Friday, November 17, 2023

'Idiocy’: Douglas Murray on TikTok users praising Osama bin Laden's ‘Letter to America’

  YouTube


Comments to this video: "People taking a terrorist’s view as a life compass is beyond foolish."

"These kids will follow any trend, any challenge, anything TikTok tells them to, and then they turn around tell us to think for ourselves whenever they watch something new. THE most conforming, predictable, simple-minded generation ever thinks they’re the deepest thinkers, and constantly looking at everyone born before them as idiots."

Responding to Bin Laden’s Letter to America
Osama Bin Laden was unworthy of the proper Islamic burial he was afforded by U.S. military forces that captured and killed him in the nation of Pakistan that was hiding him in 2011. It is an unfortunate shame that among the many sins of our American educational system, one must include the current minds venting on Tik Tok that their ‘eyes have been opened’ by Bin Laden’s letter to America. Such foolish ravings are what impressed young fools in Germany who read Mein Kampf and found themselves ready to unleash one of humanity’s most dreadful crimes: The Holocaust.

It’s time to prosecute America’s new generation of al Qaeda lovers for treason - American Thinker   "One of the most disgusting trends that has followed Hamas’s murderous attack against Israel and Israel’s response is a bold new respect for Osama bin Laden and, of course, by extension, for al Qaeda itself. What these new al Qaeda followers might not know is that we’re still at war with that terrorist organization, and they’re giving aid and comfort to a combatant against America, which is, by definition, treason and, technically, punishable by death.

"On September 18, 2001, the 107th Congress issued a Joint Resolution authorizing military force “against those responsible for the recent attacks launched against the United States.” In other words, as of September 18, 2001, the United States was officially at war against al Qaeda, the organization that was responsible for the attacks on September 11." . . .

TikTok removes hashtag for Osama bin Laden’s ‘Letter to America’ after viral videos circulate (msn.com)  . . ."In its violent extremist or criminal organizations policy, YouTube says that content “intended to praise, promote, or aid violent extremist or criminal organizations is not allowed” on the platform. It tells users not to post “content produced by violent extremist, criminal, or terrorist organizations.”

"X’s guidelines also say the platform “will remove any accounts maintained by individual perpetrators of terrorist, violent extremist, or mass violent attacks, and may also remove posts disseminating manifestos or other content produced by perpetrators.”

"Instagram’s community guidelines note the platform “is not a place to support or praise terrorism, organized crime, or hate groups.”

"As of Thursday afternoon, the link to the removed document was listed as one of the most viewed on The Guardian’s website." 

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