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I don't belive that's the way the "lay out" things for them - "Hon, you are going to serve organization whose main purpose is to kill and to provide the chemical warfare."
It's all about "brotherhood, the higher purpose, close friends to death."
It's the stuff that sells for rebellious teenagers, and the sly muslims know how to sell it.
Not buying it. they knew exactly what they were getting themselves into and now it's too hard, waaaaaa. so they want out. they deserve everything they get. they wanted to be poster wives. they got their wish. now they are poster girls who serve as a cautionary tale for others.
How much y'all want to bet those girls got raped by the men they were given to for marriage? I wouldn't wish that on anyone, and I wouldn't say they deserved it. Those girls got in over their heads. Probably the imam and other people responsible in the mosque they were attending in Austria should be held accountable for not divulging how women are treated over there, and what would happen to girls going into a society like that unaccompanied by male friends or relatives. Undoubtedly no one told them they weren't safe walking around on their own, let alone joining a radical movement.
They learned a hard lesson. They should be brought back to Austria, and required to go on TV and on a speaking tour to tell other young women what they experienced, and what the people in the movement are really like.
Don't they think that they will be beheaded by their husbands if they try to run off?
On the other hand all this is authorities's and parents's fault. Why they knew nothing about these girls's 'hobbies'? Why border guards let them leave despite of they were looks young and were without parents?
How much y'all want to bet those girls got raped by the men they were given to for marriage? I wouldn't wish that on anyone, and I wouldn't say they deserved it. Those girls got in over their heads. Probably the imam and other people responsible in the mosque they were attending in Austria should be held accountable for not divulging how women are treated over there, and what would happen to girls going into a society like that unaccompanied by male friends or relatives. Undoubtedly no one told them they weren't safe walking around on their own, let alone joining a radical movement.
They learned a hard lesson. They should be brought back to Austria, and required to go on TV and on a speaking tour to tell other young women what they experienced, and what the people in the movement are really like.
Disagree
"The girls had started lecturing schoolmates about their lifestyle and were even suspected of being behind a vandalism attack at their school calling for jihad."
Teenage rebellion gone very, very wrong. I do sympathize with them though, they are quite young, probably didn't see the ramifications fully
That's kind of how I see it. Incredibly stupid and ignorant of them, but teenagers do stupid things and I think this just got way out of hand in one of the worst possible scenarios ever.
I think they should be able to come back if they want, but yeah, there has to be some serious intermediation here for sure. And put them in school.
Don't they think that they will be beheaded by their husbands if they try to run off?
On the other hand all this is authorities's and parents's fault. Why they knew nothing about these girls's 'hobbies'? Why border guards let them leave despite of they were looks young and were without parents?
This is a good question. In the West, "border guards" don't check citizens who are leaving. However, border guards/immigration officials of the countries through which they passed should have been suspicious. But, I, myself, have seen young teenage girls traveling alone on the train from Vienna to Hungary, and train conductors and passport control were unconcerned.
This is a good question. In the West, "border guards" don't check citizens who are leaving. However, border guards/immigration officials of the countries through which they passed should have been suspicious. But, I, myself, have seen young teenage girls traveling alone on the train from Vienna to Hungary, and train conductors and passport control were unconcerned.
I guess it's fairly easy to navigate through the Balkans, especially when you speak Serbo-Croatian and have an Austrian passport. There is literally no country between Austria and Syria that would stop you at the border, especially when you get rid of your niqab for a couple of hours. They are all EU members (no passport controls) or candidates/prospects that want to avoid diplomatic hassles with Austria.
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