Difference between revisions of "Walid al-Kubaisi"

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Walid al-Kubaisi is a Norway-based, Iraq-born proponent of the Eurabia thesis. Norwegian anthropologist Sindre Bangstad notes:  
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Walid al-Kubaisi is a Norway-based, Iraq-born proponent of the [[Eurabia]] thesis. Norwegian anthropologist Sindre Bangstad notes:  
 
:Walid al-Kubaisi (1958 -), an Iraqi-born atheist, writer, and propagator of Eurabia-views, confirmed to the reporter in question that “Islamists” were behind this attack. To Finansavisen the next day, he solemnly declared that he had for a long time “anticipated this”, and that one should now ask Norwegian Islamists (read: most Muslims, for the lines are extremely blurred in al-Kubaisi’s public fantasies) to “integrate, or get out.”<ref>Sindre Bangstad, [http://www.opendemocracy.net/sindre-bangstad/norway-terror-and-islamophobia-in-mirror Norway: terror and Islamophobia in the mirror], ''openDemocracy'', 22 August 2011</ref>
 
:Walid al-Kubaisi (1958 -), an Iraqi-born atheist, writer, and propagator of Eurabia-views, confirmed to the reporter in question that “Islamists” were behind this attack. To Finansavisen the next day, he solemnly declared that he had for a long time “anticipated this”, and that one should now ask Norwegian Islamists (read: most Muslims, for the lines are extremely blurred in al-Kubaisi’s public fantasies) to “integrate, or get out.”<ref>Sindre Bangstad, [http://www.opendemocracy.net/sindre-bangstad/norway-terror-and-islamophobia-in-mirror Norway: terror and Islamophobia in the mirror], ''openDemocracy'', 22 August 2011</ref>
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
 
<references/>
 
<references/>
 
[[category:Eurabia|al-Kubaisi, Walid]]
 
[[category:Eurabia|al-Kubaisi, Walid]]

Revision as of 16:23, 13 September 2011

Walid al-Kubaisi is a Norway-based, Iraq-born proponent of the Eurabia thesis. Norwegian anthropologist Sindre Bangstad notes:

Walid al-Kubaisi (1958 -), an Iraqi-born atheist, writer, and propagator of Eurabia-views, confirmed to the reporter in question that “Islamists” were behind this attack. To Finansavisen the next day, he solemnly declared that he had for a long time “anticipated this”, and that one should now ask Norwegian Islamists (read: most Muslims, for the lines are extremely blurred in al-Kubaisi’s public fantasies) to “integrate, or get out.”[1]

Notes

  1. Sindre Bangstad, Norway: terror and Islamophobia in the mirror, openDemocracy, 22 August 2011