With only a few hours left of 2009, I'm stuck with the image of singed underwear in my mind, and thinking of that fake shlong that could have blown an airliner out of the sky. Of course I'm talking about the six-inch bomb that a dark-skinned guy with a Muslim name had stuffed in his trousers on a flight from Amsterdam to Detroit. Luckily he only succeeded in burning his briefs when he tried to set it off. But someone like him may succeed in mass murder one day if we don't stop pandering to his kind.
Let's face it. The biggest protection of terrorists is the same sort of shield that's been protecting Barack Hussein Obama from greater scrutiny -- political correctness. We're too afraid to "discriminate" on the basis of race, religion or sexual orientation, etc., to where we act like we can't even recognize a terrorist when we're staring one in the face. Or at least, we prevent our laws from recognizing a terrorist.
I was horrified a while back when a Muslim member of our own military started shooting at other members of our military on a base in our own United States of America. News stories then revealed that we have a large percentage of Muslims within our military, but we are not allowed to screen them out for any purpose because that would be religious discrimination. Screening Arabs and the like would be ethnic discrimination.
At a time when people are at least calling for full body scans of passengers entering airplanes -- and on a day when the Netherlands has said it will require such scans for people boarding flights to the U.S. -- we must take into account that people with sex changes are actively protesting the use of full body scans. They are afraid we might see their fake shlongs. People like Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab are all for gay rights, and black rights and religious rights, so long as these rights help them avoid getting caught as they attempt to blow up whites, Christians, blacks, gays, children and everyone else.
We need to start looking at Muslims the way they looked at Communists just a few short decades ago. Communists were perceived as the enemy. They were tracked down and discriminated against. You'd better believe it. And the strategy succeeded. Terrorists are being brainwashed and trained in the halls of mosques, and it's high time we redefined Islam as being more than just a religion -- it's a form of subversion, with "death to America" its favorite chant. The goal is a theocracy that allows virtually no freedoms, is opposed to all rights and education, and tolerates the cultivation of poppy for opium, honor killings, and stoning to death.
We should be screening Muslims and profiling for our own safety and for the future of our country. Being friendly toward Muslims, as Obama hoped to do, doesn't help one bit. To the contrary. The countries with the most friendliness toward Muslims are the ones with the most terrorism. Take a look at Pakistan, just for starters. People are bombed to death there regularly, and it's a Muslim nation. So much for friendliness achieving peace.
We should change our laws to allow greater scrutiny of Muslims. Certainly there are many peaceful, sincere Muslims who do see their religion as just a religion, and who are pro-American. But we need to be able to penetrate the shield of these people -- that is to say, the shield of religious protection -- to get to the Muslim terrorists who are making life difficult for not only non-Muslims, but for the peaceful Muslims themselves. More than that, these terrorists are threatening to snuff out life itself.
Let's end the political correctness and take decisive action. If we don't bend on this "freedom of religion" thing just a bit for this valid and urgent purpose, then we may find ourselves with no freedoms down the road, as Muslims use our own nuclear weapons against us, take over, and take us to hell on earth, turning our food crops into poppy crops to make opium, covering our beautiful women with black hoods, and destroying our schools. Saving our country is worth some good Muslims agreeing to be profiled, searched and so on for the sake of weeding out the bad. That's the change I believe in.
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