
The Canadian press (CBC News) has published an article that appears to blame Muslim Cyber-Jihadism for the Toronto (and Atlanta) terrorist truck bomb plots. Video above shows FBI field testing truck bomb material and it's affect.
On the internet there are "calls to arms even step-by-step
instructions, from how to make an explosive to where a suicide bomber should stand in a crowded bus for maximum impact".
I have been adamant in my stance on shutting down Muslim Jihad websites hosted in the USA, see here and here and here and here.
I have been labeled an "Internet censor" see here, been called a nuisance see here, been sued for publishing stories about Muslims linked to terrorism see here and had my website http://www.wbipi.com/ shut down and removed from the internet in February of 2007 by my then web hosting company, Idearc Media Verizon, for objectionable content (same content as seen today).
Original Message -----: Kevin.L.Wiser@idearc.com ; Dane.R.Welt@idearc.com
From Verizon... Idearc Media Corp
From: Stephen.Tenney@idearc.com
Cc
To: Dane.R.Welt@idearc.com
Sent: Thursday, January 25, 2007 10:06 AM
Subject: WBI Inc
Dane (sales rep for the WBI account)
Your customer William Warner of WBI Inc has a website with
superpages.com. The content of this website has been researched and deemed in violation of the Pink Policy for content. I contacted Mr.. Warner this morning and advised him that he had 5 business day to remove the content or the site will be taken down. That dead line is 2/1/07. The following information applies to the handling of the website http://www.wbipi.com/
The customer has 5 business days to make all necessary changes in
bringing the web site back into compliance with our Pink Policy. They must cease making changes to the site through the addition of objectionable content. If they fail to do so we will immediately remove the site, without notice, in the future.
thank you
Kevin L. Wiser
Kevin.L.Wiser@idearc.com
http://www.superpages.com/
The following article in the CBC News calls the on-line terrorists the Jihad generation, the name is very apropos and gives credence to my theory that these young on-line terrorists are brainwashed with the avalanche of anti-west propaganda, beheading videos and scenarios for future terror attacks against the USA and the West, see following article.
Internet may have played role in bomb plot CBC News
Police believe the suspects in the alleged bomb plot in Toronto (and Atlanta) may have been part of a growing trend of cyber-jihadism. Canadian authorities estimate there are as many as 4,500 jihadist websites, and they've become the main networking tool for radicals. It is uncensored terrain and authorities say it is growing fast.
There are calls to arms, even step-by-step instructions, from how to make an explosive to where a suicide bomber should stand in a crowded bus for maximum impact. The recruits seem to be mostly young men at a crossroads between Islamic society and the Western world. Security experts call them the "jihad generation," young, confused and computer savvy.
"It is easier to recruit a 17-year-old who is in a crisis of identity, who is unsure of his place in the world, than it is to recruit someone who is 40, married, a job, a career, a lot of life experience to keep him balanced," said John Thompson of the Mackenzie Institute.
Canadian Security Intelligence Service first caught wind of a possible cell after a tip from British authorities, who had been monitoring the Internet movements of Younis Tsouli - a.k.a. "Irhabi 007" - a London man accused of operating a series of al-Qaeda-linked websites. Officials believe Tsouli was using one of his chat rooms to communicate with radical recruits in Toronto and Atlanta. The London court was told that he and his codefendants Waseem Mughal, 24, and Tariq al-Daour, 21, had close links to al-Qaeda in Iraq and posted videos of its attacks on coalition forces and the beheading of Western hostages. “A lot of the funding that the brothers are getting is coming because of the videos. Imagine how many have gone after seeing the videos. Imagine how many have become shahid [martyrs].”
Using the internet in such a manner has been done before. Ahmed Omar Abu Ali of Falls Church, Va., was found guilty of plotting to kill U.S. President George W. Bush and sentenced to 30 years in prison. Authorities found he had researched online terrorist manuals.
A report into the London's transit system bombings also found the bombers plotted their attack on the internet. But Frank Cilluffo, who served in the U.S. Office of Homeland Security, says the street runs both ways. "Hopefully, one of the outcomes of this case is that not only do terrorists recognize the role of the internet, but maybe they should also start recognizing that the good guys exploit that as well, and beware."
Bill Warner
private investigator
WBI Inc Private Detective Agency
Sarasota Fl
email wbi@comcast.net