The Islamic State Thread

They need a College to figure out a remote controlled car?

Have they not heard of the interwebs... there are many tutorials on there on how to do it.

aside from israel, the middle east (since mohammed invented & imposed his religion) has hardly been a contributor to science, medicine & technology.
for example - while the rest of the world is using a braun or oralb electric toothbrush, over in the middle east they are using twigs
 
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aside from israel, the middle east (since mohammed invented & imposed his religion) has hardly been a contributor to science, medicine & technology.
for example - while the rest of the world is using a braun or oralb electric toothbrush, over in the middle east they are using twigs

In fairness we wouldnt know about Aristotle or Pythagoras today had it not been for the Muslims, the sad part is that they were stuck in the dark ages.
 
Stupid question, why would they go to so much trouble to build a remote controlled car if they have thousands if not millions of willing martyrs?

Drones are better than losing fighters if they want to attack checkpoints, also car bombs in western cities will become easier to create, harder to detect and easier to deploy.
 
In fairness we wouldnt know about Aristotle or Pythagoras today had it not been for the Muslims, the sad part is that they were stuck in the dark ages.

why ?
neither were muslim

dont confuse the arabs & the middle eastern population with muslims
there was plenty of science & discovery going on in the region until muhammad came along imposing his religion on everyone and dumbing down the region. it has never recovered.

look at the ottomans for example:

Decline and modernization
The Christian population of the empire, owing to their higher educational levels, started to pull ahead of the Muslim majority, leading to much resentment on the part of the latter. In 1861, there were 571 primary and 94 secondary schools for Ottoman Christians with 140,000 pupils in total, a figure that vastly exceeded the number of Muslim children in school at the same time, who were further hindered by the amount of time spent learning Arabic and Islamic theology.
 
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Residents of besieged Syrian town say they are being starved to death

Residents of a Syrian town a few dozen miles from the capital, Damascus, say they are dying of starvation as a result of a months-long siege by forces loyal to the government of Bashar al-Assad.

Families are eating leaves, grasses and water flavoured with spices in the town of Madaya, where rice is sold by the gram because a kilogram costs as much as $250 (£170). Some have killed and eaten their pets.

“People are dying in slow motion,” said Louay, a social worker from the town told the Guardian in a phone interview, his voice weakened by months of abject hunger. “We had some flowers growing in pots at home. Yesterday, we picked the petals and ate them, but they were bitter, awful.”

He sent pictures of emaciated bodies of several elderly men, recent casualties of the starvation. He had not taken the pictures himself, but said the men were well known in the town.
“We used to say nobody could ever die from hunger, but we have seen people actually die of hunger.”

Other activists inside the town also shared pictures of starving children, one being pushed in a buggy far too small for him because he is too weak to walk.
Others who can still move around, and should normally be in school, are risking their lives trying to collect plants in minefields around the town’s outskirts, and several have lost limbs, residents said.

“Whether you are a man, woman, child, whether you’re 70 or 20 years old, you will have lost about 15kg of your weight,” said Ebrahem Abbass, a defector who had served as a sergeant in the Syrian army. “You don’t see a child whose eyes aren’t sunken and staring from hunger.”

Assad’s forces are now starving Madaya and neighbouring Zabadani, once a stronghold of the opposition, after a punishing six-month campaign.

“I swear by God, and you might not believe me because it sounds fantastical, I tried to buy some food today, but a kilo of rice is 100,000 [Syrian] pounds,” said Louay. “A kilo of rice, bulgur, lentil, sugar – 100,000, 100,000, 100,000. That is if you can find it.”
At the black market exchange rate that would be close to £170 for rice.

“I’ve personally seen people slaughtering cats to eat them, and even the trees have been stripped of leaves now,” he added.

People are so weak that they often faint, and hunger is made worse by the biting cold in an area about 1,300 metres above sea level, near the border with Lebanon.

Though a wooded hill is nearby, snipers have a clear shot, and residents said more than a dozen people had been killed trying to retrieve firewood. They also said children had lost limbs trying to gather grass to eat from nearby fields.

“They blocked all the roads to both towns, and there are a lot of mines,” said one teacher in Madaya, who did not want to give his name because of relatives in areas under government control. “There is no way to explain, the students are always complaining they are hungry, but they have to study.”
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/jan/06/residents-besieged-syrian-town-madaya-starved-to-death
 
ISIS cuts its fighters' salaries by 50%

Wartime pressure on the Islamic State is forcing it to slash its fighters' salaries by half, according to documents leaked from inside ISIS territory.

