Because a (notoriously hateful) right-wing publication (Front Page Magazine) said (on 1/16/14) that Bangladeshi/Bangladeshi American men living in New York City are super scary "fatally serious" would-be terrorists.
Small but powerful. Look at these members of the Jackson Heights Bangladeshi Business Association standing in front of an image of the USA and Bangladeshi flags with fatal seriousness. How dare they! Small business owners hate when infidel patrons spend money in their shops.
Screenshot of Bangladeshi men chanting “We do not like Brooklyn infidels” and “Infidel woman, I glare at you” in a fatally serious manner at a music concert. Click here for the complete disturbing footage.
They just couldn’t stop with Gangnam Style. Bangladeshi men appear to take MULTIPLE dance crazes with fatal seriousness, endangering traditional American values in the process. Note how they wave various native garments overhead in a threatening manner. Note also they *might* have collaborated with other South Asian nationalities in making this video (more accurately, ‘terrorist communique’). The threat could be more networked and insidious than previously thought.
And the skirt is back….America, guard your sons against this Trouser Jihad.
These young Bangladeshi men in Jackson Heights, NYC are fatally serious about Gangnam Style. Young women also join them in this war dance, suggesting that the threat now includes women as well. MOST DISTURBINGLY, at 2:38, the Bangladeshis commence their takeover of traditional American values by putting men in skirts. We must stop this Trouser Jihad before it’s too late.
New York Times, 8/18/2010, “In Race for an Assembly Seat, a Challenger Courts the Bangladeshi Vote”
“Bangladeshi leaders hope to register as many as 800 voters….”
Huffington Post, 4/14/11: ”Bangladeshis Are on the Rise in New York City.”
“…Shakir hopes to sell enough pizza to support his family, pay his six employees, and make rent every month in the amount of $3,150—plus an extra $2,000 for electricity and gas.”
New York Times, 11/28/13, “Bangladeshis Build Careers in New York Traffic”
"The work can be challenging. The agents sweat through the summer, shiver through the winter and bristle year-round at the insults shouted as they slip parking tickets under windshield wipers. The insults can be particularly unsettling to new immigrants only in the country for a few months.
“A lot of people say, ‘Go back to your country,’ ” said Jamil Sarwar, a parking enforcement officer for several years. “But I ignored them because I know I’m doing no wrong. I work for the city.”
Of the hundreds of Bangladeshi immigrants who became traffic agents over the years, about 100…went on to be police officers…”