\
  The most prestigious law school admissions discussion board in the world.
BackRefresh Options Favorite

Naive shitlib couple travels to backwards countries, gets murdered by ISIS

These are exactly the same kind of people who want to let in...
Swashbuckling Circlehead People Who Are Hurt
  08/08/18
fucking retards. repeal the 19th. but you really have to tak...
razzle-dazzle toilet seat keepsake machete
  08/08/18
...
Swashbuckling Circlehead People Who Are Hurt
  08/08/18
LOFL @ the top comment: "A great story and an admira...
Swashbuckling Circlehead People Who Are Hurt
  08/08/18
...
Startling wrinkle jewess
  08/08/18
the alt-righters matching in Charlottelesville were similarl...
Swashbuckling Circlehead People Who Are Hurt
  08/08/18
i don't mind the attempt to be objective. here's what i do ...
Buff splenetic faggot firefighter
  08/08/18
"some people think the world is a big, scary place full...
gaped meetinghouse wagecucks
  08/08/18
ROFL. famous last words.
Swashbuckling Circlehead People Who Are Hurt
  08/08/18
...
Startling wrinkle jewess
  08/08/18
"if we're nice to them, they'll be nice to us," sa...
Bright outnumbered stage
  08/08/18
There are some seriously sick and twisted poasters here. JFC
cream place of business resort
  08/08/18
...
Startling wrinkle jewess
  08/09/18
...
Swashbuckling Circlehead People Who Are Hurt
  08/16/18
*finds magic*
supple set
  08/16/18
video here https://www.rferl.org/a/tajikistan-attack-f...
violent crotch kitchen
  08/16/18


Poast new message in this thread



Reply Favorite

Date: August 8th, 2018 3:17 AM
Author: Swashbuckling Circlehead People Who Are Hurt

These are exactly the same kind of people who want to let in hordes of MS-13 gang members. This story almost reads like an evan39 parody...

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/08/07/world/asia/islamic-state-tajikistan-bike-attack.html

A Dream Ended on a Mountain Road: The Cyclists and the ISIS Militants

Image

FRANCE Jay Austin and Lauren Geoghegan began their trip in July 2017. They reached Europe in December.CreditSimplycycling.org

By Rukmini Callimachi

Aug. 7, 2018

459

阅读简体中文版閱讀繁體中文版

Asked why they had quit their office jobs and set off on a biking journey around the world, the young American couple offered a simple explanation: They had grown tired of the meetings and teleconferences, of the time sheets and password changes.

“There’s magic out there, in this great big beautiful world,” wrote Jay Austin who, along with his partner, Lauren Geoghegan, gave his two weeks’ notice last year before shipping his bicycle to Africa.

They were often proved right.

On Day 319 of their journey, a Kazakh man stopped his truck, said hello and handed them ice cream bars. In a meadow where they had pitched their tent on Day 342, a family showed up with stringed instruments and treated them to an open-air concert. And on Day 359, two pigtailed girls met them at the top of a pass in Kyrgyzstan with a bouquet of flowers.

There were hardships, too, including punctured tires, snarling dogs, freezing hail and illness. But for Mr. Austin and Ms. Geoghegan, both 29, these were far outweighed by moments of human connection.

Then, just over a week ago, came Day 369, when the couple was biking in formation with a group of other tourists on a panoramic stretch of road in southwestern Tajikistan. It was there, on July 29, that a carload of men who are believed to have recorded a video pledging allegiance to the Islamic State spotted them.

Image

SPAIN Mr. Austin was working for the Department of Housing and Urban Development when he decided to make the trip.CreditSimplycycling.org

A grainy cellphone clip recorded by a driver shows what happened next: The men’s Daewoo sedan passes the cyclists and then makes a sharp U-turn. It doubles back, and aims directly for the bikers, ramming into them and lurching over their fallen forms. In all, four people were killed: Mr. Austin, Ms. Geoghegan and cyclists from Switzerland and the Netherlands.

Two days later, the Islamic State released a video showing five men it identified as the attackers, sitting before the ISIS flag. They face the camera and make a vow: to kill “disbelievers.”

It was a worldview as diametrically opposed as imaginable to the one Mr. Austin and Ms. Geoghegan were trying to live by. Throughout their travels, the couple wrote a blog together and shared Instagram posts about the openheartedness they wanted to embody and the acts of kindness reciprocated by strangers.

