Posted on 05/10/2015 5:31:31 AM PDT by SJackson
Pam GellerI was surprised and pleased, upon scouring the Internet, to find that Pamela Geller, the anti-Islam activist, is a looker. I would have supposed, listening to the many male commenters who have been denouncing her, that she must be partly bald, with most of her remaining hair sprouting from her nose and chin, and with the most repulsive, irregular facial features. But no, she really is attractive, and I say this objectively. My appraisal has nothing to do with the fact that I am considerably older than she is, and am finding it tougher to get dates. And yet hearken to what people, even some on Fox News, are saying about her.
Geraldo Rivera: She most reminds me of the Aryan Nation, KKK, racists .I feel like taking a shower.
And high time, Geraldo.
Bill OReilly: Its always cause and effect. This is what happens when you light the fuse; you get violence.
Donald Trump: Nobody would fight harder for free speech than me but why taunt, over and over again ?
The Donald gave voice, almost word for word, to the rallying cry of many of Ms. Gellers critics, which begins I believe in freedom of speech, but Most of the people who say this are liberals, but obviously not all.
In case you havent been following the Geller brouhaha, it began on Sunday, May 3, when two Islamic radicals attempted to raid a conclave she had organized in Garland, Texas. Outraged by the precepts of Sharia Law that conflict with American values, and dismayed by those Americans who seem inclined to knuckle under to the radicals, so as not to offend them and make them dislike us even more, she defiantly held an art contest in which she invited participants to draw cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad. Drawing images of Muhammad, cartoons or otherwise, is one of the big No-nos in the Muslim world. Ask Charlie Hebdo.
The two miscreants, armed with high-powered firearms, who attempted to crash the art contest and murder the participants, fortunately were shot and killed by a policeman before they could carry out their mission.
Because Pam Geller is not, despite her agreeable visage, the right kind of American heroine, she became fair game for the media. We were treated to many variations on the theme She asked for it, which as Sean Hannity points out is usually reserved for rape victims wearing revealing garments. As one TV personality fatuously observed: It there hadnt been a cartoon contest, those gunmen wouldnt have gone to Garland.
So lets finally just chuck the First Amendment. Too dangerous.
All this craven, gutless, sniveling blame-mongering summoned up for me a recollection of an experience I had nearly fifty years ago, during my days as a journalist. I was in Columbus, Georgia, home to the Royal Crown Cola Co., researching an article about the principal soft-drink producers. I went from office to office, interviewing some of the top executives of the company.
As you may recall, Georgia a half-century ago was not exactly a bastion of civil rights. Although it was off the point, I got to chatting at lunch with one executive about the civil-rights movement, which was dominating the public debate of the day.
He was a well-spoken, buttoned-down type, by no means a Georgia redneck. But he was not a civil-rights enthusiast either. The conversation turned to Viola Liuzzo, a white civil-rights activist from Michigan, who had been murdered in Alabama by the Klan the year before while riding in her car with a young black man. The black man shared her fate.
The executive said he deplored those murders as much as the next man, but that she should have realized that riding in a car with a black man in that part of America could have deadly consequences.
If the pious, pompous fools who are denouncing Pam Geller these days could have sat in on that conversation with the Royal Crown executive, they would have howled bloody murder. How could anyone be so insensitive? I hear them cry. Who has the effrontery to say that Viola Liuzzo, by exercising her freedom of expression, and her right to travel freely throughout the United States, had it coming?
Rivera, OReilly, Trump and the rest of you it is time for a refresher course in civics.
Geraldo, O’Reilly & Trump certainly have one thing in common, they are notorious WINDBAGS!
Neither am I, but as Pam Geller has pointed out, all you have to do to be a target is not be Moslem. She really is making a statement about free speech, not about Islam per se.
Oh wait, never mind.
It seems to me that most of Geller’s critics are Catholics who should be suspected of seeing the outlawing of insults to Islam as an opportunity to outlaw insulting Catholicism.
Well, that’s an interesting perspective.
I think it’s anti jew.
Lots of hard core libs hate Jews and hate religion.
The fact that muslims are cutting off the heads of christians and jews is fine with them.
They want to see the demise of both.
They fail to see good and evil.
They see Islam as the underdog.
The reason they support islam is because it’s a vehicle to slap christians and jews that are the majority in their home country. They don’t see Islam as a threat because it’s not a majority, yet.
Those guys on December 16, 1773. were egging the King on by throwing all that tea in the bay - they were asking for it!
To all those who have not seen this, and do not support abridging the 1st Amendment to protect innocent mulsims from becoming (more) enraged ... who are not afraid of their muslim betters and masters to be ...
Why We Are Afraid, A 1400 Year Secret
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t_Qpy0mXg8Y
I think a lot of libs identify with muslims in their hatred of christianity.
They see themselves and muslims as victims of Christianity.
They see Christianity as a powerful bully that needs a beat down. They blame it for all the world’s problems.
They don’t see any good in it.
“Hopefully he’ll allow it to stay on his website. “
Yeah, because O”Gasbag might cut off his gig on “The Factor.”
I saw that photo fifty years ago! Soon it became known that the MSM, in reporting it, used a VERY YOUNG high School photo of her. She was forty when she was murdered.
BTTT
Thank you!
This is what I posted right after O’Reilly dared to say what he said.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/3287490/posts
I'll save you a click.
No, Mr. O’Reilly, the issue is whether a religion, cult, or out of control government should be given the power to dictate whether We the People are allowed to mock the said, religion, cult or out of control government without being sentenced to death.
That sir, is Freedom.
The enemedia couldn’t care less about free speech. Nothing new.
"...don't you think the joker laughs at you?"
Or just bruto-African
Straw-man alert. Double straw-man, because the original response was a straw man, as is the premise of the whole thread.
Viola Liuzzo wasn't Pam Geller, and Pam Geller isn't leading a civil-rights movement against an oppressive Islamic state. To draw parallels between completely different women working on different political projects is a bad premise, compounded in this case by the introduction of straw men constructed as flashy ad-homs.
Just leave it alone and stick to the subject. This isn't Jim Crow Mississippi we're talking about.
FWIW, I agree with Pam Geller. A lot.
To steal a line from Mark Steyn, "No you wouldn't."
Then let's add for emphasis, "Not now! Not ever!"
You're all hair an no brains, eh Donnie?
Great column on Bernie’s part.
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