11 Mar 2010
Artemis
The website also described the recent crucifixion of a pedophile and murderer in Saudi Arabia as "justice."
The MPAC website says that Muhammad Al Ramaly kidnapped and raped 5 boys, leaving one to die in the desert. The other boys survived, and therefore could testify against him.
I had to check it out, because it obviously couldn't just be about a paedophile and murderer, since Mohammad would qualify for both those titles.
And of course the MPAC website is full of triumphalism, saying that paedophilia is very rare in Saudi Arabia, compared to Ireland where it happens all the time at the hands of Catholic clergy.
The comments section is well-represented by knowledgeable kuffar. It gives one hope.
The MPAC.ie tagline is "Putting the Green back in Eire". Not sure if this is a reference to the Islamic belief that all persons are born Muslim, so that "converts" are instead called "reverts".
11 Mar 2010
Hugh Fitzgerald
"Irish O'Muslims?
Flann O'Brien is just the man to deal with this. Where is he?
12 Mar 2010
dumbledoresarmy
Where are you, St Patrick, St Brigid?
The grass in Ireland appears to be full of snakes and the place needs to be rid of them.
It's St Patrick's Day, on the 17th March, just next week. I hope the Irish Resistance against Jihad will be out in force on that Day in those parts of holy Ireland that have been invaded by the Mohammedans and in which certain Irish traitors have turned Saracen. Let the Irish Resisters wear *bright green*, let them sing and play the harp and the fiddle and the tin whistle (remember, Mohammed *hated* flutes and stringed instruments!) and toast the name of the Saint in a drop of the uisge beatha. Let the proud owners of beautiful Red Setters and splendid Irish Wolfhounds bring their dogs to the parade. Let men and women dance together in public. Let them wear the shamrock, symbol both of Ireland and of the Holy Trinity (anathema to Muslims) or the Celtic cross (Muslims *hate* the public display of Crosses). And when the Irish march past the local mosque, how's about a few rousing choruses of St Patrick's Breastplate, which in its best known English versification begins, "I bind unto myself the name/ the strong Name of the Trinity/ By invocation of the same/ the Three in One and One in Three"? In the Old Irish 'Atomriug indiu niurt treun togarm Trindoit faistin Oendatad i nDu'lemon da'il.'