Conspiracy Theories, Reichstag Truths and a Muslim Call to Power


I remember on the 7th of July 2005 I was still training to be a combat medic in the Army. Without any connection to the outside world, I heard news of the so-called terror attacks from one of my medic instructors. While I felt bad that all these attacks kept on coming and killing innocent civilians, I had this tiny notion that it could be an inside job like 9/11. Yes, I am one of “those people” who absolutely believe 9/11 was just the beginning of this decade’s series of Reichstag events to sustain justification for the “War on Terror”.

In light of these facts (and other overwhelming evidence), I am utterly sick of so-called moderate Muslims who are actually just apologists for this entire Islamic terrorism farce, who go about declaring, “We condemn the terrorist actions of the marginal few amongst us. We condemn the extremists”. Blah. Blah. Blah. Since when do people have to apologise for actions not their own? It’s like 21st century Germans having to apologise for the Holocaust under Nazi regime.

I know condemnation is not apology but the way these ’statements of condemnation’ are declared, and the way certain ‘moderate’ Muslims suddenly want to go all-out and ‘reach out’ to the non-Muslim communities (e.g. in America, Singapore, etc), just seems to me to be the kowtowing of Muslims to the propaganda agenda of Bush & Co in their lust for oil, power and blood.

This “Oh, we’re moderates and we have nothing to do with these extreme factions and we feel sorry for the victims too and we condemn these cowardly terrorists” message is sickening. Muslims are humiliated, terrorised, looked at condescendingly (consciously or subconsciously). Even the “Oh, we know you guys are moderates. We support and respect your beliefs, moderate Muslims” message is subliminally a form of insult. As if sane and rational Muslims (i.e. the majority non-terrorists amongst us) crave approval and respect.

Respect, rights, freedom - nobody can give these things to us. We have to take it. But in the first place, we by right should already have it; so if we have to ‘take it’, then we must have done something stupid to have ‘lost it’ or allowed others to ‘take it from us’ in the first place.

The fact is, while all these ‘reach-out’ actions are good, the intention behind them have to be clear. It should be genuine. It should come from a basis of common humanity. Not propaganda. Not advertising the message that “Islam is a peaceful religion”. That’s like wasting billions of dollars advertising, “1 + 1 = 2″ or “Do you know that the sky is blue?”. DUH!!! We know that! Move on! It is insulting to the intelligences of both Muslims and non-Muslims alike.

And why is it that we see mostly non-Muslims at the forefront of these conspiracy propagation campaigns and justice movements? Since when do we have to surrender the defence of our dignity to non-Muslims while we sycophantically throw ourselves at the banner of the “Islam is a religion of peace” propaganda agenda fueled by Bush & Co while our brothers and sisters are routinely subject to holocaust-like actions (close to 1 Million Iraqi civilians killed since Gulf 1.0 and Madeleine Albright saying, “It was worth it” - not including Palestinians, Bosnians, etc) from the Zionist and Revelationist regimes?

There were Muslims among the victims of 9/11 and 7/7 and other ‘Reichstag’ terrorist attacks. Imagine the sorrow of the families of these Muslim victims compounded by the stupid apologetics of other so-called moderate Muslims who were not victims plus the harassment by the State and ignorant Islamophobes.

Here’s a suggestion. The next time, God forbid, another terror attack occurs, and Fox news (or other propaganda agencies) mentions the “believedtobelinkedtoalqaeda” word, Muslim leaders should come forward and, instead of saying the usual “We feel sorry for the victims and condemn the extremists”, should first say, “We question the legitimacy of allegations by government agents that these terror attacks were perpetrated by Islamists. We demand incontrovertible empirical evidence assessed by an overwhelming number of government-independent parties and a thorough investigation of the sources of such evidences as well as free access for the general public to the sites of these terror attacks. For the meantime, we express our heartfelt sorrow to the families of these victims and condemn all forms of terrorism - be it government-sponsored (as is usually the case) or religiously-inspired”.

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