This along with the editorial piece by Ali al-Ahmed which appeared in the Wall St. Journal yesterday pretty much exposes the hypocrisy of many Muslims. The faux outrage by Muslims is laughable when nearly a million people have disappeared since Saddam Hussein took power in Iraq in 1968; and Christians and Jews are refused to practice their faith freely in the Middleast.
1 posted on
05/21/2005 6:08:29 AM PDT by
kellynla
To: kellynla
2 posted on
05/21/2005 6:15:22 AM PDT by
Eurotwit
(WI)
To: kellynla
Do muslims have any awareness that these actions makes them look like unmitigated morons?
4 posted on
05/21/2005 6:22:32 AM PDT by
tkathy
(Tyranny breeds terrorism. Freedom breeds peace.)
To: kellynla
There is no excuse for the behavior of rioting Muslims. They believed in a lie, nothing new for many Muslims. At the start of the War on Terror I believed in helping them but the more we do the worse they get. To tell the truth, I am not sure how I feel about them now.
5 posted on
05/21/2005 6:35:23 AM PDT by
TGOGary
(I would blow my brains out before ever wearing a blue beret.)
To: kellynla
"Journalists are wondering what standards allowed the charge to be printed without proof."Standards?
We're jounralists - we don't need no steenking standards!
6 posted on
05/21/2005 6:42:27 AM PDT by
Redbob
To: kellynla
Most miss the point entirely. The Muslim religion, the Catholic religion and most major religions rely on keeping their adherents in the lower levels of the economic ladder, this is the only means of control these religions have over their followers. There is no middle class in the Muslim dominated countries, There is no Middle class in Mexico, I could go on but this is why the Muslims are doing everything to prevent Economic success in Iraq and why the Catholic Bishops in the United States Embrace Illegal aliens, mostly from Mexico. Economic success does not lead to increased religious beliefs.
Keep em poor. Religion is the opiate of the poor.
Religion and Morality are not Synonymous words. Something the Liberals do not understand.
7 posted on
05/21/2005 6:58:09 AM PDT by
BIGZ
To: kellynla
Saddam in underwear...Is he doing a fruit of the loom commercial?
13 posted on
05/21/2005 7:45:52 AM PDT by
Route101
To: kellynla
"
That argument just doesn't wash. One can appreciate the Koran's inherent worth, as I do, while recognising that it contains ambiguities, inconsistencies, outright contradictions and the possibility of human editing."Like admonitions to kill all non-moslems? (Sura 9:5)
Doesn't sound too ambiguous to me.
To: kellynla
"Abusing the Koran is like abusing basic human rights. If you're a good Muslim, your identity and dignity are bound up in revering the Koran. It's the literal word of God. Unsullied. Untouched. Unedited. Unlike the other holy books." Any individual or group that believes this has no place in my universe.
It boils down to kill or be killed.
It's like trying to reason with termites.
19 posted on
05/21/2005 8:56:30 AM PDT by
Publius6961
(The most abundant things in the universe are hydrogen, ignorance and stupidity.)
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