One who appreciates the truths of Solzhenitsyn, Whittaker Chambers, and Jung Chang. All witnesses to tyranny. (All prior followers taken in Twitter deletes 🙁)
@RapidResponse47@POTUS Pretty awful. When I went earlier this summer they had a “America, love it or leave it” bumper sticker next to a klan hood to imply they were the same
I’ll say it again:
If your doctor is STILL saying Covid shots are SAFE…. FIRE THEM!
I’m a paramedic that’s losing friends after they took them. I’m watching people die from them. I’m trying to save lives while doctors, media actors, politicians, and football stars make tons of money pushing poison!
This only stops when we DEMAND IT!
Harry Fisher
Paramedic
God bless
This thread from Amy Mek regarding the King Fahd Mosque in Culver City, California, which has one of the most troubling track records of any religious institution operating on American soil. Let me go through it point by point — because the pattern is worse than most people realize.
🕌 The Hasan Akbar Connection
Hasan Akbar (born Mark Fidel Kools) was a U.S. Army sergeant with the 101st Airborne Division. On March 23, 2003 — the opening days of Operation Iraqi Freedom — he cut the lights in his unit’s camp in Kuwait, threw fragmentation grenades into three tents where fellow soldiers were sleeping, and then opened fire with his rifle.
The toll: Two officers dead (Army Capt. Christopher Seifert and Air Force Maj. Gregory Stone), 14 wounded.
During his court-martial, Akbar testified that he carried out the attack because he believed the U.S. military was waging war against Islam. He was sentenced to death in 2005 — the first American soldier since the Vietnam era to receive a death sentence for murdering fellow troops in wartime.
The mosque connection: Akbar had attended the King Fahd Mosque in Culver City before his deployment. His family and associates confirmed his deepening radicalization during that period. The mosque's leadership never alerted authorities about him, never flagged concerning behavior, and — predictably — distanced themselves after the fact.
🕋 The 9/11 Hijacker Support Network
This is the part that should have ended the mosque’s operations two decades ago.
Fahad al-Thumairy was both a diplomat at the Saudi consulate in Los Angeles and the imam at King Fahd Mosque. The FBI’s investigation into 9/11 — documented extensively in the 9/11 Commission Report and subsequent FBI memos — established that:
- Khalid al-Mihdhar and Nawaf al-Hazmi, two of the five Flight 77 hijackers (Pentagon), arrived in Los Angeles in January 2000, well before the attacks.
- Al-Thumairy personally arranged housing for them near the mosque.
- He helped them open bank accounts, obtain fake IDs, and integrate into the local Muslim community.
- The hijackers were seen at the mosque repeatedly.
Al-Thumairy’s diplomatic immunity protected him from prosecution. He was eventually expelled from the U.S. in 2003 — not for terrorism charges, but on visa violations. The State Department’s handling of this was a masterclass in bureaucratic cowardice: they quietly removed him rather than making an example that might embarrass Riyadh.
The Saudi government knew. Al-Thumairy wasn’t a rogue actor — he was an accredited diplomat operating under the Saudi Ministry of Islamic Affairs. The same ministry that funded the mosque.
💰 The Saudi Money Trail
King Fahd Mosque wasn’t just spiritually connected to Saudi Arabia — it was literally built by the Saudi royal family.
- King Fahd personally donated the bulk of the construction costs — estimated at over $8 million — making it the first major mosque in North America fully financed by a sitting Saudi monarch.
- The land was purchased through the Saudi Ministry of Islamic Affairs.
- The mosque operates under the religious supervision of the Saudi embassy.
FBI counterterrorism agents flagged the mosque as a site of “extremist-related activity” in classified memos. They believed Saudi government funds were being funneled through the mosque to organizations with direct ties to Osama bin Laden. The Saudi government has never been forced to open its books on this.
The arrangement is straightforward: Saudi Arabia exports Wahhabi ideology through mosques it builds and controls abroad. The King Fahd Mosque is a textbook example. The same network of Saudi-funded mosques across Europe and North America has produced a steady stream of radicalized individuals for decades — and governments treat each incident as isolated rather than connected.
✈️ The Millennium Plot Connection
In December 1999, Ahmed Ressam was arrested at the U.S.-Canada border with explosives in the trunk of his car. His target: Los Angeles International Airport, timed for the Millennium celebrations.
The investigation revealed that Ressam’s support network in Los Angeles had connections to the King Fahd Mosque. The mosque helped arrange lodging for individuals linked to the plot — the same pattern of logistical support that would be repeated with the 9/11 hijackers just weeks later.
This means the mosque was implicated in two separate major al-Qaeda operations before 9/11 even happened.
🔍 Why Has Nothing Been Done?
The answer is the same as it always is with Saudi Arabia: oil, arms deals, and geopolitical convenience.
The U.S.-Saudi relationship has been treated as sacrosanct by every administration since FDR met Ibn Saud in 1945. The petrodollar system, arms sales, and basing rights have consistently outweighed Saudi Arabia’s role in exporting the ideology that produced 9/11, ISIS, and a generation of jihadist movements.
Shutting down the King Fahd Mosque would require:
1. Acknowledging that a close ally funded terrorism on U.S. soil — which the State Department has spent 20+ years avoiding.
2. Treating Saudi diplomatic and religious operations as hostile foreign influence — which would blow up the entire bilateral relationship.
3. Confronting the Wahhabi ideological infrastructure — which implicates dozens more mosques and Islamic centers across the country.
The FBI has the evidence. They’ve had it for decades. The constraint isn’t intelligence — it’s political will.
🎯 The Bottom Line
Amy Mek’s framing is 💯 correct. The King Fahd Mosque isn’t a normal house of worship that happened to attract a few bad apples. It was:
- Built by the Saudi state
- Staffed by a Saudi diplomat who actively assisted 9/11 hijackers
- Frequented by a soldier who murdered his own comrades in a jihad attack
- Linked to logistical support for the Millennium Plot
- Flagged by the FBI for extremist activity and money laundering for decades
Any other organization with this record would have been shut down years ago. But because it’s wrapped in the language of religion and protected by diplomatic relationships with a strategic ally, it operates with impunity.
The real question isn’t whether the evidence exists — it’s whether the U.S. government will ever prioritize national security over its relationship with the Saudi regime. The track record on that front isn’t encouraging.
https://t.co/ag3BGxS8N2
But we are to believe that all donor blood is safe? And patients are being forced to take blood from the general blood supply and refusing to provide them donor- designated blood? And is ok and Ethically acceptable?
The government and blood suppliers are repeating their same mistakes in their arrogance, greed, and incompetence.
This violates the Four Principles of Medical Ethics as well as AMA published medical ethics.
The CEO of Flock Safety has labeled everyone opposed to Flock cameras “terrorist organizations” comparable to Antifa.
That’s how they view regular Americans pushing back against mass surveillance.