The 'Day of Jihad' That Never Came
One year ago, political figures spread a false terrorism panic that made everyone less free—and incited violence against a child.

Illinois man Joseph Czuba believed he was ready for the apocalypse. He had been convinced by his favorite radio shows that Muslims were planning a "day of jihad" on October 13, 2023. When the day passed without incident, Czuba told his wife that something was still coming the next day. Ready to face down the attacking hordes, he withdrew $1,000 from the bank, just in case "the grid" went out. There was only one loose end: his Palestinian-American tenant, Hanaan Shahin.
"He came to the house and said he was angry at [Shahin] for what was happening in Jerusalem," prosecutor Michael Fitzgerald said after the incident, citing detectives investigating the crime. When Shahin told Czuba to "give peace a chance," Czuba allegedly chased Shahin through her apartment with a knife. Then he stabbed Shahin's 6-year-old son Wadea Al-Fayoume to death, prosecutors say. Police found Czuba outside the apartment, dripping blood.
Czuba was not the only one who feared October 13 would be a "day of jihad." After Hamas attacked Israel on October 7 and called for protests in other Arab nations the following Friday, the media speculated about a wave of terror on U.S. soil. Politicians whipped their followers into a frenzy. Police beefed up security, and schools closed down in fear of impending attacks.
Then nothing happened. There were no armed attacks on America by Muslims that week—and the rumor provoked armed attacks against Muslim Americans. It was like a speed run of post-9/11 paranoia. American society saw an incomprehensible foreign threat, and overreacted. Innocent people were hurt. Later, as the perceived danger wore off, the false rumors and the violence they inspired were memory-holed, with no one held accountable.
"The War on Terror disappeared into normality, rather than disappearing. A lot of the infrastructure that was created post 9/11 just remained in place," says Arun Kundnani, an expert on counterterrorism and mass surveillance. "When October 7 happened, the default reflex from a lot of institutions was already shaped by the War on Terror."
Through interviews and documents obtained through the Freedom of Information Act, including a never-before-seen FBI memo, Reason has reconstructed how the panic spread, and the damage it did to Jewish, Palestinian, and other American communities.
The rush by powerful figures and institutions into mass hysteria—and the lack of reflection on the consequences—vividly reveals what the politics of the war on terror have done to America.
'THERE WILL BE BLOOD'
The phrase "day of jihad" was an invention of the tabloids. Hamas never used those words. In fact, "there is no history of Hamas attacks on U.S. soil or U.S. troops," says Aymenn Jawad Al-Tamimi, a scholar of classical Arabic who has extensively researched Islamist movements. (Hamas has killed and kidnapped Americans during indiscriminate attacks on Israel.) Its ambitions, however violent and repressive, are limited to taking power in the Holy Land.
Groups that have attacked America, such as Al Qaeda and the Islamic State, want "never-ending armed jihad" aimed at "world domination," Al-Tamimi says. In September 2024, an Islamic State supporter in Canada was arrested for allegedly plotting a mass shooting against Jewish Americans. By contrast, Hamas' goal is "a Palestinian state that should be Islamic in its identity, and governed by Islamic law," Al-Tamimi says.
Still, there was a kernel of truth behind the idea that Hamas was trying to mobilize foreign supporters. As it became clear that Hamas had killed hundreds of Israelis on October 7, and reports of atrocities against Israeli civilians flooded out, someone associated with Hamas did make a call for some action in foreign countries. In an interview with a Yemeni media outlet on October 11, former Hamas chairman Khaled Meshaal asked people to "head to the squares and streets of the Arab and Islamic world" in two days.
Meshaal told "scholars who teach jihad," or religious warfare, that "this is a moment to practice" what they preach. Specifically, he asked neighboring Jordan, Syria, Lebanon, and Egypt to intervene in the war. It echoed a written statement by Hamas the day before, asking foreign Muslims to gather on October 13 and "march towards the borders of our beloved Palestine."
