Why is a Muslim Brotherhood slogan being spray painted in the streets of Paris?
In English, the Arabic translates as: The people want the fall of the regime.
The Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood created this phrase and used it in Tunisia and Egypt. The Muslim Brotherhood wanted to remove the governments of Tunisia and Egypt and replace them with Islam.
In 2008, the U.S. State Department held an Alliance of Youth Movements Summit. At this summit were representatives from Google, Facebook, YouTube, NBC, ABC, CBS, CNN, and MSNBC. Various youth groups attended the State Department Summit, including members of the Muslim Brotherhood Youth.
The summit was a recruiting and coordinating center for revolutionists.
Through the State Department Summit, members of the Muslim Brotherhood learned how to use social media to form a protest and how to keep that protest going for days. At the Summit the Muslim Brotherhood were linked up with NGOs to fund their Islamic revolutions.
In 2009, via these NGOs, the State Department set up and financed fake "pro-democracy" organizations in Algeria, Bahrain, Egypt, Jordan, Kuwait, Libya, Morocco, Syria, Tunisia and Yemen. All were fronts for Islamists who wanted to remove their governments.
In 2010, an Egyptian named Wael Ghonem, who Google had hired immediatly following the State Department's Summit, created the Facebook page, "We Are All Muhammad Bouazizi." Bouazizi was the Tunisian fruit seller who set himself on fire.
Ghonem's "We Are All Muhammad Bouazizi" Facebook page caused daily protests in Tunisia, during which time, Facebook, Twitter and YouTube incessantly promoted propaganda to create the "illusion" that the majority wanted their government removed.
Immediately following the success of the Tunisian protests, Google's Egyptian employee, Wael Ghonem, then created the Facebook page "We Are All Khaled Said" -- the protest campaign that kicked off Egypt's "revolution."
A key strategy taught through the State Department's Summit was to remain in the streets for as many days as possible. This is meant to give the impression that the government is unable to govern; the premise being, if a government can't calm chaos in the streets, it should be removed. Continuing the chaos is therefore a primary goal.
Just previous to the protests in Tunisia and Egypt, the Muslim Brotherhood had announced their goal of removing the governments of Tunisia, Egypt, Algeria and Libya in order to create Islamic States which would unite under a North African Caliphate. Though this never came to fruition, tens of thousands of North Africans have since been shipped to Europe and many of those thousands now reside in Paris.
As I watched events in Paris this last week, several things alarmed me. Why were the protesters burning people's cars and destroying public property? If they were protesting the effects the carbon tax/gas tax would have on the middle class, why were they harming the property of the middle class? Most of the cars destroyed belonged to average French citizens.
What alarmed me was this was identical to the actions of the Muslim Brotherhood during the Tahrir Square protest in Egypt.
Also, why were the Paris protesters throwing fire bombs within feet from one of the most prestigious museums in the world, the Jeu de Paume?
This was identical to the actions of the Muslim Brotherhood during the Tahrir Square protest, when they fire-bombed the Egyptian Museum.
Everyone in Egypt (except Muslim Brotherhood) had wondered, why are the protesters attacking regular people's property and the museum--if their intentions were good ones?
The purpose of the destruction was to bring in police forces. The police were brought in to stop the destruction of personal and public property.
Suddenly snipers from roof tops in Tahrir Square killed people. CNN and all other media outlets blamed the sniper fire on "regime forces" but it turned out that bearded Islamists had attacked security guards and went to the rooftop of the American University in Cairo where they sniper-fired into the crowd below.
The snipers were not "regime forces." They were members of the Muslim Brotherhood.
All of this came out later, but CNN and other mainstream media continued with the lies that "regime forces" had conducted the sniper fire.
This is all too similar to what is happening in Paris. There was a video on Twitter on Monday, December 3, showing "regime forces" sniper-firing into the Paris streets. The video went viral and the police forces are now being demonized as "regime forces." This is identical to what happened in Egypt.
While the facts are not known yet as to who exactly these snipers in Paris were, and could be factual, I think we need to pause and be leery. And we should question anything mainstream media tries to force on us. My personal experience was that everything said by mainstream media during Egypt's protests were lies.
In Egypt, the Egyptian police immediately withdrew, not wanting to be accused of any further wrongdoing. But this only complicated things further, and the result was that the government was removed.
A friend of mine who lives in France says the areas around where the protests are taking place in Paris have Muslim no-go zone areas. She also told me the original protesters were protesting peacefully when other groups joined and began the violence. Again, this is identical to what happened in Tahrir Square.
If Macron is removed, who will take his place? In Egypt and all other Arab Spring countries, there was no plan for a replacement, because the real plan was to create a void so Islamists could take over.
It is apparent the majority of French people do not like Macron's policies and the direction the country is going in, but I don't think the majority want a sudden removal of government with no preparations planned to replace it.
I'm leery as to the way the protesters have been behaving--the ongoing destruction of personal and public property. And, seeing Muslim Brotherhood graffiti being sprayed in the streets of Paris, to me, is foreboding.
The Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood created this phrase and used it in Tunisia and Egypt. The Muslim Brotherhood wanted to remove the governments of Tunisia and Egypt and replace them with Islam.
In 2008, the U.S. State Department held an Alliance of Youth Movements Summit. At this summit were representatives from Google, Facebook, YouTube, NBC, ABC, CBS, CNN, and MSNBC. Various youth groups attended the State Department Summit, including members of the Muslim Brotherhood Youth.
The summit was a recruiting and coordinating center for revolutionists.
Through the State Department Summit, members of the Muslim Brotherhood learned how to use social media to form a protest and how to keep that protest going for days. At the Summit the Muslim Brotherhood were linked up with NGOs to fund their Islamic revolutions.
In 2009, via these NGOs, the State Department set up and financed fake "pro-democracy" organizations in Algeria, Bahrain, Egypt, Jordan, Kuwait, Libya, Morocco, Syria, Tunisia and Yemen. All were fronts for Islamists who wanted to remove their governments.
In 2010, an Egyptian named Wael Ghonem, who Google had hired immediatly following the State Department's Summit, created the Facebook page, "We Are All Muhammad Bouazizi." Bouazizi was the Tunisian fruit seller who set himself on fire.
Ghonem's "We Are All Muhammad Bouazizi" Facebook page caused daily protests in Tunisia, during which time, Facebook, Twitter and YouTube incessantly promoted propaganda to create the "illusion" that the majority wanted their government removed.
Immediately following the success of the Tunisian protests, Google's Egyptian employee, Wael Ghonem, then created the Facebook page "We Are All Khaled Said" -- the protest campaign that kicked off Egypt's "revolution."
A key strategy taught through the State Department's Summit was to remain in the streets for as many days as possible. This is meant to give the impression that the government is unable to govern; the premise being, if a government can't calm chaos in the streets, it should be removed. Continuing the chaos is therefore a primary goal.
Just previous to the protests in Tunisia and Egypt, the Muslim Brotherhood had announced their goal of removing the governments of Tunisia, Egypt, Algeria and Libya in order to create Islamic States which would unite under a North African Caliphate. Though this never came to fruition, tens of thousands of North Africans have since been shipped to Europe and many of those thousands now reside in Paris.
As I watched events in Paris this last week, several things alarmed me. Why were the protesters burning people's cars and destroying public property? If they were protesting the effects the carbon tax/gas tax would have on the middle class, why were they harming the property of the middle class? Most of the cars destroyed belonged to average French citizens.
What alarmed me was this was identical to the actions of the Muslim Brotherhood during the Tahrir Square protest in Egypt.
Also, why were the Paris protesters throwing fire bombs within feet from one of the most prestigious museums in the world, the Jeu de Paume?
This was identical to the actions of the Muslim Brotherhood during the Tahrir Square protest, when they fire-bombed the Egyptian Museum.
Everyone in Egypt (except Muslim Brotherhood) had wondered, why are the protesters attacking regular people's property and the museum--if their intentions were good ones?
The purpose of the destruction was to bring in police forces. The police were brought in to stop the destruction of personal and public property.
Suddenly snipers from roof tops in Tahrir Square killed people. CNN and all other media outlets blamed the sniper fire on "regime forces" but it turned out that bearded Islamists had attacked security guards and went to the rooftop of the American University in Cairo where they sniper-fired into the crowd below.
The snipers were not "regime forces." They were members of the Muslim Brotherhood.
All of this came out later, but CNN and other mainstream media continued with the lies that "regime forces" had conducted the sniper fire.
This is all too similar to what is happening in Paris. There was a video on Twitter on Monday, December 3, showing "regime forces" sniper-firing into the Paris streets. The video went viral and the police forces are now being demonized as "regime forces." This is identical to what happened in Egypt.
While the facts are not known yet as to who exactly these snipers in Paris were, and could be factual, I think we need to pause and be leery. And we should question anything mainstream media tries to force on us. My personal experience was that everything said by mainstream media during Egypt's protests were lies.
In Egypt, the Egyptian police immediately withdrew, not wanting to be accused of any further wrongdoing. But this only complicated things further, and the result was that the government was removed.
A friend of mine who lives in France says the areas around where the protests are taking place in Paris have Muslim no-go zone areas. She also told me the original protesters were protesting peacefully when other groups joined and began the violence. Again, this is identical to what happened in Tahrir Square.
If Macron is removed, who will take his place? In Egypt and all other Arab Spring countries, there was no plan for a replacement, because the real plan was to create a void so Islamists could take over.
It is apparent the majority of French people do not like Macron's policies and the direction the country is going in, but I don't think the majority want a sudden removal of government with no preparations planned to replace it.
I'm leery as to the way the protesters have been behaving--the ongoing destruction of personal and public property. And, seeing Muslim Brotherhood graffiti being sprayed in the streets of Paris, to me, is foreboding.