tirsdag 7. juli 2026

Nye og gamle nyheter like ille ...

Noen snapshots som forteller en drøss om «øss»:

… En svensk biskop mottar et bilde som seksual­iser­er Kristi kors­feste­lse, og takkes for å ute­stenge bibel­tro preste­kandidat­er. Hvor mye kristen­dom kan man av­skaffe før kirken opp­hører å være en kirke?

se Document.no 70726, av Helena Edlund.

Mediene lærte tysk VM-supporter å frykte USA – virkeligheten fikk ham til å gråte

På document.no: Tove Elisabeth Rooney   07.07.2026 16:31 … Kraus forteller at han var nervøs før avreise på grunn av alt han hadde hørt om landet.

– For å være ærlig var jeg litt redd for å reise til USA. Nyhetene handler om masseskytinger, kriminalitet og at landet ikke er trygt, sa han.

Men da han først kom dit, fikk han en helt annen opplevelse.

I stedet for et farlig og kaotisk samfunn møtte han vanlige amerikanere som behandlet ham med vennlighet.

Kommentar: Går det an å være så dum? Er det lovlig?

Sterkt anbefalt lesing:

https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2026/07/the-west-still-confuses-weakness-with-virtue/

 

https://europeanconservative.com/articles/commentary/infiltration-and-denial-germanys-islamism-blind-spot/

 

https://www.document.no/2026/07/04/demokratene-vil-gjore-islamske-helligdager-til-statlige-fridager/

 

https://www.document.no/2026/07/04/paven-markerer-usa-nasjonaldag-ved-a-be-vesten-apne-sine-grenser/

 

https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/429538

 

https://jihadwatch.org/2026/07/archbishop-of-canterbury-visits-israel

 

https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/

 

https://www.frontpagemag.com/the-patriotism-gap/

 

https://youtube.com/watch?v=Y_3_PnnZ14I&si=O7aYGMUe5dWUOblg

 

nb

https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2026/06/the-west-fails-to-understand-that-iran-operates-religiously-not-pragmatically/

 

https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2026/06/the-tenets-of-islam-license-to-kill/

 

https://jihadwatch.org/2026/06/when-has-negotiating-with-islamic-terrorists-ever-worked

 

https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/429405 :

David Collieris an Independent Investigative Journalist. View more of David's works via his website david-collier.com

British Christians are being misled, not only by their own government and institutions, but increasingly by some of their own religious leaders. What the Archbishop of Canterbury did this week during her visit to Israel and the Palestinian Authority-controlled areas facilitates those who support violence. It sends a dangerous and deeply misleading message to the very people she is supposed to serve. At a time when Christians are crying out for moral courage and effective leadership, the new Archbishop of Canterbury showed the world she is gullible, spineless and cowardly.

It isn’t just that the Archbishop of Canterbury presented a shallow, propaganda-driven account of the lives of Christians in the birthplace of Christianity, or that she completely obscured the far broader challenges posed by Islamist extremism confronting the Christian communities who actually live there. At a time when hundreds of millions of Christians live under persecution, intimidation, discrimination and violence, Britain’s most senior church leader chose to stand alongside individuals with publicly documented associations with the PFLP, ignore the Islamist persecution of local Christians completely, and resort to that age-old Christian failsafe when the going gets tough - she simply blamed the Jews for it all.

The Archbishop of Canterbury Visits the Holy Land

There is more than one reality to Palestinian Christian life. The question is why so many British Christian leaders continually choose to present only the version of events that reinforces the Palestinian propaganda narrative. This is not a Christian voice - it is one dominated by Islamists and spoken mostly by terrorist factions and PFLP-linked NGOs created as go-betweens for a Western audience.

Christians will not secure their future by standing alongside Hamas and Islamic Jihad-driven narratives, and over the last few decades, some church groups have mistakenly aligned themselves with Islamist-driven anti-Israel movements. This misplaced strategy serves only those who seek division and conflict, does nothing to help either Israelis or Palestinian Christians, and leaves British Christians with a profoundly distorted understanding of t

the pressures facing one of the world’s oldest Christian communities.

It is also profoundly un-Christian.

The Archbishop embarked on a five-day pilgrimage to the Holy Land. There was much for her to do there. Christians once made up more than 10% of Palestinian society. Today, the Palestinian population is approximately 98.5% Muslim. What was once a thriving Christian community has dwindled to around 42,000 people. Even Bethlehem, once overwhelmingly Christian, is now overwhelmingly Muslim.

There is certainly a story the Archbishop of Canterbury needs to tell. Christian communities have been devastated throughout much of the Middle East. The Archbishop should know this better than anyone. In 2015, her predecessor Justin Welby travelled to Egypt to offer condolences following a terrorist attack that killed twenty-one Egyptian Christians in Libya. Between 2016 and 2018, Justin Welby posted numerous times following anti-Christian terror attacks in Egypt itself: … les resten ved å kikke på linken over.

 

https://www.tf.uio.no/forskning/aktuelt/aktuelle-saker/2014/religionsfrihet-1814.html

 

https://quadrant.org.au/news-opinions/immigration/the-rape-of-britain/

 

Skartveit:

https://www.document.no/2026/06/28/samfunnet-formes-av-var-tro/

 

Troja her? 

https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/429229

-

Husker du denne? (fra for lenge siden, siden tiden går fort nå):

… Meanwhile Europe’s cultural elites are dominated by people who seem likely to continue to smile upon Islamization right up till the moment they’re stoned to death. At a recent Norwegian conference on integration, the Swedish government representative was asked: “Is Swedish culture worth preserving?” “Well,” she replied dismissively, “what is Swedish culture?” To people like that, European culture is a void waiting to be filled with something, and that something might as well be Islam. Granted, things aren’t quite that bad in the U.S. — not even at the New York Times. Yet to an extraordinary extent, the political and cultural elites on both sides of the Atlantic are in sync in their denial of the reality we’re up against.

This was driven home to me a few months ago when I took part in a day-long conference in Washington, D.C., about the America/Europe relationship. Nearly all the participants and audience members, I gathered, were Americans or Europeans who worked in the diplomatic corps. The day was crammed with panel discussions, and from early morning until late in the afternoon we talked about nothing but America and Europe. Yet aside from me, only one other person even mentioned Islam. And he did so in the most indirect way, as if he were bringing up something indelicate. Everybody present seemed to share an unspoken understanding that this subject was off limits. Indeed, pretty much everybody seemed to agree that Europe is doing great — that it’s moving from strength to strength — and that America should be more like it in every way.

How I even got invited to such a conference I have no idea. In any case, everything I said was dismissed out of hand. One genial fellow who seemed desperate to correct my folly and bring me into the tent came up to me after my talk and said, almost pleadingly, “But don’t you think that the real problem is not Islam but Islamophobia?” And on the panel that followed my talk, a retired diplomat with decades of experience (and a masterly command of the art of condescension) mentioned in a tone of both wonder and whimsy that I wasn’t alone in my peculiar affliction; even Walter Laqueur — the distinguished octogenarian historian of Europe whom the retired diplomat, as his tone made clear, had once, but no longer, held in high esteem — had written a book making the same bizarre arguments I was making! But neither this retired diplomat nor anyone else was willing to entertain the possibility that if both Laqueur and I, and many others, had made certain arguments, there might actually be something in them; no, it was as if, in their eyes, we had all simply been bitten by some exotic bug or contracted some mysterious new infection or had giant alien pods placed under our beds while we were sleeping.

Fra:

http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/Read.aspx?GUID=27EFEA84-33F8-41E3-8007-CB9BC6A65C3E

 

Ingen kommentarer:

Legg inn en kommentar