"This was not a call for a global war of jihad against infidels or a call to terrorism in Western countries," Al-Tamimi says. Arabic-language media covered Meshaal's speech in passing, if at all, as a straightforward attempt to stir up pro-war demonstrations in the countries bordering Israel.
English-speaking media had a different reaction. The Middle East Media and Research Institute, a controversial think tank run by a former Israeli intelligence officer, reposted clips of Meshaal's speech with English subtitles. Journalists ran with the most sensational framing possible.
"THERE WILL BE BLOOD," declared a headline from The Daily Signal, a news outlet formerly published by the conservative Heritage Foundation. The headline was not a quote from anyone involved with Hamas—it was a quote from Heritage Foundation expert and former U.S. intelligence official Robert Greenway, who claimed Meshaal's video was "an unambiguous global call to arms" that "will be heeded." Greenway did not respond to multiple emails asking for comment.
The Daily Mail, a British tabloid, coined the phrase "day of jihad," which was quickly picked up by other media. CBS News reported matter-of-factly that "Hamas has called for a day of jihad on Friday" without any context. NewsNation ran a five-minute segment on a "call for bloodshed" and the potential threat to American cities, full of wild speculation, without specifying what they were actually talking about.
"That's what the whole framework of counterterrorism enables. You don't have to ask those kinds of questions: Precisely what are you talking about, which organization you're talking about, what is the actual evidence for a threat," says Kundnani, the counterterrorism expert. "You just have to take whatever measures you can imagine and get on with it, and you don't stop and ask questions. That's the danger of the whole framework of counterterrorism, as it's been set up since 9/11."
Political figures played up the fear. "Do not leave your homes that day unless there is an emergency. Avoid public transit. Avoid airplanes. Avoid public events," conservative podcaster Joey Mannarino warned. Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk urged his followers to "arm up."
Rep. Matt Gaetz (R–Fla.) stated on social media that Floridians would be armed that day. Republican congressional candidate from Minnesota Dalia al-Aqidi went on Fox News to claim that Hamas was "ordering every terrorist sympathizer, not only in the United States but globally, to entice [sic] violence, and antisemitism, and hate." Former Trump administration official Stephen Miller, meanwhile, argued that Americans should "design your nation's immigration policy so you don't have to worry about a global day of jihad."
As the House of Representatives debated who would be its next speaker, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R–Ga.) even tried to use the rumors to accelerate the vote. "Do not make us all travel tomorrow on Hamas' announced global day of jihad," she said. "And we all know we aren't going to be here this weekend." Mannarino, Kirk, Gaetz, al-Aqidi, and Greene did not respond to requests for comment. Neither did Miller's organization, America First Legal.
'Abundance of Caution'
Law enforcement agencies raced to respond to the public's fears. The New York Police Department ordered all officers to report in uniform on October 13, activated a Joint Operations Center, and stepped up patrols out of an "abundance of caution." Other big city police departments made similar announcements. Quietly, officers across America discussed whether there really was a threat.
Many of these conversations took place through fusion centers, a system of offices created after 9/11 for information sharing between local and federal law enforcement. Although fusion centers sometimes help police officers report real threats and receive sober guidance from higher-ups, they also allow for the spread of panicky rumors from the internet.
Government repression "is inseparable from the news cycle, and the news cycle is inseparable from social media panics. These things all feed into each other," says Dylan Saba, a half-Jewish and half-Palestinian attorney at Palestine Legal, a Palestinian-American legal aid nonprofit.
The Austin Regional Intelligence Center (ARIC), a fusion center in Texas, issued a bulletin about the upcoming "Day of Global Jihad." It includes a brief quote from Meshaal urging Muslims to sacrifice their "blood and souls," without mentioning anything else about the context or target audience of his statements. The footnotes cite an AmericanMilitaryNews.com article based almost entirely on a social media thread by a Christian televangelist.
