A conference convened last month by the Islamic extremist group Hizb-ut Tahrir in Chicago cheered the fall of secular governments in the Middle East and the political rise of groups advocating for the re-imposition of Islamic law and the revival of the global caliphate, such as the Muslim Brotherhood.
The speakers at the conference also endorsed a similar program in the West, particularly America. One of the attendees at the conference is doing his part to make that dream of Islamic rule in America a reality.
His MyLife profile lists his current location as Leland, Illinois, about 70 miles southwest of Chicago. A January police blotter notes his arrest on three separate warrants in three different counties for attempted obstruction of justice, failure to appear, and possession of marijuana. According to one of his relatives, it was during his incarceration that he converted to Islam, but has become increasingly radicalized since his release by associating with extremist imams and organizations in the area and online.
Zentmyer pushes his violent and Islamic supremacist agenda through his Facebook and YouTube websites. Included in his small network of friends on his YouTube channel was Abu Khalid Abdul-Latif, who was arrested in June along with another associate for plotting a suicide terror attack on a Seattle area military facility. Islam does not tell us to call for democracy.
A pro-jihadist video featuring Smith and her husband is being investigated by the Indiana Intelligence Fusion Center, a threat and counterterror intelligence analysis clearinghouse staffed by law enforcement officials from local and federal agencies, including the FBI and Department of Homeland Security. She painted herself as an America-loving victim just exercising her First Amendment rights when questioned by the local media:.
Her cause was picked up by Ryan J. Reilly at Talking Points Memo. Reilly had buried this information halfway down his article. Reilly, now the Justice reporter at the Huffington Post, made news last summer during the Ferguson riots when he infamously mistook foam earplugs for rubber bullets. Air Force personnel at the Frankfurt airport by Arid Uka.
Salahudin also publicly praised Uka for killing the two U. The interview begins around the minute mark :. In the interview, Salahudin justifies the killing of German and American soldiers under Islamic law. In June , Salahudin was placed on one year of probation by a German court for two videos he had posted inciting violence. The invasion included a campaign of ethnic and religious cleansing targeting Christians, Kurds, and Yazidis. In the nearly six-minute video, under investigation, the Indiana grandmother and her husband, known online as Salahudin Ibn Ja'far, 28, appear posing and hugging and holding weapons interspersed with photos of known and suspected terrorists and assorted jihadist propaganda, like an Awlaki sermon album cover.
In the video he was expressing his love and gratitude to his friends, who have died fighting for freedom. Just like any other American or European citizen who displays pictures of soldiers who have died on their videos. There is no difference in gratitude and love. It is just that your government has deemed these noble men as "terrorists" because they are not on the same side.
Least us not forget the Mujahideen who fought the Russians for the US. They were deemed "heroes" and lead by Osama Bin Laden at that time, and now because the government says so.. In a no-longer-active Facebook profile, Salahudin listed his current city as Saarbrucken, Saarland. Earlier this month he uploaded videos to his since-deleted YouTube account that included one showing training exercises by German muhajideen at jihadist camps in Pakistan, and another featuring the widow of a German Taliban jihadist directing the wives of jihadists to fulfill their obligations while their husbands are off fighting.
The video appears to have been shot at a training camp in the same Waziristan region. She has lauded Awlaki, celebrated the deaths of U.
0コメント