Exposing the role that Islamic jihad theology and ideology play in the modern global conflicts
Canada’s Foreign Minister tells UN “white supremacism and Islamophobia among the ‘gravest threats’ facing the world”
Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland has told the United Nations that “White supremacism and Islamophobia are among “the gravest threats” facing the world.”
Canada is headed in a troubling direction. The Canadian government also asserted this week that Canada rejects Israel’s need to defend itself from jihad attack, and does not recognize Israel’s control over Golan Heights. Canada evidently does not understand nor recognize the seriousness of the global jihad, which abuses and murders infidels and apostates, abuses women as inferiors, aims to subvert democracies, and endeavors to obliterate Israel, not to mention its treatment of gays.
Canada’s Conservative opposition leader Andrew Scheer was also recently lambasted for not decrying “Islamophobia” following the New Zealand massacre.
More and more, Canada is executing anti-Islamophobia M-103 to “take action” against “Islamophobia,” which goes so far to begin “monitoring citizens for compliance.”
It should therefore come as no surprise that Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland has declared to the United Nations — which has stated its intention to work more closely with the Organization of Islamic Cooperation — that “Neo-Nazism and Islamophobia” are “among the ‘gravest threats’ facing the world.” Not the global jihad.
“Neo-Nazism and Islamophobia among the ‘gravest threats’ facing the world, Freeland tells UN,” CBC News, March 28, 2019 (thanks to The Religion of Peace):
White supremacism and Islamophobia are among “the gravest threats” facing the world, Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland told the United Nations Thursday.A white supremacist’s March 15 terrorist attack on two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand, which claimed the lives of 50 worshippers, was a painful reminder to Canadians of the deaths of six people in another terrorist attack on a Quebec City mosque two years ago, Freeland said before a UN Security Council debate on terrorism.“Neo-Nazis, white supremacists, ‘incels,’ nativists and radical anti-globalists who resort to violent acts are a threat to the stability of my country and countries around the world,” Freeland said.No time for euphemisms
These attacks need to be at the top of the global agenda during discussions on confronting global terrorism, Freeland added.And when such attacks do occur, the international community must not be afraid to condemn them specifically as racist acts of terrorism, Freeland said.“We cannot hide behind euphemisms that distract from the truth,” she said. “In fact, doing so puts our citizens, especially those from religious minorities and racialized communities, in greater danger.”In the wake of acts of terrorism carried out by Muslims, Western countries often call upon Muslim countries and Muslim leaders to condemn those attacks in the name of their people and their faith, she said.“It should follow that, as the foreign minister of a majority-white and majority-Christian country, I feel a specific and personal responsibility to denounce white supremacist attacks in the same way,” Freeland said…..