The ARIC bulletin's disclaimer that there is no "intelligence indicating a potential threat to individuals, groups, or critical infrastructure within the Central Texas region" rings a little hollow, especially because the bulletin was forwarded to police across the country. Reason found a copy among the emails of the San Diego Law Enforcement Coordination Center.
The same social media thread cited in the ARIC bulletin made it as far as Clifton, New Jersey. "The link below brings you to a social media post that has brought much fear to communities within Clifton," a police captain wrote in an email to officers ordering additional patrols outside Jewish and Palestinian community centers on October 13. ARIC declined to comment in response to Reason's questions.
Other fusion centers became a source of calm. In response to a question from the Ada County Prosecutor's Office, the Idaho Criminal Intelligence Center reassured local police that there is "no indication of threats to the area." When the North Dakota governor's chief of staff emailed state officials claiming that "the Hamas is calling for violence against Israeli and in some instances in Americans [sic]," the state fusion center concluded that "We have not seen anything brewing in ND."
The Northern California Regional Intelligence Center correctly reported that Hamas had demanded "general mobilization to stand in solidarity with Palestine," calling for "protests across the Muslim world and for Muslim countries neighboring Israel to attack Israel." The bulletin clarified that there were no specific threats to northern California.
The FBI emerged as a particularly levelheaded voice. For example, New Jersey's fusion center hosted a conference call with Nelson Delgado, the FBI's assistant special agent in charge in Newark, New Jersey, to discuss Meshaal's speech.
"While the rhetoric is disconcerting, it mirrors that released by FTOs [foreign terrorist organizations] in the past decade and these types of statements historically have had minimal violent impact in the NKAOR [Newark area of responsibility] and homeland overall," Delgado said, according to briefing notes he emailed out afterward. "That said, the call to action, coupled with the date (Friday the 13th in October) may lead to some unrest by opportunists. So, it is important to keep yourselves aware and vigilant."
The FBI agent underscored that New Jersey has witnessed "peaceful mass gatherings by various groups in support of either the Palestinian and Jewish communities," that "a protestor is a USPER [U.S. person] exercising his/her First Amendment Right," and that "acts of violence/terror against any members of any community will not be tolerated." The words "First Amendment Right" were underlined in the email.
But that wasn't necessarily the message that was passed on to the public. When FBI Director Christopher Wray told the nonprofit Secure Community Network that he was "most assuredly paying attention" and "working to confirm if there is any validity" to the rumored threats, the Jewish News Syndicate ran the headline "Remain vigilant ahead of suggested 'Day of Jihad,' says FBI."
'Exploited by Bad Faith Actors'
Jewish Americans were feeling a "really visceral" fear at the time, according to Larry Yudelson, a Jewish journalist and book publisher from Teaneck, New Jersey. "If you're in the Modern Orthodox Jewish community of Teaneck, you're two degrees of separation" from one of the 1,200 people killed by Hamas on October 7, he says.
There was a worry that antisemites wanted to bring the violence home. Even before October 7, antisemitic attacks made up over half of religious hate crimes in America and were rising, according to FBI statistics. After October 7, several incidents of Americans cheering on violence against Israelis went viral, including an October 8 rally in New York City where protesters mocked the concertgoers kidnapped by Hamas.
On the other hand, outright disinformation spread, mixing up sympathy for the Palestinian people, support for Hamas, and unrelated symbols. For example, multiple videos of college students chanting "We charge you with genocide" went viral in early October after the chant was mislabeled as "We want Jewish genocide."
In a mass email thread discussing how the town of Clifton, New Jersey, planned to protect its Jewish community, a local man complained on October 10 that there was "currently a Palestinian flag on city hall property" and demanded that the police "investigate." Over the next few minutes, he went back and forth with himself about whether it was really a Palestinian flag—or just a misidentified Italian flag.
