
Salim El Koudri, a Muslim terrorist, rammed his car into a crowd and then attacked people with a knife. Two women are severely injured. Some have lost limbs.
But the usual signal has gone out to insist that El-Koudri is not a Muslim terrorist and that, like nearly every Muslim terrorist, he’s suffering from ‘mental illness’.
‘Foreign rescuers’ have also quickly been invented, much as in the Manchester Arena bombing and the Bondi Beach attack, to displace the actual Italian gentleman who took him down, Luca Signorelli.
Giorgia Meloni may be popular on social media, but she offered a meaningless non-statement. The Modena mayor insisted that it was actually Muslims who had stopped the attack and that diversity is our strength, and that what Italy really needs is more Muslims moving there.
Transport Minister Matteo Salvini said what needed to be said, warning that ‘second generation’ Islamic colonists like El Koudri were even worse than the first generation. “We must pursue with even greater determination the path of revocable residence permits for serious crimes. Certain people are absolutely unintegrable; there’s no point in anyone denying the dramatic evidence for ideological reasons.”
But back to El-Koudri, currently the center of a cover-up, what did he think? “I am bullied, marginalized, and I live in a country of racists.”
Italy gave him a degree in economics. Gave his Moroccan Muslim immigrant parents free housing. Gave them free health care. And in return, El-Koudri couldn’t be bothered to hold down a job, hated Italy and carried out an Islamic terrorist attack.
Sure, why not sign up for more of the same.
Here’s the state of the usual post-terror propaganda
A car crashes into a crowd in Modena. Salim El Koudri’s neighbor says, “He was good, but then he changed. Islam had nothing to do with it.” – Virgil
Modena attack: In addition to Signorelli, the Egyptian and Pakistani heroes who stopped El Koudri – RailNews
Modena, the two Egyptians who helped stop Salim El Koudri: “We’ve lived here for 30 years, but we don’t have citizenship.” – Today.it
Modena responded: 5,000 people gathered in the square following Mayor Mezzetti’s appeal. “United against those who spread hatred.”
What’s Italian for ‘Wir Schaffen Das’?
