Bad Feelings Matter
Oct 28, 2020
Peoples of the West should start trusting their instincts:
A security guard at the Manchester Arena said he had a “bad feeling” about suicide bomber Salman Abedi but did not approach the Islamic terrorist because he was afraid of being branded a racist if his suspicions were wrong.
Kyle Lawler, who was 18-years-old at the time of the Manchester Arena bombing, told police that he noticed Abedi was “fidgety and sweating” prior to the attack which killed 22 people and injured more than 800 others in May 2017.
Nobody called him a racist. That's what truly matters.
Even the police and the media, when reporting on Islamic terrorism, hesitate to call it what it is for fear of appearing racist.
It was only in July that The Times reported that Police in the UK may stop using the words “Islamic terrorism” and “jihadis” when discussing terrorist attacks carried out by Muslims who claim Islam as their motivation.
The move was proposed in order to prevent the public from forming a negative view of the Islamic religion. The reform was requested by a Muslim Police organisation that argued the official use of the terms are responsible for negative perceptions and stereotypes which perpetuated discrimination and Islamophobia.
Event: A Muslim slaughters dozens of infidels.
Reaction: Won't you feel sorry for the poor Muslims?
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