The media reports about a "day of jihad" seemed to confirm that the war was coming to America. Anticipating the worst, Jewish parents pulled their children out of school, and Jewish schools across the country canceled classes on October 13. So did a nondenominational charter school in Las Vegas, simply because it was housed in a former synagogue.
Jewish writer David Klion penned a widely circulated essay comparing the American reactions to October 7 with the post-9/11 climate. He tells Reason that "the trauma that Israelis and diasporic Jews experienced in the wake of October 7 is real, and valid, and shouldn't be discounted, but it was also encouraged and exploited by bad faith actors who are responsible for a climate of total dehumanization of Palestinians that preceded October 7 and has facilitated Israel's genocidal war since."
Israeli leaders were promising a harsh war of revenge for October 7, and some U.S. politicians wanted to expand the conflict. "They want to kill Israel. So does the Iran [sic], the ayatollahs," Sen. Lindsey Graham (R–S.C.) declared on Fox News. "We're in a religious war." Though America had not been attacked directly, the "day of jihad" story helped hawks act like America was about to be attacked. Graham signed onto an October 13 statement, along with nine other senators, vaguely warning about "domestic threats" related to the war.
Private actors jumped on the bandwagon, too. The controversial security nonprofit Magen Am pitched its services to Jewish communities in Los Angeles. (One of its staffers is a Navy SEAL veteran who waterboarded his own child on camera.) Magen Am head Ivan Wolkind warned CBS News that Jewish parents should not let their children walk to school or go outside without supervision due to "elevated risk" around the "day of jihad." Magen Am did not respond to a request for comment.
'What Did You Think Was Going To Happen?'
Meanwhile, many Palestinian Americans were mourning for their loved ones killed by Israeli bombing in Gaza while bracing for a return of the post-9/11 crackdown on civil liberties.
It was striking "just how quickly the anti-Arab, anti-Palestinian, anti-Muslim sentiment came out," says Tariq Kenney-Shawa, the U.S. policy fellow at Al-Shabaka, a Palestinian think tank. "A lot of our generation was under the impression that with the anti-war movement and the movement against the forever wars came a rejection of the post-9/11 anti-Muslim and anti-Arab sentiment."
But that same combination reemerged. The American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee reported multiple fishing expeditions by FBI agents, who visited mosques and community members looking for "troublemakers" in the first few days after October 7. The Council on American-Islamic Relations received 1,283 bias incident reports in the month after October 7.
The "day of jihad" rumor was an especially ominous development. The public was being conditioned to see Muslims as an immediate personal threat. And the supposed threat was not a plot by any one organization that could be stopped, but a spontaneous call to arms that would pit neighbors against neighbors.
New York City councilwoman Inna Vernikov, one of the major local boosters of the "day of jihad" story, showed up at Brooklyn College on October 13 to confront pro-Palestinian protesters. Carrying a gun, she claimed that every one of the protesters was "a terrorist without the bombs."
Some Americans took that notion literally. On October 12, former Democratic congressional candidate Max Steiner grabbed a 13-year-old Palestinian-American girl by the neck and smashed her phone after she wrote the words "Free Gaza" on a California beach—a "pro-terrorist sign," in Steiner's words. Steiner was later convicted of battery.
The following day, Army veteran Richard Blandy allegedly stopped his car outside a pro-Palestinian protest at the Pennsylvania State House and asked whether the protesters "hate Jews" or "agree with Hamas." He then pointed a gun at the face of an Arab-American woman who was there with her 11-year-old son. Blandy, who faces charges of terroristic threats and ethnic intimidation, claims he pulled out the gun because he felt threatened.
It's unclear whether Steiner and Blandy specifically had the "day of jihad" rumors in mind, or just acted out of a more general fear of Palestinians. But the deadliest incident was directly related to fear of a "day of jihad." Czuba, an avid media consumer, had become convinced that the "day of jihad" was coming and that his tenant was going to summon "her Palestinian friends or family to harm him," Czuba's wife told police.
