Radical Islam Comes to Full Bloom in Southern Virgina

December 14, 2009 by Roberto Santiago  
Filed under Islam

Entrance to Red House

Entrance to the Jamaat ul-Fuqra Compound at Red House Va.

JIHAD AMONG JUNIPERS AND MINT JULEPS

RADICAL ISLAM COMES TO FULL BLOOM IN SOUTHERN VIRGINIA

by Paul L. Williams, Ph.D. (author of The Day of Islam) with the able assistance of Dr. Hugh Cort

Note: In recent days there has been a lot of press regarding the Jamaat ul-Fuqra camps in the United Stated, specifically Red House Virginia, Commerce Georgia, Islamberg New York, and other locations.

We are posting these oldies but goodies to remind our friends who actually broke the stories, went into the compounds and interviewed the residents of these facilities.  Until this day no one else can claim to have done so.

God bless you all and have a happy Hanukkah and Christmas from The LastCrusade.org and The Chronicle Watch!

The Islamic practice of taqiyya, meaning “deception” or “concealment,” has been refined into an art-form at a jihad training compound for African American converts near the small town of Red House in Charlotte County, Virginia. Click here to read the entire article…

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Life in an American Fourth Grade

November 22, 2009 by Roberto Santiago  
Filed under Culture

Teaching kids how to think in the 21st century!

Teaching kids how to think in the 21st century!

Life in an American Fourth Grade

Teaching Kids to “Respect Other Views” by Making Them Not Have Any of Their Own

by Barry Rubin of The Rubin Reports

First came the reading list of four books: one about an African-American, one on an Asian- or Hispanic-American, one on a Native American, and one–amazingly enough–a free choice.

Then came the first book read in class on an African-American runner.

By the way, it should be understood that all these readings are not about a group of youngsters from all races, religions, and creeds, playing together while getting along but rather a focus on minorities in isolation rather than as part of the whole big society.

And next came the second book read in class, portraying the “horrors” of Japanese internment in the United States during World War Two.

By this point, my 10-year-old son piped up that he thought internment was necessary as a war-time measure. Whether or not this position is “correct,” it is certainly one that wasn’t going to be made otherwise in that classroom. Click here to read the entire article…

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