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The FLL airport shooter WAS muslim


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2017 Jan 11, 4:20am   3,268 views  6 comments

by joshuatrio   ➕follow (4)   💰tip   ignore  

The Ft. Lauderdale Airport shooter is a Muslim convert who years before joining the U.S. Army took on an Islamic name (Aashiq Hammad), downloaded terrorist propaganda and recorded Islamic religious music online, according to public records dug up by the investigative news site of an award-winning, California journalist.

......The public records uncovered in the days after the massacre suggest Santiago (Hammad) is a radical Islamic terrorist that’s seriously committed to Islam. Besides taking on a Muslim name, he recorded three Islamic religious songs, including the Muslim declaration faith (“there is no God but Allah and Muhammad is his messenger”) known as the Shahada. He also posted a thread about downloading propaganda videos from Islamic terrorists on a weapons and explosives forum. The investigative news site that unearthed this disturbing information connected the dots between Santiago, who is of Puerto Rican descent, and Hammad, an identity he created in 2007.

http://www.judicialwatch.org/blog/2017/01/airport-shooter-converted-islam-identified-aashiq-hammad-years-joining-army/

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1   Shaman   2017 Jan 11, 5:47am  

I checked out his myspace page myself. It's sparse but included those songs.
I'm not sure if that means all that, but stronger evidence is presented in the very pic the Mainstream media is presenting! Dude is wearing a keffiyah, and flashing Muslim gang signs. How much more do you want?
Islam fails again.

2   MMR   2017 Jan 11, 5:55am  

Knew it when they took a long time to report identity of the guy they had in custody. If it was just some white hispanic, they would have released the statement very quickly after he was detained. They waited few hours to tell the press what to report.

3   MMR   2017 Jan 11, 5:55am  

anonymous says

We would be much better off to downplay Islam / Isis than keep going on and on about it but that's just me...why give these guys the publicity they can't buy?

Good point; this is relevant to all terroristic attacks, because the purpose of such attacks is little more than publicity.

4   curious2   2017 Jan 12, 11:26am  

anonymous says

We would be much better off to downplay Islam / Isis than keep going on and on about it but that's just me...why give these guys the publicity they can't buy?

@anonymous, I respect you, but most NATO voters have been systematically deluded about what Islam says and does. Highlighting the attacks committed in the name of Islam cuts through the wool that has been pulled deliberately over too many eyes. It might be more persuasive than statistics about what most Muslims believe. The aggregate data should be more persuasive than the anecdotal reports of attacks, but I have seen even educated and intelligent people revert to their emotionally preferred beliefs about Islam. They respond to statistics with exceptional anecdotes and flat denial. I wish the statistics could persuade, but the human brain seems to overweight emotion, rejecting evidence and reason. To say that people who support invade&import are supporting the spread of Sharia is accurate, but unpersuasive; to say they are inviting terror attacks is also accurate, and becomes emotionally persuasive when those attacks become undeniable.

5   Strategist   2017 Jan 12, 4:48pm  

joshuatrio says

The Ft. Lauderdale Airport shooter is a Muslim convert who years before joining the U.S. Army took on an Islamic name (Aashiq Hammad)

My theory of always blaming Islam worked again. The next terrorist act will be by a Muslim. This is my declaration in advance.

6   MisdemeanorRebel   2017 Jan 17, 1:04pm  

CONFIRMED.

Ferlazzo, who conducted the interview in Miramar, said only that Santiago claimed to be fighting for ISIS and that he'd been in touch via jihadi chat rooms with like-minded people who were planning attacks as well.
Santiago is charged with using and carrying a firearm during and in relation to a crime of violence; performing an act of violence against a person at an airport serving international civil aviation that caused serious bodily injury; and causing the death of a person through the use of a firearm.
The latter two are punishable by death, while the first charge carries a maximum penalty of life in prison.
Authorities have said that Santiago confessed to the mass shooting, which they said he perpetrated after disembarking a plane from Anchorage and collecting a checked bag containing a Walther 9 mm pistol and two magazines.

http://www.cnn.com/2017/01/17/us/fort-lauderdale-shooter-isis-claim/index.html

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