The cannibal Aslan has somewhat faded from the public eye since he was fired by CNN and exhorted readers in his last book to take the advice of the oldest and most celebrated self-improvement coach, Satan: “take a lesson from Adam and Eve and eat the forbidden fruit. Do not fear God. You are God.”
Last January, however, in the midst of the media savaging of a group of Kentucky high school students were accosted by a Native American activist, Aslan called for violence against the student most prominently featured in circulating videos of the incident. When Dinesh D’Souza called him out on it, Aslan doubled down by saying he wanted to assault D’Souza:
Aslan, of course, doesn’t have to worry about getting banned from Twitter any more than does his fellow fascist C.J. Werleman. But Aslan’s tweets show the increasing mainstreaming of violence on the Left, in addition to its utter contempt for the freedom of speech. They’re neo-Brownshirts, ready to silence those whom they hate by means of violence, and they’re increasingly open about it. If D’Souza wrote this to Aslan, he would be banned from Twitter and excoriated by Leftists and conservatives alike. But Aslan will continue to be heralded on the increasingly thuggish Left.
This shouldn’t come as any surprise to those who are familiar with Aslan’s rancid public career. That this sinister jihad enabler was ever given a mainstream platform is a dispiriting sign of the times. His show on CNN was devoted to showing other religions as violent and hateful, and Islam as benign and peaceful. Also, Aslan is a Board member of the National Iranian American Council (NIAC). NIAC has been established in court as a lobbying group for the Islamic Republic of Iran. Said Michael Rubin: “Jamal Abdi, NIAC’s policy director, now appears to push aside any pretense that NIAC is something other than Iran’s lobby. Speaking at the forthcoming ‘Expose AIPAC’ conference, Abdi is featured on the ‘Training: Constituent Lobbying for Iran’ panel. Oops.” Iranian freedom activist Hassan Daioleslam “documented over a two-year period that NIAC is a front group lobbying on behalf of the Iranian regime.” NIAC had to pay him nearly $200,000 in legal fees after they sued him for defamation over his accusation that they were a front group for the mullahs, and lost. Yet Aslan remains on their Board.
Meanwhile, despite his increasingly obvious Islamic heterodoxy, Aslan remains popular with Muslim Brotherhood-linked groups in the U.S.: he has also spoken at events sponsored by the Muslim Students Association, a Brotherhood group, as well as at an event co-sponsored by the Los Angeles chapter of the Hamas-linked Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR). Doubtless they recognize that he shares their overall agenda.
Not surprisingly, after a trip to Israel he lied about being threatened by Shin Bet.
Aslan is as stupid as he is evil. It’s also worth noting that despite being hailed as a great intellect, Aslan isn’t actually very bright. He is, in fact, a borderline imbecile who frequently states howlingly false errors of fact, but is, never called out for them by his friends in the establishment media. He has made the ridiculous claim that the idea of resurrection “simply doesn’t exist in Judaism,” despite numerous passages to the contrary in the Hebrew Scriptures. He has also referred to “the reincarnation, which Christianity talks about” — although he later claimed that one was a “typo.” In yet another howler he later insisted was a “typo,” he claimed that the Biblical story of Noah was barely four verses long — which he then corrected to forty, but that was wrong again, as it is 89 verses long. Aslan claimed that the “founding philosophy of the Jesuits” was “the preferential option for the poor,” when in reality, that phrase wasn’t even coined until 1968. He called Turkey the second most populous Muslim country, when it is actually the eighth most populous Muslim country. He thinks Pope Pius XI, who issued the anti-fascist encyclical Mit Brennender Sorge, was a fascist. He thinks Marx and Freud “gave birth to the Enlightenment,” when it ended in the late 18th century, before either of them were born. He claims that “the very first thing that Muhammad did was outlaw slavery,” when in fact Muhammad bought slaves, took female captives as sex slaves, and owned slaves until his death. He thinks Ethiopia and Eritrea are in Central Africa.
A “renowned religious scholar” such as Reza Aslan should not make such elementary mistakes. But this is, of course, the man who writes “than” for “then”; apparently thinks the Latin word “et” is an abbreviation; and writes “clown’s” for “clowns.”
“Reza Aslan Calls For Genocide Against Trump Supporters,” by Ian Miles Cheong, Human Events, August 6, 2019:
CNN contributor and liberal intellectual Reza Aslan is calling for the “eradication” of Trump supporters. In a series of aggressive tweets directed toward the President and those who voted for him, Aslan remarked – in response to the mass shooting in El Paso – that President Donald Trump “is a white nationalist terror leader.”
