(Article by Robert Spencer republished from PJMedia.com)
Mohammad, according to the Associated Press, "planned to praise Allah while slitting the throats of classmates and use a gun taken from an ambushed officer to kill more." Then he planned to call 911 to report the killings, "read the Quran until he heard sirens, and then 'take calm shot after shot' with the gun" when the police arrived. He mapped out a detailed for his jihad; it "included putting on a balaclava at 7:45 a.m. and saying 'in the name of Allah' before stepping into his classroom and ordering students to use zip-ties he provided to bind their hands. Mohammad also planned to make a fake 911 distress call to report a suicidal guy [sic; this is how they write at AP these days] and wait for police outside the classroom before ambushing from behind 'and slit calmly yet forcefully one of the officers with guns.'" Presumably in the officer's throat, in accordance with the Qur'an's directive, "When you meet the unbelievers, strike the necks" (47:4).
All this stands in stark contrast to how the attack was initially reported, and even more to the reaction to it at the University of California, Merced. Mohammad's attack, as The College Fix noted back in November 2015, was widely characterized as "revenge for being kicked out of a study group." Even worse, instead of waking up to the reality of Islamic jihad, many at the University of California-Merced mourned for the attacker, with a Facebook "R.I.P" tribute to Faisal Mohammad "gaining massive support among the campus community."
Not even that was enough for the relentlessly woke UC Merced faculty, who hosted a "teach-in" that about 200 students attended, entitled "Don't Turn Our Tragedy Into Hate." It didn't mention Islam or jihad at all, except in the context of discussion about how Muslims are victims of "Islamophobia." According to one student who attended the teach-in, "'Islamophobia’ was cited as the reason people want to call it a terrorist attack….'People were quick to sympathize with the attacker and assume anyone who thought this was related to radical Islam was a xenophobic racist.'"
Among the topics discussed were "What does mental health have to do with this?"; "How do we define our community – what lives are grievable?"; and "What do race and religion have to do with this?"
Standing out in this soup of fashionable Leftist shibboleths was this: "Why are men more likely to be perpetrators of violence?" One speaker suggested that the attack was all about men not being allowed to be weak, self-centered, weepy narcissists: "Anger, that is really what we think about when we think about emotional men. They are subject to social sanctions if they deviate from masculinity. If you are perceived as failing at it, you are subject to being called a fag, a pussy, a wimp, pretty much what women are, right? So when you have this limited ability to sort of express your emotions and possible feelings of emasculation, of low self-esteem, how do you really [deal with] that? A lot of times they … engage in violence. They need to compensate for their loss of masculinity in the most manly way they have access to, and unfortunately, a lot of times that's violence."
Of course! It was all about toxic masculinity, don't you see? If poor Faisal hadn't been so pressured to conform to "society's notions of masculinity," if he had just been able to put on a comfy shift and lounge around his dorm room in high heels, he never would have gone on his stabbing spree! Faisal Mohammad stabbed four people just because he was a sensitive soul in a world that was too harsh for him.
Why, what other explanation could there possibly be?
The University of California Merced is no different from any other campus all over the country today: full of self-righteous, pseudo-intellectual, indoctrinated bots who have been thoroughly imbued with the notion that when Islamic jihadists attack us, it is our fault.
All too many even among law enforcement and counterterrorism officials assume the same thing. No number of Faisal Mohammads, and there will be many more, will convince them otherwise. Nonetheless, it is unfortunate but true that eventually all this denial and willful ignorance is going to blow up in everyone's face. We can only hope that the blow-up won't be literal.
Read more at: PJMedia.com