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eRecent Al Qaeda comments coinciding with their US Soldier abduction claim and coinci
Thanks to the DemocRAT surrender monkeys.
Where the hell is the so called "objective Main Stream Media" and why do thinking people have to depend on the internet to find this stuff Excerpts: http://www.cleveland.com/news/plaindealer/index.ssf?/base/news/1179055826251140.xml&coll=2 Al Qaeda's "pressure" campaign timed to coincide with the Democrats' campaign to undermine Bush: Mohamad al-Janabi, al-Qaeda member in the nearby city of Salman Pak, said: "I can assure you that we will start pressuring Bush in a new way at the same time he is facing pressures from the Democrats and the American people. And there will be no problem to sacrifice 10 soldiers in order to abduct a single American soldier and get him on television screens begging for us to release him." "The brothers from Algeria, they used to come to Iraq and then return to Algeria. There is coordination between us and them. Once, I met a brother from Tunisia who later died [in Iraq]... Once, I met a brother who was American and his mother was British-and yet in spite of this, he still joined the mujahideen... there are many Moroccan brothers who have joined the Islamic State." - "The beheadings are still happening, but we have an order not to broadcast them. Everything is videotaped but we can't broadcast them. We do seek to capture and imprison American soldiers, but you have to understand that it is very difficult to do so because they patrol in groups, at least 15 soldiers at a time. We hope and pray to capture them." http://www.nowpublic.com/interview_with_a_foreign_fighter_from_al_qaidas_is lamic_state_of_iraq_by_evan_kohlmann Be the First to Add Photos and Video to this Story Exclusive: Interview with a Foreign Fighter from Al-Qaida's "Islamic State of Iraq" By Evan Kohlmann On April 27, 2007, the administrators of a radical Arabic-language chat room on the Paltalk online network announced a special live question-and-answer session with Abu Adam al-Maqdisi, a Palestinian national fighting with Al-Qaida's "Islamic State of Iraq." In advertisements posted on other online forums, the organizers explained that the interview had been arranged in order to address questions from Al-Qaida supporters and to "offer an accurate picture of the jihad in Mesopotamia." The discussion, conducted entirely in an audio stream provided by Paltalk, lasted for over two hours. An English translation of the discussion is now available from Globalterroralert.com. Highlights include: - "There are no specific fixed training camps inside of Iraq. Training is conducted in hidden secret places or in areas that, for obvious reasons, I can't share them with you...Our most urgent need is for martyrs [suicide volunteers], we need martyrs more than anything else... To those of you who want to join the jihad in Iraq, then I would ask you to be patient and to organize everything before doing so. You should contact the brothers in Iraq before getting there. The whole notion of 'passionate jihad' and going to Iraq without having anyone to contact there is useless... so you should plan your departure and journey ahead of time. - "The brothers in Iraq are kept up-to-date about the events happening in Iraq via the various forums on the Internet... In response to the question 'what is the best way to prepare yourself while in your country before joining the jihad in Iraq': O' brother, there are many military courses distributed by various jihadi websites-such as the Al-Hesbah, Al-Ekhlaas, and the Al-Boraq forums." - "The brothers from Algeria, they used to come to Iraq and then return to Algeria. There is coordination between us and them. Once, I met a brother from Tunisia who later died [in Iraq]... Once, I met a brother who was American and his mother was British-and yet in spite of this, he still joined the mujahideen... there are many Moroccan brothers who have joined the Islamic State." "In regards to the bill in the U.S. Congress for the upcoming withdrawal from Iraq, I would comment that this is a normal response to what is occurring. It is the result of the efforts of your brothers among the mujahideen... our next step... is to establish an Islamic State. We will start by setting free all of the Muslim lands from the oppressor regimes. Of course, we have not forgotten about Palestine, Chechnya, Afghanistan, Andalusia [Spain], the Philippines, and all the other countries... The Islamic State of Iraq is seeking to export the jihad to neighboring countries... The jihad that began in Muslim Afghanistan and then spread to Iraq shall not stop there and will limited by any border... The Islamic State of Iraq will make sure the jihad will not stop until it reaches Jerusalem... We inform the Jews, we inform the lowlife Olmert, and we inform the apostate [Arab] rulers who support them that the jihad is here, Islam is here, and the followers of the Prophet are here." |
