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jamiemartin721 Reading 22 Jun 14 2.06pm | |
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Quote Stirlingsays at 22 Jun 2014 1.11pm
Quote nickgusset at 22 Jun 2014 12.46pm
Don't disagree about Sadams atrocities, they were awful. However to invade and try and impose western style democracy was either a terrible mistake or done so badly that we are in a worse situation.
The constitutions has been created and voted in by Iraqis. Where is the majority rejection of democracy.....The truth is that the majority were crying out for it. Where have we forced Iraq to become a democratic country.....If it is forced why is there voter turnout higher than ours even with the threat of death at the polls from the fractions with the country opposed to democracy? How much they were crying out for democracy is fairly open to debate, given the scale of the insurgency and militia problems post invasion. However the real problem is not necessarily that we 'imposed' democracy per se, but that the country really lacked a cultural understanding and completed historical discourses, such as those in the west had, that led to the rise of democracy, and its evolution. Its important to remember that every democracy wasn't born intact, as we see today, but grew out of a series of resolved discourses about democratic rights and equality. Initially, British democracy, was highly prejudicial and representative of only the will of a minority of the UK (typically men of wealth, landowners and successful mercantile classes). For democracy, to become truly democratic, Iraq must be stabled for decades, possibly even a century and resolve the issues it has regarding rights and sectarianism, exclusions, prejudices etc through the democratic inclusion of those who are marginalised whilst resisting those who would implement tyranny (either of the state, or other groups). The greatest problem of democracy in Iraq has always been its utilisation by a Shiite majority to implement its will on minorities within Iraq, particularly along sectarian lines. Whilst the Tyranny has been deposed, the state still operates tolerates tyranny and oppression as a means of controlling its specific desires - as well as tolerating many of the unacceptable practices of tyranny (torture, secret police, death squads and disappearances).
"One Nation Under God, has turned into One Nation Under the Influence of One Drug" |
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jamiemartin721 Reading 22 Jun 14 2.25pm | |
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Quote legaleagle at 22 Jun 2014 1.33pm
Huffington Post 24 May 2007:
The Pew Center for Research recently released the findings of a comprehensive survey about US Muslims, entitled "Muslim Americans: Middle Class and Mostly Mainstream." The study confirms the already obvious -- that US Muslims are mostly well integrated and quite well off. There is no reason to celebrate this "discovery" because US Muslims have known this for quite some time. The focus must be on the problems discovered. 13% of US Muslims of all ages feel that there are scenarios in which suicide bombings are justified. Only 40% of all US Muslims believe that Arabs carried out the 9/11 attacks. US Muslims, in comparison with all Americans, favor governmental intrusion in morality almost 2 to 1. Numbers show that the Blackamerican Muslim population does not share the financial success or the social optimism of immigrant Muslims. Homosexuals are reviled. A large number of youth, almost three times as many as in pakistan, believe that there is an inherent conflict between faith and modern life." I don't really have an issue with the idea of suicide bombings, they're a legitimate means of effective resistance, when you consider that as far back as Vietnam, guerrilla groups were suffering at least 70% casualty rates (the PLO claim that 80-90% casualty rate on 'military operations'). Typically the estimate is that roughly 10-20 insurgents die for every casualty they cause. In light of that, suicide attacks have become fairly efficient, as they can deliver high casualty in exchange for low losses (as well as causing fear and insecurity among the enemy). In war effectiveness replaces 'morality', and suicide attacks can be very effective for guerrilla movements. The 1983 suicide bombing of the Marine Barracks in Lebanon, demonstrates that. 299 'enemy' killed in exchange of some 20 or so casualties. Had Islamic Jihad wanted to cause those casualties by more conventional means, they would have required upwards of 3000 casualties of their own. Kamikazie attacks in WWII were highly effectual. The value of a suicide attack is not that the individual so much gives their life, but that they effectively deliver a comprehensive tactical strike that is efficient and effective, both in terms of its impact, and in relative terms of casualties experienced by the attacking side. The question isn't whether suicide bombings are justifiable, its whether the targets are justified, bombing civilians, isn't really something the Koran or International Law justifies (ie what ever side you find yourself on). Insurgents utilise suicide attacks because they're effective and efficient, not really for any moral reason.
