Radical Islam’s allure befuddles Canadian authorities

Well now, let me see if I can help my northern neighbors out.

March 16, 2008, Canwest News Service
Canadian authorities have difficulty understanding and identifying youth radicalized by extremist Islamic ideology, says a senior RCMP officer.

RCMP Supt. Lloyd Plante, a member of British Columbia’s Integrated National Security Enforcement Team, said police need more cooperation from the Muslim community to understand and neutralize the budding terrorist.
-First mistake: the muslim community is encouraging their children and will never help “neutralize” the problem. Returned jihadi are seen as heroes to allah and are honored. All muslim boys want to be just like one, the fame, the respect and the honor to their families a is very powerful draw.

“It’s not really clear how we can even identify youth who have been radicalized. . .We don’t even know the factors that contribute to youth being radicalized,” said Plante, who helped organize The Muslims of Tomorrow youth conference held on Simon Fraser University’s Surrey campus Saturday. “These are community, societal problems and we really need to work together to share ideas and develop strategies to address these very, very serious complex issues.”
-Second problem: none of the RCMP have apparently read the koran. Read it and you will understand the motivation of the “youth”. To identify them just look at any mosque going muslim family with teenage sons.

Plante refers with bafflement to the case of Rudwan Khalil Abubaker, a 26-year-old Vancouver model and movie extra who in 2004 was found dead in Chechnya and is believed to have been fighting with Muslim separatist rebels.
-What bafflement he thought allah would protect him not realizing allah was a fictitious deity invented by a seventh century pedophile and murderer. He paid for his mistake the same way most jihadi pay-with his soul.

Abdul Haqq Baker, one of the conference’s speakers, experienced first hand how powerful extremist propaganda can be in influencing a radical change in behaviour. Baker said he knew “shoe bomber” Richard Reid and Zacarias Moussaoui, a convicted Sept. 11 conspirator. Reid and Moussaoui attended Brixton mosque in South London where a radical imam wielded considerable influence for years.
-True Richard and Zacarias were slowly radicalized but so what? We have many examples of young muslims who never attended a mosque that within a few weeks of starting were recruited and sent off to die. The time from recruitment to jihad depends on several factors. In general terms a muslim born into a muslim family, raised muslim takes a very small amount of time because they have a basic familiarization or foundation. A convert takes longer only because the recruiters do not explain violent islam to them until the hook has been swallowed and the line snapped to set it. They use a soft sell technique as it has traditionally worked. The hard sell would scare away many potential killers.

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One Comment on “Radical Islam’s allure befuddles Canadian authorities”

  1. tnr Says:

    It’s a domestic dispute and for sure it has nothing to do with Islam:

    Yesterday just outside Toronto, woman found beheaded in her apartment:

    http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/news/story.html?id=bbedd5ac-772b-4cf6-aa73-15921ae4b511&k=59652


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