http://www.conservapedia.com/Sudden_Jihad_Syndrome
Yes.. the experts at Conservapedia have discovered, using highly sophisticated creation science, a new syndrome. Sudden Jihad Syndrome.
Sure..Wikipedia is so obviously biased to refuse such a creation scientifically accurate article.
Yes.. the experts at Conservapedia have discovered, using highly sophisticated creation science, a new syndrome. Sudden Jihad Syndrome.
Conservapedia Wrote:Sudden Jihad Syndrome is a term coined by Daniel Pipes to describe Muslims that suddenly or unexpectedly turn against civilized, Western society and engage in acts of terror. [1]. Pipes has argued that due to this phenomenon all Muslims must be considered potential terrorists. [2]
Examples include:
John Allen Muhammad and Lee Malvo, the so-called Washington snipers. John Allen Muhammad was a Muslim convert, but some people allege that his motivations may not have been religious. [3] [4]
Ali Hassan Abu Kamal, a Palestinian school teacher who engaged in a shooting rampage on top of the Empire State Building. He killed one and wounded six before taking his own life.[5]
Mohammed Reza Taheri-azar, an American Muslim born in Tehran who ran over students at the University of North Carolina to punish the United States. Taheri-azar was the first terrorist to be explicitly called an example of Sudden Jihad Syndrome by Daniel Pipes.[6]
Mujtaba Rabbani Jabbar who shot up a movie theater in Baltimore.[7], * Rashid Baz, a Lebanese can driver living in New York City who shot at a van full of Orthodox Jews. [8]. In a burst of political correctness, the FBI initially refused to label this act a terrorist act.[8]
Sulejman Talovic, a Bosnian Muslim, opened fire in a Salt Lake City mall, killing five poeple before being shot dead by police.[9]
In another example of bias in Wikipedia, Wikipedia has refused to allow any article on this topic[10][11] and even refused to let an editor work on a draft for a rewrite of the article.[12]
Sure..Wikipedia is so obviously biased to refuse such a creation scientifically accurate article.