The constantly moving Al-Qaeda propaganda blog The Ignored Puzzle Pieces of Knowledge, home to the world’s most famous Jihadist, posted a snuff film just days before the clueless (or traitorous) New York Times reporters Micheal Moss and Souad Mekhennet whitewashed Samir khan’s Internet activities with this patently untrue quote:
“…there is nothing to suggest that Mr. Khan is operating in concert with militant leaders, or breaking any laws”
Velvet Hammer has the proof on her site, which clearly illustrates that Charlotte, North Carolina based Khan had a post where he distributed an Al-Qaeda produced snuff film on October 2nd. Moss and Mekhennet’s article ran on the 15th of October.
Putting aside the fact that these two knowingly tanked months of investigations into Samir Khan’s connection to the Jihad in Somalia what should shock Americans is that the intrepid NYT reporters failed to do some basic research into either Khan’s site, which is replete with Jihad snuff and communiques from Al-Qaeda operatives or the legalities of his postings even without the snuff.
Were it just the reposting of snuff films Khan likes to peruse on line, he’d still be breaking the law. The distribution of snuff films is illegal and by listing all the places people could download files of the beheading of Muslim “apostates” that’s what Kahn is doing. But Khan’s activities should arouse suspicions regardless of his affection for death porn.
Didn’t these “journalists” wonder why Khan is so often one of the first Jihadists to distribute such material? Isn’t it obvious that Khan is nothing more than a mouth piece for the Global Islamic Media Front, Al-Qaeda’s propaganda department?
That being the case, wouldn’t it be considered due diligence to check around and make sure that when you issue a statement such as “…there is nothing to suggest that Mr. Khan is operating in concert with militant leaders, or breaking any laws” that you could prove that it was true?