greggerypeccary wrote on Sep 30
th, 2018 at 9:16am:
greggerypeccary wrote on Sep 30
th, 2018 at 8:55am:
Majority of terrorists who have attacked America are not Muslim, new study finds"Most of the designated terrorist groups in the US are right-wing extremists, not Muslim, according to a new report.
"A joint project by the Investigative Fund at the Nation Institute, a nonprofit media centre, and news outlet Reveal from the Center for Investigative Reporting took a look at the 201 designated terrorism incidents within the US from 2008 to 2016.
The results: “right-wing extremists were behind nearly twice as many incidents” as terror acts associated with those identified as “Islamist domestic terrorism”. "The vast majority of terrorist attacks in E.U. countries have for years been perpetrated by separatist organizations."
Less Than 2 Percent Of Terrorist Attacks In The E.U. Are Religiously Motivated" ... in the last five years, less than 2 percent of all terrorist attacks in the E.U. have been “religiously motivated.”
"In 2013, there were 152 terrorist attacks in the EU. Two of them were “religiously motivated.” In 2012, there were 219 terrorist attacks in EU countries, six of them were “religiously motivated.”
"In 2011, not one of the 174 terrorist attacks in EU countries in 2011 were “affiliated or inspired” by terrorist organizations.
"2010, 249 terrorist attacks, three of them were considered by Europol to be “Islamist.” In 2009, of 294 terrorist attacks, only one was related to Islamist militancy ..." A total misrepresentation of those Europol reports. What these reports actually say:
The first paragraph of the 2014 report:
The terrorist threat in the EU remains acute and diverse. The largest proportion of terrorist attacks in the EU was related to separatist groups, although the number significantly decreased in 2013 compared to previous years. Most separatist incidents, however, were small-scale. The majority of EU Member States continue to consider religiously inspired terrorism as a major threat, as evidenced by the significant increase in the number of arrests.
In 2013, 535 individuals were arrested for offences related to terrorism, a number similar to 2012 (537). Most of the arrests occurred in France (225), Spain (90) and the UK (77). A continuous increase in the number of arrests for religiously inspired terrorism has been observed since 2011, whereas
arrests for separatist terrorism have significantly decreased.
In 2013, as in the previous year, all court decisions in Austria, Belgium and the Czech Republic concerned religiously inspired terrorism.
In 2013 left-wing terrorism verdicts received the highest average prison sentence (18 years), followed by separatist terrorism verdicts (13 years). These average prison sentences were considerably higher than the averages reported in 2012 (8 and 9 years respectively). The average prison sentence
given for religiously inspired terrorist offences in 2013 decreased to 4 years, compared to 6 years in 2012.
Etc, Etc, Etc