Hirsi Ali: “When you criticize Islam…they intimidate, threaten and kill” (video)
College campuses have become the most intolerant of places in the U.S. Particularly when the topic is Islam, whereby the speakers and the forums they speak at require inordinate amounts of security and protection. Not to mention the harassment of those who invite such speakers.
Leading the jihad charge against any discussion of Islam at universities, and infiltrating all media coverage of such events, is the Muslim Brotherhood founded Muslim Student Association. A fact never reported by the media.
During her recent visit to the University of Wisconsin at Madison, Ayaan Hirsi Ali explained the necessity for security when discussing Islam:
“Because when you criticize Islam, you’ll find people who object to it don’t always do it only by using words and arguments, but they also intimidate, threaten and kill,” she said.
When Ayaan Hirsi Ali’s name was first mentioned as a possible speaker at UW-Madison this semester, she was rejected as too controversial.
But, ultimately, a student committee voted to bring the outspoken critic of Islam and author of “Infidel” to Madison, despite concerns by the Muslim Student Association.
“Because when you criticize Islam, you’ll find people who object to it don’t always do it only by using words and arguments, but they also intimidate, threaten and kill,” she said.
College campuses have become the most intolerant of places in the U.S. Particularly when the topic is Islam, whereby the speakers and the forums they speak at require inordinate amounts of security and protection. Not to mention the harassment of those who invite such speakers.
Leading the jihad charge against any discussion of Islam at universities, and infiltrating all media coverage of such events, is the Muslim Brotherhood founded Muslim Student Association. A fact never reported by the media.
During her recent visit to the University of Wisconsin at Madison, Ayaan Hirsi Ali explained the necessity for security when discussing Islam:
“Because when you criticize Islam, you’ll find people who object to it don’t always do it only by using words and arguments, but they also intimidate, threaten and kill,” she said.
When Ayaan Hirsi Ali’s name was first mentioned as a possible speaker at UW-Madison this semester, she was rejected as too controversial.
But, ultimately, a student committee voted to bring the outspoken critic of Islam and author of “Infidel” to Madison, despite concerns by the Muslim Student Association.
“Because when you criticize Islam, you’ll find people who object to it don’t always do it only by using words and arguments, but they also intimidate, threaten and kill,” she said.
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