Title: Very Jake News: Tapper Melts Down over Criticism of Inaccurate ‘Allahu Akbar’ Comments Source:
Breitbart URL Source:http://www.breitbart.com/big-journa ... icism-inaccurate-allahu-akbar/ Published:Nov 2, 2017 Author:John Nolte Post Date:2017-11-02 14:54:21 by cranky Keywords:None Views:2653 Comments:26
CNNs Jake Tapper, who is already dealing with humiliating ratings and a reputation implosion, decided to put on a public spectacle Wednesday over the criticism of his blatantly inappropriate and misleading comments surrounding the Islamic cry of Allahu Akbar.
In the immediate aftermath of Tuesdays terror attack, the worst in New York City since September 11, 2001, for some bizarre reason, Tapper felt the self-righteous need to say this: The Arabic chant, Allahu Akbar, God is great, sometimes said under the most beautiful of circumstances, and too often we hear it being said in moments like this.
Let us begin with the misleading part.
Allahu Akbar does not mean God is great. It means, Allah is greater.
The left-wing CNN also misinterpreted this in a chyron.
And the difference is all the difference.
As Breitbart News has reported, Allahu Akbar is the aggressive declaration that Allah and Islam are dominant over every other form of government, religion, law or ethic, which is why Islamic jihadists in the midst of killing infidels so often shout it.
In other words, Allahu Akbar is not some benign chant declaring God is great. Rather, it is a belligerent cry of religious and cultural supremacism.
But on top of misleading his viewers, there is the jaw-dropping inappropriateness of Tappers imperious reminder that Allahu Akbar is sometimes said under the most beautiful of circumstances. As Cheryl K. Chumley of the Washington Times accurately points out, so was Heil Hitler said at weddings, funerals, family reunions, and childrens birthday parties. But who thinks offering that kind of context is anything but unseemly?
So not only were Tappers comments tasteless and inaccurate, to deflect from the deserved criticism, he decided to portray himself as the victim of the eeeeevil right-wing media.
Using one of his transparent semantic arguments, Tapper publicly freaked out and launched a hysterical Twitter crusade declaring his critics a liar, including those who quoted him directly, like Sean Hannity, who did nothing more than broadcast video of the segment in question:
Another lie, this time from the Washington Times' @ckchumley, claiming i said something i never said. Just a blatant lie. https://t.co/9hHDkLaWnv
There was a time when one could tell the difference between Fox and the nutjobs at Infowars. Its getting tougher and tougher. Lies are lies https://t.co/stYjntoJUq
And, no surprise, @SebGorka lies as well, claiming i said Allahu Akbar was a "beautiful phrase." Never said it, Sebastian. Blatant lie. https://t.co/Q183XgwXOC
Things only got more entertaining from there as the meltdown spread like an STD through those mindless minions forever begging for crumbs from #JakeSoWoke, and they formed a Borg Army of the Dishonest:
The King of Fake News did not achieve that moniker by accident. As has been detailed here, Tappers outrageously dishonest semantic arguments (e.g. I did not say Allahu Akbar is beautiful; I said it is said during the most beautiful of circumstances) are the failing, left-wing anchors stock-in-trade when it comes to spreading fake news.
Among other things, Tapper has hid behind the slippery shield of semantics to continue to spread the debunked lie that President Trump mocked a reporters disability, to pretend Trump did not disavow David Duke, and to mislead his viewers into believing Trump failed to express condolences after a terrible attack on a mosque in Canada.
But this is not the first time Tapper has publicly lost his poise.
This video from election night 2016, pretty much says it all:
but Allahu Akbar! In Arabic does mead God is great.
I don't speak or read Arabic but according to the Brit rags the 'akbar' in 'Allahu Akbar' is a comparative adjective that translates to 'greater' while 'Allah' translates to 'Allah' (which is not a synonym for a deity or a generic 'god') and is commonly uttered when slaughtering infidels as way of explanation for the assault.
Apparently, it's very nuanced and some people just don't get it.