What? You mean it wasn’t sweet music to commuter’s ears? How Islamophobic! They feared jihad? How islamophobic! Did they not stick their necks out to make it easier for the devout savage? Speaking of Switzerland, their flag is very islamophobic. They are going to have to change it. It is offensive to Muslims.

A man shouting “Allahu Akbar” made people flee for their lives during a terrorism scare at a Metro station in Lausanne, Switzerland.

Looking back at our ad campaign on every clock in the NYC subway system. It’s rather prescient.

“Man shouting ‘Allahu Akbar’ causes terrorism scare on Swiss subway,” RT, June 20, 2017 (thanks to Robert Spencer): A man shouting “Allahu Akbar” made people flee for their lives during a terrorism scare at a Metro station in Lausanne, Switzerland. Prosecutors say the man was suffering from a paranoid episode and presented no immediate danger to the public. Commotion and panic erupted at the Bessieres Metro station at around 1:30 pm on Friday as the doors of a train opened and its passengers flooded out, running for the exit when a man began shouting the Arabic phrase “Allahu Akbar,” which means ‘God is great’. No, it means Allah is greater, i.e., greater than your god. Police then arrived on the scene and arrested the suspect, a 30-year-old Swiss resident from Western Sahara, a territory formally under Moroccan control, and charged him with ‘threats causing public alarm’ under Article 258 of the Penal Code. Under questioning, the man told investigators he was having a paranoid episode and was calling on God to help him. “This is a person who was afraid his life was in danger. At the height of his crisis, he began to face paranoia. Then he called to God for help. This is what he did last Friday in the subway shouting Allahu Akbar,” the prosecutor confirmed to 24 Heures. After being examined by psychiatrists, the man was not deemed a flight or violence risk and was released from custody pending a court hearing. Allahu Akbar is used by Muslims, as well as some Arabic-speaking Christians, to express an overwhelming emotion such as joy, horror or amazement, as well as in prayer…. I know a large number of Arabic-speaking Christians, and while many say “inshallah” and other expressions used by Muslims, none say or ever would say “Allahu akbar.”

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