Thanks for the scoop on the video.
Seems as though they like our movies!!
BBL, keep me posted but ping in FRmail because today is the last race of the season and things get lost in my comment section on race day!! Need a screen name for Nascar and one for TM. LOL
Snip: The dominance of Muslims from other countries in profitable branches of the economy like market trading is a reality, Mr. Ilyukhin warned. He added that the government is to blame for allowing this mass migration to happen, and predicted that ethnic Russians could riot against migrants on a scale rivaling the current disorders in France.
Al-Khansaa - for female jihadists
Snip: Al-Qaida even has an on-line "webzine" for female would-be jihadists, called "al-Khansaa." It includes advice on how they should raise their children to be future jihadists. It also discusses female holy fighters -- "mujahidat" -- in Islamic law. It is purported to be written by women and meant to target women specifically.
An editorial that appeared in that publication last year included the following: "We will stand covered in our veils and robes, with our weapons in our hands and our children in our arms." This webzine is linked to a new series of militant Islamist web sites emerging from Saudi Arabia, a supposed ally of the United States.
Will French riots breed Islamic jihadism?
Snip: She warned of a dangerous cocktail of tendencies in today's suburbs. The growing insularity of immigrant communities, resentment against society, and the opportunity for recruitment Islamists may see in the riots have created, "an ideal terrain for terrorism", she said.
Islamic propaganda from Kuwait
Snip: "Many see Islam increasingly as a monolith and cultural and security threat. These conservative think tanks are often funded by wealthy conservative and pro-Israeli donors and foundations."
Mexico nabs purported head of Juarez cartel
Snip: Ricardo Garcia Urquiza, captured in a shopping mall in Mexico City on Nov. 11, is accused of overseeing an organization that moved up to 5 tons of Colombian cocaine a month into Mexico and on to the United States.
Attorney General Daniel Cabeza de Vaca said that since late 2004, Garcia Urquiza was responsible for as much as 20 percent of the narcotics that reached America's streets from Mexico.