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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region Forums"Onward Christian Holy Rollers!" . . . Please come CAPTION Rev. Robert Doggart!
Rev. Robert ("Don't call me late for the slaughter" Doggart is saying:"Well, Joe, actually you're the first to have me on, to let me tell my side of the story. . . . We weren't trying to organize and terrorize Muslims in the United States, we really just wanted too take our country back any which way we can! . . . (And didn't the Supreme Court rule that bullets were like free speech?) . . . I mean, those Mosques could make swell ice-cream parlors or roller rinks. . . . After all, they're always terrorizing us! . . . Even Fox News won't talk about us. . . . Why do you think is that?"
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Above CAPTION based on the following Media Matters story:
http://mediamatters.org/blog/2015/05/20/a-terror-threat-fox-news-wont-cover/203714
hifiguy
(33,688 posts)shenmue
(38,506 posts)Scurrilous
(38,687 posts)Rex
(65,616 posts)The lights are on...two beers short a six pack...moonbats & waffles.
Frustratedlady
(16,254 posts)training camps and also allowing terrorists to come over the US/Mexican border?
From the article:
Right-wing media have also been known to fearmonger about often-unsubstantiated Islamic terror threats. Outlets like Fox News, The Drudge Report, and The New York Post hyped an unfounded "jihadist" plot against Fort Jackson in South Carolina. And Sean Hannity and other conservatives promoted an unsubstantiated story of an Islamic State (ISIS) training camp on the U.S.-Mexico border around the same time Doggart was arrested.
Islamberg, the town Doggart was planning to attack, has also garnered Fox News' attention in the past -- a 2007 FoxNews.com article wondered if it was a "terror compound" and a report by Fox Business host Lou Dobbs claimed the town was home to a group engaging in "guerilla war training.
Did I read that wrong?