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During Paris Attacks, MSNBC’s Brian Williams Asks About Impact On Climate Conference

Fullscreen capture 11142015 74144 AM.bmp

A climate conference is underway in Paris, and Weather Channel Managing Editor Sam Champion is there, along with former Vice President Al Gore, filming the event and doing promotion there for the cause. Champion was on MSNBC to discuss the terror attacks in Paris as they were occurring. After some back and forth, tone deaf Williams asked Champion how the conference would be affected.


During Paris Attacks, MSNBC’s Brian Williams Asks About Impact On Climate Conference


Fullscreen capture 11142015 74144 AM.bmp

A climate conference is underway in Paris, and Weather Channel Managing Editor Sam Champion is there, along with former Vice President Al Gore, filming the event and doing promotion there for the cause. Champion was on MSNBC to discuss the terror attacks in Paris as they were occurring. After some back and forth, tone deaf Williams asked Champion how the conference would be affected.

Williams did not merely ask about how the event would proceed, or whether security would be affected, which might be natural questions even if grossly untimely. But instead he asks specifically, how this attack would impact the messaging.

“What becomes of what you had hoped to be this big public campaign leading up the climate summit?”

Because that is the important thing when hostages are still being held and gunfire is still being exchanged. How will the global warming conference’s PR campaign go on? More

http://bb4sp.com/during-paris-attacks-msnbcs-brian-williams-asks-ab...

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I would love to see him put his gaggle of ARMED SECURITY people on VACATION from him and his family for the REST OF NOVEMBER if he REALLY believes TERRORISTS are of no THREAT in this country today!!!
 

Paris attacks open up 2016 campaign faultlines


Main Politics Paris attacks open up 2016 campaign faultlines

  1. 11.14 / 15:03 www.politico.com
    Paris attacks open up 2016 campaign faultlines
    Republican presidential candidates wasted little time in turning the Paris attacks into political attack lines, while tonight’s Democratic debate is set to focus more on national security and foreign policy issues. The leading Republican candidates are calling for tougher U.S. action against terrorists overseas and further restrictions on admitting Syrian refugees. The statements, often infused with expressions of condolence for the French people,…

Paris attacks open up 2016 campaign faultlines

By Nahal Toosi

Republicans go on the attack, while the Democratic debate's focus is set to change.

Republican presidential candidates wasted little time in turning the Paris attacks into political attack lines, while tonight’s Democratic debate is set to focus more on national security and foreign policy issues.

The leading Republican candidates are calling for tougher U.S. action against terrorists overseas and further restrictions on admitting Syrian refugees. The statements, often infused with expressions of condolence for the French people, suggested national security will likely play a growing role in the back-and-forth as the 2016 presidential election draws nearer, especially as the rise of the Islamic State terrorist group, also known as ISIS or ISIL, pulls U.S. forces deeper into military conflict in the region.

Within hours of the Friday night attacks, which have been claimed by the Islamic State and killed more than 120 people, Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas called on the United States to take "common-sense steps to preserve our own safety."

"We need to consult closely with our NATO allies who may be targeted for additional attacks," the White House hopeful said. "We need to immediately declare a halt to any plans to bring refugees that may have been infiltrated by ISIS to the United States. We need to redouble our efforts to prevent ISIS agents from penetrating our nation by other means."

In a veiled dig at the Obama administration, Cruz also emphasized the nomenclature involved. "We must immediately recognize that our enemy is not ‘violent extremism.’ It is the radical Islamism that has declared jihad against the West," he said.

Retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson, who has been leading in some GOP polls, reiterated his openness to sending U.S. combat troops to fight the Islamic State, a group which he has often mentioned as needing to be wiped out with brutal force if necessary.

President Barack Obama has failed to deal with the Islamist threat by “not having the kind of vision that would allow you to recognize that once you’ve got a place like Iraq under control you don’t withdraw,” Carson said during a Friday press conference. He was referring to Obama's earlier decision to withdraw U.S. forces from Iraq. The U.S. has sent thousands back to advise Iraqi forces and is sending dozens of Special Forces to advise groups battling the Islamic State in Syria.

As far as the refugees, Carson said, “I would not allow them to come into the first place." Carson and other 2016ers have often raised concerns that the Syrian refugees, millions of whom have fled the brutality of the Islamic State as well as the barrel bombs of Syrian President Bashar Assad, have been infiltrated by jihadists hoping to carry out attacks in the West.