"You are killing our kids in Israel. You Palestinians don't deserve to live," Czuba yelled, according to a friend of Shahin, the tenant. (Czuba is neither Israeli nor Jewish.) Then he made good on the threat. Czuba had once built a treehouse for Shahin's son; now, he stabbed the boy, al-Fayoume, to death in his bedroom while Shahin was trapped in her bathroom, prosecutors say.
Nashwa Bawab, a Palestinian Youth Movement member in Chicago, attended the funeral along with thousands of other Muslims in the city. There, people mourned Al-Fayoume along with the 1,900 other Palestinians who had been killed by the war by then. Bawab chokes up while describing the atmosphere.
"So many people in our community have families in Gaza, too. It was happening in our backyard," she says. "The fact that it happened in such a brutal way to a child—it was this violence that reverberated."
For many members of the community, the murder also felt like the logical conclusion of the previous few days. "I'm not saying that people could have predicted it, but if Palestinians are made to be seen as non-humans," Bawab says, "then the Palestinians who are in your backyard are also going to face the same repercussions."
She has a question for public figures who promoted the "day of jihad" rumors: "What did you think was going to happen?"
'We Kind of Just Moved On'
None of the blood-soaked predictions came true. No public transit or public events in America were attacked. Members of Congress went about their business without any disruption. There were pro-Palestinian protests in New York, as there had been the day before and would be the day after. Both Jewish and Palestinian groups were among the protesters. The New York Times reported "no violence" at the October 13 demonstrations.
Wrongdoers did exploit the fear of terrorism that day to disrupt schools and houses of worship, without firing a single shot. Bomb threats on October 13 forced authorities to evacuate people from a high school in Silver Spring, Maryland; a high school in Anchorage, Alaska; and several synagogues and public schools across Pennsylvania. None of the threats were carried out.
The only person to kill another American over the conflict that week was Czuba, who apparently thought he was preempting the "day of jihad."
What didn't happen was much self-reflection. No elected official or media personality admitted that they had wrongly predicted violence, let alone acknowledged that the mass hysteria had disrupted Americans' lives and provoked violence. Law enforcement did not tell Americans to breathe a sigh of relief when the worries about Hamas attacks proved to be false.
Wray, the FBI director, testified to Congress two weeks later that "the ongoing war in the Middle East has raised the threat of an attack against Americans in the United States to a whole 'nother level." Cue the sensationalized headlines that Hamas "could inspire" attacks in America. The scary vibes would continue indefinitely.
"Having a fear reaction, you learn from the fear," says Yudelson, the book publisher. "But the absence of fear doesn't un-condition you."
The news cycle moved on. The outlets that had spread the initial stories about a "day of jihad" did not run follow-up stories on whether any attacks happened that day—except for the New York Post, which insisted that the pro-Palestinian demonstrations and Jewish anti-war protests in New York City were the "day of jihad" unfolding.
"A lot of Americans have just thrown their hands up. Their response to this torrent of misinformation is, 'I don't understand and I won't understand,'" says Kenney-Shawa, the Palestinian-American think tanker. "That's dangerous, because there are objective truths. It is an objective truth that the day of jihad wasn't a thing."
The war on terror "was a complete and utter disaster, and destroyed the lives of millions of people," says Kundnani, the counterterrorism expert. "And then we kind of just moved on from it without ever taking stock and reflecting on what happened. So long as we don't do that reflection, we keep falling back into the same reflexes, and we can keep making the same mistakes."
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JD Vance is wrong about the day of Jihad.
So rhetoric can cause people to kill a Muslim, but it can't cause assassination attempts. Did I get this right?
That does seem to be the narrative.
When bad things happen to people we are unsympathetic toward, blaming angry rhetoric for inspiring the bad thing is wrong think. When bad things happen to people we have sympathies toward, we can blame the rhetoric of people we do not like.
It is a very balanced way of looking at events.
