I'm sure most people are aware that the terrorists and their supporters use Internet chat rooms and websites to spread their terrorist message. Some people say it's freedom of speech and they should be left to it. Besides, others point out, they are a great source of information on terrorist thinking.
One group, Internet Haganah, disagrees with this thinking and believes we should try and disrupt their lines of communications where ever we find them. They've been pretty successful too.
The Counter Terrorism website notes that, due to a lack of Arabic translators, terrorists are able to communicate at will via letters from prison.
One website Internet Haganah has not be able to shut down and that might interest Counter Terrorism, is the one run by wanted (in two countries) terrorist Hamaz the Hook. As I understand it, Hamaz runs his website, Supporters of Shareeah (get it? S.O.S), from his prison cell in Britain.
But what are we to do when the media supports the terrorists.
Reuters produces a video that shows top terrorist Zakaria Zubeidi sitting in Reuters' Jenin office, saying he was Reuters’ chief, while BBC, ITN, the Independent newspaper, and French journalists, who "thought the video was hilarious", couldn't stop laughing.
The Guardian (UK) hires a writer, Dilpazier Aslam, from banned (except in Muslim appeasement mode Britain) terrorist organization Hizb Ut Tahrir, to write an article sympathetic to the London terrorists.
Worse still, last year the BBC hired al-Jazeera editor-in-chief, Ibrahim Helal.
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Sunday, July 17, 2005
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