Quote of the Day: Yet another muslim who speaks from the koran yet doesn’t represent mainstream islam

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Another day, another public relations disaster for local apologists for terror who are banned overseas but not here, Hizb ut-Tahrir. These delightful ladies explore how the koran’s teachings mean a husband is “permitted” not “obliged” to hit his wife.

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=VSbxPs3cPR4

Naturally, their ABC rolled out spokespeople for islam on the 7pm bulletin to explain that Hizb ut-Tahrir do not represent mainstream islam.

Naturally, they neglected to mention that their favourite pet muslim of the minute, Yassmin Islam Is The Most Feminist Religion Abdel-Magied, happily sought advice from the group which does not represent mainstream islam.

Naturally, they also conveniently forgot to mention that the argument the Hizb ut-Tahrir representatives make, that there are steps a husband can take before hitting his wife only as a last resort, are eerily similar to the argument made recently on the Bolt Report by The XYZ’s favourite muslim buffoon, Keysar Trad, who also doesn’t represent mainstream islam.

That list of muslim spokespeople who don’t represent islam is getting rather long.

We’ll leave Quote of the Day to Federal Minister for Women, Michaelia Cash, who is “deeply concerned” that the main speaker in the video is a primary school teacher, “given the important leadership role she holds with young impressionable children”:

“Attempts to teach the next generation of young Australian Muslims that violence from a husband to a wife is acceptable is completely out of touch with community standards and should be condemned in the strongest possible terms.”

It’s your XYZ.

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David has studied history and political science at Melbourne University. His thesis was written on how the utilisation of Missile Defence can help to achieve nuclear disarmament. His interest in history was piqued by playing a flight simulator computer game about the Battle of Britain, and he hopes to one day siphon the earnings from his political writings into funding the greatest prog-rock concept album the world has ever seen.