Al Qaeda Recruiting In Georgia?

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vivapadrepio@aol.com

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A group of third-graders plotted to attack their teacher, bringing a
broken steak knife, handcuffs, duct tape and other items for the job
and assigning children tasks including covering the windows and
cleaning up afterward.

Nine children were disciplined by the school and three were arrested
on juvenile charges, including conspiracy to commit aggravated assault.
 
"vivapadrepio@aol.com" <vivapadrepio@aol.com> wrote in news:87c70f22-a326-
42c9-8134-0c47e766f899@e6g2000prf.googlegroups.com:


> Al Qaeda Recruiting In Georgia?



Don't look now, padre, but there's a couple of 'em hiding behind your shower
curtain.



Regards,

Josef


We do not have to visit a madhouse to find disordered minds;
our planet is the mental institution of the universe.

-- Goethe
 
<vivapadrepio@aol.com> wrote in message
news:87c70f22-a326-42c9-8134-0c47e766f899@e6g2000prf.googlegroups.com...
>A group of third-graders plotted to attack their teacher, bringing a
> broken steak knife, handcuffs, duct tape and other items for the job
> and assigning children tasks including covering the windows and
> cleaning up afterward.
>
> Nine children were disciplined by the school and three were arrested
> on juvenile charges, including conspiracy to commit aggravated assault.


What a sad story. The teacher must have been incompetent as well as the
school authorities for allowing a teacher to teach who made the children
feel they had to resort to this type of action to defend themselves for the
psychological or physical abuse.
 
Josef Balluch wrote:
> "vivapadrepio@aol.com" <vivapadrepio@aol.com> wrote in
> news:87c70f22-a326-
> 42c9-8134-0c47e766f899@e6g2000prf.googlegroups.com:
>
>
>> Al Qaeda Recruiting In Georgia?

>
>
> Don't look now, padre, but there's a couple of 'em hiding behind your
> shower curtain.


Along with your missing sarcasm meter.
 
In article <87c70f22-a326-42c9-8134-0c47e766f899
@e6g2000prf.googlegroups.com>, vivapadrepio@aol.com
said...

> A group of third-graders plotted to attack their teacher, bringing a
> broken steak knife, handcuffs, duct tape and other items for the job
> and assigning children tasks including covering the windows and
> cleaning up afterward.


Hmm. "Family Guy" began in 1999. In the real world,
Stewie Griffin would now be about nine years old...

--
-----------
Brian E. Clark
 
On Apr 2, 7:32 pm, Josef Balluch <josef.ball...@sympatico.can> wrote:
> "vivapadre...@aol.com" <vivapadre...@aol.com> wrote in news:87c70f22-a326-
> 42c9-8134-0c47e766f...@e6g2000prf.googlegroups.com:
>
> > Al Qaeda Recruiting In Georgia?

>
> Don't look now, padre, but there's a couple of 'em hiding behind your shower
> curtain.


I dunno. I think places like Georgia, Alabama and South Carolina would
be perfect places for al-Qaeda to recruit. The religious ideology of
fundamentalist muslims and fundamentalist Southern Baptist Christian
Reconstructionists is virtually identical, particularly in regards to
their attitudes towards democracy and a government of limited power.

"The heresy of democracy has since then worked havoc in church and
state ... Christianity and democracy are inevitably enemies." - Rousas
John Rushdoony, 1973

"Our job is to instigate, and by the grace of God, we did that." -
Osama bin Laden, 1999

"God told me to strike at al Qaida and I struck them, and then he
instructed me to strike at Saddam, which I did." - George W. Bush,
2003


Rich Goranson
Amherst, NY, USA
aa#MCMXCIX, a-vet#1
EAC Department of Cruel and Unusual Choreography
 
Lord Calvert <CalvertdeGrey@msn.com> wrote in
news:c3074e0a-3d3a-4928-b373-e2130edcd258@e67g2000hsa.googlegroups.com:

> On Apr 2, 7:32 pm, Josef Balluch <josef.ball...@sympatico.can> wrote:
>> "vivapadre...@aol.com" <vivapadre...@aol.com> wrote in
>> news:87c70f22-a326- 42c9-8134-0c47e766f...@e6g2000prf.googlegroups.com:
>>
>> > Al Qaeda Recruiting In Georgia?

