Free Speech Islam in the UK Taqqiya

UK RADIO HOST JUDGED INNOCENT OF ALL CHARGES, MUSLIMS TAQIYYA PRACTITIONERS LEFT FUMING…….

 

A major win for our side!

H/T: EDL Buck

Published on Apr 8, 2014

Truth prevails over taqiyya in Britain! Tim Burton successfully beats serial complainer Fiyaz Mughal in court. Islam will NOT infringe on our freedom of speech, and we will NOT be quiet about injustice and Islamic deception!

Run up to today’s verdict:

Last week Liberty GB radio host, Tim Burton, was charged by West Midlands Police with racially aggravated harassment, after his post on Twitter described a prominent individual as “a mendacious grievance-mongering taqiyya-artist”.

The delicate flower who needs defending from such criticism is none other than Mr Fiyaz Mughal OBE, founder of the Tell Mama organisation, who in June 2013 was revealed as a deceiver by Telegraph journalist Andrew Gilligan:

The project, called Tell Mama, claimed that there had been a ‘sustained wave of attacks and intimidation’ against British Muslims after the killing of Drummer Lee Rigby, with 193 ‘Islamophobic incidents’ reported to it, rising to 212 by last weekend.

The group’s founder, Fiyaz Mughal, said he saw ‘no end to this cycle of violence’, describing it as ‘unprecedented’. The claims were unquestioningly repeated in the media.

Tell Mama and Mr Mughal did not mention, however, that 57 per cent of the 212 reports referred to activity that took place only online, mainly offensive postings on Twitter and Facebook, or that a further 16 per cent of the 212 reports had not been verified. Not all the online abuse even originated in Britain.

Contrary to the group’s claim of a ‘cycle of violence’ and a ‘sustained wave of attacks’, only 17 of the 212 incidents, 8 per cent, involved the physical targeting of people and there were no attacks on anyone serious enough to require medical treatment.

 

2 Responses

  1. I’m surprised that this group was called ‘Tell Mama’ when you consider the lowly state of women in Islam. I would have thought that ‘Tell Papa’ would be a more appropriate name.
    Names are usually picked because they have a symbolic meaning and tell mama suggests a protective, strong motherly figure that can be confided in, which really doesn’t fit in with the Islamic lifestyle at all. I suppose it’s just taqiyya in action again.

    By the way, as I type this I’ve noticed something. You’ll know when the word ‘taqiyya’ really does become uniformly acknowledged and that’s when it no longer appears as an error in your spellchecker.

  2. In the video one of the two people stated that with this case the concept of taqiyya had become “embedded” in jurisprudence.

    Is that true? Certainly I too would like to see judges take judicial notice of this standard practice of Muslims. But give us a little more on the case. Did the judge take testimony that taqiyya is a part of Islam. I know that that was going to part of the defendant’s case, but did he get to make the argument, and as noted, did the judge buy it?

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