Prisoners of their freedom, they proclaim that they will not change their "lifestyle"; instead they censor the founding values of civilization.
London mourned the dead and the mutilated on the tenth anniversary of the massacre of 7 July 2005. Fifty-six victims at the hands of suicide bombers with birth certificates from Luton, Bradford, Manchester. A few days ago, at a beach on the Mediterranean, Jihad returned to kill thirty Englishmen.
But ten years later, they still do not get it.
We did not understand that the terror that struck the British metropolis was a war, not the idea of a few fanatics, but the vocation of choice of the best examples of integration, boys and girls, Muslims who attended the Foremarke Hall of Repton which counts among its alumni writers like Christopher Isherwood and former archbishops of Canterbury. Boys and girls who listened to Coldplay, wanted to change the world and were photographed with ministers (as was Reyaad Khan, a leader of the British cell obeying the orders of the Caliph).
A figure? It comes from Shiraz Maher, of the International Center for the Study of Radicalization: "There are more British Muslims in Isis than in the British Military".
more
Ten Years After the London Attacks, the British Still Don't Get it - Op-Eds - Arutz Sheva
London mourned the dead and the mutilated on the tenth anniversary of the massacre of 7 July 2005. Fifty-six victims at the hands of suicide bombers with birth certificates from Luton, Bradford, Manchester. A few days ago, at a beach on the Mediterranean, Jihad returned to kill thirty Englishmen.
But ten years later, they still do not get it.
We did not understand that the terror that struck the British metropolis was a war, not the idea of a few fanatics, but the vocation of choice of the best examples of integration, boys and girls, Muslims who attended the Foremarke Hall of Repton which counts among its alumni writers like Christopher Isherwood and former archbishops of Canterbury. Boys and girls who listened to Coldplay, wanted to change the world and were photographed with ministers (as was Reyaad Khan, a leader of the British cell obeying the orders of the Caliph).
A figure? It comes from Shiraz Maher, of the International Center for the Study of Radicalization: "There are more British Muslims in Isis than in the British Military".
more
Ten Years After the London Attacks, the British Still Don't Get it - Op-Eds - Arutz Sheva