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August 8, 2006

Sean Hannity Interviews Walid Shoebat. Facts About Islam and the Middle East Not Talked About Much on Public Airwaves. (Audio)

by @ 2:36 am. Filed under Audio, Terrorism and War

Walid Shoebat is a former PLO terrorist that was on Sean Hannity’s show yesterday. He was raised in an Islamic land under Islamic teachings, taught to hate Jews and America. Even in the Christian schools he went to in his area he was taught to hate Jews, because that’s how intense the teaching of Jewish hatred is in Muslim territories. You can read more of his story here. He has written a book called Why I Left Jihad: The Root of Terrorism and the Return of Radical Islam. He fully exposes the teaching of hate that is Islam. And I don’t mean just “Radical Islam”, the way he tells it the whole thing is radical and the non-radicals are an exception.

Left Jihad

He did not speak of things in terms of “Radical Islam” versus some other form of Islam that we’ve been told is practiced by a peaceful majority of Muslims. He spoke of the Islamic nations and the teachings of Islam he knows about, that we in the USA are not fully aware of. He feels Muslims that are not what we call “radicals” are Liberal Muslims AND HE SAYS THEIR NUMBERS ARE VERY WEAK. He says the majority of the Islamic world is what we would call Radical Islam, given they support terrorist groups like Hamas and Hezbollah. The poll he cites proves his point. Basically what we call, or have been lead to call “Radical Islam” he sees as “Islam” in it’s most true and pure form.

He cited the Al-Arabia poll in the list below.

Goodbye Gaza, Hello Hamas


A September 2003 poll conducted jointly by Public Opinion Research of Israel and the Palestinian Center for Public Opinion found that only 13 percent of Palestinians agreed with the statement that Hamas is a terrorist group; 82 percent agreed that Hamas is a freedom-fighting organization; and a mere 10 percent believed that bombings targeting Israeli civilians in buses and restaurants could be classified as acts of terrorism. These attitudes suggest that the ethical and moral gulf dividing Palestinian from Israeli culture is so vast as to be unbridgeable.

An April 2004 poll of 506 Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip found that for the first time ever, Hamas, which has long been the most popular faction in the Gaza strip, enjoyed stronger support among Palestinians than did Yasser Arafat?s Fatah movement. In that same survey, 76.5 percent of respondents supported the continuation of Hamas? suicide attacks against Israel; only 15.4 percent were opposed such attacks.

In a November 2004 Al-Arabia network survey of some 113,000 individuals throughout the Arab world, 73.2 percent of respondents said they wanted a Hamas official to replace the recently deceased Yasser Arafat as Palestinian leader.

In December 2004, municipal elections for local councils were held in 26 Palestinian communities. Hamas, participating for the first time in Palestinian elections, won a majority of council seats in nine communities, while Fatah took control of 14 towns. ?This is an outstanding result for Hamas,? noted the Palestinian analyst Ali Jerbawi. ?The 26 localities were selected from the beginning according to strongholds of Fatah. So the results should have been more for Fatah than Hamas.?

In local council elections held in Gaza in January 2005, Hamas won at least 75 out of the 118 seats it contested. The ruling Fatah faction of Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas won approximately 26 seats. Correspondents interpreted the results as a significant blow to Fatah, and a great leap forward for Hamas.

In local elections held in the West Bank and Gaza Strip in May 2005, Hamas again made a very strong showing against Abbas? Fatah movement. Further establishing itself as a potent political force, Hamas won 23 of the electoral races ? including those in Qalqiliya, Rafah, and Beit Lahiya, the three largest towns being contested.

You can’t fake that many polls and elections. The talk of moderate (Liberal) Muslims being a silent majority is obviously a farce.

Mr. Shoebat is now a Christian living in hiding. Notice he’s living in hiding, which further proves the point of Islam being mostly radical. Someone can falsely claim Christians are evil killers and not have to live in hiding. He was brought to Christ by a Christian woman he was interested in, that he thought he could convert to Islam, but Jesus had another plan for his life. His father has denied him land that he paid for, given Muslims don’t feel a need to honor agreements with non-believers.

He mentioned that bringing Democracy to the Middle East will not change things there, because of their views under Islam. Once he hit on this point Hannity quickly diverted him and mentioned that he disagrees. I must say, I agree with Mr. Shoebat. Action in areas like Iraq is good for helping to have a military base in that area to kill terrorists from, but beyond military strategy for the establishment of forces to launch strikes against enemies in that region, I don’t think we’ll be “converting” them to some Westernized form of government. And I don’t think we’ll cause them to like us either.

I think I started seeing this clearly after seeing how we supposedly “liberated” Afghanistan, only to see a Christian convert have to run for his life. And of course the election of Hamas was not a surprise to me, but I guess I wanted to hope some more good might come from US efforts. It’s like knowing something you withhold yourself from fully admitting until you can no longer deny it. Working to kill terrorists is a good thing, but we can’t take this “ally” view with nations running this cult too far. Because it would ultimately work against us. I think our forces are doing the right thing taking the fight to enemies in places like Afghanistan and Iraq. I think other nations will need to be addressed too. But when we look at nations like Pakistan and even Afghanistan’s new government, we need to be careful. It’s good some things have improved, but they have only been willing to change to a point. It is good that some of them are nice to our forces. Some are nice because they hope US forces will kill their enemies and some might have genuine love for some people they’ve made personal relationships with. But overall their view of the world works against US interests. So our forces must do what they must to engage the enemy, but let’s not go selling them critical US infrastructure. It’s nice that some in the Liberal Muslim minority are nice to us, but their majority still presents a danger. We should not forget that.

Mr. Shoebat has made a video with Brigitte Gabriel called From Hate to Love. You can see the trailer here.

Hannity’s interview with Mr. Shoebat was stunning and filled with information it seems the MSM is trying to avoid.

Hear the interview using the audio link below.
Sean Hannity’s interview with form PLO terrorist Walid Shoebat – ASF Audio
(For the sake of bandwidth there will be no other formats made.)



2 Responses to “Sean Hannity Interviews Walid Shoebat. Facts About Islam and the Middle East Not Talked About Much on Public Airwaves. (Audio)”

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