST
by
garjog
To: Amerisrael
An Arab national in a Colorado prison is in for trouble. You haven’t heard the last of this story.
To: junta
Know about the “Kos”, but never watched “Avatar”
To: Amerisrael
A leading Saudi government cleric and author of the country's religious curriculum believes Islam advocates slavery. "Slavery is a part of Islam," says Sheik Saleh Al-Fawzan, according to the independent Saudi Information Agency, or SIA. In a lecture recorded on tape by SIA, the sheik said, "Slavery is part of jihad, and jihad will remain as long there is Islam." His religious books are used to teach 5 million Saudi students, both within the country and abroad, including the United States. How can so many give them a free pass? We've been infiltrated by this sick cult for decades though Saudi money.
16
posted on
02/26/2011 10:17:55 AM PST
by
varyouga
("The hardest thing in the world to understand is the income tax." - Albert Einstein)
To: varyouga
We've been infiltrated by this sick cult for decades though Saudi money. And a huge amount of that money is because our government prevents us from drilling our own oil.
Put noose around neck...jump from high place...
17
posted on
02/26/2011 10:23:49 AM PST
by
Aria
( "If we ever forget that we're one nation under God, then we will be a nation gone under.")
To: Aria
“And a huge amount of that money is because our government prevents us from drilling our own oil.”
Ditto!
To: Amerisrael
What other arab/muslim perversions are we supposed to accept from this primitive culture? This is disgusting.
19
posted on
02/26/2011 10:34:50 AM PST
by
Enten
(How's that hopey changey thing working out for you?)
To: Amerisrael
"Al-Turki insists he is innocent and a victim of anti-Muslim sentiment. " That alone should lead to an automatic doubling of the sentence.
Oh, and fire the judge for caving in to Saudi pressure. (Or was it a call from the White House?)
20
posted on
02/26/2011 10:36:54 AM PST
by
Moltke
(Always retaliate first.)
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