Assclown Matthew Petti must be looking for a CNN gig. Just more complete nonsense for us normal Americans to give the eye roll headshake.
I do like easy-to-remember principles.
The dangerous rhetoric that compelled two Act Blue donors to attempt to assassinate Trump on two separate occasions came from Trump himself. - douchesters
But of course the violent rhetoric of pro-Hanas sympathizers did nothing, nor did their direct actions.
Act Blue donors? So you mean conservative Republicans, right?
When I think of Bad Faith Actors, Matthew Petti is front of mind
After October 7, several incidents of Americans cheering on violence against Israelis went viral, including an October 8 rally in New York City where protesters mocked the concertgoers kidnapped by Hamas.
And that was merely the beginning. Tens of thousands of Hamas sympathizers rioted nationwide, many personally threatened Jews, and dozens of sites were damaged.
Not a day if jihad, but a season. Led by American useful idiots.
Jesse: Only leftists say words are violence.
Someone takes a shot at Trump.
Jesse: Words are violence! Words are violence!
When the press and Democrats seriously claimed Giffords' shooting was due to a Palin political poster...the complaint about "BOAF SIDEZ" rings hollow.
Do not complain about that the rules set by others gets used on others. Fuck, this "libertarian" site is claiming rhetoric caused this issue...but not, you know, any assassination attempts. Because that is consistent.
Democrats did it first. That makes it ok.
In this case...yes, yes it is.
Democrats set the rules. Stop trying to protect them from the repercussions of their actions.
Harris yesterday said “Trump is an existential threat to America.”
F that cont.
Hey, let's not ignore those pluralities whose egoes depend on self-fulfilling prophecies!
And we don't talk about rhetoric like "We're all in this together.", "My mask protects you, your mask protects me.", and "Mostly peaceful protest."
Misinformation can affect behavior - but drag-queen storytelling hour is totally not going to do that.
I don't get the hate for drag queen story hour.
They're not doing some kind of cabaret act in front of the kids, and with the amount of makeup many of them are wearing it might as well be Rodeo Clown story hour.
Beside that, what's more hetero-normative and rooted in the "patriarchy" than the idea that men have to be dressed as women to be seen as "safe" around kids they're not related to?
This entire piece operates off the premise that the reader should believe everything his quoted "Palestinian" (whatever that is) American "scholars" say.
Reason decided to trot out it's sympathy for terrorist supporters piece today of all days.
Got to signal those ‘virtues’
They always talk about how Hamas just wants a Muslim nation for "Palestinian" Arabs. They always leave out that Hamas wants that place to cover all of the land "from the river to the sea", and that it would then need to be cleansed of all non Arab-Muslims, including Christian Arabs who are at least as "indigenous" to the area as the followers of a religion which was founded hundreds of miles away as opposed to literally within that territory as is the case with the two religions they're looking to extinguish in the region.
It's not the murdering terrorists who are to blame - it's the *reaction* to them . . .
https://x.com/normmacdonald/status/809637479674281984?lang=en
This is the day for this article? Really?
The democrats are posturing that Trump will jihad America and we will lose all our freedoms.
Some people may take action.
Well Trump did put America on a global holy war during his first administration, and…….. oh wait, that never happened.
Is Obama taking your guns again ?
That was a total non sequitur. As I was making a sarcastic (but not Sarcasmic) remark about your idiotic democrat hyperbole towards Trump.
And Obama didn’t try to directly take guns away. Instead he unconstitutionally put regulations in place to make ammunition more expensive and difficult to buy..
He banned importing Russian manufactured firearms and ammunition which eliminated the affordability or obtaining and practicing with AK platform rifles. An infringement.
He and Holder transferred some arms to cartel types which were used to murder a border patrol agent.
