Sunday, July 08, 2007

DAR AL HARB - U.K.: THE INSANE BRITS

You may recall Warsi from a prior post of mine titled:

DAR AL HARB - U.K.: FLAMING DHIMMITUDE OF THE UNITED KINGDOM

In the initial article they did not mention that Warsi wants to:

-engage in chats with terrorists
-make nice with Hamas
-no pressure on moslems to root out jihadists in their midsts (why should they?!? it's part of islam and mohammad said it was good)
-infidels are to blame for the jihad - - - yeah, by their very existence & unwilligness to submit to the will of moslems & islam...


Dave, we can see through this stunt

Sayeeda Warsi is a Muslim mother who wants to engage with Islamic terrorists. She welcomes the election of Hamas, whose idea of democracy is to drag its political opponents into the street and shoot them in the head.

She insists we must not put pressure on British Muslims to root out bombers in their communities as it offends their sensibilities. And she says the Government's anti-terror laws 'are enough to tip any normal young man into the realms of a radicalised fanatic'.

So, has Warsi been shunned by mainstream society and earmarked as a potential threat to national unity?

Nope.

In response to the failed bomb plots that would have destroyed the lives of dozens of innocent Brits, she was parachuted into the House of Lords to fight terrorism. And the most startling fact of all is that Warsi is not some loony Left appointment, nor some limp LibDem gesture, but another cynical stunt from David Cameron.

Another cynical stunt from David Cameron?

On his blog, the Sunshine Kid triumphantly introduces Warsi as the first Muslim member of any Cabinet or Shadow Cabinet.

"History is being made right here in this very room," he says of his newly-appointed Shadow Minister for Community Cohesion.

Well, forgive me if I don't join in the glad-handing.

I first encountered Baroness Warsi nearly a decade ago when we both took part in a TV show simulating how people would respond if they were running the country at a time of national crisis.

Even back then, researchers on the show described her as one of the most ruthlessly ambitious women they had ever met. Ambitious to make a difference? No, ambitious to become a celebrity.

And now, Baroness Warsi will be just that, wheeled out on programmes such as this week's Question Time as a very visible statement about the inclusive nature of the Conservatives.

It didn't seem to bother Cameron that his new 'cohesion' guru's views on homosexuality have outraged gays. Or that she believes that failed asylum seekers should be free to stay and work in Britain. Or even that she found it impossible to secure a safe Tory seat.

No, Cameron's only concern was PR - and as a Muslim mother, Warsi could convey a token message of change.

It's enough to make you want to change parties.



Pertinent Links:

1)
Dave, we can see through this stunt

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