domingo, 27 de outubro de 2024

Nigéria: um cristão assassinado a cada duas horas

 

Um relatório abrangente de 136 páginas publicado pelo Observatório para a Liberdade Religiosa na África em 29 de agosto de 2024, constatou que militantes muçulmanos massacraram 16.769 cristãos só nos quatro anos entre 2019 e 2023. Isso significa 4.192 cristãos mortos em média por ano, ou seja: um cristão assassinado por causa da sua fé a cada duas horas.

(Continua)


sábado, 26 de outubro de 2024

Conselhos sobre como e quando um muçulmano deve/pode bater na mulher


Mulher muçulmana lapidada até à morte

 

Diferenças

  

Como habitualmente, esta manhã comprei o "Correio da Manhã" e o "Público", as minhas duas leituras matinais. Através do primeiro, obtenho uma visão populista e popular do que vai acontecendo no nosso país. O Público, é o porta-voz da "Esquerda-Caviar" - e está tudo dito.
Hoje, li esses dois jornais com uma atenção redobrada. Li, de fio a pavio, todos os artigos que abordavam os desacatos e a violência que se espalhou por Lisboa e arredores, depois da morte de um africano, atingido a tiro por um elemento da PSP, no Bairro da Cova da Moura (pequeno detalhe, neste bairro já foram abatidos 3 elementos da PSP, nos últimos anos).
No Hospital de Santa Maria está um homem nos cuidados intensivos em estado de coma induzido, devido a graves lesões pulmonares e queimaduras de 1º grau, na cabeça, na face, nos ombros e nos braços.
É motorista da Carris e estava a terminar o seu circuito, na noite em que o cidadão africano foi morto pela PSP. Um grupo de indivíduos, com os chamados "passa-montanhas", interceptou o autocarro. Mandaram sair os cerca de dez passageiros e, a seguir, um deles aproximou-se da janela e atirou um cocktail molotov para cima do condutor, à queima-roupa, pode-se dizer.
Em nenhum dos jornais que acima refiro há uma linha, que seja, falando deste episódio e da situação clínica do condutor da Carris. E porque é que, neste caso, não tivémos uma explosão de violência nem um choramingar colectivo da Esquerda, perante esta tentativa de assassínio? O condutor da Carris não é africano. É branco.

quarta-feira, 23 de outubro de 2024

Donald Trump's Past Comments About 'Mein Kampf' Resurface

  

 

Donald Trump's past comments about Mein Kampf have resurfaced after he referenced the book penned by Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler in a speech in Iowa last night. Trump has earned criticism for his speech in the Hawkeye State after he said immigrants are "poisoning the blood of our county" during a rally in New Hampshire over the weekend. He doubled down on the comments yesterday. He said: "It's crazy what's going on… They are destroying the blood of our country, that's what they are doing. They are destroying our country.

"They don't like it when I said that and I never read Mein Kampf. They say 'Oh, Hitler said that' in a much different way." Donald Trump speaks during a campaign event in Waterloo, Iowa, on December 19, 2023. He doubled down on his comments that immigration is "poisoning" American blood 

The Biden-Harris campaign accused Trump of "parroting Hitler" in his speeches, while a resurfaced interview reveals the moment the former president talked about being given Mein Kampf by a friend. Maria Brenner wrote a 1990 Vanity Fair article, which included an interview with Trump's first wife Ivana Trump, and referred to Trump keeping a book by Hitler by his bed. The article was published amid the couple's divorce following his affair with Marla Maples. Ivana died on July 14, 2022.

The article said: "Last April, perhaps in a surge of Czech nationalism, Ivana Trump told her lawyer Michael Kennedy that from time to time her husband reads a book of Hitler's collected speeches, My New Order, which he keeps in a cabinet by his bed. "Kennedy now guards a copy of My New Order in a closet at his office, as if it were a grenade."

Referring to this, Trump is quoted as saying: "It was my friend Marty Davis from Paramount who gave me a copy of Mein Kampf, and he's a Jew." In response, Davis is quoted as saying he did give his friend a book about Hitler, but that it was actually My New Order A Collection of Speeches not Mein Kampf.

"I thought he would find it interesting," Davis said. "I am his friend, but I'm not Jewish." In the article, Trump is quoted as saying: "If I had these speeches, and I am not saying that I do, I would never read them." The article also said a Trump Organization employee would click his heels and make a mock Nazi salute at Trump saying "Heil Hitler."

Newsweek has approached Trump's campaign team via email for comment. In Iowa, Trump said—without providing evidence—that immigrants are coming to the U.S. from mental asylums and may carry disease.

"They are coming from all over the world, people we have no idea they could be healthy they could be very unhealthy, they could bring in disease that is going to catch on in our country, but they do bring in crime," he said.

"They have them coming from all over the world and they are destroying the blood of our country, they are destroying the fabric of our country," Trump said. "We are going to have to get them out, we are going to have to get mass numbers of these—especially the criminals—they re coming from jails, they are coming from mental institutions they say 'please don't say the words 'insane asylum' but I have to say they are emptying out the insane asylums from all over the world." 

