Posted on 04/16/2003 11:19:30 AM PDT by Remedy
Actually, I do. Let's examine the facts of this red herring you misguidedly raise.
"When the two religions (Islam and Christianity) met in the Mediterranean area, each claiming to be the recipient of God's final revelation, conflict was inevitable. The conflict, in fact, was almost continuous: the first Arab-Islamic invasions took Islam by conquest to the then Christian lands of Syria, Palestine, Egypt, and North Africa, and, for a while, to Southern Europe; the Tatars took it into Russia and Eastern Europe; and the Turks took it into the Balkans. To each advance came a Christian rejoinder: the Reconquista in Spain, the Crusades in the Levant, the throwing off of what the Russians call the Tatar yoke in the history of their country, and, finally, the great European counterattack into the lands of Islam..."
To sum it up, Islam started a bloody jihadic takeover of Christian lands, from the Middle-East through Western Europe, and the Christians then fought back and defended themselves, their beliefs, and their lands.
Your straw man falls on its face, and turns to the dust found in the words of a deceiver.
I'll ask you again, have you ever read about or seen a Christian with C-4 platique and ball bearings taped to his chest? Please answer the question, and cease with your lame attempts to muddy the issue.
Speak for yourself. I look great, and so does America. That's why these evil religion followers hate us.
;-/
It's stupid; we're going to need Muslim allies to rebuild Iraq.
New Petition: Transform Iraq into beacon Albert Yelda, an Assyrian Christian with influence over more than 1.5 million Iraqi Christians, including Assyrians and Chaldeans. Yelda, cofounder of the Iraqi National Congress, split off from the Moslem-dominated group in 1999 to form the Iraqi National Coalition. He has been part of the Iraqi opposition since 1973, while living in Iraq.
The Bush administration must understand the need for a government not controlled by any one religion, like elsewhere in the Middle East. To promote and groom only Shi'ite groups, such as the "supreme council of Islamic revolution in Iraq," Iraqi communists and "ex" Baath party members to key positions in the post-Saddam government is a mistake. Members of such groups are today in Washington D.C. Pro-democracy figures of the Iraqi opposition must not be ignored.
USATODAY.com - Ex-Iraq officers discuss ousting Saddam Albert Yelda, co-founder of the Iraqi National Coalition, said the meeting would be the largest gathering ever of exiled Iraqi officers. He said they hope to unify those in exile and still inside Iraq in "establishing a democratic regime where the Iraqis, Assyrians, Christians, Muslims, Arabs, Kurds and Turkomans can live peacefully and equally."
Is this truly all it is to you?
Do you or do you not support disinviting Rev. Graham?
And if you do support disinviting him, on what exactly do you base your opinion?
So what. The question isn't whether "someone" thinks the choice was unwise, but whether 1 billion people think we're waging a war on their religion.
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