"One Nation Under God, has turned into One Nation Under the Influence of One Drug" |
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Stirlingsays 22 Jun 14 2.25pm | |
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Quote legaleagle at 22 Jun 2014 1.33pm
Huffington Post 24 May 2007:
The Pew Center for Research recently released the findings of a comprehensive survey about US Muslims, entitled "Muslim Americans: Middle Class and Mostly Mainstream." The study confirms the already obvious -- that US Muslims are mostly well integrated and quite well off. There is no reason to celebrate this "discovery" because US Muslims have known this for quite some time. The focus must be on the problems discovered. 13% of US Muslims of all ages feel that there are scenarios in which suicide bombings are justified. Only 40% of all US Muslims believe that Arabs carried out the 9/11 attacks. US Muslims, in comparison with all Americans, favor governmental intrusion in morality almost 2 to 1. Numbers show that the Blackamerican Muslim population does not share the financial success or the social optimism of immigrant Muslims. Homosexuals are reviled. A large number of youth, almost three times as many as in pakistan, believe that there is an inherent conflict between faith and modern life."
Again, this isn't an answer to my observation. Why don't Americans have anything like the same level of attacks on American soil by American Muslims? You haven't got an answer. I have and it's bleeding obvious. But some on the left can't deal with it and wish to obfuscate and minimize the reality. Their ideology contributed to our mess.
'Who are you and how did you get in here? I'm a locksmith. And, I'm a locksmith.' (Leslie Nielsen) |
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Stirlingsays 22 Jun 14 2.30pm | |
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Quote jamiemartin721 at 22 Jun 2014 2.06pm
Quote Stirlingsays at 22 Jun 2014 1.11pm
Quote nickgusset at 22 Jun 2014 12.46pm
Don't disagree about Sadams atrocities, they were awful. However to invade and try and impose western style democracy was either a terrible mistake or done so badly that we are in a worse situation.
The constitutions has been created and voted in by Iraqis. Where is the majority rejection of democracy.....The truth is that the majority were crying out for it. Where have we forced Iraq to become a democratic country.....If it is forced why is there voter turnout higher than ours even with the threat of death at the polls from the fractions with the country opposed to democracy? How much they were crying out for democracy is fairly open to debate, given the scale of the insurgency and militia problems post invasion. However the real problem is not necessarily that we 'imposed' democracy per se, but that the country really lacked a cultural understanding and completed historical discourses, such as those in the west had, that led to the rise of democracy, and its evolution. Its important to remember that every democracy wasn't born intact, as we see today, but grew out of a series of resolved discourses about democratic rights and equality. Initially, British democracy, was highly prejudicial and representative of only the will of a minority of the UK (typically men of wealth, landowners and successful mercantile classes). For democracy, to become truly democratic, Iraq must be stabled for decades, possibly even a century and resolve the issues it has regarding rights and sectarianism, exclusions, prejudices etc through the democratic inclusion of those who are marginalised whilst resisting those who would implement tyranny (either of the state, or other groups). The greatest problem of democracy in Iraq has always been its utilisation by a Shiite majority to implement its will on minorities within Iraq, particularly along sectarian lines. Whilst the Tyranny has been deposed, the state still operates tolerates tyranny and oppression as a means of controlling its specific desires - as well as tolerating many of the unacceptable practices of tyranny (torture, secret police, death squads and disappearances). Wasn't democracy here forged via conflict and military wars? We had the Baron's war.....We had the civil war...Loads of conflict related to how we are governed....The move to majority democracy isn't always an easy process and it takes time to be accepted. There is nothing unusual about what is happening within new democratic countries. I agree that outside of the intelligentsia and middle or lower middle classes many in middle eastern countries weren't so worried about democracy. Still, you could to a smaller extent say the same thing here......It's about who has the power and which groups in society prosper. Democracy always leads to a lesser role for religion.....Some clerics and supporters (not the moderate ones by any means) won't have that.
'Who are you and how did you get in here? I'm a locksmith. And, I'm a locksmith.' (Leslie Nielsen) |
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matt_himself Matataland 22 Jun 14 2.53pm | |
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Quote nickgusset at 22 Jun 2014 12.46pm
Quote matt_himself at 22 Jun 2014 11.37am
Quote nickgusset at 22 Jun 2014 9.43am
Quote matt_himself at 22 Jun 2014 9.07am
Interesting.
