I've had a holiday planned and now I'm second guessing to go or not.
Where to Paris? I'm sure it would be safe NOW but you can't just let them make you afraid to stop what you first intendedI've had a holiday planned and now I'm second guessing to go or not.
I think any acknowledgement for past offenses is always a step in the right direction. I never said it would completely stop terrorists. It is a step in the right direction. Hollande did acknowledge of 'suffering' of the Algerians, but stopped short of apologizing for the massacres their armies inflicted on the local population. Why would that be?
If you are go to Central Europe, for the love of god have some situational awareness. Don't wonder into the ghettos.
I admire your enthusiasm in the prospects of integration. I do believe there are millions of well integrated North Africans and/or Muslims, but the truth can bite hard. The French Arab/Muslim community has still suffered from racism, and according to the BBC, the unemployment rate for university graduates of French origin is 5%; this can be compared to the unemployment rate of 26.5% for university graduates of North African origin. (Source). A report of Amnesty International investigates racially motivated executions in French banlieue's, murders and abuses committed by the French police and the leniency expressed by the French government into investigating such cases has been published April 2, 2009. The report has mostly been censored by French news. You can find it here: http://www.statewatch.org/news/2009/apr/ai-france-police-report.pdf. The riots in 2005 that left France in a state of emergency only brought the problem to light for a brief period.
It doesn't help also, that although understated, the French terrorists that attacked the satirical newspaper were brainwashed in prison, of which 70% of the inmates are Muslim. When the dust settles, I think at least one of these attackers will be a disgruntled French Muslim from the French Banlieue's brainwashed from the very same prisons.
The thing is are they targeting France specifically. The three incidents could be isolated, but it seems weird.
As an outsider, as a non-European that's my impression as well. The European model for multiculturalism seems to be failing.
As an outsider, as a non-European that's my impression as well. The European model for multiculturalism seems to be failing.
As an outsider, as a non-European that's my impression as well. The European model for multiculturalism seems to be failing.
It is really too bad this is not getting the attention it deserves. He prevented a similar attack but because it was not in a European country no one is giving it much publicity.In Lebanon, a man named Adel Termos threw himself at an ISIS suicide bomber to save a crowd of people from being killed. http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/nov/13/lebanon-families-mourn-victims-beirut-bombings
I've had a holiday planned and now I'm second guessing to go or not.
The thing is are they targeting France specifically. The three incidents could be isolated, but it seems weird.
Did Anne Hathaway back down when she was being forced out of her successful dotcom company? No! Did she back down when threatened with death by a roided-up Tom Hardy? No! Did she back down when the diabolical Viscount Mabrey tried to take the throne of Genovia? No!
Anne Hathaway never backs down, and neither should you!
Islamic State warned in a new video on Monday that countries taking part in air strikes against Syria would suffer the same fate as France, and threatened to attack in Washington.
The video, which appeared on a site used by Islamic State to post its messages, begins with news footage of the aftermath of Friday's Paris shootings in which at least 129 people were killed.
The message to countries involved in what it called the "crusader campaign" was delivered by a man dressed in fatigues and a turban, and identified in subtitles as Al Ghareeb the Algerian.
"We say to the states that take part in the crusader campaign that, by God, you will have a day, God willing, like France's and by God, as we struck France in the center of its abode in Paris, then we swear that we will strike America at its center in Washington," the man said.
It was not immediately possible to verify the authenticity of the video, which purports to be the work of Islamic State fighters in the Iraqi province of Salahuddine, north of Baghdad.
The French government has called the Paris attacks an act of war and said it would not end its air strikes against Islamic State in Syria and Iraq.
French fighter jets launched their biggest raids in Syria to date on Sunday targeting theIslamic State's stronghold in the city of Raqqa. The operation was carried out in coordination with U.S. forces.
Police raided homes of suspected Islamist militants across France overnight following the Paris attacks.
"Al Ghareeb the Algerian" also warned Europe in the video that more attacks were coming.
"I say to the European countries that we are coming, coming with booby traps and explosives, coming with explosive belts and (gun) silencers and you will be unable to stop us because today we are much stronger than before," he said.
Apparently referring to international talks to end the Syrian war, another man identified in the video as Al Karrar the Iraqi tells French President Francois Hollande
"we have decided to negotiate with you in the trenches and not in the hotels."
(Reporting by Ahmed Tolba and Lin Noueihed, editing by Ahmed Aboulenein, Michael Georgy and David Stamp)
http://m.huffpost.com/us/entry/5649d815e4b08cda34898214