you give the impression of someone who hates Islam — Baden
Can one reasonably or legitimately prefer less plurality of ethnicity, religion, politics, and so on? — Bitter Crank
O you believe, obey God and obey the messenger and also those in charge among you" — Qur'an: 4:59
and a little more homogenization wouldn't be a bad thing.
Any guidance here? — Bitter Crank
(1) You use the words 'This is why', as if the sentence logically follows from what went before it. But it doesn't. The only conclusions that follow from what you wrote are 'don't give terrorists planes'. It seems to me that the West's governments have been pretty successful on that front over the last ten years or so.This is why they must be extirpated post haste, — Thorongil
(1) You use the words 'This is why', as if the sentence logically follows from what went before it. But it doesn't. The only conclusions that follow from what you wrote are 'don't give terrorists planes'. It seems to me that the West's governments have been pretty successful on that front over the last ten years or so. — andrewk
The question is, how do you plan to do that? I'm sure the West's security organisations would love to hear your ideas. — andrewk
But it gave no plausible reasons — andrewk
Can you make an even halfway plausible case that radical Muslims are likely to overthrow the governments of Western countries — andrewk
. A relatively small Western force could knock both them and Assad out relatively quickly. — Thorongil
I had maintained from the get go that the US did not have the capacity to solve the problems of the Middle East. It wasn't that we lacked force; that we had (and still have). It was that we did not have the competence to sort out the internal conflicts and contradictions of Iraq or anybody else. We were not alone in this--I don't know who else had (has) both the competence and the ready force necessary. Certainly not Europe. — Bitter Crank
Augustine reasoned that no mortal, secular justice could ever be meaningful, by comparison to the far better achievement of all attaining eternal life. That first part much might have been OK by itself, but Augustine then went further to add a second part. He claimed that secular justice is not the virtue it appears to be, but rather results from the first deadly sin, pride, and thus is not safe, and moreover a danger to faith itself. He even went as far to call secular justice a 'weakness, plague, and disease/'. — ernestm
If one considers the topic without bias, it is not unreasonable to postulate that Mohammed actually picked up the first part of this doctrine from Augustine's doctrine — ernestm
The Ash'aris state that the unaided human mind is unable to determine if something is good or evil, lawful or unlawful, moral or immoral, without the direct aid of divine revelation. — ernestm
The number of casualties from which have been far, far, fewer than from issues like the one WhiskeyWhiskers pointed out, and many other tragedies that Western governments continue to neglect simply because they don't make as exciting news copy as terrorism does.I don't think this is likely. What's not unlikely, because it's already happened, is that radical Muslims will murder citizens in Western countries en masse. — Thorongil
You know it's not simple. If it were simple it would have been done.Finally, you could simply cut off the snake's head by destroying ISIS. — Thorongil
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