Don't forget about "Operation Choke Point" where they tried to use Financial Regulatory agencies to try to intimidate banks away from doing business with businesses and non-profit groups who were associated with advocacy and products related to "disfavored rights" such as 2A. Something which the State of New York was recently punished for attempting to replicate at the level of their jurisdiction.
Oh no, Palestinians perpetrated a massacre and some people on the other side of the world over-reacted. Its all the fault of the juice and JD Vance.
So if Hamas doesn't do a press conference about it then their surrogates couldn't have said anything. Fuck off you dishonest terrorist shill.
Then nothing happened. There were no armed attacks on America by Muslims that week—and the rumor provoked armed attacks against Muslim Americans. It was like a speed run of post-9/11 paranoia. American society saw an incomprehensible foreign threat, and overreacted. Innocent people were hurt. Later, as the perceived danger wore off, the false rumors and the violence they inspired were memory-holed, with no one held accountable.
If this was caused by a Western nation, we would call this "blowback." And as for whether anyone is being held accountable, Joseph Czuba is on trial for his crimes. He's being held accountable for his actions. Perhaps someone riled him up, but the idea of getting him incensed to commit murder might have much less effective if not for Hamas committing a massacre at a music festival only days earlier. Any call to hold people accountable that doesn't also include holding Hamas leaders accountable is just a double standard.
Groups that have attacked America, such as Al Qaeda and the Islamic State, want "never-ending armed jihad" aimed at "world domination," Al-Tamimi says. In September 2024, an Islamic State supporter in Canada was arrested for allegedly plotting a mass shooting against Jewish Americans. By contrast, Hamas' goal is "a Palestinian state that should be Islamic in its identity, and governed by Islamic law," Al-Tamimi says.
Why even write this paragraph when you're going to immediately undermine it in the next paragraph? Yes, Hamas is limited in both its scope and its reach, but Hamas has many allies and supporters, including the nation of Iran. Just because Hamas itself is not a threat to the US domestically doesn't mean that people who support Hamas are never going to attack the US.
Osama Bin Laden cited the existence of Israel as the reason he attacked the United States. He called it a military occupation that was organized by the British and supported by the United States. People who are still upset about the existence of Israel absolutely can and will have a grievance against the United States. These people are on board with the goals of Hamas and are ideologically supporting them. Just because Hamas isn't striking targets in the US doesn't mean nobody will ever strike the United States in their name because it has more-or-less already happened back in September 2001.
The United Nations are pretty much Hamas supporters at this point. And apparently a shit ton of commies and migrants who trashed Rome for some reason the other day.
Which is why we should both leave AND expel the UN. Let them set up shop elsewhere.
We should also expel all Marxists. Then we can pass a constitutional amendment to criminalize the practice of Marxism. The death penalty should be part of that equation.
Why care what acting lifelong criminal minds want, unless they end up in custody for an actual crime?
Palestinian Americans have always been the primary victims of October 7.
We better send them back home right away!
It figures that Reason would publish a bullshit article like this on the anniversary of the Islamic attacks on Israel. Got to signal they’ve got their minds right to their fellow travelers.
Anyone who would murder a 6 year old boy is a deranged lunatic. That's confirmed by simply searching Google for photos of Joseph Czuba. That face just screams out "I'm mentally ill"
.
From the details presented, Czuba is a psychotic murderer who belongs behind bars forever.
Former Trump administration official Stephen Miller, meanwhile, argued that Americans should "design your nation's immigration policy so you don't have to worry about a global day of jihad."
I completely agree with Miller. Those who follow the tenets of Islam would seem to be incompatible with the society we had built in the US (falling apart, I recognize, but there's no reason to hasten that).
Which tenet authorizes the incompatibility? Could it be the definition where they indict the notion of the god as representative of a plurality, (recently & seductively repositioned as a singularity by who-knows-what)?
"There is no god ..." (you know an assertion of Islamic faith if you have any interest in the topic).