“You get a feeling of wanting to give back, not just to this person who has welcomed a stranger into their home, but to the wider world,” Mr. Austin wrote. “You become someone who wants to welcome others into your home. You become a merchant in the gift economy.”

Back in Washington, where the pair met, Mr. Austin lived in a tiny house, an experiment in the principles that eventually led him to his journey around the world.

Image

MALAWI The couple camped along route.CreditSimplycycling.org

After earning a master’s degree from Georgetown University, he began working at the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development. Convinced that many of the belongings people accrue are unnecessary, he began adopting a minimalist lifestyle, said his childhood friend Ashley Ozery.

After earning a master’s degree from Georgetown University, he began working at the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development. Convinced that many of the belongings people accrue are unnecessary, he began adopting a minimalist lifestyle, said his childhood friend Ashley Ozery.

ADVERTISEMENT

With his own hands, he built a house, nicknamed “The Matchbox,” that was so small — just 140 square feet — that it was profiled on numerous TV shows. To free up space, the walls were constructed with built-in magnets, so that he could store metal objects by sticking them to the paneling, like his spice collection.

If one of his goals was to pare down his life to the bare essentials, another was to enlarge his world. Because he had no mortgage weighing him down, his miniature house meant that he could take unpaid leave from his government job and travel the globe.

“At HUD at the end of each year, you could ask for a higher salary or more vacation,” said Ms. Ozery. “He always chose more vacation.”

First, he took a scooter trip around the United States. That was followed by a rail voyage in Europe. Next came a stint in Namibia. Then it was a weekslong trip across India, said Ms. Ozery, who became friends with Mr. Austin in 1999 at their elementary school in Manalapan, N.J.

Image

SPAIN Mr. Austin and Ms. Geoghegan posted photos and writing about their journey.CreditSimplycycling.org

In 2012, he met Lauren Anne Geoghegan, a native of Southern California, who like him had graduated from Georgetown and was now working in the college’s admissions office.

“Outside-the-box.” “Challenges me to grow.” “Adventurous.” That was how Ms. Geoghegan described Mr. Austin to her closest friends, said Kristen Bautz Robinson, who had known her since their first year at Georgetown.

Although Ms. Geoghegan, too, was a seasoned traveler — she had spent a summer in Beirut learning Arabic and a semester in Madrid becoming fluent in Spanish — the rugged, do-it-yourself journeys that had become Mr. Austin’s hallmark were new to her.

His values began to rub off on her, say her friends. She bought a bikeshare day-pass, which turned into an annual membership. Soon she purchased her own bike.

Mr. Austin was a vegan. Ms. Geoghegan became a vegetarian, said her close friend Amanda Kerrigan.

It was in 2016 that Ms. Geoghegan told Ms. Kerrigan that she was planning to quit her job and bike around the world. Ms. Kerrigan could not suppress a little concern. “I said, ‘This is not the Lauren I know,’ ” she said, adding: “Jay changed the trajectory of Lauren’s life.”

Image

KAZAKHSTAN Drying clothes at a hotel room in Almaty.CreditSimplycycling.org

If the plan seemed far-fetched, the couple was methodical in their planning. They did a monthlong test-run in Iceland, cycling across its valleys.

And since they had to carry everything themselves, they focused with laserlike attention on each object they planned to bring. One reporter who dropped by to write a profile of Mr. Austin found him in front of a scale, weighing the possessions he planned to pack — hat: 2 ounces; tablet: 11 ounces.

Online, they found a deck of cards measuring just 1 inch by 1 inch. “A regular deck of cards is not that big — that shows you the degree to which they planned,” said Holly Geoghegan, the young woman’s aunt, who was visiting them when the tiny deck arrived in the mail.

They spent months saving, but then it was time for big decisions: The trip was not one that could be covered by an extended leave.

“I quit my job today,” Mr. Austin posted the month before their departure last summer.

“I’ve grown tired of spending the best hours of my day in front of a glowing rectangle, of coloring the best years of my life in swaths of grey and beige,” he wrote. “I’ve missed too many sunsets while my back was turned. Too many thunderstorms went unwatched, too many gentle breezes unnoticed.”

Image

EGYPT Mr. Austin and Ms. Geoghegan met in Washington.CreditSimplycycling.org

The day Ms. Geoghegan and Ms. Kerrigan said goodbye, the two friends hugged outside Ms. Geoghegan’s apartment.

