that the pope sort of accuses islam of being a violent religion, so in protest muslims fire bomb churches and make threats etc because they are offended at being called violent
9/21/2006 11:42:03 AM
no you're not the only one
9/21/2006 11:43:22 AM
YEAH YOU'RE THE ONLY ONE[Edited on September 21, 2006 at 11:45 AM. Reason : lock]
9/21/2006 11:44:25 AM
am i the only one that immediately sensed sarcasm in jwb's post? cause some people on TWW have a big problem differentiating sarcasm from literal posts
9/21/2006 11:46:28 AM
i hope it was sarcasm
9/21/2006 11:47:34 AM
I know the muslims in South Asia do some retarded shit some times but why dont they get all huffy when this stuff happens?or do they and we just dont know it.
9/21/2006 11:56:37 AM
youre the only one
9/21/2006 12:04:03 PM
I'm dissapointed that the Pope was pressured into recanting his statement.
9/21/2006 12:04:26 PM
^^^do people just ignore questions now to toot their own horn?
9/21/2006 12:06:41 PM
9/21/2006 12:17:21 PM
They made fun of it on the Daily Show.
9/21/2006 1:10:49 PM
But what about Protestantism, too?
9/21/2006 1:27:28 PM
Sorry, Protestantism came too late in the game ... after the crusades ... after the inquisition ... there might be some religious violence, but most of it was before the church split ...
9/21/2006 1:32:16 PM
I'll bet you those millions of Native Americans whose descendants aren't with us today would disagree.
9/21/2006 1:32:50 PM
^&^^^^^We're talking about THE PRESENT. Not what happened hundreds to thousands of years ago. THE PRESENT, where we live now, in the CIVILIZED WORLD.
9/21/2006 1:35:04 PM
9/21/2006 1:36:31 PM
You're not even the only one to make a thread about this.
9/21/2006 1:38:59 PM
9/21/2006 2:02:41 PM
I'd argue much the same for Islam.
9/21/2006 2:10:41 PM
you dont see the massive global christian violence like you don with the muslims, so id say we are a little better in that regard. what religions did 100s of years ago in the middle ages is not relevant to stating today here and now that islam is a religion of violence and extremism. sure christians commited the same atrocities way back in the day, and sure violent christian extremists still exist today....but not nearly on the scale and degree that muslims do. christians pretty much cleaned up there act, islam not so much.
9/21/2006 2:58:23 PM
I don't think anyone has ever made a thread on this topic, ever
9/21/2006 3:01:44 PM
^^ The middle ages don't need to be relevant. Christian violence didn't magically disappear because you stopped reading about it being in conflict with other still-extant religions in History class. Christian violence includes: the witch trials (part of the Inquisition happened here), the Western expansion of America, the Conquistadores in South America, and many of the historically Imperialist misadventures of Britain.America, friend, has never had a non-Christian President. What separates its violence from Christian violence if Church and State are philosophically separate or indistinguishable (as most like to say)?
9/21/2006 3:47:37 PM
Because our country has Christian Presidents, that means that the actions of our country are "Christian"?For such a prolix person, you're pretty damn obtuse.
9/21/2006 4:19:26 PM
9/21/2006 4:27:14 PM
If we take the common rebuttal to arguments of Church vs. State, then yes. We can pretty easily attribute all violence carried out for ends that satisfy the means of the spread of Christian thought to Christianity. Why not? The actions of a few Wahhabists' and other minority sects are being extended to the followers, believers, and citizens of states under theocratic and Democratic rule of a single, broadly defined religious faith.[Edited on September 21, 2006 at 4:35 PM. Reason : ...]
9/21/2006 4:35:06 PM
but Muslims who tell other Muslims "attack the American infidels for invading your holy land in the name of Allah" is definitely affiliated with religionI don't think any of the American efforts in the Middle East in recent memory are to the effect of "Take out these terrorists in the name of Jesus Christ"not saying that some of the individual battalions dont take their shots at Islam but its certainly nowhere near the extent of the Muslims...you have religious leaders saying to do this or that in the name of Allah...even when Bush mentioned 'crusade' I think that was about the closest thing to "Attack these people in the name of Christianity"Hell, theres no "Christian Law" that we have in the United States, or at least no overlying Christian Law, whereas in the Middle East (Iran and Saudi Arabia specifically) they want everyone to conform to "Muslim Law"...non Muslims can either convert, be underclass citizens, or die...none of that going on in the USA
9/21/2006 4:38:36 PM
Yeah Gamecat, on this I think we just disagree.I only count violence overtly perpetrated in the name of religion to be religious violence.Not all terrorism is religious violence. Very often it is political instead.The IRA, and Al Queda, however, are religious terrorists.
9/21/2006 4:53:16 PM
The IRA was political.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Provisional_Irish_Republican_Army
9/21/2006 5:06:09 PM
yeah the IRA is definitly political and anyone who claims otherwise is stupid. Yes religion has an influence but it is the politics of the matter
9/21/2006 6:14:13 PM
Eric Rudolph had a religious incentive. Don't know how else you can slice it.And I'd argue that your understanding of domestic terrorists are simply more nuanced because you have more information about them. I'd argue you know far less, or at least would learn far less about the makeup of Islamic terrorists by following the media and would thus be less inclined to note the stark and numerous similarities.
9/21/2006 10:03:17 PM
Eric Rudolph is debatable: "Many good people continue to send me money and books," Rudolph writes in an undated letter. "Most of them have, of course, an agenda; mostly born-again Christians looking to save my soul. I suppose the assumption is made that because I'm in here I must be a 'sinner' in need of salvation, and they would be glad to sell me a ticket to heaven, hawking this salvation like peanuts at a ballgame. I do appreciate their charity, but I could really do without the condescension. They have been so nice I would hate to break it to them that I really prefer Nietzsche to the Bible."http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2005-07-05-rudolph-cover-partone_x.htmRegardless, a marked dissimilarity between Eric Rudolph and Islamic terrorists exists: Rudolph operated individually as opposed to very large Islamic terrorist groups operating world-wide.
9/21/2006 10:29:36 PM
9/22/2006 1:29:56 AM
^ Both forms of Christianity. Islam isn't a monolithic religion without fractured sects, either.
9/22/2006 9:49:48 AM
JAHOVIA WAITRESSES!
9/22/2006 9:54:00 AM
^^i'd say that Islam is much more fractured than Christianity, but neither Unitarians or Jehovah's Witnesses are subsets of Christianity in my book. They're both their own religion.
9/22/2006 10:50:27 AM
9/22/2006 11:26:11 AM
No. But I'd need some kind of basis to go on if I wanted to get further than a few thousand.
9/22/2006 11:44:24 AM
A few thousand is significantly greater than one. And that few thousand has already amply demonstrated that they are capable of far more destruction and death than one Eric Rudolph.http://www.milnet.com/state/2003/c12108.htmal-Qaida alone is estimated to have "several thousand members and associates."[Edited on September 22, 2006 at 12:04 PM. Reason : ]
9/22/2006 11:51:14 AM
How many individuals are in the Aryan Nations? The Order?
9/22/2006 1:37:39 PM
9/22/2006 1:39:56 PM
And what makes the leaders of so-called Islamic states any different? Are they no less bound to play the part of the religious fanatic if it suits their alterior aims?
9/22/2006 2:04:47 PM
9/22/2006 3:12:05 PM