wiesiek wrote:We need to ask a new holly entity for brand new book.
, problem is that they don`t change verses. It is quite understandable, you cannot change something, what is sacred for you .
We need to ask a new holly entity for brand new book.
Christians don't seem to be as violent as Muslims.
leifeng wrote:So what's your solution?
There are only three options:
1-Do nothing and accept Islamic terrorism as part of our lives
2-Ban Muslims
3-Fix the ideology
I believe 3 is the most realistic and humane option. You can't change Islam worldwide but you can regulate it within the borders of a western country.
Born in Essex to a British Pakistani family, Nawaz is a former member of the radical Islamist group Hizb ut-Tahrir. This association led to his arrest in Egypt in December 2001, where he remained imprisoned until 2006. Reading books on human rights and interacting with Amnesty International, which adopted him as a prisoner of conscience, resulted in a change of heart. This led Nawaz to leave Hizb-ut-Tahrir in 2007, renounce his Islamist past and call for a "Secular Islam".
Dmitri wrote:wiesiek wrote:We need to ask a new holly entity for brand new book.
No worries, they already did. A brand new civilization is in the works!
On Jan. 2, Saudi Arabia beheaded 47 people across 13 cities. Among the executed was cleric Nimr al-Nimr, a leader from the country’s Shia religious minority who was arrested for leading peaceful protests against the regime in 2011-12.
Sheikh al-Nimr was known throughout the Islamic world for his staunch opposition to sectarianism.
The outspoken Saudi dissident firmly insisted that Sunnis and Shias are not enemies, and should unite against the sectarian regimes oppressing them. “The oppressed should unite together against the oppressors, instead of becoming tools in the hands of the oppressors,” he declared.
By executing a dissident who challenged sectarianism, the Saudi monarchy was only further fomenting it.
The oppressed should unite together against the oppressors, instead of becoming tools in the hands of the oppressors
Ali Mohammed al-Nimr, the nephew of the murdered cleric, was arrested at age 17 for attending a peaceful pro-democracy protest in 2012. He was allegedly tortured, before being sentenced to death by beheading and crucifixion.
Saudi Arabia is one of the last places on the planet where crucifixions are still practiced — ordered by the government itself.
In recent years, the Saudi monarchy has also arrested at least two other peaceful teenage pro-democracy activists and sentenced them to death.
Journalist Abby Martin devoted an episode of her show “The Empire Files” to exploring the Saudi-U.S. relationship. The episode, aptly titled “Inside Saudi Arabia: Butchery, Slavery & History of Revolt,” displays the brutality of the monarchy in excruciating detail.
“The sweetest sound I know is the Muslim call to prayer.” .... Barack Hussein Obam
By their own website’s admission, if U.S. law conflicts with Sharia law, “we follow Sharia law.” It also openly admitted separate rules for men and women in their proceedings, discriminating and humiliating women which is against the U.S. Constitution. The Islamic Tribunal also openly declared that they hope [this] will “set a precedence that will be emulated and duplicated throughout the country.”
Read more: http://www.thepoliticalinsider.com/musl ... z44OaW0xZg
I can tell you solutions that don't work? Killing people has never been a permanent solution unless it's extermination or genocide. Unfortunately, even Christians have tried it in the past. It generally doesn't work, but it's worse if it does.
leifeng wrote:You can't change Islam worldwide but you can regulate it within the borders of a western country.
Dmitri wrote:Aside from that being a perfect setup for a whole lot of future trouble -- may I remind you of this little bit: "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; (...)"
chud wrote:Dmitri wrote:Aside from that being a perfect setup for a whole lot of future trouble -- may I remind you of this little bit: "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; (...)"
But we can prevent people from carrying out extreme sentences rendered via Sharia Law, such as killing or maiming people.
But we can prevent people from carrying out extreme sentences rendered via Sharia Law, such as killing or maiming people.
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