Patrick Christys shared his view on the British Muslims who have "praised the Taliban leaders"
Don't Miss
Most Read
Trending on GB News
There is a Trojan horse in Britain, hardline Muslims, who will be content to send us back to the dark ages with Sharia law. It's emerged that several prominent figures in the British Muslim community praised the Taliban.
Between them, they said the Taliban were beautiful. They felt free in Afghanistan and defended their treatment of women.
Can I just make the point that the Taliban stones women to death and flogs them? People come from miles around to view the stonings and the floggings.
Girls over the age of 12 have been mostly excluded from school, and the government has also stopped most Afghan female staff from working at aid agencies.
Patrick Christys shared his opinion on several prominent figures in the British Muslim community praising the Taliban
GB News
They've closed beauty salons, barred women from public spaces like parks and gyms and cartel travel for women in the absence of a male guardian. Despite this, Hamid Mahmood the founder of an Islamic girl's school in East London, told an audience about the freedom he felt in Afghanistan.
He said: "It was somewhat quite sad and painful as an experience leaving that land, because I will be very honest and I've said this very clearly, that there was something there. A feeling of outright freedom."
He can go live there if he wants.
One person, who is reportedly Haitham Al Haddad, said: "Western secular influences were being driven into the minds of the students who were speaking against the Sharia and many vices were creeping in. When it is time to rebuild the country, we cannot tolerate division and therefore temporary suspension of liberal secular education."
Okay, we have that over here though, don't we?
According to newspaper reports, her dad was previously described as one of the most dangerous men in Britain and being gay was a scourge and a criminal act.
Patrick said: "They can draw crowds because there is a market for them against some elements of the Muslim community in Britain"
PAHe reportedly said the Japanese tsunami in 2011, which killed more than 15,000 people, was a "just punishment for the country not being Muslim." On child marriage, he reportedly said: "The earlier the better, especially for girls. But you have to be careful of the legal issues."
These people walk amongst us. Mufti Ismail Satia told the 250-person-strong crowd at Queen Mary's University in London: "We went to Afghanistan with a very open mind. It brought back to me the stories of the Sahaba companions of Prophet Mohammed that we read. They reminded me of those who sacrificed for Islam and those who were willing to do anything for Islam."
People might say this is just a few fringe people who don't mean any harm. Okay fair enough. So why was it that an extremist hate cleric called Enayet Ullah Abbasi said: "If anybody dares to criticise our Prophet Mohammed, that person should be declared as a disbeliever and hence his/her head should be chopped off."
Why was it that he was able to come from Bangladesh and draw big crowds in Nottingham? He was set to draw a big crowd in London until GB News stepped in, alerted the Home Office and he was sent on his way. They can draw crowds because there is a market for them against some elements of the Muslim community in Britain.
The taxpayer has been funding the counter-terror Prevent programme.
A report found that key figures in organisations funded by Prevent are alleged to have supported the Taliban, defended militants, and Islamist groups banned in the UK and hosted hate preachers themselves.
The latest polling shows there are only one in four British Muslims who say it will be undesirable to have Sharia law. 52 per cent want to make it illegal to show a picture of the Prophet Muhammad.
Only around 28 per cent are opposed to making homosexuality illegal. Widespread sympathy with Hamas and the younger Muslims is apparently the most extreme.