ISIS (and related) "Official" Thread

Nature's Fury

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admittedly i ain't been keeping up with the news because i been too wrapped up in my own life these past few months...can somebody explain isis and whats going on???
 

Digga38

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admittedly i ain't been keeping up with the news because i been too wrapped up in my own life these past few months...can somebody explain isis and whats going on???
either the latest mossad/Cia created group is out of control or the latest mossad/Cia terrorist group is doing exactly what they want them to do so they can destroy the middle east and rezone it as they see fit...


take your pick
 

Kritic

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admittedly i ain't been keeping up with the news because i been too wrapped up in my own life these past few months...can somebody explain isis and whats going on???
as someone who isn't keeping up with the news how do you perceive what's going on?
 

Kritic

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Hang the bankers? Nice source. The entire premise of your article is silly seeing as ISIS poses no threat to Israel but hey continue on.
Algeria to donate World Cup prize money to Gaza
Algeria-World-Cup-team.jpg

The Algerian World Cup team has decided to donate their team salary of $9 million they got after their Round of 16 match with Germany to the people of Gaza, revealed one of the squad’s forwards.


“They need it more than us,” 26-year old Islam Slimani, whose club is Sporting Lisbon.

The manager of the team hasn’t yet officially confirmed Slimani’s statement.

June, 30 the team from Algeria lost 2:1 to the Germans the Round of 16 in a fierce battle.



Germany team needed extra time to beat Algeria and reach the quarter-finals.

Algeria was the only Arab country playing in the Brazil 2014 FIFA World Cup.

The Desert Foxes from North Africa won the respect of the football fans after the team became one of the leaders in Group H. The Algerians pushed through round of 16 for the first time, giving their fans plenty of reasons to cheer and smile.


hangthebankers.com/algeria-to-donate-world-cup-prize-money-to-gaza/

:stopitslime:
 
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☑︎#VoteDemocrat

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The Deep State
Why So Many Jihadists Come From Belgium

  • SEP. 5, 2014, 9:38 AM
  • 2,159
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anti-islam-protest-belgium.jpg

AP / Thierry Charlier

A group wearing T-shirts reading "Stop Islamization" protest during a demonstration in Brussels on Sept. 11, 2007, regarding what some believe as the Islamization of Europe.



As more than a thousand Westerners have joined the conflict in Iraq and Syria, the most per-capita have come from Belgium, according to an analysis by Business Insider.


Between 250 and 400 jihadists in the area are thought to have come from the small European nation, which has a population of 11 million.

Although the trend may seem surprising from a highly developed state known for waffles and EU bureaucracy, a closer look at Belgium's fractured society shows this may have been a long time coming.

Failed Integration
Muslim immigrants are not well integrated into Belgian society despite decades of immigration there from countries like Tunisia, Morocco, Turkey, and Algeria.

While Muslim Belgians make up only 4% to 6% of the country’s population, some politicians say their very presence threatens the Belgian way of life.



belgium-anti-islam.jpg

AP / Thierry Charlier

Members of the Flemish Nationalist Party hold a banner that reads "Europe for Europeans, Islamization out" during a demonstration regarding what some believe as the Islamization of Europe.



Wearing a face veil can earn you a $200 fine in Belgium, and far-right anti-immigrant political groups have achieved healthy levels of support.


Vlaams Belang, a Flemish political party that has advocated deporting Muslim immigrants who don’t renounce their faith, has achieved upward of 20% of the vote in some regional elections.

In 2013, the Minister for Integration and current leader of the Flemish government, Geert Bourgeois, spoke about a report showing that less than a third of young Muslims felt accepted by Flemish society.

"That so many young people are discriminated against or feel rejected means we have a lot of work to do as a society," he said, "but another way of looking at it could be that we think young Muslims do not belong to because they do not want to belong."

With a population so divided, Belgian Muslims tend to live in close-knit communities with seperate social circles. Without integration, radical groups can take root.