As an aside, How much did Dick Cheney's friends at Halliburton make from Iraq post invasion? There, IMHO, lies the real reason for the invasion. Edited by nickgusset (22 Jun 2014 9.52am) "Saddam was a tyrant, no doubt. But he kept a lid on the growth of fundamentalist groups which are now on the rise". So, in your mind, the Anfal campaign, using chemical weapons against the Kurds, the Kuwait invasion which involved the burning of one billion barrels of oil by the Iraqi Army, the violent repression of the Sh'iite uprising and the subsequent massacre of the Marsh Arabs was a form of acceptable social control? I would suggest that in Sadaam's day there was plenty of fundamentalist groups, the difference is that under the Democratic Iraq, they can stand to run the country in a democratic process and not be subjected to the tyranny experienced in his time. The fact that don't, is their doing and is not a symptom of democracy, it is a symptom of their inability to proceed in life in a civilised fashion.
This is precisely why I am completely against your politics. You speak a lot about what is wrong yet make or support no act that would actually resolve the situation.
"That was fun and to round off the day, I am off to steal a charity collection box and then desecrate a place of worship.” - Smokey, The Selhurst Arms, 26/02/02 |
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legaleagle 22 Jun 14 2.54pm | |
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Quote jamiemartin721 at 22 Jun 2014 2.25pm
Quote legaleagle at 22 Jun 2014 1.33pm
Huffington Post 24 May 2007:
The Pew Center for Research recently released the findings of a comprehensive survey about US Muslims, entitled "Muslim Americans: Middle Class and Mostly Mainstream." The study confirms the already obvious -- that US Muslims are mostly well integrated and quite well off. There is no reason to celebrate this "discovery" because US Muslims have known this for quite some time. The focus must be on the problems discovered. 13% of US Muslims of all ages feel that there are scenarios in which suicide bombings are justified. Only 40% of all US Muslims believe that Arabs carried out the 9/11 attacks. US Muslims, in comparison with all Americans, favor governmental intrusion in morality almost 2 to 1. Numbers show that the Blackamerican Muslim population does not share the financial success or the social optimism of immigrant Muslims. Homosexuals are reviled. A large number of youth, almost three times as many as in pakistan, believe that there is an inherent conflict between faith and modern life." I don't really have an issue with the idea of suicide bombings, they're a legitimate means of effective resistance, when you consider that as far back as Vietnam, guerrilla groups were suffering at least 70% casualty rates (the PLO claim that 80-90% casualty rate on 'military operations'). Typically the estimate is that roughly 10-20 insurgents die for every casualty they cause. In light of that, suicide attacks have become fairly efficient, as they can deliver high casualty in exchange for low losses (as well as causing fear and insecurity among the enemy). In war effectiveness replaces 'morality', and suicide attacks can be very effective for guerrilla movements. The 1983 suicide bombing of the Marine Barracks in Lebanon, demonstrates that. 299 'enemy' killed in exchange of some 20 or so casualties. Had Islamic Jihad wanted to cause those casualties by more conventional means, they would have required upwards of 3000 casualties of their own. Kamikazie attacks in WWII were highly effectual. The value of a suicide attack is not that the individual so much gives their life, but that they effectively deliver a comprehensive tactical strike that is efficient and effective, both in terms of its impact, and in relative terms of casualties experienced by the attacking side. The question isn't whether suicide bombings are justifiable, its whether the targets are justified, bombing civilians, isn't really something the Koran or International Law justifies (ie what ever side you find yourself on). Insurgents utilise suicide attacks because they're effective and efficient, not really for any moral reason. Yes, but my point wasn't about suicide bombings and morality/lack of ...the context was the view expressed by another poster that somehow because of multiculturalism in the UK and because the USA didn't have a strong left wing presence/tradition, therefore unlike the UK there was not a significant element of disaffection and support for violent action within elements of the Muslim community..