Re: eRecent Al Qaeda comments coinciding with their US Soldier abduction claim and co
"Pajamas O'Donovan" <[email protected]> wrote in message news:
[email protected]. com... <snip> Look help you faq Music comics April 29, 2007 By JENNIFER STEINHAUER Associated Press SANTA ANA, Calif., April 25 - Anyone convicted of a crime knows a debt to society often must be paid in jail. But a slice of Californians willing to supplement that debt with cash (no personal checks, please) are finding that the time can be almost bearable. For offenders whose crimes are usually relatively minor (carjackers should not bother) and whose bank accounts remain lofty, a dozen or so city jails across the state offer pay-to-stay upgrades. Theirs are a clean, quiet, if not exactly recherché alternative to the standard county jails, where the walls are bars, the fellow inmates are hardened and privileges are few. Many of the self-pay jails operate like secret velvet-roped nightclubs of the corrections world. You have to be in the know to even apply for entry, and even if the court approves your sentence there, jail administrators can operate like bouncers, rejecting anyone they wish. "I am aware that this is considered to be a five-star Hilton," said Nicole Brockett, 22, who was recently booked into one of the jails, here in Orange County about 30 miles southeast of Los Angeles, and paid $82 a day to complete a 21-day sentence for a drunken driving conviction. Ms. Brockett, who in her oversize orange T-shirt and flip-flops looked more like a contestant on "The Real World" than an inmate, shopped around for the best accommodations, travelocity.com-style. "It's clean here," she said, perched in a jail day room on the sort of couch found in a hospital emergency room. "It's safe and everyone here is really nice. I haven't had a problem with any of the other girls. They give me shampoo." For roughly $75 to $127 a day, these convicts - who are known in the self-pay parlance as "clients" - get a small cell behind a regular door, distance of some amplitude from violent offenders and, in some cases, the right to bring an iPod or computer on which to compose a novel, or perhaps a song. Many of the overnighters are granted work furlough, enabling them to do most of their time on the job, returning to the jail simply to go to bed (often following a strip search, which granted is not so five- star). The clients usually share a cell, but otherwise mix little with the ordinary nonpaying inmates, who tend to be people arrested and awaiting arraignment, or federal prisoners on trial or awaiting deportation and simply passing through. The pay-to-stay programs have existed for years, but recently attracted some attention when prosecutors balked at a jail in Fullerton that they said would offer computer and cellphone use to George Jaramillo, a former Orange County assistant sheriff who pleaded no contest to perjury and misuse of public funds, including the unauthorized use of a county helicopter. Mr. Jaramillo was booked into the self-pay program in Montebello, near Los Angeles, instead. "We certainly didn't envision a jail with cellphone and laptop capabilities where his family could bring him three hot meals," said Susan Kang Schroeder, the public affairs counsel for the Orange County district attorney. "We felt that the use of the computer was part of the instrumentality of his crime, and that is another reason we objected to that." A spokesman for the Fullerton jail said cellphones but not laptops were allowed. While jails in other states may offer pay-to-stay programs, numerous jail experts said they did not know of any. "I have never run into this," said Ken Kerle, managing editor of the publication American Jail Association and author of two books on jails. "But the rest of the country doesn't have Hollywood either. Most of the people who go to jail are economically disadvantaged, often mentally ill, with alcohol and drug problems and are functionally illiterate. They don't have $80 a day for jail." The California prison system, severely overcrowded, teeming with violence and infectious diseases and so dysfunctional that much of it is under court supervision, is one that anyone with the slightest means would most likely pay to avoid. "The benefits are that you are isolated and you don't have to expose yourself to the traditional county system," said Christine Parker, a spokeswoman for CSI, a national provider of jails that runs three in Orange County with pay-to-stay programs. "You can avoid gang issues. You are restricted in terms of the number of people you