Wednesday, January 23, 2013

The Roots Of Pakistan Terror Lies In The Young






 
A Terror Expert Explains What makes These Monsters
Isador Blume, an Israeli expert, explains why Muslims like killing Muslims.
 



 
Pakistani Doctors Turn Into Jihad Bombers
Umar Kundi is a typical journey of blood. Umar was his parents’ pride, an ambitious young man from a small town who made it to medical school in the big city. It seemed like a story of working-class success, living proof in this unequal society that a telephone operator’s son could become a doctor.
But, like most Muslims, he is basically evil. He, and other professionals, took the dark path and decided to blow up women and children in markets.

Mr. Kundi and members of his circle — educated strivers who come from the lower middle class — are part of a new generation that has made militant networks in Pakistan more sophisticated and deadly. Al Qaeda has harnessed their aimless ambition and anger at Pakistan’s alliance with the United States, their generation’s most electrifying enemy.
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Taliban Agent's Often Confuse Religious Muslim Students
He brought that past — part shyness, part shame — with him to college in Faisalabad, the third-biggest city in Pakistan. The city was an explosion of things modern. Traffic jams. Fancy restaurants. Uncovered women. For young people from small towns, unfamiliar with city life, the atmosphere can arouse a rigid defensiveness.  4
   



Al-Queda Uses Student Groups
Often the young 'Maccacas' join student groups. He joined Lashkar-e-Taiba, a student group that ran charities and prayer meetings. It also offered training for jihad in Kashmir. Lashkar’s blend of adventure and patriotism appealed to restless young men. It even had an office on campus: Room 12D. “

The trouble started when hard-line mullahs and injected Islam into school textbooks.

Lashkar was driven underground, but it continues to operate through a charity wing. American, Indian and Pakistani officials say it carried out the attacks on hotels and other landmarks in Mumbai, India, in November 2008. Public universities, which are attended almost exclusively by lower- and middle-class youth, are fertile recruiting grounds.
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Next The Student Is Handed Over To Homosexual Mullahs
Once the young 'Maccaca' becomes disillusioned, then he is handed over to the local Mullah. The two develop a close relationship, sometimes even sexual (anal and oral sex), giving the boy the attention he has long craved. The mullah then introduces him to others, men who make him feel important, as if he is part of something bigger than himself. 3
   




Bin Laden Lays In Wait
Instead of healing the sick, Mr. Kundi went on to become one of Pakistan’s most accomplished militants. Working under a handler from Al Qaeda, he was part of a network that carried out some of the boldest attacks against the Pakistani state and its people last year, the police here say.

   



Bombing Markets Is A Powerful Addiction

In a study of 24 young men who were involved in terrorist attacks in Pakistan, the psychiatrist, Brig. Mowadat Hussain Rana, has found that they tend to be the younger or middle siblings in families of six or more children. The households are not always poor but are often violent, and the youngsters get lost in the chaos.

The result has been deadly. In 2009, militant attacks killed 3,021 Pakistanis, three times as many as in 2006.

 

   




Al Queda Has Canadian Cells
Many 'Macaccas' are sent to Canadian Universities, where monsters like Hafiz Muhammad Saeed  (Née 'Singh Candee') pose as religious leaders. Saaeed was a skilled recruiter, whose family lived in Canada for generations.

   






 
Thank God For Jewish Terrorism Experts
It takes special insight to explain why Muslims use horrific bombs to kill Muslims in Sunday markets. At first I thought it was Israelis trying to promote civil wars and western propaganda. But thanks to terror experts like Dov Rosenbaum, I learn that it really is Pakistani doctors, dentists, engineers, etc. behind these attacks.
 






 

 

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