Techniec
Drugs and Kalashnikovs
Them saudi muslims sure love whipping on black people, wonder what's the islamic c00ns' take on this.
Thats an alleged Saudi Prince & his Black "Servant" heh
Them saudi muslims sure love whipping on black people, wonder what's the islamic c00ns' take on this.
Thats an alleged Saudi Prince & his Black "Servant" heh
muslim emcees---------)Islam, the worst religion
islam
Its a war fakkit. All your thoughts are so bytch. Let them behead nikkas. Its how you put fear into the enemy. Works for a few years.
fukk do you know about war? You wear a crotchless karate gi and get teabagged by suburban cacs from Orange County.Its a war fakkit. All your thoughts are so bytch. Let them behead nikkas. Its how you put fear into the enemy. Works for a few years.
You just sound like a complete moron. These people are in a war for reasons other then religion and your talking about their religion as it pertains to their method of killing. I mean really make some sense fukkboy.fukk do you know about war? You wear a crotchless karate gi and get teabagged by suburban cacs from Orange County.
BEIRUT - Jihadist fighters from the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIS) have executed a man in Syria's Idlib province after accusing him of blasphemy, a monitoring group said Monday. "ISIS executed Ibrahim Qassum, a heating oil vendor, by shooting him in the head... on allegations of blasphemy, two days after their forces arrested him," the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said. ISIS has its roots in the Islamic State of Iraq, Al-Qaeda's Iraqi affiliate, and has been involved in numerous alleged abuses of civilians in Syria. The Observatory said the man was reportedly suffering from mental illness and was arrested by ISIS fighters in the city of Saraqeb, in western Syria, after they accused him of watering down his fuel. "The fighters bought fuel from him and asked him why it was impure. He responded in the colloquial dialect by saying 'How should I know? What am I, the God of fuel?'" the Observatory said. The group said the fighters arrested Qassum, executed him and on Sunday threw his body, with several bullet wounds to the head, in the streets of the town. In June, the Observatory said ISIS had executed a teenager in front of his parents after accusing him of blaspheming against the Prophet Mohammed. The jihadist group has been criticized by many within the Syrian opposition for a string of abuses in areas under its control. But it remains a potent fighting force in Syria, where nearly 126,000 people have been killed since the conflict began in March 2011, according to the Observatory.
I lauded their technological innovation, you fruitbasket. The Muslim world hasn't contributed much in terms of science since the 13th century. It's good to see some getting back to that. Maybe someone from Syria will invent better hair clippers one day.You just sound like a complete moron. These people are in a war for reasons other then religion and your talking about their religion as it pertains to their method of killing. I mean really make some sense fukkboy.
Is this your way of distancing yourself from Islam because you look like you hijacked them planes? Confused as a child called you a t3rr0rist? Well life is hard, fukk out my face.
BAGHDAD - Gunmen shot dead nine people at alcohol shops in the Iraqi capital on Saturday, security and medical officials said. The shootings in the Waziriyah area of Baghdad also wounded at least five people, the sources said. Extremists have targeted Baghdad's liquor stores in the past, both because drinking is forbidden by Islam and because such shops are often run by religious minorities. In May, gunmen armed with silenced weapons killed 12 people at liquor stores in the city. Iraq in recent months has seen the worse surge in violence since 2008, when the country was just emerging from a brutal period of rampant sectarian killings. The mounting unrest comes as Iraq's Al-Qaeda affiliate has been emboldened by the civil war in neighboring Syria. The renamed Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) has carried out scores of attacks on both sides of the border. Violence spiked after security forces stormed a Sunni Arab protest camp north of Baghdad in April, sparking clashes that killed dozens. Members of Iraq's Sunni minority, who complain of discrimination at the hands of the Shiite-led government, have held demonstrations for almost a year. The government has made some concessions aimed at placating Sunni Arabs, including freeing prisoners and raising the salaries of anti-Al-Qaeda fighters, and has also trumpeted security operations against militants. But daily attacks have shown no sign of abating, and violence has killed more than 6,250 people since the beginning of the year, according to AFP figures based on security and medical sources.