Saturday, October 12, 2019

We Don't Have to Rescue People Who Willingly Went to the Middle East to Support ISIS

There is not moral or logical reason to re-incorporate these fat, Jew-hating supporters of child-rape and mass murder.

And here is why:

O'Hara, one of four pedestrians struck by a speeding cube van in downtown Edmonton two years ago, testified Friday at the jury trial of Abdulahi Hasan Sharif.

She told court that she doesn't remember being hit by the van, just waking up in a hospital and not being able to understand what people were saying.

"When people were talking to me, it was like a different language, not English," O'Hara said.

She also said she didn't understand the extent of her injuries while she was in the intensive care unit for about 10 days.

"I didn't know what was wrong. I just knew I was hurt."

When she was transferred out of the ICU, people were able to communicate with her through writing. That's when her brother explained what had happened, she said.

Sharif, 32, is accused of running down and stabbing a city police officer who was on traffic duty outside an Edmonton Eskimos football game on the night of Sept. 30, 2017. A few hours later, O'Hara and three other pedestrians were struck by the driver of a rented U-Haul van.

Sharif has pleaded not guilty to 11 charges, including five counts of attempted murder.

This will be the new normal.

Aside from the fact that these women committed treason and aided in woman abuse and child rape, they denounced Canada. They cannot use it as a contingency plan because their mass-murdering husbands are dead, soiling themselves in a Kurdish prison or "bravely" fled leaving their fat wives and future murdering children behind.


Also:

One of the first things the Liberals did upon taking office in 2015 was to withdraw our fighter jets, which had been providing a support role in the offensive against ISIS — much to the chagrin of our Kurdish allies.

The Trudeau government did promise to supply weapons to the Kurds, but we never followed through on that. We’ve also ignored repeated pleas from the Kurds to deal with our foreign nationals, whom they’ve been holding along with other ISIS prisoners.

Moreover, when Kurds voted for independence in 2017, Canada ignored the result — after previously urging them to cancel the vote.

At this point, the Kurds already have reason to question Canada’s commitment and the American betrayal may make them reluctant to trust anyone else any time soon. But that doesn’t mean we should ignore this issue and hope for the best.

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