“The minute your instinct tells you something is wrong — leave,” Ms. Kerrigan told her. She was concerned for her friend, in part because of how bighearted she was and in part because she feared that Mr. Austin had a higher tolerance for danger than Ms. Geoghegan did.

“When someone dies, people will always say, ‘Oh that person was wonderful,’” Ms. Kerrigan said. “Lauren was not just a good person. She was exceptional at connecting with people — exceptional at giving to people, in a way that would have been exhausting to me.”

The couple began their voyage at the southernmost tip of Africa with a miscalculation that left them stranded.

It was July 23, 2017 — winter in South Africa, when the sun sets at 5:30 — and they hadn’t realized how far they would need to travel on congested freeways before they could get out of Cape Town. At dusk, they found themselves with a punctured tire on the chaotic R27. There was nowhere to pitch their tent except for a ditch adjacent to the busy freeway.

Image

A PLEDGE TO KILL Two days after the cyclists were killed, the Islamic State released a video in which these men swore allegiance to the terrorist group.CreditIslamic State group, via Associated Press

In a post about why he chose to cycle — as opposed to, say, drive around the world — Mr. Austin spoke about the vulnerability of being on a bike. “With that vulnerability comes immense generosity: good folks who will recognize your helplessness and recognize that you need assistance in one form or another and offer it in spades,” he wrote.

In the middle of the night, a security guard patrolling the grounds of a nearby nuclear plant spotted their tent. He radioed for help and arranged for a truck to drive them across the city to a campsite.

Their journey was a series of tedious, and occasionally grueling, physical tests, punctuated by human kindness.

They continued north, crossing deserts where the sand was so deep they had to dismount and push their bikes. In Botswana, a concerned man stopped his car to offer them ice water as they pedaled in 95-degree heat.

They cycled on dirt paths, through dry riverbeds and on cracked asphalt, going days without a shower. In Morocco, a family offered the couple a room, and then sent them off the next morning with homemade bread.

Image

TAJIKISTAN The Ak-Baital Pass in the Pamir Mountains. This was the last photo the couple posted to social media.CreditSimplycycling.org

Days turned to weeks, and then into months. Their bodies began to break. An ear infection landed Ms. Geoghegan in the emergency room in France. They both contracted pinkeye. They shouldered on through upset stomachs and sore throats.

It was winter by the time they reached Europe last December. Torrential rain soaked through their waterproof gloves. “Utterly hopeless, wet and cold,” they posted from Spain.

A few hours later, a couple in a white van stopped, handed them a towel and insisted on driving them to their house, where they dried their sopping clothes in the dryer.

But in the course of their travels, their blog posts also noted flashes of cruelty.

On one mountain pass, a group of men blocked their path and tried to shove the couple off their bikes.

And just 50 yards from the Spanish border in bumper-to-bumper traffic, Mr. Austin signaled to a driver that he wanted to cut into his lane. The driver let him enter and then — slowly and deliberately — began to run him over, trapping Mr. Austin’s bike between the advancing car and the vehicle ahead of them.

Still, by the time they reached that bend in the road in Tajikistan just over a week ago, they had embraced the notion that the world was overwhelmingly good, the dozens of annotated photographs and the thousands of words they left behind show.

“You read the papers and you’re led to believe that the world is a big, scary place,” Mr. Austin wrote. “People, the narrative goes, are not to be trusted. People are bad. People are evil.

“I don’t buy it. Evil is a make-believe concept we’ve invented to deal with the complexities of fellow humans holding values and beliefs and perspectives different than our own … By and large, humans are kind. Self-interested sometimes, myopic sometimes, but kind. Generous and wonderful and kind.”

“No greater revelation has come from our journey than this,” he wrote.

In the video released by the Islamic State after the couple’s death, the men pledging allegiance to the group can be seen sitting on a stone slab, an aquamarine lake partly visible over their left shoulders. It’s the kind of panorama that the young couple might have stopped to capture and post on their blog.

