[sparkscoffee] Re: Yeah, Let's Make It All About "The Girls"

  • From: "" <dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> (Redacted sender "sblumen123@xxxxxxx" for DMARC)
  • To: sparkscoffee@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Sun, 18 May 2014 21:32:02 -0400 (EDT)

D J J  Ring, Jr.
I didn't hear it but someone else did and mentioned it to me that the girls 
were Christian.
That is terrible, terrible, terrible anyway we look at it.
 
Comrade B
 
 
-----Original Message-----
From: D.J.J. Ring, Jr. <n1ea@xxxxxxxx>
To: sparkscoffee <sparkscoffee@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Sat, May 10, 2014 2:23 pm
Subject: [sparkscoffee] Yeah, Let's Make It All About "The Girls"


Why doesn't the news mention that "The Girls" are Christian and of
that group mostly Catholics.

Being about "The Girls" makes it sound like it's the socially
acceptable Socialist policy about being against education for women
and girls.

But it's not about that.  Boko Haram is attacking Christians.

Christians are being attacked all over Northern Africa and the Middle
East.  But it's against what I believe is Mr. Obama's pro Muslem
terrorist policies.  He's sending in help to Nigeria, announcing it,
but not sending in military men to stage the attack.

This is a WAR.  It's a war of Muslem terrorists against Christians!
Who doesn't get it, and who is making sure the people aren't being
informed?

See below.

73
DR

http://www.christianpost.com/news/boko-haram-kidnaps-nearly-200-school-girls-in-nigeria-parents-facing-nightmare-118079/


"Boko Haram has been kidnapping little girls who are Christians,
trying to turn them into sex slaves, trying to convert them by force.
Their strategy is to marry the girls and kill the men. So what they
have done by kidnapping these female students, it is another
demonstration of the impunity with which Boko Haram has been running
its terrorist activities."

He pointed to a specific incident in 2012, when a Nigerian Christian
woman, Deborah Shettima from Borno state, witnessed Boko Haram gunmen
storming into her home, killing her husband and kidnapping her young
daughter. To this date, there is no information on what happened to
the daughter.

"We are just totally, completely appalled that the Nigerian federal
government continues to show itself totally incompetent to bring these
people to justice and to halt these very pernicious, despicable
activities," Akande said.

While there have been numerous reports on the extent to which the
Nigerian army has been able to fight back against Boko Haram, the
CANAN executive director insisted that the war is being lost – at a
"faster rate than we thought."

He blamed political pressure on the federal government for the
inability to cope with Boko Haram's attacks, which he said have become
more viscous than they have ever been.

"The issue of terrorism is not one to play politics with," he added.

CANAN has called on the federal government to help the thousands of
refugees fleeing Nigeria to escape the violence, as well as to provide
better welfare packages and boost the morale of Nigerian soldiers on
the frontlines.

He noted that the Nigerian army is capable of handling the threat of
Boko Haram on its own, but still called for international support in
the battle to bring the Islamic terrorists to justice.

Islamic extremists are also suspected to be behind the bus bombing on
Monday in Abuja, where 71 people were killed and 123 were injured.

It was reportedly the deadliest attack ever recorded on Abuja, and a
Roman Catholic priest noted that the victims were mostly poor, working
class people.

Boko Haram has been trying to take down the Nigerian government and
drive out Christians from the religiously-divided country over the
past four to five years, killing thousands of people and carrying out
attacks on government buildings, schools and churches.


 

Other related posts: