Friday, May 22, 2009

James Cromitie



James Cromitie, one the four men arrested in the terror plot to bomb synagogues and shoot down military airplanes, is mad as hell and proud of it.

From the Associated Press:

[James] Cromitie was burning with anger about the U.S. war in Afghanistan, where his parents had lived before he was born, according to the criminal complaint. He told the informant he was interested in jihad and "doing something to America" and was crestfallen that "the best target (the World Trade Center) was hit already," the complaint said.

In the same conversation, Cromitie said: "I hate those mother-------, those f------ Jewish b------ .... I would like to get (destroy) a synagogue," according to the complaint.

In one conversation, Cromitie said he longed to shoot Jews in the head as they walked on the street near a synagogue, the informant told authorities. In another conversation with the informant, Onta Williams said the U.S. military was killing Muslims, "so if we kill them here with IEDs and Stingers, it is equal," according to court papers.

A woman who answered the phone at a Bronx listing for several of Cromitie's relatives said she didn't want to speak about him and hung up. No one answered the door at his Newburgh address, but neighbor Luis Pena said Cromitie was "a real nice guy."

Good grief!

"A real nice guy"?

Obviously, Luis Pena didn't know Cromitie very well. Cromitie was driven by hatred, real hatred.

I think the term "hater" is thrown around way too freely.

Leftists so often use it to describe conservatives, to demonize them. If you're not on board with the radical Obama's agenda, you're a hater. If you express your policy disagreements, you're a hater. If you hold Obama and Democrats accountable, you're a hater. If you practice your Christian religion, chances are you just might qualify to be labeled a hater.

I've been called a hater. I suppose it comes with the territory.

It's as if conservatives, by definition, are full of hate.

Dissent is not necessarily hate. It shouldn't be defined that way.

Words have meaning; and when words are wrongly applied, their meaning is lost. They become nonsensical. They lose their worth in communication.

So, if you're having difficulty understanding what it means to hate, look at James Cromitie. Examine what he said, what he imagined, what he actively plotted to do.

Cromitie is a hater. He personifies hatred.

Cromitie hates Jews. He hates Americans. He hates America.

Cromitie is not a nice guy.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

It's Bush's... oh forget it.