Congress shall make no law ... (I couldn't help but notice how reading can be affected by moving a matter of fact & truth from general vernacular and instead putting Ronald McSmithy in charge of all acceptable definition of fact & truth pertaining to it, who I am when he buys your sticks & stones).
There's nothing about the mere practice of Islam that's incompatible with existing in the US.
Those who want to establish a nation governed under Sharia law are incompatible with the society of the USA, but so are those who believe that all of a nation's laws should be directly derived from the beliefs of any other religion (having laws which happen to overlap certain beliefs such as prohibitions against murder and theft isn't the same as theocracy), or even those who would seek to establish any kind of "State Religion" in the nation or any State within the union. That would arguably include anyone who claims that this country is a "Christian Nation" by origin.
But that date of October 13th, 2023 fell on Friday.
Friday the 13th motivates certain non-Muslims to feel significance where there is none, or at least none by default, because the superstition relates to a tale about Norse gods where a guest shows up who was unwelcome — factually having been a “13th guest” — or so the venerated Siri has told.
I find it not at all surprising that Tucille can write an article that almost requires one to frame the issue in terms of good and evil. While another article here at Reason shows where that emotional/religious framing leads.
Sadly, I find it not at all surprising how many commenters here use the same framing and are perfectly ok with a kid being killed because of it.
And though that framing is religious, I am certain that none of the commenters here who go down that path are religious. Certainly not ethical
While I am at it, I should tag on that constructing a philosophy becomes necessary in order to carry out an act of faith so that a rational explanation does exist for any given religious foundation. The problem begins with the next man who does not have the capacity to comprehend the most manifest terms of modestly provisional salvation, the man who could not read and therefore was at the mercy of available interpreters to comprehend Hammurabi's explicitly proscribed laws for the first time written for all to see.
commenters here use the same framing and are perfectly ok with a kid being killed because of it.
I re-read every single comment on this article, thinking I had missed something. I hadn't. Not one said, or even implied, that they "are perfectly ok with a kid being killed."
That makes your post a blatant lie. And an easily refuted one.
Sadly, I find it not at all surprising how many commenters here ... perfectly ok with a kid being killed because of it.
I'm not at all surprised you would make up such an idiotic and unsupported accusation. What a pathetic and disgusting sack of shit you are.
https://x.com/normmacdonald/status/809637479674281984
and the rumor provoked armed attacks against Muslim Americans...
who were peacefully trying to celebrate the October 7th massacre.
Is the author of this piece a member of the "millenial" or a younger generation?
There's been some attention paid to a "generational split" in viewpoints on Israel and the middle east. I've wondered more than once how much of that split is the result of people who can't remember the 20th century also not remembering the era in the 70s and 80s where it seemed like the PLO (or some allied group) were hijacking or bombing US and European airliners 2-4 times per year (maybe it was less frequent than that, but it seemed to be far too common), a practice which ended with 9/11/01 as much because the nature of that attack would put an end to the hostages on an airliner staying compliant as a strategy to survive the encounter (that compliance being the only reason why a small number of people could possibly control a much larger number in an enclosed space). They also don't remember the decades of bombing and mass shooting civilian spaces like markets/restaurants/nightclubs in Israel which evolved into suicide bombing as security measures increased, then to mortar and rocket attacks when the PLO/Hamas/Hezbollah/IJ friendly parts of the Arab territories got segregated, and ultimately the blockade of Gaza to stop Iranian military grade rockets from being shipped into the country.
For people who seem to view the history of the late 20th century as being on par with the legends King Arthur and Robin Hood (despite being literally surrounded by people who witnessed the 20th first-hand), I suppose it's maybe possible to buy into the idea that "apartheid" conditions between Israel and Gaza somehow happened in a vacuum, or were just suddenly established in 2006 out of sheer pique on the part of the Jews. Maybe to them the difference in time between 75 years ago and 5700 years ago is also somehow academic in terms of what constitutes the "indigenous" population of an area (they are the "pics or it didn't happen" generation after all)?