Arguing that there was “no longer any room for nuance” – words that are remarkably similar to Dayton shooter Connor Betts’ calls for violence on Twitter – Reza openly called for the genocide of Trump supporters.
“The President is a white nationalist terror leader. His supporters – ALL OF THEM – are by definition white nationalist terror supporters. The MAGA hat is a KKK hood. And his evil, racist scourge must be eradicated from society.”
In the same series of tweets, Aslan called Kellyanne Conway “”’the depraved evil’” we need to eradicate,” following her remarks that America needed to come together in the wake of the mass shooting. The CNN contributor took her call for the eradication of hate and turned it upon her with a call for the eradication of a group of people – Trump supporters – of which Conway is a part….
Armed with dehumanizing language, Aslan’s call for the “eradication” of the Left’s political opponents and his characterization of Trump supporters as an “evil, racist scourge” is rooted in the language of Holocaust proponents and other architects of 20th-century genocide.
The term “eradicate,” when used in the context of groups of people, is a call for genocide. An early intelligence record on Hitler’s “Final Solution” was declassified in 2001 under the Nazi War Crimes Disclosure Act, which contains statements by Axis diplomats referring to a plan for the “eradication” of Jews in Europe.
“The Jewish problem is being partially solved in the Protectorate [Reich Protectorate of Bohemia-Moravia], as it has been decided to eradicate all the Jews and send some to Poland and others to the town of Terezin, whilst looking for a more remote place,” reads an official Nazi dispatch to the Chilean government.
In reference to genocide, identical language is used by historians, journalists, and human rights organizations…
gravenimage says
Reza Aslan calls for genocide, says Trump supporters must be “eradicated”
………………….
Inciting others to punch children is not enough for Reza Aslan–now he has graduated to calling for mass murder. Muslim thug.
william carr says
Not only an ignoramus posing as an intellectual but a dumb*ss into the bargain!
Jessie says
He is a loser who got fired for the likes of CNN . That should say something about this idiot.
Mike says
Well , islamofascist is the price we pay to live in great cities , nowadays……except inChina , Russia , Poland, Romania , Hungary , Slovaquia ,Lithuania ….
Angemon says
China is not exactly safe, it has a history of mass stabbings by Uygur.
Lydia Church says
Yes.
That is exactly what it is. Now they will all be getting on the bandwagon. Once they start using terms like ‘eradicate’ a people group, it’s on the fast track to the next Holocaust. The exact same tactics were used in the last one. The ‘problem’ that needed a ‘final solution,’ which happened to be the death camps. And oh, how convenient, those fliers have already been posted calling for that, (NY, fliers posted calling for death camps for Trump supporters). And the movie where they hunt us for ‘sport.’ Hey! It’s just ‘fun and games,’ you know, like those computer games, no hard feelings, eh? It is chilling to watch how a society gets transformed from Mayberry into one that is capable of cold blooded murder, and the citizens have been programmed that it is ‘okay’ to murder an entire people group because, well you know, it’s been ‘justified,’ because they are ‘the problem’ that is standing in the way to their imagined utopia. That’s what happened in Germany and other countries in Europe. One must ask, “How can a civilized people be transformed into a savage group that could do something like that?!” Well, as I look around me, I’m witnessing how. They just make them all angry about all their woes, and point the finger of blame at us.
During the final stages of this evil plot, it will be the one world government and one world religion (and economy) under the antichrist under which this will be done. All pretenses will have been swept aside. Evangelical and other Christians will be labeled as the target, the ‘cancer’ and all sorts of other derogatory terms, that must be ‘eradicated’ so as to usher in ‘world peace,’ because you know… we are somehow ‘standing in the way’ by clinging to the Bible. Funny how their thinking works. And don’t think it won’t happen. The Bible says it will, and…. the current pope already made such a statement!
Oct. 2013: Francis added: “The faith becomes ideology and ideology frightens, ideology chases away the people, distances, distances the people and distances of the Church of the people. But it is a serious illness, this of ideological Christians. It is an illness, but it is not new.”
What is ideology? Belief and doctrine. He is saying that believing Christians are a ‘serious illness.’
And that was six years ago.
It’s all well underway.
Fred Dawes says
TOTAL RIGHT ITS TIME TO FIGHT BACK.
