Congressional Hearings
November 7, 2009
. . . now.
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November 7th, 2009 at 10:02 pm
Unanswered questions about why Ft. Hood jihadist w…
Hot Air brings up the challenging question of why Malik Nidal Hasan was still in the army even after his poor grades in the psychiatry profession, and his internet postings in which he condoned jihad…
November 8th, 2009 at 12:41 am
Save the time and expense of the Congressional hearings. The explanation is obvious. Although born here, he didn’t consider himself an American forsaking all others. Same with some Germans and Japanese during WWII. And by some, I mean a relative few*. Such people need to be identified (and with Hasan, the clues were all there) and dealt with on a case-by-case basis. Discrimination. Treating individuals fairly, but according to the situation and the facts. And we must start promoting assimilation again and give up the crap pushed by the Left of dividing people into small victim groups to further their political power. Fuck that hyphenated American BS. Save that for the holiday menu.
And for crying out loud! Let our soldiers be armed, at least when they are on a military base. Restrict “Gun-Free Zones” to places where it doesn’t matter if you want to conduct social experiments. Like Congress. Or the Annenberg Foundation.
*Yes some Americans of German and Japanese heritage betrayed the US during the war. They were dealt with accordingly. Some of the information (especially with the Japanese) was classified because our government was worried about violence toward innocents in peacetime. See “The World at War” –the 1973 BBC series narrated by Sir Lawrence Olivier and Michelle Malkin’s articles on the subject. Targeting groups for the actions of individuals is stupid. Denying things that happened is also stupid.