But in the clip, when these men point to the scenery around them, they vow to slaughter the “disbelievers” who have overrun their land.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4045730&forum_id=2#36575986)



Reply Favorite

Date: August 8th, 2018 3:22 AM
Author: razzle-dazzle toilet seat keepsake machete

fucking retards. repeal the 19th. but you really have to take the vote away from faggots like this guy as well. they're basically women.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4045730&forum_id=2#36576004)



Reply Favorite

Date: August 8th, 2018 1:18 PM
Author: Swashbuckling Circlehead People Who Are Hurt



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4045730&forum_id=2#36578440)



Reply Favorite

Date: August 8th, 2018 1:20 PM
Author: Swashbuckling Circlehead People Who Are Hurt

LOFL @ the top comment:

"A great story and an admirable couple. But those who condemn their killers as evil probably fail to recognize that ISIS fighters see themselves as being on the side of good. For them, these young Americans were an embodiment of the Great Satan. Do you really believe that people willing to lay down their lives for an ideal - as ISIS suicide bombers are - are selfish psychopaths? Instead of bandying around moral absolutes, perhaps we should recognize that good and evil are relative categories, dependent on your culture and your values. Some countries are inherently dangerous not because they have too many sociopaths roaming around but because their cultures are violent, narrow-minded, or filled with bad ideas. I hate radical Islam because I believe it is totally wrong, not because I think its adherents are bad people. I don’t actually care whether they are or are not. The American cyclists embraced ideals I can identify with - individualism, self-fulfillment, adventure - and so I grieve for them. “Nothing is good or bad/ But thinking makes it so” (Shakespeare, Hamlet)."

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4045730&forum_id=2#36578458)



Reply Favorite

Date: August 8th, 2018 1:22 PM
Author: Startling wrinkle jewess



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4045730&forum_id=2#36578480)



Reply Favorite

Date: August 8th, 2018 1:25 PM
Author: Swashbuckling Circlehead People Who Are Hurt

the alt-righters matching in Charlottelesville were similarly not selfish psychopaths. Rather, they were just standing up for their ideals and see liberals as the embodiment of Satan

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4045730&forum_id=2#36578509)



Reply Favorite

Date: August 8th, 2018 1:32 PM
Author: Buff splenetic faggot firefighter

i don't mind the attempt to be objective.

here's what i do mind

1. "But those who condemn their killers as evil probably fail to recognize that ISIS fighters see themselves as being on the side of good."

this is wrong. everyone with a speck of a brain knows these people see themselves as being on the side of good. they are condemned as being evil based on their actions and their beliefs, but not their sincerity

2. "Do you really believe that people willing to lay down their lives for an ideal - as ISIS suicide bombers are - are selfish psychopaths?"

what kind of bullshit straw man is this--'selfish' psychopaths? selfish? why don't you try 'deluded' and then ask the question. and then you'll get a unanimous 'yes' in response and you'll see that your attempt at being understanding was built on a sand foundation

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4045730&forum_id=2#36578556)



Reply Favorite

Date: August 8th, 2018 1:39 PM
Author: gaped meetinghouse wagecucks

"some people think the world is a big, scary place full of bad peo-" he choked out, while having his head sawed off by a serrated knife

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4045730&forum_id=2#36578602)



Reply Favorite

Date: August 8th, 2018 1:39 PM
Author: Swashbuckling Circlehead People Who Are Hurt

ROFL. famous last words.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4045730&forum_id=2#36578606)



Reply Favorite

Date: August 8th, 2018 1:41 PM
Author: Startling wrinkle jewess



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4045730&forum_id=2#36578619)



Reply Favorite

Date: August 8th, 2018 1:43 PM
Author: Bright outnumbered stage

"if we're nice to them, they'll be nice to us," said every Lib

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4045730&forum_id=2#36578649)



Reply Favorite

Date: August 8th, 2018 6:22 PM
Author: cream place of business resort

There are some seriously sick and twisted poasters here. JFC

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4045730&forum_id=2#36580936)



Reply Favorite

Date: August 9th, 2018 6:55 AM
Author: Startling wrinkle jewess



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4045730&forum_id=2#36583943)



Reply Favorite

Date: August 16th, 2018 5:00 PM
Author: Swashbuckling Circlehead People Who Are Hurt



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4045730&forum_id=2#36628449)



Reply Favorite

Date: August 16th, 2018 5:02 PM
Author: supple set

*finds magic*

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4045730&forum_id=2#36628471)



Reply Favorite

Date: August 16th, 2018 5:57 PM
Author: violent crotch kitchen

video here

https://www.rferl.org/a/tajikistan-attack-foreign-cyclists/29398357.html

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4045730&forum_id=2#36628785)