To: Doren who wrote (1423261 ) 10/27/2023 1:41:23 AM From: Maple MAGA 1 RecommendationRecommended By Mick Mørmøny
Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1578700 Ireland: Cops say Muslim migrant who beheaded two homosexual men ‘wasn’t radicalized’ OCT 26, 2023 12:30 PM BY ROBERT SPENCER 18 COMMENTS Maybe he wasn’t, but why did he behead his victims, which accord with the dictum “When you meet the unbelievers, strike the necks” (Qur’an 47:4)? A hadith depicts Muhammad specifying the punishment for homosexual activity: “The Messenger of Allah (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) said, ‘Whoever you find doing the action of the people of Loot, execute the one who does it and the one to whom it is done.’” (Sunan Abu Dawud 4462) “The story of Yousef Palani: A homophobic killer who sickened the nation,” by Sorcha Crowley, Irish Examiner , October 24, 2023: Described as “giddy” and “daft”, nobody thought Yousef Palani could murder and maim. And yet he did. His gruesome murder and beheading of two gay men in Sligo last year, for which he was handed down two life sentences, has shocked and sickened a nation. It was the worst homophobic attack in the history of the State. Palani’s decision to plead guilty, to first stabbing Anthony Burke and then murdering Aidan Moffitt and Michael Snee, at least saved their families from having to sit through what would have been undoubtedly a traumatic trial. Some suspect his decision was self-serving, and not made out of any consideration for his victims or their families. Perhaps it was the weight of damning evidence against him. The prosecution’s book of evidence was so big it had to go to the printing section of Garda Headquarters in Phoenix Park. The sentencing of the 23-year-old heard he was motivated by his hatred of and prejudice towards homosexual men. The second eldest of eight children of an Iraqi-Kurdish family, Palani came to Ireland in 2006 under a UN protection programme when he was six years old. The family was provided with accommodation by the State in Sligo…. “It’s not that they were causing trouble all the time, but they would intimidate us subtly,” said one neighbour, speaking to this newspaper on condition of anonymity…. There are five different motives attributed to spree killings: anger/revenge, ideological reasons, desperation, mental illness or thrill. Investigators were satisfied he wasn’t radicalised. He was driven by “hostility and prejudice” towards gay men. He denied being gay himself. The Irish Council of Imams condemned the killings at the time, saying that “murder is a horrific crime that cannot be justified by any means irrespective of the alleged motive or the identity of the perpetrator. Islam values and cherishes human life.”