Posted on 05/12/2016 9:24:21 AM PDT by Jan_Sobieski
List of Islamic Celebrities (note: many are former Christian converts)...
1. Shaquille Oneil
2. Mohammed Ali
3. Dr Oz
4. Zayn Malik
5. Dave Chappelle
6. Janet Jackson
7. Ice Cube
8. Malala
9. Ellen Burstyn
10. Mike Tyson
11. Lupe Fiasco
12. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
13. Mos Def
14. Akon
15. Cat Stevens (Yusuf Islam)
16. Aasif Mandvi
17. Busta Rhymes
18. Jemima Khan
19. Snoop Dogg
20. Faran Tahir
(Excerpt) Read more at fitstylelife.com ...
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L L Cool J?
Nobody on the list that I didn’t know or suspect as being a muzzie.
“A that time in history, being anything less than pitch-black may have sufficed to earn one the nickname “Red.”
“may have sufficed”?
What makes you believe the white races are only a few hundred years old?
Malccolm X was half white and had reddish hair.
The Hebrew word translated ruddy was the same as the Hebrew word describing Esau and it meant the color we refer to as “red”.
In the Song of Solomon, Solomon is described as “milky white”.
Ellen Burstyn????? really?
I went to school with her son, she was a very nice person. Very sweet, down to earth and didn’t behave like a hollywood snob. I am in shock that such a nice person would become a muslim.
Maybe it’s time for her to have another encounter with the exorcist.
Kareem was my (around-the-corner) neighbor in L.A. in the '90s. Met him once while we were out walking out dogs not long after he retired. Yes, nice fellow. No airs. His nemesis Wilt was also a class guy.
I remember when Kareem lost his house to a fire in '83, and his enormous vinyl jazz collection bit the dust with it. Sympathetic jazz aficionados from all over the world sent him records to help replace his collection, and Kareem was overwhelmed by the outpouring of kindness.
He had a Jazz radio show in Milwaukee. He knew I was a musician, so we talked music often.
Very cool. I should’ve talked jazz with him when I had the chance...
Really no surprise celebs would gravitate towards islam. Being that so many have been duped into scientology. Though completely different entities, they share some important commonalities. They cannot tolerate ridicule or criticism. Scientology reacts with threats of litigation, islam reacts with violence. They cannot tolerate apostasy. Scientology reacts with harassment and character assassination, as ex scieno Leah Remini learned the hard way. Islam reacts with violence as untold millions learned the hard way. And they both need to disguise themselves as religions in order to conceal their true agendas. Scientology in the guise of a little religion is nothing more than an elaborate scam devised by L Ron Hubbard, a low level con artist whose primary objective was to separate the rich and famous from as much of their$$$ as possible. Islam in the guise of a religion is a tyrannical, absolutist, misogynist, racist political/social order devised by Mohammed, a hashish abusing child molester whose primary objective was to rule the world by any means necessary.
I still remember the first time I saw him get out of his Mercedes Coupe.
Some of the people on this list are no doubt more devout than others.
Hey, take it easy, my Mooskie name is al Nofakinwi. My dear old granny, from Tulsa, gave me that name.
She knew Mohamhead personally. No, not like that, she was his hairdresser.
I had two kids in Tulsa. Their names are Sally and Patrick.
Why did they leave Obama off the list? ;-)
Dr. Oz was born into a more or less secularized muslim family, but his practice is Transcendental Meditation.
Ellen Burstyn is a cafeteria spiritualist who picks a little from this religion and a little from that religion... she cannot be classified as a true muslim based on her wikipedia profile.
Lupe Fiasco?.....
Why do you infer that I believe that? On the contrary: I'm sure that in certain places in the world at that time - maybe in northern Europe - there were plenty of Whites.
Again, my point is that, e.g., a six-footer will be called "Shorty" in a society of 7-footers. In northern Norway, someone with a modicum of melanin might be regarded as "swarthy." In records from the Middle Ages, I'm sure that some people were described as "big" or even as "giants" who wouldn't be at all conspicuous in modern-day America. Biblical passages describing various individuals as "ruddy" or "milky white" (hyperbole!) thus tell us nothing about the actual appearance of those individuals - only their complexion in relation to the average at that time, at that place.
Regards,
“Again, my point is that, e.g., a six-footer will be called “Shorty” in a society of 7-footers.”
I know I should not say anything, but your method of reasoning is completely absurd.
The writers of the Bible, believing in the criticality of their subject matter, were not given to such slack nonsense as you assign to them.
When the Biblical writer mentioned that Esau was hairy, does that not seem to suggest that most of his compatriots were not hairy?
Or, doesn’t history place blacks as inhabiting Africa? And the Egyptian paintings definitely have the Egyptians as white when you decode their method of representation. The paintings do represent blacks with black pigmented painting, and they were represented as slaves.
“Milky white” is certainly hyperbole, but to think that it was referring to a non-white is absurd.
No, please: Your opinion is valuable.
When the Biblical writer mentioned that Esau was hairy, does that not seem to suggest that most of his compatriots were not hairy?
To me, that suggests only that Esau was hairy in comparison to other (less-hairy) persons whom the writer (who was certainly not as well-travelled or sophisticated as a modern person, who would be familiar with numerous different races and ethnic groups) considered "average."
Or, doesnt history place blacks as inhabiting Africa? And the Egyptian paintings definitely have the Egyptians as white when you decode their method of representation. The paintings do represent blacks with black pigmented painting, and they were represented as slaves.
It was not my intention to engage in an anthropological discussion. I know too little about the mass migration of different peoples in the Middle East thousands of years ago.
My intention was only to point out that when a writer (in a primitive culture) says "big" or "hairy" or "fair-complexioned," one should not assume that he is using the same measuring stick as the one employed in an entirely different era and geographical region, like present-day Europe / America.
Regards,
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