Linked In
How helpful it is to continue to receive recommendations from Linked In to reach out and make contact with people the social-management-professional link site is certain you would want to know. And possibly you might want to know some of these people; I might. I imagine that's why Linked In keeps sending me, as a casual and not-very-involved quasi participant, invitations to get to know some of these remarkable people.Most of whom are remarkable in their professional fields of endeavour, in the results of their academic educations, in their preoccupation with the quality of life and how to improve it through their contacts with a myriad of people whom they assume share their values, priorities and way of life. The trouble is, as I see it, Linked In keeps sending me personally, and likely countless others, invitations to become acquainted with someone they appear to endorse. But whom I prefer to avoid.
Since that 'someone' is currently under arrest and has been securely locked up to ensure he can do no harm to Canadians while incarcerated, their selection does qualify as highly unusual. The long investigation shared between the Royal Canadian Mounted Police force and the American Federal Bureau of Investigation against Chiheb Esseghaier and his companion in jihad, Raed Jaser, concluded with their arrest in April of 2012.
They had conspired to place explosives perhaps on a trestle bridge around Niagara Falls, for the purpose of bombing a passenger train with regular runs between New York and Toronto. Their motivation was clearly to kill as many people as possible, and to inspire in those communities targeted the height of terror. Because in their considered opinion, infidels have no right to life and liberty to begin with, since they eschew the veneration of Islam.
So, given that situation, I am not personally thrilled with the invitation extended by Linked In to contact and get to know Chiheb Esseghaier, that brilliant bioengineering student who was given landed immigrant status in Canada and who studied at an institute of higher learning in the Province of Quebec, and who sought to repay the kindness of Canada in accepting him as a potential citizen, exposing him to a premium education in the process, with vile Islamist brutality.
And I just wonder how the people listed below on Linked In's invitation (one of many perplexingly received over a prolonged period of time that highlight the inclusion of that estimable personage of admirable talents) feel about being grouped in such an invitation along with this man who aspired to mass slaughter?
People You May Know
Labels: Canada, Crimes, Immigration, Islamism, Violence
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