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Friday, January 02, 2009

Have you noticed the amazing similarity between "Islamic activists" and the KKK?

The boys at Powerline said: "...it looks like a Ku Klux Klan rally put on by children." And they are absolutely right!



Granted, the KKK hoods had a better point, but the effect is the same. Fanatical hatred hidden behind the anonymity afforded by hoods … or face masks ... are the uniform of choice for Islamofascists.



It takes little imagination to picture these children as American children growing up in the South after Reconstruction and the early 1900s , learning hate at their parents’ knee. But even the KKK Kids were not weaned to hate so viciously that they sought to kill Blacks by detonating themselves in suicide attacks. That is a hatred that is beyond understanding by civilized society.

And if you think that this hatred is confined to the Arab world, see what Islam in India thinks.



Or Indonesia



What do the Middle East, India and Indonesia have in common? Not culture, not language, not the Israeli/Palestinian conflict. It is Islam. The Religion of Peace.

Even a stupid mule will learn if you hit it between the eyes with a two-by-four.
You have seen the quizzes asking are you smarter than a fourth grader? Let’s ask, are you smarter than a mule?

H/T Powerline.

Jimmy Akin comments



See this man?

He's preaching a message of violence and hate.

He's also doing something else: He's wearing a mask.

This kind of thing is socially acceptable in many Muslim circles, as evidenced by the fact that it's quite common. It happens all the time. Whenever there are protests in the Muslim world (or even Muslims protesting elsewhere; this gentleman was protesting in London) people wearing masks show up preaching messages of violence and hate.

Can you think of anyone else who would wear masks while preaching messages of violence and hate?

That's right. The Ku Klux Klan.

They did this kind of thing all the time: Go out in public and preach a message of violence and hate while wearing masks.

And eighty years ago that kind of thing was socially acceptable in many American circles (and not just in the South).









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