Check out this debate with a very hostile "anchor" on RTV. I have no idea what posts of me she is talking about (I have published close to 20,000 posts), but she clearly got her "muhammad" post from the unindicted co-conspirator, Hamas-linked, Muslim Brotherhood CAIR -- because Nihad Awad used the same smear against me on O'Reilly (yes, O'Reilly). Tonight he had on Awad, the executive director of the unindicted co-conspirator, Hamas front CAIR. CAIR must be very afraid. The O'Reilly segment had nothing to do with me, but Hamas-linked Awad brought me up out of nowhere (nuts). It was a Ground Zero mega mosque interview. More on CAIR here.
Funny how the objective RTV "anchor" (who obviously gets her talking points from CAIR) and Hamas-linked CAIR don't mention the pig Muhammad cartoon that Danish imams deliberately created to incite hatred against Denmark, the country that had hospitably welcomed them in. (Brussels Journal)
To this end, while on a visit to Arab countries last month, they added three false, extremely offensive Muhammad “cartoons” to the twelve relatively mild ones published by Jyllands-Posten last September [see the latter here, halfway down the page].
The toon that the CAIR tool anchor and Hamas-linked Awad are talking about was from "Everyone Draw Muhammad Day." And the reason why I posted all of those entries was because there was a death fatwa on the head of a Seattle cartoonist for an innocuous cartoon. And she is us. That death threat was meant for all free men to submit to Islam. Here is Mark Steyn at NRO on "Everybody Draw Muhammad Day." And see also this: Why Everyone in the Civilized World Must Support ‘Everybody Draw Muhammad Day’ by Brad Thor.

The paintbrush/pen/pencil/crayon is mightier than the sword. Or hey, even needlepoint if you're up for it. The possibilities are endless. "Seattle cartoonist launches 'Everybody Draw Mohammed Day'," by Jamie Griswold for the Associated Press, April 23 (thanks to all who sent this in):
After Comedy Central cut a portion of a South Park episode following a death threat from a radical Muslim group, Seattle cartoonist Molly Norris wanted to counter the fear. She has declared May 20th "Everybody Draw Mohammed Day."Norris told KIRO Radio's Dave Ross that cartoonists are meant to challenge the lines of political correctness. "That's a cartoonist's job, to be non-PC."Producers of South Park said Thursday that Comedy Central removed a speech about intimidation and fear from their show after a radical Muslim group warned that they could be killed for insulting the Prophet Muhammad.The group said it wasn't threatening South Park producers Trey Parker and Matt Stone, but it included a gruesome picture of Theo Van Gogh, a Dutch filmmaker killed by a Muslim extremist in 2004, and said the producers could meet the same fate. The website posted the addresses of Comedy Central's New York office and the California production studio where South Park is made."As a cartoonist I just felt so much passion about what had happened I wanted to kind of counter Comedy Central's message they sent about feeling afraid," Norris said.Norris has asked other artists to submit drawings of any religious figure to be posted as part of Citizens Against Citizens Against Humor (CACAH) on May 20th.But drawings of one "religious figure" in particular will provoke death threats and accusations of hatred and racism.
On her website Norris explains this is not meant to disrespect any religion, but rather meant to protect people's right to express themselves.




