Posted on 05/08/2007 4:58:57 AM PDT by all4one
These Muzzies (radical militant terrorists) are a serious global threat.
The suspects were described as “Islamic radicals” by Greg Reinert, a spokesman for the United States Attorney’s Office. A law enforcement source told FOX News that all of the suspects are recent converts and were not born Muslims.
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,270601,00.html
Here we go - Bosnian Muslim was St. Lake City shooter:
http://sweetness-light.com/archive/yes-the-salt-laker-shooter-was-a-bosnian-muslim
Oh that one! Yes, that was St. Lake.
There was a mall incident in NY State or Pennsylvania too.
yes, bump
For the cubicle bound - are you serious? Did CNN say it was not terror related???
Oh, I’m sure. But NO One should be able to do such things and not be considered to be aiding and abetting.
Terror training camps in the Poconos, none in Iraq!
Thanks for the ping; I think you might be interested in my post at #198
dare i speculate on how many were named “muhammad?”
Wasn't that kid who shot up the mall in Salt Lake City an ethnic Albanian? And a Muslim?
Of course that was not a terrorist act. I repeat; that was not a terrorist attack. /s
No ties to any international terror groups, according to CBS News. It was homegrown.
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/05/08/terror/main2773084.shtml
“Some of the would-be attackers have been illegally in the United States, while others are illegal immigrants, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office.”
And the difference would be........(sarcasm not directed at you, but at the world).
Hey youse.
I’m hoping someone captures the presser or at least fmails me the link.
We are all happy and safe just ask the liberal Dems that live in Utopia and are smarter than we are.
Get outta here. You’re serious?
Gotta run out for a gross of duct tape.
Hi HC
here we all are again...
:)
Oh, that's right. He was Bosnian Muslim not Albanian Muslim.
So there's no possible dots to connect. My bad for thinking that any shoot 'em ups in America are anything but random acts. /s
“There are no reliable statistics on religion in this country, which still fiercely separates religion from politics. It is generally thought that the majority of Albanians are Muslim,..”
http://www.northjersey.com/main.php?qstr=eXJpcnk3ZjcxN2Y3dnFlZUVFeXkz
Fort Dix speeds up relocation of Kosovo refugees
refugees and guardsman
The pace of resettlement has picked up, with 100 refugees slated to leave per day
June 6, 1999
Web posted at: 7:56 p.m. EDT (2356 GMT)
From Reporter Deborah Feyerick
FORT DIX, New Jersey (CNN) — The sounds of Islamic calls to prayer echo across Fort Dix, temporary host to thousands of ethnic Albanians who fled war-ravaged Kosovo. But the U.S. Army base will soon play final taps for the refugee resettlement program that should end this month.
“I feel like I’m in a paradise,” one Kosovar explained, as she described the base that has been a haven for about 4,000 refugees.
With nationwide settlement efforts in full swing, the military has no plans to bring other refugees to the makeshift village.
So far, 500 Kosovars have been relocated; about 100 are scheduled to leave daily. All the refugees should know by mid-June where they will be going, officials said.
“This was always intended to be a temporary facility,” said Michael Kharfen, spokesman for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
After arriving at Fort Dix from camps in Macedonia, the refugees received medical checkups, security clearances and U.S. government documents.
Kosovars could become U.S. citizens
doctor & patient
The Kosovo refugees received medical checkups, security clearances and U.S. documents at Fort Dix
“We have a lot of work to here to move refugees out to various communities,” said Human Services Secretary Donna Shalala.
“The last time anything like this (resettlement program) happened was the big exodus of Vietnamese refugees,” said Kay Bellor of the International Resettlement Community. “The extraordinary thing is we did it. The U.S. has not done something like this in many years, and we did it.”
The United States has pledged to take in 20,000 Kosovo refugees through the summer. The others will go directly to sponsoring agencies or to live with relatives.
Voicing skepticism about the peace deal in Belgrade, some of the Fort Dix refugees worry about what lies ahead. Eventually, however, they must decide whether to stay in the United States or return to Yugoslavia. The United States will make either option possible.
Officially given refugee status, they can receive green cards to work in the United States, and apply for citizenship in one year.
“They’ll be able to stay in the U.S. and become citizens if they want to. If they wish to go home, we will pay their way home,” Shalala said.
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