Frightening article about a recent event that is in fact murder involving a Jewish patient and a Muslim doctor http://www.debbieschlussel.com/archives/002354print.html
I like Debbie Schlussel. She has done a lot of good work. I remember especially how she confronted an arrogant Muslim on the
Hannity & Colmes show after he, a typical Muslim, tried to take advantage of her sex by shouting her down.
She has also exposed many Michigan mosques, in Detroit, Dearborn and elsewhere, as hotbeds of Islamic terrorist incitement. She slipped into the mosques disguised as a Muslim woman, and recorded the sermons of the imams.
Also, I can readily question the motives of a doctor named Osama.
But her article, I regret to say, presents not a single shred of evidence that the death of the elderly Jewish patient in question was caused by medical malpractice instead of Jew-hatred.Instead, the article leaps to a lot of conclusions which destroy Schlussel's credibility as a journalist.
The doctor never uttered any anti-Semitic statements, and did nothing else which betrayed an intent to kill based on anti-Semitism. Nor, apparently, does he have a history of doing such things - no history, at least, that Schlussel could dig up.
Instead, she resorts to pointing out that Dr. Osama comes from Birmingham, a hotbed of British Muslim incitement but also one of England's largest cities, and that he attended a medical university in Muslim Nazi Egypt known for its radicalism - as if every Egyptian institution isn't a radical one.
To make matters worse, Michael Applebaum - the son of Joseph Applebaum, the elderly Jew who died - has set up a web site in which he publishes an "online novel" about the night of his father's death - a novel which, he stresses, is nothing but fiction "based on fact."
On the basis of what I've seen so far, I can only conclude that Debbie has recklessly shot herself, and us, in the foot, with an article of fiction based on fact.