Muslims Sacrifice Animals on Eid-al-Adha
Christians celebrate this season with an evergreen tree, songs, and giving gifts, often by a jolly elf. In Islam, however, they still practice blood sacrifice of goats, camels and cattle. The butchering is done in the streets, on the ground, and the blood is allowed to drain into open sewers.
Toss the baby goat. See if Allah will catch it.
Tie a cow to a forklift and hack at it . Dodge the blood sprays.
The city streets are the perfect place to butcher animals for sacrifice in the name of false prophets like Mohammad.
You wonder where mulsim children become comfortable with beheadings? Christians have “Ho Ho Ho” and Muslims have “hack hack hack.”
Thanks to SG at Sweetness and Light for the photos. And he also reminds us that people are up in arms about abusing animals this holiday season, but no one would dare get mad at filthy Islamic barbarian rituals. Nope, they get mad at whales wearing Santa hats like below.
From the DailyMail here:
Environmentalists are saddened by the sight of what they say is the final humiliation for the whale in a country that hunts them down with harpoons.
The beluga whales have been fitted out with the cute Santa hats to entertain the crowds at the Hakkeijima Sea Paradise on Yokohama Island.
There’s even a chance to receive a wet kiss under the mistletoe from a yuletide beluga.
Beluga whales have been fitted out with the Santa hats in a bid to draw in the Christmas crowds at the Hakkeijima Sea Paradise on Yokohama Island, Japan
Yes, its true that our culture is superior to those of these barbarians who butcher animals needlessly in the streets.
It is absolutely, postively sickening the way animals are treated in this Country – and I mean all animals – cats and dogs, too. At least they aren’t slaughtered for Eid. The smell of blood will be rampant downtown, today. We drove downtown yesterday to go to the grocery store and passed a butcher shop – I have got to take pictures. No one will ever believe me when we return to the States about the “shops” here unless I have photographic evidence.
Hey BT!
Yeah, you know, of course we slaughter animals for our celebrations. But we do it without gloryifying the bloodletting and the gore and we do it with good sanitation practices and out of the public’s eye.
I really think these people get off on it. And I think I would throw up at the stench of blood everywhere like you describe.
I remember the meat markets well. The ones I saw in Egypt were the worst(of the ME countries I’ve been in). But I did end up with a friendly intestinal parasite while in Turkey.