Friday, June 5, 2015

Rep. Andre Carson: Taqiyya or stupidity?

Is radical Islam a mental health issue? Rep. Carson (D-Ind) thinks it is, and he's actually a Muslim. Does it mean that he hasn't actually read his own book of scripture, the so-called holy Koran?

Or does it mean that, like his other Muslim brother in Congress, Keith Ellison (D-MN), he knows exactly what's inspiring these young, religious men to kill anyone who does not believe in Allah and Mohammad the same way he does? 

It's called Taqiyya. In the website Inquiry into Islam, the term is explained quite well and it seems to fit the mold into what apologists like these two Congressional idiots say about the religion of peace and what you may hear by other Muslims.

Rep. Andre Carson sits on the House Intelligence Committee and he says that he's "very and pleased" the shooting of the jihadist wielding a knife in Boston "was shown to community leaders and faith leaders and the family, so that their story can be corroborated." Carson, who was once a cop, added, "It is clear that radicalization is becoming more widespread in our country."

Then Carson went all Taqiyya on us and said: "And the greater question becomes, if, in fact, law enforcement is monitoring Muslims in particular, in a case like this, intervention should have happened, and we need to have a larger discussion about mental health issues in our country."

Jake Tapper of CNN then asked Carson if the suspected cell acted the way they did due to mental health problems rather than Islamic inspiration for jihad. Of course, Carson wasn't going to admit that without getting an Islamic demerit (which, like all Islamic demerits merits death) so he said that there were a "multiplicity of issues at play."

"I think mental health is clear," Carson said, meaning that the mental health of the terrorist was just fine (i.e., clear). 

So according to Carson, every swinging sword-bearer of ISIS has a mental health issue. I feel so stupid--I thought Marie Harf was correct when she said these guys need jobs and they'll have something else they can do with their hands.

"I think many of these so-called jihadist movements are tapping into big pockets of disillusionment with government with their own personal lives and we could bring in sociologists to talk about some of those new religious movements that emerged since the 20th Century," he obfuscated. 

Carson referring to these jihadists as "so-called jihadist movements" is an example of how many Muslims in government, or in terror-supporting organizations like CAIR, use Taqiyya to cover up the truth. Their thoughts: "If it was good enough for Mohammed to prescribe deception to further the cause of Islam."

"I do know that there's a history in this country dating back to J. Edgar Hoover's counterintelligence program, where we saw government overreach and we saw civil liberties being encroached," he said. "So I think there has to be a healthy balance."

Like the Muslim scholar, Al-Tabari, explained about this verse: "If you [Muslims] are under their [infidels'] authority, fearing for yourselves, behave loyally to them, with your tongue, while harboring inner animosity for them . . . Allah has forbidden believers from being friendly or on intimate terms with infidels except when infidels are above them [in authority]. In such a scenario, let them act friendly toward them."

This is where the term "lying sack" comes from--it did not originate on Capital Hill, but it certainly has been perfected there.


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