
in August, not that long ago in the student newspaper at Ohio State University. So clearly he was very sensitive to being a Muslim and going out and praying in the open. Right, and that you're still in the same situation there. He's sensitive saying, don't judge me, that I'm a terrorist because I want to pray in the open or because I'm a Muslim. And then months later, he gets a knife in a car and he attacks people. Well, I find out a lot of motive there, but that's very chilling to be able to see the side by side. Gee, what could the motive be? Mmm. But this is odd. No one's calling it a terrorist attack. It's very, I don't know, at best a lone wolf. And I picked up this clip from... How can you do that? I mean, you either make lone wolf terrorist attacks an item. You don't all of a sudden have lone wolf non-terrorist attacks by a Muslim that would be, seems like it would be a terrorist since he's supposedly screaming,
It says this article is currently protected from editing until December 23rd, 2016. Huh. I've never seen that. Oh, it's an editing dispute. But I guess they lock it down. That's interesting. Anyway, he was on Fox and here's what he had to say about lone wolves. And I liked it. I repeat it again and again and again. The phrase lone wolf is designed to make Americans stupid. It is designed to make you disconnect the dots. There is no such thing as a lone wolf, whether it's the Tsarnaev brothers in Boston, whether it's Major Nidal Hassan, whether it's the individual who recently detonated devices in New York and New Jersey, or this attack, potentially. These are all individuals linked together. How are they linked? They are linked by the connective tissue of jihadi ideology. These aren't people who sit in a basement, go online,