Remembering the 7th July Islamic Jihadist attacks.

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Today is the day when we remember the 52 innocent people murdered on 7th July 2005 by Muslim terrorists on the London transport system.

It is also a time for remembering all those who did not lose their lives in this attack, but who were left with life changing injuries or who have been traumatised by the attack.

In addition we must also use this time to make sure we all understand, that these attacks were not comitted by an enemy flying overhead and dropping bombs, as in the London Blitz, nor were they the result of enemy troops, creating terror to control the occupied population, of which history has provided us with many examples. These attacks were the result of leaving the fifth columnists of Islam unscrutinised and unchallenged for so long. These attacks were perpetrated by those who were ostensibly our own citizens, but ones who had decided that their primary loyalty was not to the British people, but to the mad utterances of a 7th century warlord called Mohammed.

The 7/7 attacks as well as being devastating for those directly and indirectly affected by them was a wake up call to Britons and started to give them an awareness of just what was going on in Britain’s Islamic Ghettos and the sort of hatred and treason that was being preached in mosques. On 7/7 we saw naked, murderous Islamic hatred for ‘the other’ writ large, and written in blood. No more could Britons, and especially Londoners, ignore what has going on. Islamic violence was no longer confined to far away places about which we knew little and cared about even less.

The response to Islamic violence and hatred by the then Labour administration was weak, ineffective. and in many cases, counterproductive. From the turn of the 21st century Labour’s policy was to bring into government, and sometimes promote, ‘non violent extremists’. These ‘non-violent’ extremists have done almost everything in their power to deflect the blame for Islamic terror onto anything other than its true ‘root cause’, which is Islam itself. These ‘non violent extremists’ are not blameless, or peaceful or just exercising their right to free speech, they are the ones who are speaking the words that cause the proto-jihadi to study the Koran, which leads them to immerse themselves in Islamic hatred and then on to the murder of innocents. The July 2005 attacks and the uncovering of other Islamic terror plots started to reveal just how stupid it was to think that by ‘engaging’ with those who wish to murder non-Muslims, purely for being non-Muslim, Britain could avoid, or curtail, Islamic hatred.

So that those who lost their lives on 7/7 didn’t lose their lives in vain, I’d like to believe that 7/7 was one of those turning points in history, where the scales fall from the eyes of the deluded. The 7/7 attacks have indeed opened many people’s eyes to the true nature of the ideology of Islam and how it is a threat not only to us, the non-Muslim, but a threat to all those who have the misfortune to be born into Islam. Maybe in the great scheme of things the deaths of the 7/7 victims may have contributed to a greater, and much needed, cynicism about the ideology of Islam. I certainly hope that that the history books will record such a change in attitude by Britons towards Islam. After 7/7 pro-Islam commentators and politicians have found it much more difficult to say the phrase: ‘Islam is a religion of peace’ without being subjected to mocking and cynical laughter. It is partially because we see so many atrocities worldwide, including the 7/7 attacks, which are being comitted by the followers of the ideolgy of Islam, that we are now more aware than ever of the disconnect between what Islam says it is, and what it is in reality.

Those victims of the public transport attacks who set out for work on 7/7 were ordinary people, Londoners from a variety of backgrounds who had ‘chosen life‘ and didn’t suspect that that they would become the victims of those whose ideology led them to chose death instead of life.

Remember the dead, remember the injured and the tramatised, remembe the grieving and the hurt and never forget who and what the perpetrators are.

I was working in London on that day, and I will neither forget, nor forigive this atrocity and those like it. If the Jihadists hoped that Britons would be cowed by this terror into complying with their desires, then they were wrong. More people than ever despise the ideology of Islam and the multiple crimes of its followers are being slowly uncovered. The only people who died in vain on 7/7 were the murdering bombers themselves.

Postscript:

To give you an idea just what sort of anti-human ideology Britain is dealing with when it comes to the ideology of Islam and its supporters there have been reports that the memorial to the victims of 7/7 in London’s Hyde Park, was vandalised by what looks like an Islamic group.

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/77-memorial-defaced-on-anniversary-of-2005-attacks-with-blair-lied-thousands-died-graffiti-9588326.html

Again we see the allocation of fake ‘root causes’ by Islamic groups with their attempt to blame the attack on Tony Blair. The cause of the attacks on 7/7 were not Blair nor Bush nor ‘neocons’ nor the liberation of Iraq from Saddam Hussain’s brutal rule, but the hate-filled ideology of Islam itself.

Still think that Islam is a religion of peace and not at all a threat to the UK? This vandalism attack on this of all days should make us all think again on that matter.

3 Comments on "Remembering the 7th July Islamic Jihadist attacks."

  1. More to come, I fear, until we as a people start to debate how many more casualties we are prepared to accept as the price for sustaining Islam within our borders.

    My answer, for what its worth, would be “zero”.

  2. Dear Fahrenheit. Just to say “Thank You” for saying what so many of us feel and would like to say, but can’t.

  3. We remember. The MSM, not so much :/

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