Saturday, September 1, 2007

Muslim's Bombs Closes Street in Canada


I'll just let Pam of Atlas Shrugs tell this tale of another Muslim immigrant gone berserk in her own sweet delicate way.
FROM ATLASSHRUGS:
Let me understand this, they closed down two of Toronto's busiest highways to move LIVE bombs. It wasn't till the seventh paragraph that the Post mentions that the bomber was a landed immigrant from Lebanon. They were careful not to mention his middle name... Mohamed. Norman sent this - haven't heard a word of it in the American press. The dhimmitude defies all logic and the most basic instinct - the will to live.
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Muslim's Bombs Closes Street in Canada
"There's absolutely no pattern as far as any religion, ideology, or nationality." stated Deputy Chief Warr of the Toronto police.
BOMBS CONVOY CLOSES STREET
Torontonians were transfixed yesterday by the spectacle of police gingerly transporting three live bombs through their city, shutting down two of Toronto's busiest roadways for more than an hour after a man was arrested for a series of August letter bombings.

As news helicopters buzzed overhead, a 17-car police convoy crept slowly down the Don Valley Parkway and under the Gardiner Expressway to the waterfront Leslie Street Spit, carefully towing a trailer containing the three explosive devices seized earlier from a rental car.
Bridges over the busy parkway were sealed off and pedestrians and other vehicles kept hundreds of metres away until the bombs were carefully deposited on a deserted section of the spit, and blown up in a controlled explosion that could be heard kilo-metres away.
Check out "a weary looking"
Adel Arnaout, 37, a landed immigrant from Lebanon, was charged yesterday with three counts of attempted murder, three counts of delivering and setting off a bomb and one of illegal possession of explosives. He was also charged with criminal harassment.
A weary-looking Mr. Arnaout, handcuffed and clad in a prison-issue orange jumpsuit, made a brief appearance in an east-end court, staring sullenly at the justice of the peace as a bail hearing was set for next Wednesday. He lives in a small
Major Toronto highway closed as police dispose of explosive devices CBC