David Urban Blasts Dem Strategist Who Links Trump To Hitler: "Shameful"

  

Republican strategist David Urban vehemently pushed back after a pundit linked former President Donald Trump's recent attacks against migrants to the rhetoric used by Nazi Germany dictator Adolf Hitler.

During an appearance on CNN Monday evening, Urban, who worked on Trump's 2020 campaign, reacted alongside Democratic strategist Aisha Mills to the former president's comments on a conservative radio show earlier in the day, during which the Republican presidential nominee said that there are "a lot of bad genes" among migrants living in America.

Mills, an LGBTQ+ activist who has worked on dozens of congressional campaigns, told CNN's Erin Burnett that Trump's comments "reek of authoritarianism, and it also hearkens back to a time of Hitler."

"All of this smells like an affinity toward eugenics, which really should give us all pause," Mills added. "Because when we remember the last person, the last awful authoritarian dictator who believed in eugenics, it was someone who really wanted to exterminate an entire people because they thought that they didn't have 'good genes.'"

Urban shook his head through Mills' answer, and said after she had finished, "You should be ashamed of yourself."

"Aisha, for you to compare Donald Trump to Adolf Hitler on 10/7 is just shameful," Urban continued, referring to the anniversary of the Hamas attacks on Israel of October 7, 2023.

Urban said that Trump's comments were in reference to migrants who have murdered Americans and the "scientific studies" about whether murderers "have some sort of genetic predisposition to murder people."

"No eugenics, not of some made-up BS, Aisha," Urban said. "So, listen, I'm sorry that Donald Trump feels like standing up for people who may have been murdered by immigrants and want to deport illegal immigrants ... but that's OK in my case."

Dem Strategist Links Trump to Adolf Hitler

Republican presidential nominee and former President Donald Trump participates in a town hall at the Crown Center Arena on October 4 in Fayetteville, North Carolina. GOP strategist David Urban adamantly pushed back after a counterpart...

Trump made the controversial statement during an appearance on conservative radio host Hugh Hewitt's show Monday morning, during which he again attacked Vice President Kamala Harris for "allowing people to come through an open border." He also repeated false claims that there are "13,000" convicted murderers who have entered the country illegally under the Biden-Harris administration.

By Kaitlin Lewis
Night Repórter
Updated Oct 07, 2024 at 11:21 PM EDT

Trump's Ex-Chief Of Staff Says Donald Prefers 'Dictator' Approach

On Tuesday, The Atlantic published an article by its editor-in-chief Jeffrey Goldberg alleging that while serving as president, Donald Trump once said: "I need the kind of generals that Hitler had. People who were totally loyal to him, that follow orders."

Goldberg attributed this account to "two people who heard him say this" and also cited John Kelly, Trump's White House chief-of-staff from 2017 to 2019, who said the then president expressed admiration for the loyalty of "Hitler's generals." Trump spokesperson Alex Pfeiffer branded the account "absolutely false" adding: "President Trump never said this."

In an interview with The New York Times published on Tuesday, Kelly said: "Certainly the former president is in the far-right area, he's certainly an authoritarian, admires people who are dictators—he has said that. So he certainly falls into the general definition of fascist, for sure." Kelly also alleged he'd said "you know, Hitler did some good things too."

"He commented more than once that, 'You know, Hitler did some good things, too,'" Kelly told The New York Times.
The claims were rejected by Trump campaign spokesperson Steven Cheung who in a statement to The New York Times said Kelly was spreading "debunked stories." Newsweek has contacted representatives of Donald Trump 2024 presidential election campaign for comment via email on Wednesday outside of regular office hours.

The accusations come as polling analysis suggests the 2024 presidential election remains a nail-biter, with website FiveThirtyEight giving Democratic candidate Kamala Harris a 1.7-point lead over Trump in its latest polling average published on Tuesday. However, the website says that overall Trump has a 52 percent chance of victory in November, against Harris at 48 percent.

Senior Democrats have suggested a second Trump term could pose a threat to American democracy with Harris recently labeling the Republican nominee "unstable" and "dangerous," while the voice-over in one of her recent ads said that "if he wins, he'll ignore all checks that rein in a president's power." Trump has denied this claim and hit back saying the threat to U.S. democracy comes from another Democratic administration.

By James Bickerton
US News Reporter
Updated Oct 23, 2024 at 7:05 AM EDT

 

 

Trump chama drogada e preguiçosa a Harris

Depois de, em entrevistas recentes, ter falado em virar as forças armadas ou a Guarda Nacional contra “inimigos internos” (especificando mesmo que se referia a democratas de topo) e de ter avisado que estações de televisão como a CBS deveriam perder as suas licenças de emissão, Trump lançou um ataque cerrado a Harris durante um comício na Carolina do Norte.

“Ela bebe? Consome drogas? Não sei, não sei, não sei, não faço ideia”, declarou. No início do dia, chamou-lhe “preguiçosa” - um preconceito racista frequentemente utilizado contra afroamericanos.

(Continua)


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