Belgium is home to the banned extremist Salafist group, Sharia4Belgium, which remains active underground. The group supports ISIS and is accused of recruiting fighters for the war in Syria.

Abu Hanifa al Belgiki, a former bodyguard for Sharia4Belgium’s leader, recently appeared in an ISIS video in which he says that since taking up arms in Syria, he has “never felt so Muslim.”

Prosecutors — who have charged 46 members of the group — say Sharia4Belgium has links to international jihadi groups and is responsible for a significant proportion of Belgium’s jihadi outflow.



anti-assad-belgium.jpg

AP / Geert Vanden Wijngaert

An anti-Assad protester in Belgium on June 3. Experts told Business Insider that a connection with Syrian suffering, a sense of duty, and the West's inaction could be driving motivations for foreign fighters.



Government Response


In a recent New York Times op-ed, two Belgian experts in Arab studies wrote that few of the Belgian jihadis would qualify as radical Islamists when they left the country, with most being driven by idealism.

“What most have in common, apart from their wish to help fellow believers, is a disillusionment with the West’s attitude toward Muslims,” the scholars note.

The article says the Belgian government has done little to address concerns over unemployment, discrimination, and economic deprivation in the Islamic community.

Dr. Sara Silvestri, an expert in Islamism and international politics at City University London, told Business Insider that in an age of live news, trans-national communication and mixed identities, "it cannot be surprising to find out that people in one country feel attracted to the cause of another."

"This does not mean necessarily that people who decide to go to Syria or Iraq automatically nourish sentiments against their original countries of birth or of residence, though."



rtr3wbpt.jpg

REUTERS

According to two experts, few of the Belgian jihadis would qualify as radical Islamists when they left the country. Authorities worry their experiences in Iraq and Syria will change that.





Silvestri says Western governments face tough balancing acts in combatting potential threats with harsher laws: "Policymakers are stuck in a dilemma whereby if they act in one way they secure the trust of the majority of the population but then run a high risk of alienating for good their Muslim minorities, thus playing into the hands of ISIS."

"On the other hand, if they try to appeal to social cohesion and harmony between communities, they could run up against the growing political competition of right-wing parties, which are very canny in deploying anti-Muslim and anti-immigrant discourse," she said.

Governments in the U.K., the Netherlands, and Australia have sought to combat extremist Islamism by fostering better relations with moderate Islamic leaders, also increasing surveillance levels and canceling passports.

Silvestri warned that some measures may risk stigmatizing communities, describing the cancellation of passports as "a big gift to Islamic State and its claim to be a sovereign state with its own citizens."



son.png

Twitter

"That's my boy" — The message tweeted along with this image (censored) by Khaled Sharrouf, an Australian foreign fighter who joined ISIS. The image is Mr Sharrouf's son, whom he brought with him and is thought to be 7 years old.



Deciding when to take action is also a challenge "when the line between what constitutes evidence of a crime and mere suspicion or assumption is very thin," she said.


"Rather than becoming concerned with one particular country as the generator of radical jihadist, we ought to be preoccupied more for the protraction of the conflict itself in Syria and for the way in which this has shaken Muslim feelings globally," Silvestri said. "If the international community had coalesced and done something about it some years ago, we would not be in this situation now."

For more details on how ISIS is recruiting Western fighters, you can read our full report on Western jihadis here.



Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/belgian-fighters-in-iraqsyria--isis-2014-9#ixzz3CSEkNcsw
 
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While Muslim Belgians make up only 4% to 6% of the country’s population, some politicians say their very presence threatens the Belgian way of life.

:heh: the nerve of these belgians on so many levels

Do they forget how their forefathers acted in Congo when they were literally threatening the Congolese ppl with their "way of life"
Acting as if their divided society is above others, when the belgians themselves are 1 well-financed coup away from a sectarian conflict just like Iraq
 
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