CRUSADER says
“The Spectator” wrote:
Eating human brains, burying one’s face in dead people’s ashes and publicly deriding the president of the United States as a ‘piece of shit’ are not among the activities usually associated with serious religious historians. But Reza Aslan is something else. An American academic born in Iran, brought up as a Muslim, converted to Jesus by the Jesuits and back to Islam through his own free will, he came to prominence following an interview on Fox TV to promote his book Zealot: The Life and Times of Jesus of Nazareth (2013). He was repeatedly asked how being a Muslim qualified him to write about Jesus, to which he responded by listing in pushful, indignant tones all his academic credentials.
He claimed to be a ‘historian’ (which strictly he isn’t); a ‘professor of religion’ (he is actually a professor of creative writing) and a ‘PhD in the history of religions’ (when actually he is a doctor of sociology). This interview, which reflected badly on both participants, went viral on YouTube under the title ‘The most embarrassing Fox News interview ever’, and in consequence, Aslan’s Zealot became a bestseller.
The excitement generated by the video, together with Aslan’s boyish good looks, led to his fronting a six-part religious series on CNN, called Believer, in which he ate the aforementioned brains, smothered himself with the char, and from which he was sacked for tweeting derogatively about Donald Trump.
Each episode featured the sensational and disgusting practices of fringe groups connected to Hinduism, Christianity and Judaism, which, unsurprisingly, offended mainstream Hindus, Christians and Jews who did not care to be associated in the public mind with their pee-drinking, brain-eating, death-worshipping sub-sects. No discreditable customs of any Muslim sub-sect were shown. Since Aslan has elsewhere gone out of his way to dismiss Islamic terrorism as less of a problem than ‘faulty furniture’; has described jihadism as a mere ‘pop culture’; and has denied any link between the Islamic religion and female genital mutilation, he soon found (no doubt to his delight) that he had sharply divided America’s liberal progressive movement. On the one hand, he was lauded for his defence of Johnny Muslim against the odious advances of populist bigotry; on the other, he was accused of failing to protect human rights and global peace by diverting attention from the obvious threats posed by the spread of Islamic fundamentalism.
Aslan explained that the purpose of his Believer series was to reveal to the world how everyone is ‘the same’. His detractors interpreted this to mean that Christians, Jews and Hindus should stop complaining about the unappealing practices of Muslims because there are people doing equally appalling things in the name of their religions too.
All this is useful background to anyone intending to read God, a brief and lively history of the development of the God-like type over 12 millennia. Aslan writes in clear, concise and attractive English. He is intelligent and has an uncommon ability both to marshal and contextualise seemingly random facts, and is skilful at condensing complex ideas into short, effortless paragraphs. But despite his claims to high scholarship, he is at heart a popular historian. Even his end-notes are fun.
The surface message of his book is simple. He repudiates the ‘humanisation of God’, by which he means man’s historical desire to portray him in his own image —to give him a face, eyes, hair, hands, feet, a tongue, lips, even a womb (Job 38:29) and bowels (Jeremiah 31:20). The ‘Odes of Solomon’ describe God with milk-filled breasts: ‘The Father is he who was milked, and the holy Spirit is she who milked him’; while the ancient Jewish Hekhalot gives precise measurements of the space between God’s thighs and his neck, revealing that from head to toe he is 1.298 billion km tall.
Aslan has no time for any of this, but considers it an aberration borne of human arrogance that began when man started putting fences round animals. Prehistoric man, he argues, worshipped animals as spirits; but farming subjugated the beasts and so man made God in his own image. Islam, according to Aslan, is innocent of all this. References in the Quran to God’s eyes, hands, face and shin are to be read metaphorically. Isn’t this also true of the Bible?
As Aslan’s commentary passes from French and Spanish cave drawings to the temples of Göbekli Tepe, and from ancient Egyptian animists to the monotheistic Yahwists, it becomes increasingly obvious to the reader that his impatience is growing; that the scholarly impartiality he vaunted so famously in his interview on Fox TV is starting to disintegrate and that he is now bursting out of his chrysalis. He is an ambitious man who enjoys the limelight. He has already played many parts — Christian, Muslim, businessman, sociologist, lecturer, editor, presenter, producer, public intellectual, scholar, historian, creative writing tutor and performing clown. Now it looks as though he wants to become a guru.
….
CRUSADER says
….
