Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Network Solutions Excuse...History and Violence

Thanks to Creeping Sharia
In an interview with the Washington Post Susan Wade a spokesperson for Network Solutions explained the company's reasoning behind the blocking of Geert Wilders' site.


"When you look at the history and violence surrounding this particular situation...some of the bad things that have happened or could happen, that was part of what we were thinking in suspending the Web site," Wade said. "We felt it was best to take it down while we continued our investigation."
Hezbollah also has a long history of violence....
The action comes after weeks of speculation about the movie's content and its potential for sparking violent protests and outbursts of the kind that followed the 2006 publication in several European newspapers of political cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed that many Muslims found offensive. Earlier this month, NATO's secretary general said he was concerned that the Wilders movie could foment anger that could translate into added danger for troops in Afghanistan. Protests against the Wilders film occurred this past weekend there, according to Reuters.

Wilders, who was elected to the Dutch parliament on an anti-immigration platform, had planned to air the video online after being turned down by television networks. Wilders could not be immediately reached for comment.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Well done Kryos!

Of all the Islamist filth; I have a especial hatred for Hizbullah.

By the way, I have noticed Canadian companies are much more responsive to taking down terrorist websites than some US ones.