By Thomas Madison

Pope Francis excuses, defends even, the murderous Muslim scum who took the lives of innocent people because Mohammed had been depicted in a manner considered unsuitable to 7th century cave apes.

Point #1, Your Privileged Popeness – Mohammed was not the mother of the gutter scum Kouachi brothers.

Point #2, Your Papistic Pompousness – Who determines where your tyrannical line of censorship is drawn? You? The useless UN? A panel of rabid imams?

So, tell me Francis, why did you not murder anyone over the past several decades when a representation of Jesus Christ was displayed in a container of urine, and it was called art; or when a depiction of his mother, Mary, was smeared with feces and it was called art? Why didn’t you avenge those sacred to your faith by murdering the offending artists?

Are you a hypocrite, Francis? A coward? Or just a parasite who wants to get along and collect his paycheck, to hell with your faith and those most sacred to it?

If the Muslim cockroaches who committed this act of horror were fully within their rights, as you seem to suggest, then you must have been terribly wrong to not avenge the desecrations of Jesus and Mary. How shameful of you to not butcher a dozen innocent people.

The following is from AP and Daily Mail, via Jim Hoft, The Gateway Pundit:

Pope Francis said there are limits to freedom of expression following the Charlie Hebdo massacre.

hebdo reporters
Six of the Charlie Hebdo journalists and staff members killed in Wednesday’s attack are pictured together in this photo, taken in 2000. Circled top from left is Philippe Honore, Georges Wolinski, Bernard Maris and Jean Cabut. Below them on the stairs, from left, is editor Stephane Charbonnier and cartoonist Bernard ‘Tignous’ Verlhac. (Daily Mail)

The Pope appeared to defend the Islamic Charlie Hebdo killers, “If my good friend says a curse word against my mother, he can expect a punch.”
The AP reported:

Pope Francis said Thursday there are limits to freedom of expression, especially when it insults or ridicules someone’s faith.

Francis spoke about the Paris terror attacks while en route to the Philippines, defending free speech as not only a fundamental human right but a duty to speak one’s mind for the sake of the common good.

But he said there were limits.

By way of example, he referred to Alberto Gasparri, who organizes papal trips and was standing by his side aboard the papal plane.

“If my good friend Dr. Gasparri says a curse word against my mother, he can expect a punch,” Francis said, throwing a pretend punch his way. “It’s normal. You cannot provoke. You cannot insult the faith of others. You cannot make fun of the faith of others.”

Many people around the world have defended the right of satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo to publish inflammatory cartoons of the Prophet Muhammed in the wake of the massacre by Islamic extremists at its Paris offices and subsequent attack on a kosher supermarket in which three gunmen killed 17 people.

hebdo shooters
The killer Kouachi brothers killed twelve people including a Muslim police officer begging for mercy on the street.