The Trudeau-Approved Boyle-Taliban
"J.B. (Joshua Boyle) regularly threatened to kill me by setting me on fire."
"The guards would separate us for a few days, weeks or months at a time. When we were returned together, J.B. would accuse me of betraying him by accepting niceties from the guards and not asking for him more often."
"J.B. had uncontrolled rage, instituted corporal punishment of me, and struck me in a fit of rage."
"I would like to stress, most strongly, that for more than a decade, the respondent [Boyle] has had an interest in extremist ideologies and in the complete subservience of women. I have never shared that interest."
Caitlan Coleman, 32, U.S. citizen, former Boyle-Taliban hostage
"Under the exceptional circumstances of this case, requiring C.C. [Caitlan Coleman] and the children to remain in Ottawa would be akin to once again holding them hostage."
"To say that the circumstances of this case are tragic in the extreme would be an understatement."
The court does have evidence, on the other hand, that C.C. is healthily and protectively parenting the children."
"Based on all of the evidence before me, I can find little to suggest C.C. would not be a suitable temporary custodian of the children."
Ontario Superior Court Judge Tracy Engelking
"We both enjoyed BDSM [bondage]. We both wanted to travel by way of backpacking, and we both wanted to see the world."
We crossed into Afghanistan for a short while in hopes that I could meet people who could give me a story I could write about."
"I had hoped that personal experience in Afghanistan might help me to land more permanent journalism work."
Joshua Boyle, 34, Canadian citizen, undercover Islamist
Joshua Boyle, his American wife Caitlan Coleman and their three children were freed from captivity in October. (Pakistani Defence/Facebook) |
Joshua Boyle distinguished himself improbably, through a brief marriage with Zaynab Khadr, eldest daughter of a member of Osama bin Laden's cheering club, Ahmed Said Khadr, a fundraiser for al-Qaeda, known to have taken his family to Afghanistan so his sons could learn how to be mujahadeen, trained as Islamist jihadists, and taught to shoot, make IEDs, and to throw grenades at members of the U.S.-led international forces fighting the Taliban and searching out al-Qaeda.
Zaynab Khadr, like her mother, spoke scathingly of the depraved values of the West and the superiority of fundamentalist Islam in its assaults of terrorism against the degenerate non-Muslim nations of the world. The Khadr family chose to return to Canada, despite how disgusting a country it is, for the superior welfare system and universal healthcare they could take advantage of as citizens while disparaging everything about the country, considering themselves entitled to receive its benefits, a situation fitting right into the concept of Muslims extracting jizya from the dhimmi.
Joshua Boyle was not just intrigued by Islamist extremism, he was fascinated and drawn to it, admiring and wishing to become a part of it. His brief marriage to Zaynab Khadr -- whose brother spent time at Guantanamo Prison for his role in a Taliban battle with U.S. troops where he threw a grenade that killed a medic and blinded another, eventually returning to Canada after his sentence was reduced in view of his age, 15, when he acted as a Taliban recruit to jihad, graciously accepting $10-million in compensation from an apologetic Canadian government -- taught him that not all Muslim women would be as subservient as he anticipated.
Naive Caitlan Coleman turned out to fit the bill on rebound and he succeeded in persuading her to travel with him to see the world, negotiating their travel in southeast Asia to include Afghanistan. His story about wanting to be a recognized journalist, one of many he spooled while avoiding the larger picture of his ambition to join the Taliban and live as they do, with the Haqqani tribal network. While there, as 'hostages', Caitlan paid the price of acquiescing to partnership with Boyle, carrying four pregnancies, three of which results were 'rescued' by the Pakistani military along with their parents.
When Caitlan, Joshua and their three children were returned to Canada and to the bosom of his protective parents, there was much jubilation and even more subterfuge, Boyle enjoying the opportunity to sketch out the misery and horrors they were consigned to as unwilling 'hostages', a confection which the Taliban responded to with the scorn of truth. But the family was given a heroic reception in the news media, and Justin Trudeau was pleased to give them a personal, approvingly supportive audience in the office of the Prime Minister of Canada.
Not that long afterward they moved to an apartment of their own in Ottawa, and Boyle was soon arrested for sex-related violence, death threats, assaults, and the administering of a 'noxious substance' to an unnamed individual; details kept confined from the public. The man who while claiming to be a prisoner and living with his wife under life-defying circumstances, forced three subsequent pregnancies on her while she was raising the first child. Evidently the peculiarity of a loving husband under such conditions and outcomes raised no suspicions in the media.
Now, Coleman and her three children have been reunited with her family in Pennsylvania, while launching a lawsuit for sole custody of the children that Boyle insists he alone raised, nurtured, and schooled while they were held in Afghanistan. Coleman rejects his assertion for one of her own that it was she who was the primary caregiver, responsible for schooling the children during their captivity. How stupid is this woman? Soon to give birth to the fourth child; five times pregnant by the man who would be Taliban.
Labels: Canada, Islamists, Joshua Boyle, Justin Trudeau, Khadrs
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