guno
Gold Member
- Mar 18, 2014
- 21,553
- 4,895
Big nest in NC and South carolina, thankfully they are being monitored
There are more violent militiamen, klansmen, far-right activists, neo-Nazis and Christian zealots from North and South Carolina, as Saletan documents: Justin Moose, Charles Robert Barefoot Jr., Kody Brittingham, Paul Chastain and Daniel Schertz were all foiled in their attempts to commit bombings, shootings and other acts of terror.
To date none of the 800,000 refugees the United States has accepted since 9/11 has been arrested for plotting a terror attack (and there have been no convictions), because refugees who resettle in the United States are painstakingly screened by United Nations authorities, as well as by U.S. counter-terrorism agencies and the Department of Homeland Security, in a process that can take more than two years.
“Terrorists from North Carolina encounter no such scrutiny,” Saletan writes. “They just climb into their cars, cross the border and proceed to Georgia, Kansas, or Colorado. They’re protected by Article IV of the Constitution, which, as interpreted by the U.S. Supreme Court, guarantees citizens ‘the right of free ingress to other states.’”
Saletan cites 27 fatal terror attacks in the U.S. since 9/11, with a total of 77 people killed; two thirds, he says, “died at the hands of anti-abortion fanatics, ‘Christian identity’ zealots, white anti-Semites, or other right-wing militants,” just the types we see getting indoctrinated in, and flowing out of, North and South Carolina.
Religious extremists from North and South Carolina more dangerous than refugees, says Slate
There are more violent militiamen, klansmen, far-right activists, neo-Nazis and Christian zealots from North and South Carolina, as Saletan documents: Justin Moose, Charles Robert Barefoot Jr., Kody Brittingham, Paul Chastain and Daniel Schertz were all foiled in their attempts to commit bombings, shootings and other acts of terror.
To date none of the 800,000 refugees the United States has accepted since 9/11 has been arrested for plotting a terror attack (and there have been no convictions), because refugees who resettle in the United States are painstakingly screened by United Nations authorities, as well as by U.S. counter-terrorism agencies and the Department of Homeland Security, in a process that can take more than two years.
“Terrorists from North Carolina encounter no such scrutiny,” Saletan writes. “They just climb into their cars, cross the border and proceed to Georgia, Kansas, or Colorado. They’re protected by Article IV of the Constitution, which, as interpreted by the U.S. Supreme Court, guarantees citizens ‘the right of free ingress to other states.’”
Saletan cites 27 fatal terror attacks in the U.S. since 9/11, with a total of 77 people killed; two thirds, he says, “died at the hands of anti-abortion fanatics, ‘Christian identity’ zealots, white anti-Semites, or other right-wing militants,” just the types we see getting indoctrinated in, and flowing out of, North and South Carolina.
Religious extremists from North and South Carolina more dangerous than refugees, says Slate