The U.S. is hoping to admit 10,000 of the Syrian refugees next year, but its security and vetting procedures often take so long it's unlikely to meet that goal. Europe, meanwhile, is absorbing hundreds of thousands of Syr…

Paris attacks open up 2016 campaign faultlines

Republicans go on the attack, while the Democratic debate's focus is set to change.

11/14/15 09:30 AM EST

151114-debate-gty-1160.jpg

Ted Cruz speaks during the GOP debate on Tuesday, Nov. 10. | Getty

Republican presidential candidates wasted little time in turning the Paris attacks into political attack lines, while tonight’s Democratic debate is set to focus more on national security and foreign policy issues.

The leading Republican candidates are calling for tougher U.S. action against terrorists overseas and further restrictions on admitting Syrian refugees. The statements, infused with expressions of condolence for the French people, suggested national security will likely play a growing role in the back-and-forth as the 2016 presidential election draws nearer, especially as the rise of the Islamic State terrorist group, also known as ISIS or ISIL, pulls U.S. forces deeper into military conflict in the region.

Within hours of the Friday night attacks, which have been claimed by the Islamic State and killed more than 120 people, Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas called on the United States to take "common-sense steps to preserve our own safety."

"We need to consult closely with our NATO allies who may be targeted for additional attacks," the White House hopeful said. "We need to immediately declare a halt to any plans to bring refugees that may have been infiltrated by ISIS to the United States. We need to redouble our efforts to prevent ISIS agents from penetrating our nation by other means."

In a veiled dig at the Obama administration, Cruz also emphasized the nomenclature involved. "We must immediately recognize that our enemy is not ‘violent extremism.’ It is the radical Islamism that has declared jihad against the West," he said. And he suggested that the president had been too risk-averse, launching "targeted airstrikes with zero tolerance for civilian casualties, when the terrorists have such utter disregard for innocent life."

Retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson, who has been leading in some GOP polls, reiterated his openness to sending U.S. combat troops to fight the Islamic State, a group which he has often mentioned as needing to be wiped out with brutal force if necessary.






President Barack Obama has failed to deal with the Islamist threat by “not having the kind of vision that would allow you to recognize that once you’ve got a place like Iraq under control you don’t withdraw,” Carson said during a Friday press conference. He was referring to Obama's earlier decision to withdraw U.S. forces from Iraq. The U.S. has sent thousands back to advise Iraqi forces and is sending dozens of Special Forces to advise groups battling the Islamic State in Syria.

As far as the refugees, Carson said, “I would not allow them to come into the first place." Carson and other 2016ers have often raised concerns that the Syrian refugees, millions of whom have fled the brutality of the Islamic State as well as the barrel bombs of Syrian President Bashar Assad, have been infiltrated by jihadists hoping to carry out attacks in the West.

The U.S. is hoping to admit 10,000 of the Syrian refugees next year, but its security and vetting procedures often take so long it's unlikely to meet that goal. Europe, meanwhile, is absorbing hundreds of thousands of Syrians who have made the often-dangerous trek to the continent by land and sea.

The injection of terrorism as a topic in the presidential race could pose a fresh challenge to Rand Paul, often the GOP’s odd man out on national security. Paul clashed with Marco Rubio during Tuesday’s Republican debate, with the Kentucky senator ripping his Florida colleague as a big-spending liberal for proposing “a trillion dollars in new military spending” and Rubio blasting Paul right back as a “committed isolationist.” More than any other contender in the 15-person GOP field, Rubio has positioned himself as a hawk, touting his experience on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and developing close ties to neoconservative groups.

American voters, and especially Republicans, have shifted right on national security as the Islamic State has risen as a global threat. A November Quinnipiac University poll found that American voters, by a 54-38 percent margin, backed sending U.S. troops to fight ISIL in Iraq. As for Syria, an even higher percentage – 66 percent – said they believed the U.S. and its allies were losing the fight against the terror group. Three-quarters of Republicans blamed ISIL’s rise on Obama’s decision to remove U.S. troops from Iraq, while Democrats tended to blame former President George W. Bush’s 2003 invasion.