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nickgusset Shizzlehurst 22 Jun 14 2.57pm | |
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Quote Stirlingsays at 22 Jun 2014 1.18pm
Quote nickgusset at 22 Jun 2014 1.13pm
Quote Stirlingsays at 22 Jun 2014 1.05pm
I repeat America does not have a significant threat from American Muslims on its soil. For a country with five times the population their threat compared to ours if ridiculously small...It has happened but it's nothing compared to here...I repeat there are no left wing power bases in the US. You didn't answer that....Instead you post links about Americans going out to fight in foreign wars. Apologies, posted the same link twice, try this one Really Nick. If these are extremist organizations where are the attacks Nick? Please answer points. Links are not answers. We haven't had an attack for a while, so by your logic, there are no extremists! As an aside to something else you said; you hate multiculturalism-does this mean you espouse a monocultural society? - perhaps the thread title should be -Is Stirling the new Nazi?
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nickgusset Shizzlehurst 22 Jun 14 3.01pm | |
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Quote matt_himself at 22 Jun 2014 2.53pm
Quote nickgusset at 22 Jun 2014 12.46pm
Quote matt_himself at 22 Jun 2014 11.37am
Quote nickgusset at 22 Jun 2014 9.43am
Quote matt_himself at 22 Jun 2014 9.07am
Interesting.
As an aside, How much did Dick Cheney's friends at Halliburton make from Iraq post invasion? There, IMHO, lies the real reason for the invasion. Edited by nickgusset (22 Jun 2014 9.52am) "Saddam was a tyrant, no doubt. But he kept a lid on the growth of fundamentalist groups which are now on the rise". So, in your mind, the Anfal campaign, using chemical weapons against the Kurds, the Kuwait invasion which involved the burning of one billion barrels of oil by the Iraqi Army, the violent repression of the Sh'iite uprising and the subsequent massacre of the Marsh Arabs was a form of acceptable social control? I would suggest that in Sadaam's day there was plenty of fundamentalist groups, the difference is that under the Democratic Iraq, they can stand to run the country in a democratic process and not be subjected to the tyranny experienced in his time. The fact that don't, is their doing and is not a symptom of democracy, it is a symptom of their inability to proceed in life in a civilised fashion.
This is precisely why I am completely against your politics. You speak a lot about what is wrong yet make or support no act that would actually resolve the situation. So you think it's ok for Saudi Arabia to have a repressive regime. By your logic, you should call for an invasion. Do you think it's okay for fracking companies to cause environmental disasters? Edited by nickgusset (22 Jun 2014 3.03pm)
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legaleagle 22 Jun 14 3.03pm | |
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Quote Stirlingsays at 22 Jun 2014 2.25pm
Quote legaleagle at 22 Jun 2014 1.33pm
Huffington Post 24 May 2007:
The Pew Center for Research recently released the findings of a comprehensive survey about US Muslims, entitled "Muslim Americans: Middle Class and Mostly Mainstream." The study confirms the already obvious -- that US Muslims are mostly well integrated and quite well off. There is no reason to celebrate this "discovery" because US Muslims have known this for quite some time. The focus must be on the problems discovered. 13% of US Muslims of all ages feel that there are scenarios in which suicide bombings are justified. Only 40% of all US Muslims believe that Arabs carried out the 9/11 attacks. US Muslims, in comparison with all Americans, favor governmental intrusion in morality almost 2 to 1. Numbers show that the Blackamerican Muslim population does not share the financial success or the social optimism of immigrant Muslims. Homosexuals are reviled. A large number of youth, almost three times as many as in pakistan, believe that there is an inherent conflict between faith and modern life."
Again, this isn't an answer to my observation. Why don't Americans have anything like the same level of attacks on American soil by American Muslims? You haven't got an answer. I have and it's bleeding obvious. But some on the left can't deal with it and wish to obfuscate and minimize the reality. Their ideology contributed to our mess. How many attacks on British soil in the last 5 years? The flaw in the analysis is trying to push every event through a simplistic and narrow left/right, I don't like multiculturalism, prism. 11/5/2009 USA Ft. Hood, TX A Muslim psychiatrist guns down thirteen unarmed soldiers while praising Allah. 12/4/2009 USA Binghamton, NY A non-Muslim Islamic studies professor is stabbed to death by a Muslim grad student in revenge for 'persecuted' Muslims. 4/14/2010 USA Marquette Park, IL After quarrelling with his wife over Islamic dress, a Muslim convert shoots his family members to 'take them back to Allah' and out of the 'world of sinners'. 4/30/2011 USA Warren, MI A 20-year-old woman is shot in the head by her stepfather for not adhering to Islamic practices. 9/11/2011 USA Waltham, MA Three Jewish men have their throats slashed . 3/24/2013 USA Ashtabula, OH A Muslim convert walks into a church service with a Quran and guns down his Christian father while praising Allah. 4/15/2013 USA Boston, MA Foreign-born but US resident Muslims detonate two bombs packed with ball bearings at the Boston Marathon, killing three people and causing several more to lose limbs. 4/19/2013 USA Boston, MA Then, one gun down a university police officer sitting in his car. 8/4/2013 USA Richmond, CA A convert "on a mission from Allah" stabs a store clerk to death.
