Moslem Murderer Tsarnaev |
Seems the proprietors of several Boston area boneyards aren't thrilled with the prospect of having to tell their cash paying customers that their Aunt Matilda is planted right next to the debonair Chechnyan zealot.
What is interesting is that this mass murderer is being afforded all the dignities of burial according to his Islamic religious customs. The ghouls who do such things are ritually washing and mumbling Moslem mumbo-jumbo over his carcass.
There was a time in American history when leaders had the wherewithal to dispense with such dignities when dealing with crazed Moslems.
We're talking here about U.S. General John J. "Blackjack" Pershing who in 1911 buried Philippine Moslem terrorists with pig's blood and porcine intestines.
General Pershing didn't coddle Moslem copses |
The decisive military leader who would later command the victorious U.S. forces in World War I, was not one for coddling the corpses of Moslem terrorists.
Pershing captured 6 terrorists who had gone on the usual Moslem murder spree of infidels.
He tied them to posts for execution. He then brought in 2 pigs and had them slaughtered in front of the devout adherents of Allah. He pointedly had the firing squad dip their bullets in the pig's blood and mentioned to the condemned that they would be planted in Allah's acre, awash in pig blood and guts.
Area Moslems got wind of this and for the next several decades there was a notable absence of the usual Islamic hijinx on the Philippine archipelago.
You see, devout Moslems have a peculiar belief that if they are touched by anything relating to a pig at the time of death, they won't get to enjoy their 72 virgins in the Islamic conception of heaven.
So if, say, someone were to sneak into the morgue where this Moslem maniac's body is being pampered and accidentally spilled some pork plasma on his murderous cadaver, and say, word of the dastardly deed were to leak out -- it might give future crazed Moslems reason for pause.
Just thinking out loud here.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Comments invited, however anonymous commentors had better deal directly with the issues raised and avoid ad hominem drivel. As for Teachers' Union seminar writers -- forget about it.