Pro-Terrorist Rally Held In Miami

A group of pro-terrorist protesters began chanting slogans such as “We are Hamas!” as they marched through Miami.

The demonstration, sponsored by groups like the Council on American-Islamic Relations Florida and the Islamic Circle of North America, was supposed to be a “stop the bombing” march.

The event started on topic with chants of “no more killing; no more war” but changed into Islamic chants of “Allahu Akbar” and “we are jihad!”

The crowd assaulted a Jewish photographer who was sent to cover the event when his Jewish faith was discovered.  Several protesters threated to kill the photographer because he was “a Jew.”  They used multiple Jewish slurs as they harassed the man until he left the area.

A local reporter covering the event said she found it chilling to see hate-filled Jihadists controlling streets in Miami and threatening someone because they were Jewish.

Israeli Supporters Attacked By Crowd Chanting “Kill Jews”

A Canadian family of six who was pro-Israel and showing support for Israel in downtown Calgary was attacked by a group of 100 pro-terrorist protesters and beaten.

The crowd chanted a variety of anti-Semitic slogans including “Kill Jews” as they circled the family and would not let them escape.  A 22-year-old woman and a 52-year-old woman who was recovering from surgery were the most severely beaten by the mob.

Samantha Hamilton, the 22-year-old victim, told the Free Beacon that the protesters who told her that “Hitler should have finished you off.”

“I heard my mother screaming because six or seven guys had jumped on my brother,” who is 19 years old, Hamilton recalled. “He had a Star of David on his shirt and they were ripping it off, biting him, and scratching him, and stomping on him on the ground.”

Her brother suffered a concussion from the assault.

Calgary police arrived and the attack was stopped but none of the pro-terrorist attackers were arrested for their actions.

Pro-Terrorist, Anti-Semitic Rallies In Europe

Crowds chanting anti-Semitic slogans and voicing clear support for the terrorists attacking Israel rallies throughout Europe over the weekend.

In Germany, a mob gathered on Kurfurstendamm Avenue, waving flags and chanting Jude, Jude feiges Schwein! Komm heraus und kämpf allein!”  Which translates to “Jew, Jew, cowardly swine, come out and fight on your own!”

Rallies in Dortmund and Frankfurt chanted “Hamas Hamas Juden in gas!” meaning “Hamas, Hamas, Jews to the gas!”

“We are currently experiencing in this country an explosion of evil and violent hatred of Jews, which shocks and dismays all of us,” Dieter Graumann of the Central Council of Jews in Germany said in a statement. “We would never in our lives have thought it possible anymore that anti-Semitic views of the nastiest and most primitive kind can be chanted on German streets.”

“Jews are once again openly threatened in Germany and sometimes attacked, synagogues are being defaced and declared as targets.”

In Paris, protesters ignored government bans and continued their vocal support of the terrorists attacking Israel.

Hundreds of protesters looted shops, burned cars and attacked a synagogue.  The attackers were yelling “F*** Israel” and “Israel assassin” as they attempted to access the synagogue and attack the Jewish citizens inside.

At least one Molotov cocktail struck the side of the synagogue according to French authorities.

None of the protest groups responded to reporters questions about why they were not concerned about the six million Israeli citizens being subjected to daily rocket attacks by the terrorist group Hamas.

Pastor Arrested For Crossing Police Barricade Found Not Guilty

A Texas appellate court has found a Texas pastor and a member of his congregation that had been arrested for crossing a police line at an event where they were protesting not guilty.

Pastor Joey Fault and members of the Kingdom Baptist Church in Venus, Texas were protesting at an event in Fort Worth Texas in October 2012.  When some of the event’s attendees were upset the Christians were passing out information and pamphlets that disagreed with the event’s mission, the police formed a human barricade to keep the Christians from being able to reach attendees.

Pastor Faust told the Christian News Network police told them that they could go no further and they were forbidden from even crossing the street.