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nickgusset Shizzlehurst 22 Jun 14 3.04pm | |
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Quote elgrande at 21 Jun 2014 6.52pm
Quote elgrande at 20 Jun 2014 7.50pm
Quote nickgusset at 20 Jun 2014 7.22pm
Quote elgrande at 20 Jun 2014 7.05pm
Quote nickgusset at 20 Jun 2014 6.56pm
Quote elgrande at 20 Jun 2014 6.38pm
Quote nickgusset at 20 Jun 2014 6.34pm
Quote elgrande at 20 Jun 2014 6.06pm
Quote nickgusset at 20 Jun 2014 5.43pm
Quote elgrande at 20 Jun 2014 5.21pm
Quote nickgusset at 20 Jun 2014 5.16pm
Quote elgrande at 20 Jun 2014 5.05pm
Quote nickgusset at 20 Jun 2014 4.19pm
Quote elgrande at 20 Jun 2014 4.03pm
Quote nickgusset at 20 Jun 2014 3.45pm
Gabrielle also stated that non fundamentalist Muslims are irrelevant in winning the 'war on terror'. A mistake I feel. As we are seeing all to often, you get ejeets who profess to hate Islam and all Muslims. This is no way to get them onside is it. In fact I'd argue that the creeping islamophobia is pushing more people away from integrating. Edited by nickgusset (20 Jun 2014 3.46pm)
Fair enough. However do you think that ostracising / railing against ALL Muslims has a positive or negative effect?
If they were given the platform, I'd wager that they would. Call me cynical, but I feel they are not given the platform in the daily mail etc Al as it would contradict Lord Roth mare's fear mongering agenda. You are very cynical,"thems not as blind as he will not see". There's loads more.
Haven't said there are not have I? If they know about them, arrest them on their return! I will continue this discussion later-I have a holradio podcast to record...
Austerity not working and the cuts are a topic subject for debate. Hand wringing is just a default lazy label to use for those who have no argument.
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jamiemartin721 Reading 22 Jun 14 3.24pm | |
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Quote Stirlingsays at 22 Jun 2014 2.30pm
Quote jamiemartin721 at 22 Jun 2014 2.06pm
Quote Stirlingsays at 22 Jun 2014 1.11pm
Quote nickgusset at 22 Jun 2014 12.46pm
Don't disagree about Sadams atrocities, they were awful. However to invade and try and impose western style democracy was either a terrible mistake or done so badly that we are in a worse situation.