ISIS might seem like a ragtag group of terrorists, but in reality, it operates as a government over parts of Iraq and Syria. And it hands out biweekly paychecks to its jihadist army.
ISIS soldiers earn between $400 and $1,200 a month, plus a $50 stipend for their wives and $25 for each child, according to the Congressional Research Service.

But running a state at war is expensive. And recent victories for the U.S.-led coalition against ISIS mean that the Islamic State can't afford to pay its soldiers quite as much as it used to.
"On account of the exceptional circumstances the Islamic State is facing, it has been decided to reduce the salaries that are paid to all mujahideen by half, and it is not allowed for anyone to be exempted from this decision, whatever his position," the ISIS' government wrote in a memorandum.
Despite the pay cuts, the Islamic State said it "will continue to distribute provisions twice every month as usual."

The leaked document was obtained by Aymenn Jawad al-Tamimi, a leading scholar who tracks ISIS. He's also a fellow at the Middle East Forum.
Al-Tamimi gets documents from sources inside al-Raqqa, the seized Syrian city that ISIS declared as its capital.
The ISIS memo doesn't say why it's cutting back.
ISIS makes most of its money by taxing its population. But one major source of pressure on ISIS' finances is the U.S.-led coalition's bombing runs. Airstrikes are taking aim at the ISIS oil business: blowing up oil trucks, storage tanks, mobile refineries and other oil field equipment.
The result? ISIS was making $40 million a month on oil alone in early 2015, according to the U.S. Treasury. Now, it's making only a fraction of that, according to the State Department.

The airstrikes have also targeted ISIS money itself -- literally. Last week, the United States military made an extremely unusual move, two U.S. defense officials told CNN. It dropped two 2,000-pound bombs on a building in central Mosul, Iraq, destroying a cache of cash worth "millions."
Another source of financial pressure is the massive cost of operating a functioning government. ISIS provides public services and collects taxes. That means it has to pay for infrastructure and civilian employee salaries.
To keep the lights on, it pays highly skilled engineers and technicians, who can make upwards of $1,500 a month, according to an investigative team of UN researchers.
http://money.cnn.com/2016/01/19/news/world/isis-salary-cuts/
 
i always find videos of bombs being dropped on the heads and wiping out islamic jihadis both strangely comforting and mildly arousing
sexy plane:
[video=youtube;55ni9KbpSv4]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=55ni9KbpSv4[/video]
 
Eighteen months after British schoolgirl Kadiza Sultana ran away from home to join the Islamic State militant group, her family lawyer says they've received word she has died in Syria.According to ITV, the family received a call "to say Kadiza had been killed in an airstrike." Family lawyer Tasnime Akunjee told the BBC that they are "very obviously devastated," and added that they had not been able to independently confirm the report.Kadiza Sultana was 16 years old when she fled the U.K. and took a flight to Istanbul with two friends from school. Authorities said the three then crossed the border into Syria. The news made headlines in the U.K., as NPR's Ari Shapiro reported last year.

"They're described as good students, modern, well-integrated, well-adjusted kids," Ari said. "The parents say they never heard their daughters express interest in events in the Middle East."

http://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-...ho-ran-away-to-join-isis-feared-dead-in-syria
 
I had a similar thought when the tv news reported it. They went into it eyes open so knew it was a possibility...

We're told only the poor, uneducated, persecuted and desperate join ISIS though
 
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I find it difficult to believe that a first world country couldn't pick this up, but a schithole like ours could prevent, on at least three occasions (to my knowledge), people from leaving to go join ISIS -the 15 year old girl, Thulsi twins and the other siblings who were arrested on the same day as the Thulsies.

OK, then there's that idiot from PE who was clinging onto life with a bullet stuck in his head there in Raqqa.
 
I find it difficult to believe that a first world country couldn't pick this up, but a schithole like ours could prevent, on at least three occasions (to my knowledge), people from leaving to go join ISIS -the 15 year old girl, Thulsi twins and the other siblings who were arrested on the same day as the Thulsies.

OK, then there's that idiot from PE who was clinging onto life with a bullet stuck in his head there in Raqqa.

I'm sure they've prevented quite a few from leaving the UK while plenty here have slipped through.

The intelligence services in Europe are also severely hampered by political correctness. They get things wrong once and it's hell to pay.
 
I'm sure they've prevented quite a few from leaving the UK while plenty here have slipped through.

The intelligence services in Europe are also severely hampered by political correctness. They get things wrong once and it's hell to pay.



It's nothing to do with political correctness, any adult is free to travel, how do they prove the young Muslim group isn't going on holiday to Turkey as they say they are?

It's amazing they manage to get the evidence to stop anyone (and the security services have managed to stop plenty).

What is your suggestion? a travel ban on all fighting age Muslims?
 
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