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History 1700s-1800s of USA vs Muslin Thinking

sfhorn

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Nov 20, 2001
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Brackettville, Ft. Clark
Long read, but found this quite interesting. A retired military buddy sent this to me.


THIS IS ONE OF THE BEST DESCRIPTIONS OF HOW THE MUSLIM RELIGION WORKS.

When Thomas Jefferson saw there was no negotiating with Muslims, he formed what

is now the Marines (sea going soldiers). These Marines were attached

to U.S. Merchant vessels. When the Muslims attacked U.S. merchant vessels

they were repulsed by armed soldiers, but there is more.


The Marines followed the Muslims back to their villages and killed every one in the village.


It didn't take long for the Muslims to leave U.S. Merchant vessels alone.


English and French merchant vessels started running up our flag when entering the

Mediterranean to secure safe travel.


Why the Marine Hymn contains the verse, "To the Shores of Tripoli".


This is very interesting and a must read piece of our history. It points

out where we may be heading.


Most Americans are unaware of the fact that over two hundred years ago the

United States had declared war on Islam, and Thomas Jefferson led the charge!


At the height of the 18th century, Muslim pirates (the "Barbary Pirates")

were the terror of the Mediterranean and a large area of the North Atlantic.

They attacked every ship in sight, and held the crews for exorbitant

ransoms. Those taken hostage were subjected to barbaric treatment and

wrote heart-breaking letters home, begging their governments and families

to pay whatever their Mohammedan captors demanded.


These extortionists of the high seas represented the North African Islamic

nations of Tripoli, Tunis, Morocco, and Algiers - collectively referred to

as the Barbary Coast - and presented a dangerous and unprovoked threat to

the new American Republic.


Before the Revolutionary War, U.S. merchant ships had been under the

protection of Great Britain. When the U.S. declared its independence and

entered into war, the ships of the United States were protected by France.

However, once the war was won, America had to protect its own fleets.


Thus, the birth of the U.S. Navy. Beginning in 1784, 17 years before he

would become president, Thomas Jefferson became America's Minister to

France. That same year, the U.S. Congress sought to appease its Muslim

adversaries by following in the footsteps of European nations who paid

bribes to the Barbary States rather than engaging them in war.

In July of 1785, Algerian pirates captured American ships, and the Dye of

Algiers demanded an unheard-of ransom of $60,000. It was a plain and

simple case of extortion, and Thomas Jefferson was vehemently opposed to

any further payments.


Instead, he proposed to Congress the formation of a coalition of allied nations

who together could force the Islamic states into peace.


A disinterested Congress decided to pay the ransom.


In 1786, Thomas Jefferson and John Adams met with Tripoli's ambassador to

Great Britain to ask by what right his nation attacked American ships and

enslaved American citizens, and why Muslims held so much hostility towards

America, a nation with which they had no previous contacts.

The two future presidents reported that Ambassador Sidi Haji Abdul Rahman

Adja had answered that, "Islam was founded on the Laws of their Prophet,

that it was written in their Quran that all nations who would not

acknowledge their authority were sinners, that it was their right and duty

to make war upon them wherever they could be found, and to make slaves of

all they could take as prisoners, and that every Musselman (Muslim) who

should be slain in battle was sure to go to Paradise."


Despite this stunning admission of premeditated violence on non-Muslim

nations, as well as the objections of many notable American leaders,

including George Washington, who warned that caving in was both wrong and

would only further embolden the enemy, for the following fifteen years the

American government paid the Muslims millions of dollars for the safe

passage of American ships or the return of American hostages.


The payments in ransom and tribute amounted to over 20 percent of the United

States government annual revenues in 1800.


Jefferson was disgusted. Shortly after his being sworn in as the third

President of the United States in 1801, the Pasha of Tripoli sent him a

note demanding the immediate payment of $225,000 plus $25,000 a year for

every year forthcoming.


That changed everything.


Jefferson let the Pasha know, in no uncertain terms, what he could do with

his demand. The Pasha responded by cutting down the flagpole at the

American consulate and declared war on the United States.


Tunis, Morocco, and Algiers immediately followed suit.


Jefferson, until now, had been against America raising a naval force

for anything beyond coastal defense but, having watched his nation

be cowed by Islamic thuggery for long enough, decided that it was finally

time to meet force with force.


He dispatched a squadron of frigates to the Mediterranean and taught the

Muslim nations of the Barbary Coast a lesson he hoped they would never

forget. Congress authorized Jefferson to empower U.S. ships to seize all

vessels and goods of the Pasha of Tripoli and to "cause to be done all

other acts of precaution or hostility as the state of war would justify".

When Algiers and Tunis, who were both accustomed to American cowardice and

acquiescence, saw the newly independent United States had both the will

and the right to strike back, they quickly abandoned their allegiance to

Tripoli.


The war with Tripoli lasted for four more years, and raged up

again in 1815. The bravery of the U.S. Marine Corps in these wars led to

the line "to the shores of Tripoli" in the Marine Hymn, and they would

forever be known as "leathernecks" for the leather collars of their

uniforms, designed to prevent their heads from being cut off by the Muslim

scimitars when boarding enemy ships.


Islam, and what its Barbary followers justified doing in the name of their

prophet and their god, disturbed Jefferson quite deeply.


America had a tradition of religious tolerance. In fact Jefferson,

himself, had co-authored the Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom, but

fundamentalist Islam was like no other religion the world had ever seen.

A religion based on supremacy, whose holy book not only condoned but

mandated violence against unbelievers, was unacceptable to him. His

greatest fear was that someday this brand of Islam would return and pose

an even greater threat to the United States.


It should concern every American that Muslims have brought about

women-only classes and swimming times at taxpayer-funded universities and

public pools; that Christians, Jews, and Hindus have been banned from

serving on juries where Muslim defendants are being judged; Piggy banks

and Porky Pig tissue dispensers have been banned from workplaces because

they offend Islamist sensibilities; ice cream has been discontinued at

certain Burger King locations because the picture on the wrapper looks

similar to the Arabic script for Allah; public schools are pulling pork

from their menus; on and on and on and on..


It's death by a thousand cuts, or inch-by-inch as some refer to it, and

most Americans have no idea that this battle is being waged every day

across America. By not fighting back, by allowing groups to obfuscate

what is really happening, and not insisting that the Islamists adapt to

our culture, the United States is cutting its own throat with a

politically correct knife, and helping to further the Islamists' agenda.

Sadly, it appears that today America's leaders would rather be

politically correct than victorious!


If you have any doubts about the above information, Google "Thomas

Jefferson vs. the Muslim World."
 
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