>>
>> Don't look now, padre, but there's a couple of 'em hiding behind your
>> shower curtain.

>
> I dunno. I think places like Georgia, Alabama and South Carolina would
> be perfect places for al-Qaeda to recruit. The religious ideology of
> fundamentalist muslims and fundamentalist Southern Baptist Christian
> Reconstructionists is virtually identical, particularly in regards to
> their attitudes towards democracy and a government of limited power.



Having a fundamentalist mindset is one thing. CHANGING a fundamentalist's
mind is quite another. For details, see the theist trolls in a.a

Also, there is a level of dogmatism required to become a martyr. A dyed-in-
the-wool fanatic is much more dangerous than one who is capable of changing
his mind. While it is not impossible, I find it rather less likely that a
convert would consider becoming a suicide bomber for the "cause".



Regards,

Josef


All fanaticism is a strategy to prevent doubt from becoming
conscious.

-- H. A. Williams
 
On Apr 3, 9:17 am, Josef Balluch <josef.ball...@sympatico.can> wrote:
> Lord Calvert <CalvertdeG...@msn.com> wrote innews:c3074e0a-3d3a-4928-b373-e2130edcd258@e67g2000hsa.googlegroups.com:
>
> > On Apr 2, 7:32 pm, Josef Balluch <josef.ball...@sympatico.can> wrote:
> >> "vivapadre...@aol.com" <vivapadre...@aol.com> wrote in
> >> news:87c70f22-a326- 42c9-8134-0c47e766f...@e6g2000prf.googlegroups.com:

>
> >> > Al Qaeda Recruiting In Georgia?

>
> >> Don't look now, padre, but there's a couple of 'em hiding behind your
> >> shower curtain.

>
> > I dunno. I think places like Georgia, Alabama and South Carolina would
> > be perfect places for al-Qaeda to recruit. The religious ideology of
> > fundamentalist muslims and fundamentalist Southern Baptist Christian
> > Reconstructionists is virtually identical, particularly in regards to
> > their attitudes towards democracy and a government of limited power.

>
> Having a fundamentalist mindset is one thing. CHANGING a fundamentalist's
> mind is quite another. For details, see the theist trolls in a.a


There would be no need to change it. The ideological beliefs and the
mindset are already in place. Besides, in any competent intelligence
op the agent never knows who he is truly working for. If al-Qaeda
wanted to recruit in the deep south all they would have to do is claim
that they're working for a terrorist group like Operation Rescue, the
National Reform Association or the Chalcedon Foundation. They'd be
swimming with more recruits than they could possibly handle. You could
make a pretty sizable legitimate list of targets in the US that both
fundamentalist Muslim and fundamentalist Christian groups would be
more than happy to take out.


Rich Goranson
Amherst, NY, USA
aa#MCMXCIX, a-vet#1
EAC Department of Cruel and Unusual Choreography
 
Lord Calvert <CalvertdeGrey@msn.com> wrote in
news:ccc6af58-0cc0-4f40-abd9-e259e8788ee5@d45g2000hsc.googlegroups.com:

> On Apr 3, 9:17 am, Josef Balluch <josef.ball...@sympatico.can> wrote:



....


>> Having a fundamentalist mindset is one thing. CHANGING a
>> fundamentalist's mind is quite another. For details, see the theist
>> trolls in a.a

>
> There would be no need to change it. The ideological beliefs and the
> mindset are already in place. Besides, in any competent intelligence
> op the agent never knows who he is truly working for. If al-Qaeda
> wanted to recruit in the deep south all they would have to do is claim
> that they're working for a terrorist group like Operation Rescue, the
> National Reform Association or the Chalcedon Foundation. They'd be
> swimming with more recruits than they could possibly handle. You could
> make a pretty sizable legitimate list of targets in the US that both
> fundamentalist Muslim and fundamentalist Christian groups would be
> more than happy to take out.



Easier said than done. Given the amount of time, training and planning
required for such missions there is a significant risk that the ruse will
be discovered before the plot can be carried out. And why even risk
discovery when there is no shortage of potential recruits within their own
circle?


Regards,

Josef
 
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