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Breaking News: Terrorist attacks in Paris, France

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  • Originally posted by Weebler I View Post
    Where are the people who said we should let Muslim refugees into Europe?

    They're tomorrow's terrorists, perhaps as above, even today's.
    Looks like a 2nd one passed through Greece as a refugee in October.

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        • Originally posted by Weebler I View Post
          Probably. The horrible uncomfortable reality is that for Europe, today's immigrants are tomorrow's terrorists.
          who's the big booty girl working the catwalk in your sig bro? i tried to Green K but it wont let me

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          • The Lion warned them:

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            • Originally posted by BKM-2010 View Post
              Looks like Poland remembers its history and their once great king who defeated islam.

              http://www.discussionist.com/1014201380

              Poland from now on refuses to take in Syrian refugees.
              Not surprised. Poland never wanted to help the refugees. When eu shoved it down their throat they unwillingly took a very small amount. The poles only wants the good things from the eu. Not the bad. Now they think they have found an exit from the bad without there being a proven causality between the refugees and the terrorists.

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              • It's important to consider that France has very strict gun control.

                But it didn't stop these or other terrorists from obtaining weapons.

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                • Originally posted by Freedom. View Post
                  It's important to consider that France has very strict gun control.

                  But it didn't stop these or other terrorists from obtaining weapons.
                  Whoa. You nearly gave me a heart attack! Imagine if France and the rest of europe had a yank gun culture! The number of homicides would be insane given the diversity that is prevalent here.

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                  • Originally posted by BattlingNelson View Post
                    Not surprised. Poland never wanted to help the refugees. When eu shoved it down their throat they unwillingly took a very small amount. The poles only wants the good things from the eu. Not the bad. Now they think they have found an exit from the bad without there being a proven causality between the refugees and the terrorists.
                    Nov 14 The holder of a Syrian passport found near the body of one of the gunmen who died in Friday night's attacks in Paris passed through Greece in October, a Greek minister said, and another suspected attacker was thought to have entered Europe the same way.

                    "The holder of the passport passed through the island of Leros on Oct. 3, 2015, where he was identified according to EU rules," Greece's deputy minister in charge of police, Nikos Toskas, said in a statement.

                    Toskas did not know if the Syrian passport had been checked by other countries through which the holder might have passed on his way to France.

                    A Greek police source said the passport's owner was a young man who had arrived in Leros on a small vessel from Turkey with a group of 69 refugees and had his fingerprints taken by Greek officials.

                    Three Greek government sources later said a second suspect was also very likely to have come into Europe through Greece, adding that an investigation was still under way.

                    Any identity documents and fingerprint records would have to be matched with the remains of the actual attackers to establish whether they passed through Greece posing as refugees, or perhaps bought or stole passports along the way.

                    Following the Paris bloodshed, populist leaders around Europe rushed to demand an end to an influx of refugees and migrants from the Middle East and Africa. Poland said it could not accept migrants under EU quotas without security guarantees.

                    If one or more of the attackers turn out to have come into Europe among the migrants arriving from war-torn countries, this could change the political and security debate about refugees and what to do with them.

                    Police declined to give the name of the Syrian passport holder, saying French authorities wanted to keep information about the suspect confidential.

                    The source said there were no official records showing the man had left Greece, but that authorities believed he may have crossed into Macedonia.

                    Greek police were also asked by French authorities to check on the holder of an Egyptian passport that was apparently found near the body of another attacker, the police source said.

                    Greece has seen about 600,000 refugees and migrants - mainly from Syria, Afghanistan and Iraq - arrive on its shores this year, mostly from nearby Turkey, hoping to reach wealthier northern Europe.

                    The island of Leros, in the southern Aegean sea, is one of five preferred entry points where Greek authorities have been setting up so-called hotspots to register and identify arrivals. (Reporting by Renee Maltezou and George Georgiopoulos, writing by Silvia Aloisi; Editing by Kevin Liffey)

                    http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/...13913A20151114

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                    • Originally posted by Isaac Clarke View Post
                      Nov 14 The holder of a Syrian passport found near the body of one of the gunmen who died in Friday night's attacks in Paris passed through Greece in October, a Greek minister said, and another suspected attacker was thought to have entered Europe the same way.

                      "The holder of the passport passed through the island of Leros on Oct. 3, 2015, where he was identified according to EU rules," Greece's deputy minister in charge of police, Nikos Toskas, said in a statement.

                      Toskas did not know if the Syrian passport had been checked by other countries through which the holder might have passed on his way to France.

                      A Greek police source said the passport's owner was a young man who had arrived in Leros on a small vessel from Turkey with a group of 69 refugees and had his fingerprints taken by Greek officials.

                      Three Greek government sources later said a second suspect was also very likely to have come into Europe through Greece, adding that an investigation was still under way.

                      Any identity documents and fingerprint records would have to be matched with the remains of the actual attackers to establish whether they passed through Greece posing as refugees, or perhaps bought or stole passports along the way.

                      Following the Paris bloodshed, populist leaders around Europe rushed to demand an end to an influx of refugees and migrants from the Middle East and Africa. Poland said it could not accept migrants under EU quotas without security guarantees.

                      If one or more of the attackers turn out to have come into Europe among the migrants arriving from war-torn countries, this could change the political and security debate about refugees and what to do with them.

                      Police declined to give the name of the Syrian passport holder, saying French authorities wanted to keep information about the suspect confidential.

                      The source said there were no official records showing the man had left Greece, but that authorities believed he may have crossed into Macedonia.

                      Greek police were also asked by French authorities to check on the holder of an Egyptian passport that was apparently found near the body of another attacker, the police source said.

                      Greece has seen about 600,000 refugees and migrants - mainly from Syria, Afghanistan and Iraq - arrive on its shores this year, mostly from nearby Turkey, hoping to reach wealthier northern Europe.

                      The island of Leros, in the southern Aegean sea, is one of five preferred entry points where Greek authorities have been setting up so-called hotspots to register and identify arrivals. (Reporting by Renee Maltezou and George Georgiopoulos, writing by Silvia Aloisi; Editing by Kevin Liffey)

                      http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/...13913A20151114
                      Yeah. I Know that. Thats why I wrote 'proven'. So far it's not proven. Likely yes, but not proven yet. Point being that the poles are way too swift in their reaction and such reaction should be coordinated with eu.

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