I don’t think it would be spoiling the story (it’s not that kind of book) if I revealed Aslan’s conclusion: ‘God,’ he writes three pages from the end, ‘did not make us in his image; nor did we simply make God in ours. Rather we are the image of God in the world — not in form or likeness, but in essence.’ This he describes as a personal ‘epiphany’, arrived at through his ‘long, and admittedly circuitous, spiritual journey’. Only now does he reveal to his readers that the history contained in the first 166 pages of his book is a ‘mirror’ of his own ‘faith-journey’. His title, God: A Human History, might just as well have been God: A History of Me. ‘The entire reason we have a cognitive impulse to think of God as a divine reflection of ourselves,’ he writes, ‘is because we are, every one of us, God.’
And so this extraordinary book, which started as an informative history of an idea, transforms itself into a self-help manual and an autobiographical consecration, delivered as a sermon from the pulpit of the author’s personal epiphany. ‘God,’ he writes, ‘is not the creator of everything that exists. God is everything that exists’ — an idea which leads him inexorably to his final remarks: ‘So then, make your choice. Believe in God or not. Either way, take a lesson from Adam and Eve and eat the forbidden fruit. Do not fear God. You are God.’
Aslan’s theology, as well he knows, is not original. It is called pantheism — an ancient belief that God exists through his creation — that the creator and that which he has created are indivisible. Pantheism is espoused in the philosophy of the Stoics and Spinoza, in Zen Buddhism, and by a group of Muslim thinkers known as ‘the drunken Sufis’; it can be interpreted from the teachings of St Paul and even in the mystical opening chapter of the Gospel of St John, where Aslan (I think incorrectly) declares that Jesus is ‘unambiguously recogised as the incarnate God’. Pantheism underpins the love of discovery — the desire to understand all of God’s creation in order to know God and find the eternal life. It was precisely this impulse that drove the Knights Templar to donate all their money to learning and religion and the Rosicrucians to devote their lives to scholarship.
If Aslan is hoping to found a new religion based upon this ancient wisdom and his own charismatic personality he may succeed. He is after all articulate, handsome and a keen self-publicist, who already appears to have a following of sorts. If he plays his cards right he could be wearing togas and flying around in a private jet in five years’ time.
But he needs to advance with caution. If hubris tempts him to fly too high, he could fall victim to one of those vicious sub-sects of Islam that he chose to ignore on CNN — one, for instance, which still believes in the death penalty for Muslim apostates, or which threatens to castrate authors who print pictures of Muhammad in their books about God (I have personal experience of them). There was a wool-carder from Baghdad, called Husayn ibn Mansur, who stood up and shouted ‘Ana ‘l-haqq’ (‘I am the Truth’) which a number of furious Muslims interpreted to mean ‘I am God’; so they seized him, tied him up, tortured him, doused him in oil and set him on fire.
Despite Aslan’s professing of the Muslim faith, he must know that some of his ideas are not congenial to Islam’s sub-sects. Human beings may be ‘all the same’; they may even all be God; but Aslan would do well to remember, as he lays the foundations of his first temples in the receiving soil of southern California, that ‘those who annoy Allah and his Messenger shall have a curse on them: and whenever they are found, shall be seized and slain without mercy’ (Quran 33:57-61).
https://www.spectator.co.uk/2017/11/reza-aslan-doesnt-fear-god-but-should-he-fear-his-fellow-muslims/
Anjuli Pandavar says
What a spectacular take-down!
Bill says
What a tool. If the roles were reversed and a conservative was calling for liberals to be “eradicated” the left and mainstream media would be up in arms. But as usual complete silence from the left. Such hypocrites. I wish he would try to eradicate me. I would have a little surprise waiting for him.
Fred Dawes says
“Total evil”, Is he that last Nazi WE BEEN LOOKING FOR IN THE Last 70 years? Or just a new Nazi pig ass beast of hell, “hey pig ass”, come get me! you Communists Nazi monkey!.
KNOW YOUR HISTORY MUSLIMS IN 1933-45 ALL Nazi LOVERS, I HATE Nazis and Communists pigs both have killed 100 million children and Old people. “you butt pig ass”, If a civil and race war START ,see what will happen you can say good bye to Islam and all its evil butts.
ntesdorf says
Reza Aslan puts Adolf Hitler in the shade. Adolf only wanted to eradicate the Jews, Reza wants to eradicate 52% of the US population. He may have bitten off more than he can chew.
Westman says
D’Souza made an illegal campaign contribution and has received a full pardon.