are encountering and they are a similar persuasion such as you." Most of the programs - which offer 10 to 30 beds - stay full enough that marketing is not necessary, though that was not always the case. The Pasadena jail, for instance, tried to create a little buzz for its program when it was started in the early 1990s. "Our sales pitch at the time was, 'Bad things happen to good people,' " said Janet Givens, a spokeswoman for the Pasadena Police Department. Jail representatives used Rotary Clubs and other such venues as their potential marketplace for "fee-paying inmate workers" who are charged $127 a day (payment upfront required). "People might have brothers, sisters, cousins, etc., who might have had a lapse in judgment and do not want to go to county jail," Ms. Givens said. The typical pay-to-stay client, jail representatives agreed, is a man in his late 30s who has been convicted of driving while intoxicated and sentenced to a month or two in jail. But there are single-night guests, and those who linger well over a year. "One individual wanted to do four years here," said Christina Holland, a correctional manager of the Santa Ana jail. Inmates in Santa Ana who have been approved for pay to stay by the courts and have coughed up a hefty deposit for their stay, enter the jail through a lobby and not the driveway reserved for the arrival of other prisoners. They are strip searched when they return from work each day because the biggest problem they pose is the smuggling of contraband, generally cigarettes, for nonpaying inmates. Most of the jailers require the inmates to do chores around the jails, even if they work elsewhere during the day. "I try real hard to keep them in custody for 12 hours," Ms. Holland said. "Because I think that's fair." Critics argue that the systems create inherent injustices, offering cleaner, safer alternatives to those who can pay. "It seems to be to be a little unfair," said Mike Jackson, the training manager of the National Sheriff's Association. "Two people come in, have the same offense, and the guy who has money gets to pay to stay and the other doesn't. The system is supposed to be equitable." But cities argue that the paying inmates generate cash, often hundreds of thousands of dollars a year - enabling them to better afford their other taxpayer-financed operations - and are generally easy to deal with. "We never had a problem with self pay," said Steve Lechuga, the operations manager for CSI. "I haven't seen any fights in years. We had a really good success rate with them." Stanley Goldman, a professor of criminal law at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles, has recommended the program to former clients. "The prisoners who are charged with nonviolent crimes and typically have no record are not in the best position to handle themselves in the general county facility," Professor Goldman said. Still, no doubt about it, the self-pay jails are not to be confused with Canyon Ranch. The cells at Santa Ana are roughly the size of a custodial closet, and share its smell and ambience. Most have little more than a pink bottle of jail-issue moisturizer and a book borrowed from the day room. Lockdown can occur for hours at a time, and just feet away other prisoners sit with their faces pressed against cell windows, looking menacing. Ms. Brockett, who normally works as a bartender in Los Angeles, said the experience was one she never cared to repeat. "It does look decent," she said, "but you still feel exactly where you are." |
Re: eRecent Al Qaeda comments coinciding with their US Soldier abduction claim and co
On 14 mai, 15:29, PJ O'Donovan <[email protected]> wrote:
> Thanks to the DemocRAT surrender monkeys. > > Where the hell is the so called "objective Main Stream Media" and why > do thinking people have to depend on the internet to find this stuff > > Excerpts: > > http://www.cleveland.com/news/plaind...se/news/117905... > > Al Qaeda's "pressure" campaign timed to coincide with the Democrats' > campaign to undermine Bush: > > Mohamad al-Janabi, al-Qaeda member in the nearby city of Salman > Pak, said: > > "I can assure you that we will start pressuring Bush in a new way > at the same time he is facing pressures from the Democrats and the > American people. And there will be no problem to sacrifice 10 soldiers > in order to abduct a single American soldier and get him on television > screens begging for us to release him." > > "The brothers from Algeria, they used to come to Iraq and then return > to Algeria. There is coordination between us and them. Once, I met a > brother from Tunisia who later died [in Iraq]... Once, I met a brother > who was American and his mother was British-and yet in spite of this, > he still joined the mujahideen... there are many Moroccan