''...when you listen to the the Kazzaab in the White House, the Resident will continue to lie about what constitutes terrorism. He should know. Homeland Security completed their own study. Terrorists are white Christian conservative males and military-trained conservative soldiers and Marines. Everything else is a little white Kazzaab.''
When Army Major Nidal Malik Hasan headed for the 7-Eleven near the base at Fort Hood, Texas for his morning coffee he looked like a Muslim cleric in his Islamic linen jubba. It was Thursday, Nov. 5, 2009. In his mind, this was gong to be Hasan's last day on Earth. He planned to meet Allah that day, bringing with him the souls of as many infidels he could carry on that journey.
As he headed to the Fort Hood Readiness Center he had a 9mm sidearm and a semiautomatic pistol concealed under his jubba. As a medical doctor and a psychiatrist, Major Hasan would be the last person anyone in a civilian or military security detail would suspect of being heavily armed as he entered the base, or when he entered the Readiness Center where troops heading to, or returning from Iraq and/or Afghanistan, were being processed.
Hasan, a Virginian-born Palestinian whose parents entered the country with Jordanian credentials before he was born, was considered to be one of "the good guys" who counseled troubled soldiers who can't erase the horrors of war from their minds once they return home. Hasan's cousin, Nadar Hasan, described his cousin as "...a good American who never got into trouble, but who did not support the war in Iraq or Afghanistan."