Posted on 08/21/2002 5:54:16 PM PDT by HAL9000
An hostage decapitated in the south of the Philippines
Wednesday August 21, 2002 - 23h40 GMT
ZAMBOANGA (the Philippines), August 22 (AFP) - One of the six Christian hostages Filipinos removed by supposed islamists of the group Abu Sayaf in the south of the Philippines Wednesday was decapitated by its kidnappers, one learned military Thursday of source.
The head of the hostage was found Wednesday evening near the headquarters of the army, in the capital of the island of Jolo, one specified of the same source.
A second hostage decapitated in the south of the Philippines
Thursday August 22, 2002 - 0h20 GMT
ZAMBOANGA (the Philippines), August 22 (AFP) - a second hostage among the six Christians Filipinos removed by supposed islamists of the group Abu Sayaf in the south of the Philippines Wednesday was decapitated by his kidnappers, one learned military Thursday of source.
The second head was found, packed in a plastic bag, close to the market of the capital of the island of Jolo, while the first head had been discovered near the headquarters of the army, according to the General Romeo Tolentino.
"Those which do not believe in Allah will undergo the same fate", said a note found close to one of the two heads, specified the Tolentino General.
Six Witnesses of Jéhovah, agents sales in beauty products, had been kidnapped Tuesday in the town of Patikul on the island of Jolo, one of the strongholds of Abu Sayyaf.
The removal was carried out by the men of the gang directed by a local head, Moin Sahiron, nephew of Radulan Sahiron, a veteran of the separatist wars in the Moslem south of the archipelago.
The group Abu Sayyaf, whose last taking of hostages goes back to last October, is specialized in the taking of hostages in order to obtain ransoms.
Jolo is one of the strongholds of Abu Sayyaf which had taken to last year three Americans as hostages. One was released in June and two died. The island was not the target of the American intervention which was completed at the end of July and concentrated on Basilan.
Three Indonésiens kidnapped in June are also held by other Moslem separatists reconverted into the banditism on Jolo.
Sorry, but it only took 19 of them to take 3,000 lives. After witnessing September 11 first hand, after watching footage of numerous suicide bombings committed by Palestinian muslims and Pakistani muslims killing Christians and Hindus (not to mention what they did to Daniel Pearl) and the horror perpetrated by muslims in the Phillipines I'm just fresh out of tolerance.
How could you possibly know such a thing? Are you God?
Cordially,
Its amazing how the jihadis boldly attack the strongest military targets... sleeping 5 year old children, unarmed women...
If the villagers in Indonesia, India and the Phillipines were armed to any degree and if their cultural attitudes regarding self defense and self preservation were changed, the jihadis would flee like they were in some Monty Python skit.
The powers of human reason.
Are you God?
Yes. I am master of my own destiny. I am my own God. And no, I have not been struck by lightning.
Holding my breath for this sentiment to be denounced by Muslims.
Cordially,
But there is no evidence pointing to the veracity of any religion. That's the point. You're supposed to accept their dogma on blind faith alone.
Since some unknown fact may prove your limited understanding of religion to be mistaken, you cannot be certain that all the evidence is in support of your position.
Well, that's always true with anything. But based on the evidence available to me, its safe to say that there's no rational reason for belief in any divine or supernatural being.
Thus you are in no position to positively assert that all religions are equally false
Um, no. I can say that all religions are false, just as I can say that the world isn't flat. Could some evidence ever be produced that would conclusively demonstrate that all of our round-earth beliefs have all been mass-delusions and optical illusions? Conceivably, that's possible. We'll cross that bridge if as and when we come to it, but until that point, I'll continue to make declarative statements.
If not, then we have not paid attention to history.
5.56mm
There you go again. There is no way that you can know for certain that there is no evidence pointing to the veracity of any religion, which is actually what you do acknowledge in your next statement that:
Well, that's always true with anything...
But based on the evidence available to me, its safe to say that there's no rational reason for belief in any divine or supernatural being.
You do not have enough information to know for certain that it is safe to say that there's no rational reason for any belief in any divine or supernatural being, because you are a finite human being who has not and cannot examine all of the evidence concerning religion that exists. The assertion that the world isn't flat is based on empirical observations that the earth is a globe. However, your assertion that there's no rational reason for belief in any divine or supernatural being is not an empirical observation, it is a metaphysical assertion.
The best you can do is the expression of a personal doubt, namely that you haven't come across any evidence that you are willing to regard as providing a rational basis for belief in any divine or supernatural being.
Cordially,
The Abu Sayyaf in the Philippines and the murderers of Daniel Pearl in Pakistan are indirectly related through al Qaeda connections.
1. Somewhere, there may be evidence that God exists, you just haven't seen it. Presumably, its hiding under a rock.
2. Therefore, you should just assume that God exists.
There is plenty of evidence that the world was created solely through natural phenomena. As such, there is no need for a God.
The best you can do is the expression of a personal doubt, namely that you haven't come across any evidence that you are willing to regard as providing a rational basis for belief in any divine or supernatural being.
Um, is that wrong? Unless you can give me a reason, supported by logic or evidence, to believe in anything, I won't believe in it. That includes God, cold fusion, the Easter Bunny, and Martha Stewart's imClone alibi.
To go from indignation to decapitation would require more than a couple steps.
To equate the cultural battle between conservative Christians and secular humanists with the cultural battle between radical Islam and Western Civilization is to engage in moral relativism.
The former is a battle for the hearts and minds of a free people, and is being waged in the marketplace of ideas. The latter is a battle for our survival as a free people, and is being waged in a pool of blood.
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