Aslan calls him a felon while Aslan calls for the death of Trump supporters. Which one is the real felon? Aslan wouldn’t dare say this in the UK, Germany, Denmark, Sweden, or The Netherlands because they would fine or jail him for hate speech. Here in the US, he is protected from prosecution but not from being seen as the crazed, evil-minded, person that he is.
He and Rob Reiner would make a great couple.
CRUSADER says
While we are distracted by this Reza clown ?
and other insignificant arses….
Third Wave of Jihad is forming!
Michael Youssef converted from Islam:
https://youtu.be/2FBsGH49u38
CRUSADER says
Clarion Project film;
“The Third Jihad: Radical Islam’s Vision For America”
The film was used to train New York Police Department officers during required counterterrorism training.
https://clarionproject.org/films/thethirdjihad/
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=PaCVlBXKONg
James Lincoln says
Much thanks for the video links, CRUSADER.
Angemon says
An agent provocateur trying to take advantage of existing stress-lines.
Wellington says
An accurate euphemism.
Georg says
Spot on. Lots of others involved in efforts with these aims as well.
Gary fouse says
I’ve seen him speak twice and he is every bit a sicko as described above. He poses as a scholar and has found his niche at UC Riverside where he is posing as a professor in some useless field of study. He literally radiates arrogance.
Georg says
“The cannibal Aslan…”
What you risk when eating people.
Although his insidiousness is his worst aspect, being a purveyor of the fuzziest, nonsensical crapola excuse for thinking, writing, and speech is an intellectual crime by itself. An agent of the Ayatollah–really as simple as that. Seems to be an example of the literal insanity which results from some level of awareness, however subconscious, that the Koran is a reprehensible book, along with the behavior it creates, yet for reasons of ethnic infatuation and supremacy he can’t admit as much as he sits in a nation and culture so nurturing he is told to and feigns to hate but which he so thoroughly enjoys.
No Fear says
Racial supremacists? – Bad, Religious supremacists? – Fine,OK!
Georg says
Right. So long as the religious supremacists aren’t of a certain race, at least…
tgusa says
Our government has allowed foreigners in to our Republic that want to kill us. What a shocking surprise, not. Send him back!
Battle says
Robert Spencer hits nail on head. Good.
mortimer says
Twitter is mainstreaming violence against their ideological critics. Twitter is defending Trotskyists and Jihadists, but silencing the critics of those violent ideologies.
Reziac says
Perhaps this will explain…
https://qz.com/519388/this-saudi-prince-now-owns-more-of-twitter-than-jack-dorsey-does/
See, with a significant Muslm interest involved, Twitter cannot be allowed to denigrate Islam.
Georg says
This is what the new Red-Green alliance manages with a website. Imagine what they’d do with the government.
underbed cat says
I think his speech shows he may be dangerous and he needs a visit to explain his intentions. I don’t think mentally ill people are all dangerous, unless they hear voices to kill, are addicted, and show anger issues.and have consistent thoughts of hurting others..in .which this comment should put him on a “don’t sell a gun to” list. Since he gets attention and is well known, but not an iman, he could incite violence and feel justified by his muslim education of the Quran and it’s obligations. Still to this day, the public is resistant to information about this book and it’s ties to terror. in my opinion.
Reziac says
Or, why any “red flag” laws will rapidly backfire.
CRUSADER says
—— the opposite of ‘believing the truth’ is ‘delighting in wickedness’.
*****
God gives sinners over to the very sin and error they have embraced (Ps. 80:12-13; Rom. 1:24, 26, 28; 11:8; 2 Tim. 4:4).
Lies and evil go together like truth and goodness do. They cannot be separated. Jesus made it clear in John 3:19-21 that people loved the darkness (lies) and rejected the truth because their deeds were evil. When we cling to sin and evil, we will always reject and despise the truth,
Let me conclude with some remarks from famous modern theologian John Stott who, as is so often the case, presents us with theologically astute yet imminently practical comments for our consideration. He too makes the connection (as Paul does of course) between truth and goodness, lies and evil:
It is of great importance to observe that the opposite of ‘believing the truth’ is ‘delighting in wickedness’.
This is because truth has moral implications and makes moral demands. Evil, not error, is the root problem.
The whole process is grimly logical:
First, they delight in wickedness, or ‘make sinfulness their deliberate choice’ (NEB).
Secondly, they refuse to believe and love the truth (because it is impossible to love evil and truth simultaneously).
