Pope pisses off Muslims

I think 9-11 changed a lot of minds around here.

Why would anyone condemn this change of attitude is beyond believe.


Quote from ZZZzzzzzzz:

Modern Islam is rooted in the mind of men and women who practice Islam, just as Christianity is rooted in the mind of Christians, etc.

Those who rationalize illegal actions in the name of their religion, is nothing new...it is modern, and it is ancient.

I do not support violation of our laws, but it really is not my business, or the Pope and his business to sit in judgment of other religions and what they do in their own country.

Very few, very few here at ET gave a rats azzz what these people did within the confines of their own country, and would not to this day would they really care...except for those few Muslims who have taken their ideas to the extremes of violence against America and the current American interest.

The pure intellectual dishonesty of the ET members who focus on what is going on in these countries, when pre-911 the typical ET member would just say "let them kill do whatever they want to each other" demonstrates that they really do not actually care about anyone but themselves.

And, that is a fact...

Wanna guess how many ET members were donating money to Amnesty International and other human rights groups pre-911?

Wanna guess how many have since 911 donated money to Amnesty International and other human rights groups post-911?
 
Please post the statictics of violence against the Catholic Church and their clergy in America by Muslims living in America.

Think it comes anywhere near the burning of black Churches in the south by US extremists?

Quote from hapaboy:

....or we'll burn it down and kill you and your nuns, priests, and followers.

No wait, we intend to do that anyway.....unless you convert of course.

Allah O Akbar!!
 
911 changed a lot of minds, and the closed minded self centered ET members, the norm here, don't give a flying fork about the Muslims and what they do to each other...as long as they don't attack America, and as long as they sell us their oil cheaply.

911 changed minds to become bigots againt Islam, if they were not Muslim haters to begin with.

Puuuuuulllleeeeeeeeeeezzzzzzz spare us the "I care about human rights for the Muslims."

Total BullShit!

Quote from optionpro007:

I think 9-11 changed a lot of minds around here.

Why would anyone condemn this change of attitude is beyond believe.
 
Is that the fake Catholic and "social Christian" coming out to levy an ad hominem attack against me?

Putzie, the neo Nazi...

I take issue with world leaders...and Putzie has only the response to attack me.

What a perennial loozer you are Putzie...

Quote from Pabst:

LMFAO. Here's an ET member who averages 16 posts per day, the vast majority of which are inane "judgements" about Bush, Israel, Christian values, "regressives" or any other topical issue that can be used as a catalyst for his anti-American, anti-family and anti-right agenda. He's engaged in ad hominem attacks with literally dozens of members on this site. Yet it's the truthful words spoken by the Pope that brings on outrage from muZZZlim.

Is your own house in order?

Is the Democrats house (or lack of) in order as they criticize the President?

Is institutional perfection now a prerequisite for the right to express commentary?

The Pope is hardly "casting the first stone." He's not remarking that Islam is a death-cult masquerading as "religion". He's merely pointing out the truth. The Koran encourages death to non-believers and those words were fuel in 1306 and 2006 as justification for murder and forced conversion. The truth hurts but it will set you free.
 
Secular states are the only solution.

Politics and government stay out of the Church's business, and Churches stay out of the politics and the government's business.

The Pope is playing politics, something that Popes have done for generations, which is why we need to tax the Churches who use their pulpit to practice politics.

Now, tell me how separate and distinct the Vatican and the Emperor were in 14th century Rome...

Tell us who had the most power...

Who kissed whose ring?

Quote from TM_Direct:

READ AGAIN....your passing judgement without reading

He repeated criticism of the Prophet Mohammad by the 14th century Byzantine Emperor Manuel II Palaeologus, who is recorded as saying that everything Mohammad brought was evil "such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached


That wasn't the vatican but an Emperor....so the pope cannot even read old history books? Funny, but the last Pope had to apologize for the Catholic Church not being more outspoken against the anti-semitism in Europe 60 years earlier.....so we can only look back in history when???
 
Ok ZZZzz, what or who pissed you off today ?


Quote from ZZZzzzzzzz:

911 changed a lot of minds, and the closed minded self centered ET members, the norm here, don't give a flying fork about the Muslims and what they do to each other...as long as they don't attack America, and as long as they sell us their oil cheaply.

911 changed minds to become bigots againt Islam, if they were not Muslim haters to begin with.

Puuuuuulllleeeeeeeeeeezzzzzzz spare us the "I care about human rights for the Muslims."

Total BullShit!
 
Quote from ZZZzzzzzzz:

Please post the statictics of violence against the Catholic Church and their clergy in America by Muslims living in America.

Think it comes anywhere near the burning of black Churches in the south by US extremists?
My post said nothing about Muslims living in America. It referred to the violence that has followed since including the murder of a nun in Somalia, the attacks on churches internationally, and the calls by Muslims to murder the Pope himself.

