British police allow antisemitic activist to get away with spewing horrific statements
The level of antisemitism that has been revealed following Hamas' Oct. 7, 2023, terrorist attacks on Israel has been utterly shocking. Maybe I just didn't realize how popular it has become in our modern-day culture to hate Jewish people. Regardless, ever since these attacks, I've witnessed an alarming number of hateful and prejudiced posts on social media blaming Jews and Israel for practically every evil on earth.Absolutely not. But what's even more shocking could easily be that the UK police so far have allowed this to pass for even a short time without arrest for incitement to violence, which can and will affect even non-Jewish residents of the UK as well. And to think that the education system could be allowing this too. How much longer is Britain going to put up with such a degenerate example?
A prime example of this is a recent comment from Mohammed el-Kurd, a pro-Palestinian activist, who was loudly cheered and applauded during a demonstration when he made a call to "normalize massacres as the status quo" in a speech condemning both the Jewish state and Zionism.
Yes, you read that correctly. A grown human being, not an easily influenced teenager, stood in front of a mass of individuals seething with hatred for Jewish folk and called for the normalization of mass murdering them in cold blood. This was done in public, not behind closed doors. El-Kurd is attempting to foment a movement to see Jews slain in the streets. This is how degenerate radical Islam is, ladies and gentlemen. Child brides, rape, discrimination, and murder. Does that sound like a "religion of peace" to you?
Update: also look at how these pro-Hamas protestors in New York City yelled at a cancer hospital, in all their obsession with attacking virtually everything they feel like.
Labels: anti-semitism, dhimmitude, islam, Israel, jihad, londonistan, military, misogyny, Moonbattery, New York, political corruption, racism, sexual violence, terrorism, United States, war on terror