The Paris attacks could also put former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on the defensive, forcing her to defend President Obama’s national security record and her role in conflicts such as Libya and Syria, but they also give her a platform to demonstrate her command of a subject matter that has exposed several of her rivals in both parties as novices on the international stage.

For former Fla. Gov. Jeb Bush, a renewed focus on terrorism is also fraught with equal parts peril and opportunity — given his brother’s painful history in Iraq. In an interview with conservative radio host Hugh Hewitt, Bush, who despite his lack of direct experience has sought to portray himself as the GOP field’s grown-up on national security, called the battle against extremists "the war of our time" and said the U.S. needs to show global leadership.

"We need to re-garner the alliances, fortify those alliances, reconnect with our counterintelligence and intelligence capabilities with our European allies, and engage in the Middle East to take out ISIS, which is the wellspring, and more likely to be the wellspring of this type of activity," Bush said. "If it’s not them, there are other terrorist groups."

The Paris attacks are expected to change the dynamics of the Democratic presidential debate set for Saturday night, with moderators likely to focus their questions more on national security and foreign policy issues. Clinton was among the many White House hopefuls in both parties offering words of support for France.

"We must stand side-by-side every step of the way with France and our allies around the world to wage and win the struggle against terrorism and violent extremism," she said in a statement. "Even in this darkest night, Paris remains the City of Light."

 

 

 

 

Source; http://girlsjustwannahaveguns.com/paris-jihadis-faked-identies-as-s...

PARIS JIHADIS: Faked Identies as SYRIAN REFUGEES to Get into France

Screen Shot 2015-11-14 at 5.43.47 PM

No… terrorists would never do that.

Two of the suicide bombers who caused carnage in the Paris massacre are thought to have sneaked into France by posing as refugees from Syria.

The disclosure, which came amid claims of French intelligence failures, inevitably raised new security concerns about Europe’s borders.

Police said the two men, who arrived in Greece last month, were among seven attackers, one as young as 15.

All wearing explosive vests, they roamed across the French capital in three teams, perpetrating the ‘worst acts of violence’ in the country since the Second World War. Fingerprint records show that two of the terrorists had arrived in the EU as refugees through Greece.

A Syrian passport found near the body of one of the gunmen who struck at the Stade de France showed the holder, who was born in 1990, had passed through the Greek island of Leros on October 3.

Greece’s deputy minister in charge of police, Nikos Toscas, said he was ‘identified [as a refugee] according to EU rules’ as he passed through the country, but did not know if it was checked elsewhere en route to Paris. In all, 129 people were killed in a series of co-ordinated bomb and gun attacks on Friday night. With 99 of the 352 wounded critically ill, the death toll is expected to rise.

Six of the terrorists, believed to be from Islamic State, took their own lives, while one was shot dead by police.

Among their victims was a 36-year-old British man, Nick Alexander, from Colchester in Essex, who was selling T-shirts at the Bataclan Theatre where 89 music fans were slaughtered.

With much of Europe on high alert yesterday, a Frenchman caused chaos at Gatwick Airport after producing what appeared to be a gun at an easyJet check-in desk. Hundreds of passengers were evacuated after the 41-year-old man fled and threw the ‘firearm’ into a rubbish bin at the North Terminal following a row with staff.

Armed police rushed to restrain the man and were said to have shouted ‘get down, get down’ to nearby travellers.

Meanwhile in Paris, distraught relatives and friends of people still missing launched a desperate search for loved ones feared killed. They shared pictures and information with the hashtag ‘RechercheParis’ – which means ‘search Paris’ – and it has now spawned its own Twitter accounts and Facebook page. Many of those missing were at the Bataclan concert.

British victim Mr Alexander was with his American friend Helen Wilson when gunman stormed the venue before blowing themselves up. She told how they were forced to lie on the ground – with those who moved, shot.

Read more: dailymail.co.uk

In view of this information, why in hell is Obama and many State Senators allowing, nay , encouraging  the taking in of Refugees? It's Idiotic unless they want the violence here to help some nefarious plan to institute Marshal Law to control all Americans.

OOPS ! Too late!

September 10, 2015

La Voix du Nord, a French newspaper, reports security forces have been instructed to carry out the arrest of a known ISIS terrorist who is suspected to be in a refugee camp in the Pas-de-Calais prefecture.

http://www.infowars.com/french-security-detects-isis-terrorist-in-r...

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