As usual, your apoplectic spasms are far off the mark.

Allah O Akbar!
 
Help Islamic extremism, shut up

By Diana West

Friday, September 22, 2006

Shut up.

When all is said and done -- when protestors junk their placards, when burning churches cool, when a murdered nun's grave grows grass -- "shut up" is the underlying message of Pope Rage, the latest fulmination to come from Islam, this time over Pope Benedict's recent lecture on faith and reason. When the pope argued, quoting a Byzantine source on Muhammad, that the practice of forced conversion -- key to Islamic expansion over the centuries -- is inimical to both faith and reason, the reaction of anger and violence was instantaneous. Just shut up, the umma exclaimed.

Or, to put it more elegantly, as did Daniel Pipes: "The Muslim uproar has a goal -- to prohibit criticism of Islam by Christians and thereby impose Shariah norms in the West. Should Westerners accept this central tenet of Islamic law, others will surely follow. Retaining free speech about Islam, therefore, represents a critical defense against the imposition of an Islamic order." The question is, will we retain our free speech about Islam? Speaking at the United Nations this week, Pakistan's Pervez Musharraf asked the international community to ban the "defamation of Islam" -- a rendition of "shut up" that's a constant refrain at the United Nations -- but it looks like mum's already the word. Just read through George W. Bush's address to the world body. "Islamic fascists" are out. "Extremists who use terror as a weapon to create fear" are in.

We probably have presidential pal and roving ambassador Karen Hughes to thank for Bush's discreet-to-the-point-of-incomprehensible talk. "Diplomats say that Muslims hear (the phrase 'Islamic fascists') as an attack on their religion, thereby validating the extremists' false charge that the United States is at war with Islam," writes Morton Kondracke, explaining Hughes' semantic sentiments, which he says have put the kibosh on administration straight talk. But maybe there's more (less) to it. Earlier this month, Hughes wrote: "As I have traveled the world, I have met those who try to justify the violence based on policy differences, long-held grievances or a perceived threat from the West."

Differences, grievances, threat: Isn't she missing some little old jihad thing? Not that she's alone. Take Hughes mentor Edward Djerejian. Veteran diplomat to assorted Middle Eastern countries -- warm to Arabs, cool to Israel (just like his close associate James Baker, who now co-chairs the vaunted Iraq Study Group) -- Djerejian is another happy warrior of ambiguity. The "seminal challenge" of our age, as Djerejian describes it, is "the struggle for ideas between the forces of moderation and extremism, whether it be secular extremism or religious extremism of no matter what religion, no matter what culture."

This is a challenge, all right -- a challenge to know what he's talking about. But such obfuscation is more than just the antithesis of reasoned critique. It also happens to comply with what Pipes calls "Shariah norms" in the West.

Islam prohibits "blasphemy," which includes criticism of its prophet Muhammad. The sharia penalty is death. But if it is "extremists" who carry the penalty out -- as in the ritual murders of Theo van Gogh in Amsterdam (2004) and Mohammed Taha in Sudan (2006) -- what Pope Rage reveals is how shockingly little separates "moderates" from "extremists" when it comes to the blasphemy-taboo in the first place.

"Even the most moderate and Westernized Muslims will not tolerate insults to the Prophet Muhammad," writes Tulin Daloglu, commenting on Pope Rage from the moderate side of Islam, in The Washington Times. "Each offense unites Muslims against Western prejudices and rejection -- and the extremists gain more credibility."

So shut up.

Blogging online, columnist Mona Charen reported on another moderate, George Washington University's Seyyed Hossein Nasr. In an interview with NPR host Diane Rehm, Nasr contested that Pope Rage violence against Christians was not unprovoked. As Charen wrote, "Diane Rehm equably restated his position (I paraphrase): 'So you think words are violence.' He confirmed." So shut up.

Meanwhile, listen to the voice of bona fide "extremism," Great Britain's own Anjem Choudary, as reported in the Evening Standard: "The Muslims take their religion very seriously and non-Muslims must appreciate that and must also understand that there may be serious consequences if you insult Islam and the prophet."

He continued: "Whoever insults the message of Muhammad is going to be subject to capital punishment."

"Shut up," say the moderates, "or else," say the extremists. Frankly, this sounds an awful lot as if the "moderates" are as non-reasonable as the "extremists." This may be shocking -- but it's nothing to be left speechless over.
 
So your previous comments were directed toward only that small percentage of Muslims who interpret Islam incorrectly, not Islam nor all Muslims as a whole.

Quote from hapaboy:

My post said nothing about Muslims living in America. It referred to the violence that has followed since including the murder of a nun in Somalia, the attacks on churches internationally, and the calls by Muslims to murder the Pope himself.

As usual, your apoplectic spasms are far off the mark.

Allah O Akbar!
 
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