brothers who > have joined the Islamic State." > > - "The beheadings are still happening, but we have an order not to > broadcast them. Everything is videotaped but we can't broadcast them. > We do seek to capture and imprison American soldiers, but you have to > understand that it is very difficult to do so because they patrol in > groups, at least 15 soldiers at a time. We hope and pray to capture > them." > > http://www.nowpublic.com/interview_w...er_from_al_qai... > > Be the First to Add Photos and Video to this Story > > Exclusive: Interview with a Foreign Fighter from Al-Qaida's "Islamic > State of Iraq" > By Evan Kohlmann > > On April 27, 2007, the administrators of a radical > Arabic-language chat room on the Paltalk online network announced a > special live question-and-answer session with Abu Adam al-Maqdisi, a > Palestinian national fighting with Al-Qaida's "Islamic State of Iraq." > In advertisements posted on other online forums, the organizers > explained that the interview had been arranged in order to address > questions from Al-Qaida supporters and to "offer an accurate picture > of > the jihad in Mesopotamia." The discussion, conducted entirely in an > audio stream provided by Paltalk, lasted for over two hours. > > An English translation of the discussion is now available from > Globalterroralert.com. > > Highlights include: > > - "There are no specific fixed training camps inside of Iraq. Training > is conducted in hidden secret places or in areas that, for obvious > reasons, I can't share them with you...Our most urgent need is for > martyrs [suicide volunteers], we need martyrs more than anything > else... > To those of you who want to join the jihad in Iraq, then I would ask > you to be patient and to organize everything before doing so. You > should contact the brothers in Iraq before getting there. The whole > notion of 'passionate jihad' and going to Iraq without having anyone > to > contact there is useless... so you should plan your departure and > journey ahead of time. > > - "The brothers in Iraq are kept up-to-date about the events happening > in Iraq via the various forums on the Internet... > In response to the question 'what is the best way to prepare yourself > while in your country before joining the jihad in Iraq': O' brother, > there are many military courses distributed by various jihadi > websites-such as the Al-Hesbah, Al-Ekhlaas, and the Al-Boraq forums." > > - "The brothers from Algeria, they used to come to Iraq and then > return to Algeria. There is coordination between us and them. > Once, I met a brother from Tunisia who later died [in Iraq]... Once, I > met a brother who was American and his mother was British-and yet in > spite of this, he still joined the mujahideen... there are many > Moroccan brothers who have joined the Islamic State." > > "In regards to the bill in the U.S. Congress for the upcoming > withdrawal from Iraq, I would comment that this is a normal response > to > what is occurring. It is the result of the efforts of your brothers > among the mujahideen... our next step... is to establish an Islamic > State. We will start by setting free all of the Muslim lands from the > oppressor regimes. Of course, we have not forgotten about Palestine, > Chechnya, Afghanistan, Andalusia [Spain], the Philippines, and all the > other countries... The Islamic State of Iraq is seeking to export the > jihad to neighboring countries... The > jihad that began in Muslim Afghanistan and then spread to Iraq shall > not stop there and will limited by any border... The Islamic State of > Iraq will make sure the jihad will not stop until it reaches > Jerusalem... > We inform the Jews, we inform the lowlife Olmert, and we inform the > apostate [Arab] rulers who support them that the jihad is here, Islam > is here, and the followers of the Prophet are here." they ought to send Pelosi and Harry Reid over there to make peace with al-Qaida. |
Re: eRecent Al Qaeda comments coinciding with their US Soldier abduction claim and co
In article <[email protected]. com>,
[email protected] says... > On 14 mai, 15:29, PJ O'Donovan <[email protected]> wrote: [snipped peabrain's clueless cut-and-paste] > > they ought to send Pelosi and Harry Reid over there to make peace with > al-Qaida. Just as "they" ought to send you back to the US to face the music for your various crimes, Stephen Bach. Perhaps a little letter to M. Sarkozy about the undesirables using France to escape their just punishment is in order... > > |
Re: eRecent Al Qaeda comments coinciding with their US Soldier abduction claim and co
snip
Saddam ( the previous American ally ) hated AQ and they were never active in the country. The Us lead CoW has really stuffed Iraq and ME stability |
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