This NPR Story on the Michigan Synagogue Terror Attack Will Leave You Speechless
We don’t criticize the media
enough. There’s no shock value anymore, but it’s important to note: the
liberal media has an obsession with Muslim terrorists, and it’s
seriously unhealthy. Last week, Ayman Mohamad Ghazali attacked Temple
Israel,
a synagogue in West Bloomfield, Michigan. Luckily, no innocent
bystanders were hurt, as Ghazali rammed through the front entrance
before he was killed by armed security. He died like a terrorist, but
National Public Radio chose to portray him as the victim and focus on how he’s being mourned and all that. It’s all nonsense:
Ghazali
had lived in the United States for more than a decade but kept strong
ties with relatives back home. Four members of his family were killed in
an Israeli airstrike just as the war involving Iran began.
Ghazali
was born and raised in Lebanon, along with his two brothers. He also
had a niece and a nephew. All were killed in the airstrike. On March 5,
as the sun set, they were gathered at the home of Ibrahim Ghazali — the
attacker's younger brother — breaking fast for Ramadan.
The house
is now a pile of rubble. The roof is caved in. Water leaks from a
severed pipe. Clothes are strewn on top. Children's toys are covered in
dust.
Fouad Qasem, Ghazali's maternal uncle, lives down the
street. He says he helped pull the bodies of his nephews and the
children from the rubble that night.
"I held my own flesh and blood in my hands," Qasem says tearfully.
[…]
The
Israeli military did not respond to NPR's questions about why the
family's house was hit. Israel says it is targeting Hezbollah after the
militant group launched rockets into Israel at the beginning of the war
involving Iran. On Sunday, Israel's military said Ghazali's brother
Ibrahim was a Hezbollah commander, "responsible for managing weapons
operations within a specialized branch of the Badr Unit. The unit is
responsible for launching hundreds of rockets toward Israeli civilians
throughout the war."
Qasem remembers Ayman Mohamad Ghazali as a
kind, well-mannered and gentle person and says his nephew avenged the
children's deaths because they were so dear to him.
U.S.
officials say they are investigating why Ghazali attacked the synagogue
in Michigan. But many in this town say they believe it was revenge.
Several said anyone would want to avenge the killing of their entire
family.
Ibrahim Zeih, a soccer coach of one of the killed
brothers, says he understands the anger but that it's not an excuse to
kill other innocent people so far away.
"We're not against Jews as Jews," Zeih says. "We are against the Israelis who are killing us daily."
What the hell is this? I’m sorry—who cares? I couldn’t care
less that his terrorist family got turned into an ashtray. I don’t. They
deserved to die, as did he. One less terrorist in the world, and I’m
damn rejoicing.
Thank you, NPR, for reminding us why you got defunded.
And burn in hell, Ghazali, and the rest of your terrorist POS family.
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