Keyword: christianidentity
-
The Wall Street Journal The most credible aspect of Mr. Reed's book is that it was not written with Whitewater in mind. He wrote the book Compromised Compromised is the true story of the Faustian pact that Bill Clinton made as governor of Arkansas. It tells how his unbridled political ambitions and his pledge to create jobs for Arkansas led him to compromise his ideals in exchange for support for his presidential candidacy in 1992. By selling out politically to the Reagan-Bush administration, by giving the Agency free rein to operate a secret training base near the tiny western Arkansas...
-
Errol Southers: "Groups that claim to be extremely anti-government."
-
Here is video of President Barack Obama's nominee to head the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) - Errol Southers - saying he worries about the danger posed by groups that are "Christian-Identity Oriented." He does not explain what he means by that. Southers also mentions groups that are "anti-Government," "anti-abortionist," and with a "survivalist mentality." He never mentions any concern for groups or individuals that have a strong "Muslim-identity," even though virtually ever terror attack - or attempted terror attack - has been carried out by Islamic Jihadists. And President Obama thinks someone like Southers is going to make us safer....
-
Vandalism at a Jewish chapel in a Sylmar cemetery is being investigated as a hate crime, a sheriff's sergeant said. A groundskeeper contacted authorities at about 9 a.m. Saturday after discovering the vandalism at Glen Haven Memorial Park and Mortuary at 13017 Lopez Canyon Road in Sylmar, said Los Angeles County sheriff's Sgt. Don Bee. A menorah in the chapel of the Sholom Memorial Park section of the cemetery was smashed, pews were knocked over, and several caskets were pulled from a storage area and vandalized. A casket containing a body was not disturbed, police said. The vandals also emptied...
-
MOSCOW. June 5 (Interfax) - Understandings reached by the European Union Troika, Russia, the United States and China rule out the use of force against Iran, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said in an interview with Nezavisimaya Gazeta published on Monday. Lavrov was asked whether any of the six countries at the Vienna meeting of foreign ministers had spoken of the possibility of using force against Iran, to which he answered: "Nobody did. Moreover, I can say that the understandings reached by the six nations rule out the use of force in any case."
-
<p>Svyatoslav_Igorevich has taken a keen interest in inducing Stormfront members to register at Free Republic. Free Republic is approximately five times as large as Stormfront.</p>
<p>"How do we penetrate Free Republic?"</p>
<p>Over the past few years, Free Republic has gotten less and less interesting. However, many posters and readers at Free Republic are four square behind stopping the illegal invasion from Mexico. This is one topic on which you will be allowed to post at Free Republic.</p>
-
by Jayna Davis Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols were not the lone conspirators in the Oklahoma City bombing -- the attack that killed nearly 170 people in a few short seconds. They were part of a greater scheme, one that involved Islamic terrorists and at least one provable link to Iraq. That's the conclusion -- backed up by stunning evidence Written by the relentless reporter who first broke the story of the Mideast connection, is filled with new revelations about the case and explains in full detail the complete, and so far untold, story behind the failed investigation: why the...
-
DAYTON TOWNSHIP, Mich. (AP) ? Fire burned the rural home of a man who barricaded himself inside during a deadly police standoff, but authorities were unable to find him when they searched the rubble, Michigan State Police said. Two hours after the Tuesday afternoon fire, officials found a backpack filled with food and ammunition about three-quarters of a mile away, said Tracy Pardo, a state police communications officer. The wife of the barricaded man, Scott Allen Woodring, 40, identified the backpack as her husband's, Pardo told the Detroit Free Press for a Wednesday story. State police said Woodring was believed...
-
Weblog: Is Eric Rudolph a Christian Terrorist? Compiled by Ted Olsen | posted 06/03/2003 Was alleged Olympics bomber motivated by religion? Is Eric Rudolph a Christian terrorist? The Washington Post asks the question in yesterday's edition. "The question is not just whether Rudolph is a terrorist, or whether he considers himself a Christian," writes Alan Cooperman. "It is whether he planted bombs at the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta, two abortion clinics, and a gay nightclub to advance a religious ideology—and how numerous, organized and violent others who share that ideology may be." Syracuse University political science professor Michael Barkun,...
-
<p>Eric Rudolph, suspected of bombing the 1996 Atlanta Olympics, two abortion clinics and a gay nightclub, is under arrest. "Rudolph was captured after police in western North Carolina spotted a man digging in a trash bin in the small town of Murphy" early Saturday morning, the Associated Press reports. He must be one of those "freegans."</p>
-
To: Friends From: Gary L. Bauer President American Values Date: Monday, June 2, 2003 Christian Terrorism? It took the Washington Post less than 48 hours to link accused Olympic bomber Eric Rudolph with Christianity. This is the same Washington Post that downplays the growing evidence that the Washington, D.C. snipers were driven by their Islamic faith. An article on page 3 of the Post this morning, under the headline, "Is Terrorism Tied to Christian Sect?" heavily quotes Professor James Aho of Idaho State University. Professor Aho tells the Post that if Christians take umbrage at the juxtaposition of the words...
-
The Village Voice question is almost always answered exclusively by liberals (“How can you even ask if Bush is as bad as Hitler?! The question should be asked the other way around!!”) but I thought some conservatives might like to give their views on this question. Would you call Eric Rudolph a 'Christian terrorist'?
-
THE IDENTITY MOVEMENT What has come to be known as the Identity Movement was previously termed Anglo-Israelism or British-Israelism. It is composed of those individuals and groups who identify the present day Anglo-Saxon people as the direct biological descendants of the ancient Israelites and, as such, God's chosen people, the heirs of all God's promises to Abraham and his progeny. The ten lost tribes of Israel, the former northern kingdom, are sharply distinguished from Judah, the ancient southern kingdom centered upon Jerusalem, which consisted of the tribes of Judah and Benjamin and some Levites. In like measure, modern Anglo-Saxons (Israelites)...
|
|
|