The pastor and his group continued their protest but then noted police were allowing those who were not part of the church group to pass through their line and across the street.  The pastor then attempted to cross the street and was immediately seized upon by the police and arrested for “interfering with public duties.”  He was jailed for 20 hours and released on $1,500 bail.

Last May, a judge said the pastor and another member of his congregation who arrested on the same charge were guilty.  The case was appealed to the Second District of Texas Court of Appeals that ruled the men were not guilty and that the police had infringed on the First Amendment rights of the church.

“The skirmish line prohibited all member of the church from exercising their right of free speech merely because of their association with the church,” the court rules.  “This is too far a limitation.”

New York City Pastors Fight Policy Against Churches In Schools

A group of New York City pastors is banding together to get the policy banning churches from using public schools for worship services reversed despite a court saying schools had the right to ban Christians from their buildings.

Pastor William Devlin told the Christian post that he was optimistic the policy would be reversed and surprised many by saying the far-left mayor of the city was on their side.

“Pastors across New York City are very encouraged about recent developments on the right to worship. We know that Mayor de Blasio is with us 100 percent and any day we will hear that he has reversed the draconian and discriminatory Department of Education policy … we have his word,” Devlin told the Post.

An appeals court in New York City ruled in favor of the Board of Education in their battle against churches holding worship services in school building after school hours.

According to the Wall Street Journal, Mayor Bill DeBlasio said “I believe that a faith-based organization has a right like anyone else … to use that space.”

The ruling against churches is being appealed to the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals.

Police Break Up Egyptian Student Protest

Police broke up a student protest supporting ousted Muslim Brotherhood president Mohammed Morsi.

The interior ministry told the BBC they were responding to a request from university authorities for help in containing the protest. The pro-Morsi students had been holding protests for weeks.

The move against the students came hours after the arrest of Essam al-Erian, the vice chairman of the Brotherhood’s Freedom and Justice Party.

The students reportedly invaded the university’s offices and ransacked them before the police arrived at the campus. Photos on social media showed graffiti and damage to the university’s offices.

Egyptian Clashes Leave 44 Dead

Clashes between police and Muslim Brotherhood extremists have left at least 44 people dead and hundreds injured.

Officials said at least 200 members of the banned Muslim Brotherhood have been arrested for their parts in the violent protests.

The government had been trying to hold events for the 40th anniversary of the 1973 Arab-Israeli war.  Hundreds gathered in Cairo’s Tahrir Square for a ceremony that included flyovers from jets and Apache helicopters.

That’s when the Brotherhood supporters took to the street to protest the government’s banning of their organization and continuing to complain about the removal of their leaders from positions of governmental power.

Egyptian Prime Minister Hazem Beblawi spoke on state TV to urge citizens to “stand together, be optimistic about the future” as the country approached a “critical time.”

Egyptian Situation Continues to Deteriorate

At least 20 people have died Friday as the Muslim Brotherhood is calling on their supporters to launch a “march of anger” against the military backed government.

The BBC is reporting the flashpoint is Muslim Brotherhood supporters opening fire on a police station. Police responded with tear gas and then opened fire. The government approved police using live ammunition to defend themselves if attacked by Brotherhood supporters. Continue reading

Muslim Brotherhood Burns Government Building

Hundreds of people connected to the Muslim Brotherhood forced their way into a government building in Cairo and burned it.

The mob was repelled by police after burning the offices of the local government in Giza, Cairo’s twin city on the west bank of the Nile.

The Brotherhood had been staging a protest sit-in over their removal from power but those protest camps were cleared out yesterday by the government. The Brotherhood then began firing at police and civilians. Continue reading

Egyptian Prime Minister Defends Crackdown On Morsi Supporters

Egypt’s interim prime minister has stated in a televised address to his nation that today’s action against supporters of Mohammed Morsi and the Muslim Brotherhood was necessary because authorities had to restore security.

Hazem Beblawi said the decision to move into the camps and disperse the protesters was not easy. Continue reading