The constitutions has been created and voted in by Iraqis. Where is the majority rejection of democracy.....The truth is that the majority were crying out for it. Where have we forced Iraq to become a democratic country.....If it is forced why is there voter turnout higher than ours even with the threat of death at the polls from the fractions with the country opposed to democracy? How much they were crying out for democracy is fairly open to debate, given the scale of the insurgency and militia problems post invasion. However the real problem is not necessarily that we 'imposed' democracy per se, but that the country really lacked a cultural understanding and completed historical discourses, such as those in the west had, that led to the rise of democracy, and its evolution. Its important to remember that every democracy wasn't born intact, as we see today, but grew out of a series of resolved discourses about democratic rights and equality. Initially, British democracy, was highly prejudicial and representative of only the will of a minority of the UK (typically men of wealth, landowners and successful mercantile classes). For democracy, to become truly democratic, Iraq must be stabled for decades, possibly even a century and resolve the issues it has regarding rights and sectarianism, exclusions, prejudices etc through the democratic inclusion of those who are marginalised whilst resisting those who would implement tyranny (either of the state, or other groups). The greatest problem of democracy in Iraq has always been its utilisation by a Shiite majority to implement its will on minorities within Iraq, particularly along sectarian lines. Whilst the Tyranny has been deposed, the state still operates tolerates tyranny and oppression as a means of controlling its specific desires - as well as tolerating many of the unacceptable practices of tyranny (torture, secret police, death squads and disappearances). Wasn't democracy here forged via conflict and military wars? We had the Baron's war.....We had the civil war...Loads of conflict related to how we are governed....The move to majority democracy isn't always an easy process and it takes time to be accepted. There is nothing unusual about what is happening within new democratic countries. I agree that outside of the intelligentsia and middle or lower middle classes many in middle eastern countries weren't so worried about democracy. Still, you could to a smaller extent say the same thing here......It's about who has the power and which groups in society prosper. Democracy always leads to a lesser role for religion.....Some clerics and supporters (not the moderate ones by any means) won't have that.
Indeed, and I think this gets to the core of the problem of 'Liberal Interventionism' itself, the idea that values can be imposed on other nations, that do not have a cultural basis in that nation. The idea of liberal democracy in the west, flourished really only in the post war period. Really prior to then the concept of an 'all inclusive democracy' is more or less revisionist. The nature of democracy is a progression of conflict resolution, from violence resolution to political resolution through inclusion. Democracy has to be seen to be successful in resolving conflicts between social groups through mutual self interest and inclusion. Indeed the existence of democracy flourished in Ancient Athens, because of the battle of Samaras, in which the allied Greeks, with their first ever democratically appointed Admiral, devastated a superior Persian fleet. The recent situation in Iraq is a test for democracy, as it will need to repell the Isis and its allies, without retaliating against the Sunni population, in order to really gain a foothold in the Northern Provinces. Any force needs to become 'liberators' of those captured provinces. For Iraq to become democratic, it has to move away from the idea of being Shiite, Sunni, Kurd, Christian, to being Iraqi (something the Baathists were ironically quite successful at).
"One Nation Under God, has turned into One Nation Under the Influence of One Drug" |
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Stirlingsays 22 Jun 14 3.28pm | |
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Quote legaleagle at 22 Jun 2014 3.03pm
The flaw in the analysis is trying to push every event through a simplistic and narrow left/right, I don't like multiculturalism, prism. 11/5/2009 USA Ft. Hood, TX A Muslim psychiatrist guns down thirteen unarmed soldiers while praising Allah. 12/4/2009 USA Binghamton, NY A non-Muslim Islamic studies professor is stabbed to death by a Muslim grad student in revenge for 'persecuted' Muslims. 2/7/2013 USA Buena Vista, NJ A Muslim targets and beheads two Christian Coptic immigrants. 3/24/2013 USA Ashtabula, OH A Muslim convert walks into a church service with a Quran and guns down his Christian father while praising Allah. 4/15/2013 USA Boston, MA Foreign-born but US resident Muslims detonate two bombs packed with ball bearings at the Boston Marathon, killing three people and causing several more to lose limbs.
You keep calling it simplistic. I just interpret that to be your refusal to accept responsibility for an ideology you support. As I say there is a lot of lefty revisionism going on now. For decades the language they used was vastly different in these areas. Accusations of racism and bigotry were common fare. A lot of those concerns about isolationism and separatism were valid...Yet you would be called a racist for the observation....Some still carry it on. Lets look at your links.....Now I said attacks on US soil....I'm looking at US Muslims attacking the US system. In other words they have been radicalised against their country. I'm not looking for crimes or murders committed by the mentally ill or criminals to happen to be Muslims. Attacks by those wishing to be connected to the worldwide struggle again the west......Like the groups and plots we have to break up here every year it seems. 11/5/2009 USA Ft. Hood The fort Hood incident is exactly the thing I'm looking for. How does most of what you gave me here qualify? The Boston marathon was an attack carried out by immigrants who were raised outside of America......They didn't grow up American.....It doesn't fit what I'm saying.
'Who are you and how did you get in here? I'm a locksmith. And, I'm a locksmith.' (Leslie Nielsen) |
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