Thirdly, Satan gets in and deceives them.
Fourthly, God himself ‘sends’ them a strong delusion, giving them over to the lie they have chosen.
Fifthly, they are condemned and perish. This is extremely solemn teaching. It tells us that the downward slippery path begins with a love for evil, and then leads successively to a rejection of the truth, the deception of the devil, a judicial hardening by God, and final condemnation.
The only way to be protected from being deceived is to love goodness and truth. These, then, are the dynamics (devilish and divine) which are behind the final rebellion.
So instead of taking umbrage at God and accusing him of doing things we think he ought not to do (eg., sending delusion), we need to see the big biblical picture of how sin and rebellion compound and multiply, with more sin and deception resulting, until truth is rejected, lies embraced, and God rejected.
God can only confirm such folks to their own fate.
But while folks are not so far down that path, this passage serves as a powerful warning: don’t get to that place. Repent and turn from sin now. That is our hope. But to reject God and his truth condemns us to God’s just judgment.
We need to be making wise decisions now, before it is too late.
Eric Jones says
Aslan thinks his words are protected as free speech under the First Amendment. His incitement to violence against specific persons goes beyond free speech. They are an example of yelling fire in a crowded theater.
He is soliciting others to do harm to persons which is an element in conspiracy. People are busted all the time doing this. He is inciting others to riot and to do harm to persons. If a person is harmed as a result of his calls to violence he can be charged as acting in concert to the violent act. This happens in NYS criminal indictments all of the time.
I am no attorney but Aslan is in need of good legal advice. He reminds me of the washed up actor doing anything to make himself currently relevant. Mr. Robert Spencer is a towering intellect as compared to Aslan.
Eric
NotALib_NoMo says
Zippy the pinhead is a towering intellect compared to the ackbarbarian aslan.
gravenimage says
Yow!
Carolyne says
Aslam needs no lawyer. He is a part of the privilege class which must never be prosecuted.
Robert Laity says
THE DEGENERATE HAS the same opinion as the maker of “The Hunt”.
Reziac says
I’m thinkin’ “The Hunt” is the best possible motivator for those of us whom it would make targets.
jayell says
I believe it might have been Rudyard Kipling who coined the phrase ‘noble savage’; that is, a human being who has learned to present the appearance of sophisticated civility (advanced language skills and the manifestations of apparent intelligent social awareness, etc) but has basically not progressed beyond the level of crude, antediluvian, biological-imperative Dark Age tribalism. In other words, a self-serving, cynical fraudster whose contributions to society will be no less destructive than one would expect from a cynical fraudster in any other circumstances. Now, I wonder who might fit this description?
gravenimage says
Actually, Jayell, the term is older than Kipling. John Dryden’s heroic play The Conquest of Granada (1672) contained the term. (The Islamic reference is interesting).
NotALib_NoMo says
As one of allahu’s ackbarbarians, I would expect nothing less from the cannibal. Like islam, and the rest of its followers, he’s a disgusting animal with no redeeming qualities.
AP says
Aslan, should be careful, if he mistakenly insults his false religion, someone may lop off his head. Just saying these people are nuts and so is he.
CTTV15@Hotmail.com says
This man should be arrested and charged with more than falsely ‘yelling FIRE in a crowded theater’..
CTTV15@Hotmail.com says
This man should be charged. ..This is certainly more than falsely ‘yelling FIRE in a crowded theater’..
MJP says
I think he should be eradicated what a P O S
Carolyne says
Did Aslam murder the person who’s brain he devoured? If so, shouldn’t be be tried for murder? Or at least charged with abusing a body?
Ole Pederson says
Aslan is a muslim. Islam is genocide. ’nuff said.
Guy Forester says
Dear RA,
After living through some rather tumultuous times, including widespread civil disobedience and attempted revolution, I would like to put forth some food for thought.
1. If you have not done so, please study the riots that consumed parts of US cities over the years. You will note that these never grew into widespread open revolt, nor were the perpetrators and instigators able to move out of the flashpoint areas to any significant degree. There may have been small short lived spill overs and forays into other areas, but no widespread attacks or sympathetic rebellions.
2. When you figure out why those riots and attempted insurrections never went far, you will know why your threats will not get far either.
OLD GUY says
He sounds like a guy who would fit the bill for a RED FLAG alert and all weapons removed. I thought when you threaten to kill someone, ie. the Pres. you should be arrested.
Fred says
If he thinks he is bad enough, let him try.