Penn Judge: Muslims Allowed to Attack People for Insulting Mohammad
See on Scoop.it – Islam Revealed
COMMENTARY | Jonathon Turley, a law professor at George Washington University, reports on a disturbing case in which a state judge in Pennsylvania threw out an assault case involving a Muslim attacking an atheist for insulting the Prophet Muhammad.
“Judge Mark Martin, an Iraq war veteran and a convert to Islam, threw the case out in what appears to be an invocation of Sharia law.”
Further:
“The text of the First Amendment could not be clearer. ‘Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof-’ It does not say ‘unless somebody, especially a Muslim, is angered.’ Indeed Judge Martin specifically decided to respect the establishment of a religion, in this case Islam.
That Judge Martin should be removed from the bench and severely sanctioned goes almost without saying.”
America better get control of this Sharia thing.
See on news.yahoo.com
No comments yet.
Leave a Reply
-
Recent
- The not defendable borders of lesser Israel
- Allah and Muhammad quote Babylonian Talmud instead of Hebrew Scriptures
- Prominent U.S. Imam: New Caliphate Should Wage Jihad
- Yes, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev is a Muslim Terrorist
- The Islam Bomb
- Islamicized Sweden Has Declared War on the Jews
- Beck Breaks Exclusive Information on Saudi National Once Considered a Person of Interest in Boston Bombings
- FBI Informant Claims Taliban Members Are Living In America
- The Home Counties girl training female suicide bombers for Al Qaeda
- Boko Haram Muslim Terrorists Murder More Than 1,500 Christians and Destroy 400 Churches
- UK: Jihad terror plotters who wanted to carry out another 9/11 and outdo 7/7 will be free by July
- Jihad Movement leader calls for applying Sharia
-
Links
-
Archives
- May 2013 (1)
- April 2013 (28)
- March 2013 (2)
- February 2013 (1)
- December 2012 (19)
- November 2012 (29)
- October 2012 (78)
- September 2012 (61)
- August 2012 (85)
- July 2012 (67)
- June 2012 (56)
- May 2012 (161)
-
Categories
-
RSS
Entries RSS
Comments RSS