Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Second Amendment = State Militia: What They're Teaching Our Children In The Re-Education Camps They Call "Schools"

"Re-Education Camps", yeah, I borrowed that from Epa.




6 comments:

Always On Watch said...

I see that kind of crap all the time in textbooks published by various companies.

Anonymous said...

If it were my kid going to that school I'd tell him/her: "We are all state militia."

Counter that you stupid c*** liberals.

On another, more important note, were conservatives busy sniffing glue while this twisted sh*t was being taught or started being taught at schools?

Nicoenarg

Epaminondas said...

'If it were my kid going to that school I'd tell him/her: "We are all state militia."'

That's because we ARE.
Then. now and in the future, whether we LIKE IT or not.

Some might say it is OUR personal responsibility before god.

And I borrowed that from sharia

Always On Watch said...

A lot of people will not speak up because they are afraid of the consequences for their children at the school.

We are a nation of cowards now.

Anonymous said...

Today, my child, a freshman in high school informed me of a modified version of history suggested in his global studies class. On a pre-quiz designed to assess student familiarity with history at the beginning of the school year (to be juxtaposed against a post-quiz at the end of the school year), one multiple choice question about the Reconquista offered the following answer . . .Expulsion of muslims (Moors) by Christians. No context, no inclusion/mention of Jewish expulsion.
FWIW . . .this school is now using common core programming.

Pastorius said...


The Reconquista ("reconquest")[a][b] is a period of approximately 781 years in the history of the Iberian Peninsula, from the first Islamic invasion in 711 to the fall of Granada, the last Islamic state on the peninsula, in 1492.

...

Ferdinand and Isabella completed the Reconquista with a war against the Emirate of Granada that started in 1482 and ended with Granada's complete annexation in early 1492. The Moors in Castile previously numbered "half a million within the realm." By 1492 some 100,000 had died or been enslaved, 200,000 had emigrated, and 200,000 remained in Castile. Many of the Muslim elite, including Granada's former Emir Muhammad XII, who had been given the area of the Alpujarras mountains as a principality, found life under Christian rule intolerable and emigrated to Tlemcen in North Africa.[13]

...

During the Islamic administration, Christians and Jews were allowed to retain their religions by paying a tax (jizya). Penalty for not paying it was imprisonment. During the time of the Almoravids and especially the Almohads some were treated badly, in contrast to the policies of the earlier Umayyad Caliphs and later Emirs.[citation needed]


Moros y cristianos celebrated in many towns and cities of Spain, to commemorate the battles of Reconquista.
The new Christian hierarchy demanded heavy taxes from non-Christians and gave them rights, such as in the Treaty of Granada (1491) only for Moors in recently Islamic Granada. It expelled the Jews. In 1492 the Alhambra decree under Archbishop Hernando de Talavera dismissed the Treaty of Granada and now the Muslim population of Granada was forced to convert or be expelled. In 1502, Queen Isabella I declared conversion to Catholicism compulsory within the Kingdom of Castile. King Charles V did the same to Moors in the Kingdom of Aragon in 1526, forcing conversions of its Muslim population during the Revolt of the Germanies.[14] Despite the monarchs' wishes, many local officials took advantage of the situation to seize property.