on 09-10-2014 11:03 AM
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Hizb ut-Tahrir refuses to criticise Muslim terrorists who slaughter other Muslims, massacre infidels, traffic in women and behead journalists and aid workers:
Emma Alberici confronts this head case.
The interview is quite revealing. Apparently its all our fault again. In typical fashion its all about our countrys desire to assist the barbarians out of ...the stone age.
Its ok for IS to butcher their own kind but its not ok for us to stand in the middle of the religious factions to seek peace between the warring tribes.
The quicker these fruit loops are chucked out of Australia the better.
Poor Emma Alberici couldnt get a word in with this hate filled person... and he was born here and lives in our society yet hates us and everything we stand for
Take 10 minutes and watch this interview from Lateline last night... its an eye opener...
Australian Broadcasting Corporation
Broadcast: 08/10/2014
Reporter: Emma Alberici
http://www.abc.net.au/lateline/content/2014/s4103227.htm
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on 09-10-2014 04:03 PM
Yes like a question I heard asked today of someone who has been spreading anti Islam propaganda all over social media -
Australians don't support religious intolerance, yet you are actively engaging in it - why don't you stop and why don't you publicly condemn those who are involved in it?
person couldn't/wouldn't answer - just started mumbling.
on 09-10-2014 04:14 PM
I watched and it was the worst kind of journalism I have seen. Emma was aggressively leaning forward and shouted from the word go. She did not let him speak, constantly yelling over him. She demanded he answers yes or no to complicated and very loaded questions. It was absolute disgrace. Why not let him speak? Just let him say what he wants, so we can hear it from him and decide if we really do not like him; why not just give him enough rope?
on 09-10-2014 05:22 PM
alan jones pulling abbotts strings and abbott speaks without knowing what he is talking about - what a surprise - abbott reminds me of that saying - all fur coat and no knickers.
Is Prime Minister's anger at 'hate preachers' justified?
Hizb ut Tahrir has condemned the terrorist group Islamic State and is overtly non-violent - so why is Tony Abbott "angry and frustrated" he hasn't been able to ban the group, and hopeful new laws will allow him to do so?
But wild conspiracies do not amount to promoting terrorism and Hizb ut Tahrir has loudly denounced the caliphate claimed by Islamic State as an aberration and condemned its killings of innocents and non-believers.
Underpinning its philosophy is the belief that "offensive jihad" - launching pre-emptive attacks to achieve the aims of the caliphate - is forbidden, as is violence that targets innocents, no matter what their faith.
"Defensive jihad" - or Muslims defending themselves against direct oppression - is, however, considered legitimate.
The group supports the rights of Muslims to resist the Western interventions in Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria, including with violence against those they believe have taken up arms against them.
This principle extends to Syria, and has led to the group giving tacit support to Australians travelling there to join the resistance against the regime, with the recent exception of taking up arms with the Islamic State group.
For the past decade, security agencies in the West have repeatedly considered whether the group should be banned. Invariably, they have declined.
The main concern has been that the group is a "conveyer belt" for jihadists, a weigh station where they are inculcated with radical ideology before they leave for a group with more violent tendencies.
Nawab Osman, an academic at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore who did his doctorate in Australia on the group, says the "conveyer belt" theory doesn't stack up. Hizb, overall, acted as a bulwark against Islamic radicals taking the next step and turning to terrorism, he said.
A ban, he added, would be counter-productive.
"All you will do is create martyrs out of Hizb ut Tahrir. It will grow and it will grow underground. That makes it much more difficult for security agencies to monitor."
on 09-10-2014 05:24 PM
@***super_nova*** wrote:I watched and it was the worst kind of journalism I have seen. Emma was aggressively leaning forward and shouted from the word go. She did not let him speak, constantly yelling over him. She demanded he answers yes or no to complicated and very loaded questions. It was absolute disgrace. Why not let him speak? Just let him say what he wants, so we can hear it from him and decide if we really do not like him; why not just give him enough rope?
nah, its not the journalists - he has a message
to spread and in the interviews i have seen
he is quite clever in how he menages to dictate
the way the interviews go. this was just another
opportunity. maybe emma knew what to expect
and was hoping to actually get an answer ????
cant remember who the journo was last time
he was on lateline.
on 09-10-2014 05:28 PM
@boris1gary wrote:Yes like a question I heard asked today of someone who has been spreading anti Islam propaganda all over social media -
Australians don't support religious intolerance, yet you are actively engaging in it - why don't you stop and why don't you publicly condemn those who are involved in it?
person couldn't/wouldn't answer - just started mumbling.
lol no, nothing like that.
wassim doureihi was loud and clear.
on 09-10-2014 05:32 PM
@secondhand-wonderland wrote:
Why doesn't anyone ever ask the questions; If Saddam Hussein was still alive and leading Iraq would IS have the power that they have today? Also If America hadn't invaded Iraq back in 2003 would IS be as dominant as they are today? (Taking into account that the whole Iraq invasion was based on lies...)
What would be the point of hypothetical questions when there are current ongoing concerns that she was interviewing him about.
on 09-10-2014 05:42 PM
So, why not ask some real questions? eg: what can the Muslim community and the rest of Australia do to stop ISIS and it's (apparent) hold on impressionable teens?
on 09-10-2014 05:46 PM
on 09-10-2014 05:50 PM
@azureline** wrote:So, why not ask some real questions? eg: what can the Muslim community and the rest of Australia do to stop ISIS and it's (apparent) hold on impressionable teens?
It was certainly a train wreck of an interview.
on 09-10-2014 05:50 PM
He said he was insulted by that question............. I can see merit in that.