Anonymous ID: a07dfa Dec. 25, 2020, 11:44 a.m. No.12172396   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2732

>>12172357

>https://amp.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/jun/21/tennessee-newspaper-ad-islam-muslims-nashville#click=https://t.co/OCBhvNCOWE

 

Posting more of article from anon's post

 

Sun 21 Jun 2020 16.52 EDT

 

A Tennessee newspaper said on Sunday it was investigating what its editor called a “horrific” full-page advertisement from a religious group that predicts a terrorist attack in Nashville next month.

 

The paid advertisement that appeared in Sunday’s editions of the Tennessean from the group Future For America claims Donald Trump “is the final president of the USA” and features a photo of Trump and Pope Francis.

 

It begins by claiming that a nuclear device will be detonated in Nashville and that the attack will be carried out by unspecific interests of “Islam”.

 

The group also ran a full-page ad in Wednesday’s editions of the newspaper stating its intention to warn Nashville residents about next month’s event “so that they may be able to make a decision intelligently”.

 

In a story on its website Sunday afternoon, the Tennessean said the ad violated the newspaper’s long-established standards banning hate speech.

 

Vice-president and editor Michael Anastasi said the paper’s news and sales departments operate independently.

 

“Clearly there was a breakdown in the normal processes, which call for careful scrutiny of our advertising content,” Anastasi said.

 

“The ad is horrific and is utterly indefensible in all circumstances. It is wrong, period, and should have never been published. It has hurt members of our community and our own employees and that saddens me beyond belief. It is inconsistent with everything the Tennessean as an institution stands and has stood for.”

 

Sales executives ordered the ad removed from future editions, the newspaper said.

 

Council on Islamic-American Relations spokesman Ibrahim Hooper said in a statement that while the group appreciates that the “Islamophobic” ad was pulled and an investigation has begun, “we would urge the Tennessean to also implement updated policies and staff training to ensure that this type of hate incident does not occur in the future. CAIR is willing to offer that training.”

 

It was not immediately known how much Future for America paid for the ads.

 

According to its website, the group’s ministry warns of so-called end-of-the-world Bible prophecies whose fulfillment “is no longer future_for it is taking place before our eyes”.

 

A telephone message left with Bonnerdale, Arkansas-based Future for America wasn’t immediately returned.

 

Terry Heaton, an author and retired television news executive, who is a former executive producer of The 700 Club, a successful show on the Christian Broadcasting Network, said the ad’s claim is not supported in the Bible.

 

“This idea has been debated in church circles forever, and there have been plenty of historical accounts of those who shouted that ‘the end is near’,” Heaton said.

 

“Obviously, nobody has been accurate, so I think it’s safe to say this is nonsense.”

Anonymous ID: a07dfa Dec. 25, 2020, 11:50 a.m. No.12172455   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2566 >>2677 >>2819

‘Club kid’ killer Michael Alig dies of ‘heroin overdose’ inside his Manhattan home on Christmas morning

 

A convicted murderer and notorious party promoter dubbed the “Club Kid Killer” died of a suspected drug overdose at his New York apartment.

 

Michael Alig spent 17 years behind bars for murdering and dismembering drug dealer Angel Melendez in 1996 and throwing his body in the Hudson River.

 

Alig, 54, was a fixture on the city’s party scene in the 1990s and was even played by Macaulay Culkin in the 1993 movie Party Monster, based on his life.

 

Police say his body was found at the apartment in the Washington Heights neighbourhood in the early hours of Christmas Day.

 

Detectives reportedly found drug paraphernalia and plastic bags containing heroin at the scene, according to the New York Post.

 

Alig was the found of the Club Kids group of club-goers in the 1980s and 1990s.

 

He was once described as “the Pied Piper to young clubbies” by the Village Voice newspaper.

 

“The biggest thing I learned in prison was patience,” he told Rolling Stone after being released from prison in 2014.

 

“I was demanding and self-centered, but in prison, you learn very quickly that you’re on their time.”

 

https://www.yahoo.com/news/club-kid-killer-michael-alig-181239132.html

Anonymous ID: a07dfa Dec. 25, 2020, 12:09 p.m. No.12172682   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2761

>>12172633

Reports claiming that warning recording was playing from a vehicle, not sounding like it was standard Govt or State warning.

 

Nashville Explosion - Live: Parked vehicle broadcast audio warning before massive explosion

 

Officers responding to reports of gunfire came across the vehicle which was broadcasting a message that a bomb would soon detonate. Approximately 15 minutes later the explosion occurred.

 

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/nashville-explosion-downtown-damage-investigation-b1778915.html