Ireland now has its very own mendacious grievance mongering taqiyya artist

The flag of the Republic of Ireland

 

I get the impression from reading around and talking to those afflicted by unwanted migration, that the Irish people are starting to get a bit pissed off with the Muslims that their government has imported to the Republic of Ireland. As has happened elsewhere in Europe, including in Ireland’s closes neighbour the UK, the arrival of Muslims from places like Pakistan and Afghanistan has brought with it the rape and murder of Irish citizens. Also as in other European nations local people are also apparently becoming annoyed with the Gardai, the Irish police, allegedly shrugging their shoulders and leaving ordinary Irishmen and Irishwomen to put up with the criminal and antisocial behaviour of Ireland’s imported Muslims.

The Muslims that the Irish government and the ‘refugees welcome’ idiots operating there have imported to the Republic have not exactly gone out of their way to make friends with the natives. Just as we’ve seen on this side of the Irish Sea in the UK, the arrival of Muslims from deeply uncivilised cultures and lands has not benefited the native Irish people one little bit and this is something that a growing number of Irish people are starting to notice.

Ireland’s imported Muslims have brought little apart from grief. They have brought rape, crime, welfare sponging and, as we saw recently in Dundalk, alleged stabbing jihad.

Hot on the heels of the Islamic savagery that has been inflicted on the Republic, Ireland also now seems to have in Fazel Ryklief of the Islamic Foundation of Ireland, its very own analogue of Fiyaz Mughal and the Tell Mama group, Britain’s notorious and lavishly publicly funded mendacious grievance mongering taqiyya artists. According to a report in the Irish Times the sort of ‘nothing to do with Islam’ liars and those who wish to promote a dishonest Muslim victim narrative have started to pop up in Ireland. Here’s part of a report from the Irish Times about Ireland’s Islamic taqiyya artist and his whining about how Muslims are disliked. As is usual policy for this blog the original text from the Irish Times is in italics whereas this blog’s comments are in plain text.

The Irish Times said:

Fazel Ryklief watched in dismay as news of the Dundalk attack that left one man dead and two injured spread on Wednesday morning. Meanwhile, a tide of anti-immigrant abuse directed at Muslims had begun to swell on social media.

Well maybe if Ireland’s imported Muslims had not behaved so damn badly then maybe people would not be expressing so many valid criticisms of these Muslims.

In the end, irrespective of whether he was Syrian or Egyptian, it all came down to him being a Muslim. Islam always gets the brunt of it,” said Ryklief, who works at the Islamic Foundation of Ireland in Dublin.

Frankly it is down to this violent savage being a Muslim it really is. Members of other groups such as the poor Japanese migrant whom an Islamic savage stabbed to death in Dundalk haven’t behaved with a fraction of the nastiness that seems to be characterising Ireland’s Islamic migrants. Mr Ryklief doesn’t seem to realise or is trying to hide the fact that Ireland’s Muslims are earning the public’s distrust and indeed hatred.

I want to stop feeling guilty about being a Muslim every time someone with a Muslim name does something like this,” he told The Irish Times, adding that he was not surprised that some media outlets immediately concluded that the alleged attacker was a Syrian.

Well maybe if Ireland’s imported Muslims were not murdering people, raping Irish women or generally being a pain in the arse then you might not have to cringe so much every time one of his co-religionists decided to act in an antisocial or violent manner.

The majority of Muslims condemn all violence, and abhor the killing of anyone, he went on: “As soon as the police mention the words ‘terrorist attack’ people go mad. They don’t wait to establish the reasons.”

Maybe that’s because the vast majority of terror attacks in the world and in the British Isles which includes the Republic of Ireland have, since the end of the Irish Troubles, been committed by Muslims. The vast majority of alleged peaceful Muslims are of no account unless they take huge steps to deal with the violent religious fascists that Islam produces on a monotonously regular basis.

However, the “terrorist” rhetoric that has surrounded Muslims in recent years is having this effect, feared Dr Saud Bajwa, a consultant at Galway University Hospital and spokesman for the Galway Islamic Cultural Centre.

Oh look another Islamic grievance monger this time from Galway.

Dr Bajwa says the vast majority of Irish people treat Muslims with respect but that he has noticed a change in attitudes in recent years. “There is no doubt that these days people are quick to jump to conclusions,” he said.

Let me try and translate Dr Bajwa’s whine for you as I’m pretty fluent in Islamic taqiyya. What it looks like he is saying is that most Irish citizens have given the imported Muslims the benefit of the doubt, after all the Irish have a history of migration themselves and understand deeply the migrant experience. He’s also saying that this tolerance to Islam is starting to die as the followers of this appalling death cult start to make their presence felt. The Irish citizens must have thought, especially when you take into account the massive amounts of pro-migrant and pro-‘refugee’ propaganda that Ireland like the UK has been subjected to, that what was arriving were hard working, grateful migrants who would contribute to the Irish economy and culture. Sadly this was not the case. What Ireland got was violent Muslims, dole bludging Muslims, arrogant Muslims, rapist Muslims and terrorist Muslims, something that no civilised nation either wants or needs.

On our side, we’re always praying sincerely that the latest attack is not a Muslim thing. I still think there is a wider good out there in Ireland but there are always people who look at me with doubt because I am a Muslim.”

I would say to Dr Bajwa that it’s likely that your prayers will not be answered. When it comes to modern day terrorism and migrant crime in the West the perpetrators are in the majority the followers of Islam and often they are committing their crimes in the name of, or are inspired by, the ideology of Islam. No religion on this earth has totally clean hands when it comes to violence and aggression, but Islam has never, unlike other monotheistic faiths, made any attempt to get those hands clean, it has never eschewed or reinterpreted the verses that encourage violence and hatred.

Maybe if Dr Bajwa was not praying to a deity that allegedly took, as Islam’s deity did, its emissary on earth a violent paedophile, thieving, warlord murderer called Mohammed then his prayers for peace and for Muslims not to be violent might be listened to? Dr Bajwa is also whining about how people in Ireland look upon him and other Muslims with doubt and suspicion. I will agree with Dr Bajwa on one thing and one thing only, and that it is not nice to be looked at with doubt and suspicion especially when that doubt and suspicion is undeserved. Unfortunately this is not the case with regards the hardening of attitudes towards Islam in the Republic of Ireland. This doubt and suspicion that Muslims in Ireland are experiencing and which Dr Bajwa is complaining about is not unjustified in fact it has been justly earned. One of the first rules that make for success as a minority group that is different in religion and culture from the rest of the society is not to piss off the natives, sadly pissing off the natives seems to be a habit among the followers of Islam. Entering a country like Ireland as the followers of Islam have and poncing off the welfare state, committing horrendous crimes including rapes and other sexual offences and engaging in the sort of Jihad that we saw in Dundalk, tends to turn the natives against you. The Irish people are starting to realise that Islam is not the religion of peace that they’ve been told it is and it the revelation of this lie that is causing people to turn against an ideology that is bringing nothing but grief to the citizens of Ireland.

Both Dr Bajwa and Fazel Ryklief are trying to do all in their power to divert attention away from the problems that Islam has brought to Ireland and to try to establish a dishonest Islamic victim narrative. These are aims that must not be allowed to succeed. The truth is that Islam has brought similar problems to Ireland as it has brought elsewhere in Europe and to not acknowledge that Islam is often less victim ideology than perpetrator ideology, is an act of breathtaking dishonesty.