Saturday, May 10, 2008

Publishing A Cartoon Is "Hateful". Supporting Attacks On Canadians Is Not

That's the way things work nowadays. When The Chronicle Herald newspaper publishes a cartoon picturing a radical muslim raising funds for her fellow terrorists - the newspaper ends up under police investigation for alleged "hate crimes". But apparently it's perfectly fine for a wife of an islamic militant (supposedly the prototype of the woman pictured), a Pakistani with a Canadian passport, to post online comments such as "may ahlal crush those Jews", let alone mentioning that she hates Canada in a newspaper interview...

Praising the Khadrs (yet another al-Quaeda family that took advantage of Canada's lax immigration laws), posting hateful messages against Jews, bashing Canada? Oh, come on, that's her freedom of speech; unlike Ezra Levant and Mark Steyn she's is entitled to it. Raising funds for the families of islamic militants? That's a multiculturalism-oriented charity. So don't expect a human rights complaint, let alone a hate crime investigation against Cheryfa MacAulay Jamal and her Pakistani friends with Canadian passports.

Don't expect any hate crime investigation against Naeem Muhammad Khan, a landed immigrant, currently living in Toronto, for whom "Support Our Troops" refers to the Taliban. I bet, when the time comes, he'll submit his citizenship application. He'll answer a few questions such as "Is Canada a tolerant, multicultural country? yes/sure/of course/i dunno", he'll make a symbolic promise (it's not even an oath nowadays) and, in the eyes of our bleeding-heart Liberals, he'll become as Canadian as maple syrup...

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