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Old 08-25-2005, 02:16 AM   #81 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by politicophile
Host, if you are planning on making all of us read through your ridiculously long quotations, I respectfully ask that you read through them before posting and make some very basic effort to verify their authenticity. This quotation is so obviously fraudulant that I can't possibly believe you actually read the article.
Please accept my sincere apology, politicophile, and everyone else who read the deceptive, fake, "news" release from the satirical site, whitehouse.org that I led with in the first quote box of my last post on this thread.

Since I initiated the topic of this thread, I recognize that I have more of a responsibility to post information that I sincerely believe is accurate, than everyone else here, does. I posted what I believed to be an archive press release from the official white house website. I do thoroughly read every quote that I post, and I did not do so, in this instance.

The following is a fact based article that describes a "pay back" to Pat Robertson's CBN, by the republican congressional majority, in the recently passed "transportation bill". The question I have, is...."pay back" to the Robertson organization....for what?
Quote:
http://home.hamptonroads.com/stories...0216&ran=85493
$10.8 million in Congress bill goes to Beach link

By TOM HOLDEN, The Virginian-Pilot
© August 5, 2005

Rep. Thelma Drake said Thursday that she supports putting $10.8 million into a new interchange along Interstate 64 – in spite of the fact that the connector hasn’t been a priority for state and regional road planners – because she believes it’s a project that can quickly ease congestion........

...The interchange is not on the region’s list of priority interstate projects, nor is it in the Virginia Department of Transportation’s six-year spending plan. No road exists that would connect to the interchange, though a development executive hired by CBN has said plans call for building one with private money. That road would cut through the development to Centerville Turnpike.

CBN also is waiting on results of a study into whether federal highway safety guidelines would allow the interchange. The Federal Highway Administration is among regulators and planning agencies that would have to approve the project.

The interchange appeared as a $1 million line item in a version of the transportation bill approved earlier this year by the House of Representatives.

By the time it emerged from a House-Senate conference committee early last week, the amount had risen to $10.8 million.

“I can’t explain how it got to be $10.8 million,” Drake said. She said she had no role in the increase.

Lowell W. Morse, a real estate executive hired by CBN, said Wednesday that Drake, Rep. J. Randy Forbes and Sens. John W. Warner and George Allen supported the ministry’s project as the transportation bill made its way through Congress. All four lawmakers are Republicans.

But Christy Boardman, press aide to Forbes, wrote in an e-mail Thursday that the congressman had no role in submitting the request for an interchange near CBN.

CBN officials met with Forbes’ staff to discuss the project in January 2004 , she said.

But, she said, their request for help in securing federal money for the interchange was denied because “the project isn’t in our district and there are many other high-

priority projects throughout the 4th District that were much more deserving.”

Calls to Allen’s press office about the interchange weren’t returned Wednesday or Thursday.

John Ullyot, a spokesman for Warner, said Wednesday that the senator supported federal money for the interchange after learning that a “significant private contribution” would be made to help build it.

Morse said Wednesday that developers are expected to help pay for the interchange, the total price of which he said could range between $30 million and $40 million. Typically, most of the cost of interchanges is paid for with federal tax dollars, with some contribution from the state.

Morse’s company, Morse and Associates Inc., is helping CBN advance its long-held plans to develop about 500 acres located along I-64 and straddling the Chesapeake and Virginia Beach city lines.

Morse said the project would include housing, retail and commercial space that could have a value of up to $300 million when completed. No timetable for the development has been released.

Drake said she has seen CBN’s plan for its undeveloped land.

She called it “an incredible economic development project” that will bring housing and jobs to the region.
The article is an example of "corporate welfare", if the highway interchange is primarily necessary to increase the value/development potential of CBN's real estate holdings. With the newly emerging "energy crisis", is the best use of deficict enhancing federal spending, construction of a new highway interchange that was <b>"not on the region’s list of priority interstate projects, nor is it in the Virginia Department of Transportation’s six-year spending plan" ?</b>

This federal appropriation indicates that Robertson and CBN still have the ability to influence federal legislators directly, possibly for their mutual financial benefit, since CBN did not appear to work through conventional local and state transportation agencies to get the funding. This is disturbing. It is also extremely alarming, that, with motor fuel headed towards the $3.00 per gallon level, and possibly beyond, that a transportation bill that funds the expansion of automobile dependent, urban sprawl, and tax breaks for the oil industry, funds these counterproductive provisions at the cost of more federal borrowing and further neglect of mass transit infrastructure and an emphasis on new development in urban centers that will become more attractive because of the effects of high fuel prices on public attitudes and pocketbooks.

The 2004 election cemented the political power and influence of politicians from predominantly non-urban states. These are people who come from places where the automobile is the only practical means of transport. They promote policies and funding that are all about insuring plentiful oil without a signifigant plan for efficiency or conservation. It is ironic to observe the political "hit" that they are just beginning to experience from their constituents as the fossil fuel availability that drives their policy goals becomes increasingly inaffordable, even as the rising price and their rising deficit gnaws away at the stability of U.S. currency.

Do not discount the fact that Pat Robertson founded and financed the ACLJ with the goal of countering the perceived "liberal" influence of the ACLU. Pat's "foresight" and investment seem to be bringing a return, lately. Pat hired the ACLJ's director. Pat is neither an irrelevant force, nor one that "mainstream" republican leaders can distance themselves from. He has his own "bully pulpit", too much money and fund raising ability, and the same political base that Rove has so methodically cultivated for Bush. I believe that Bush and Cheney share Pat's sentiment about Chavez. They are taking us back to Pre-Castro, "Batista" style, U.S. imperialism, always a great climate for white European Spanish and American business investors, but terribly tragic for the "brown", impoversihed masses..........
Quote:
http://www.law.com/jsp/article.jsp?id=1120208726476
Choosing a Justice: Bush's Key Players
Legal Times
07-05-2005

First, President George W. Bush and the White House must choose the nominee to the Supreme Court to replace the departing Justice Sandra Day O'Connor. Then comes the battle to see that nominee confirmed by the Senate. Informing that process in a variety of ways will be a handful of players, both inside and outside of government, whose influence is felt within the Bush administration and on Capitol Hill. Here's a look at some of those who'll be working -- sometimes publicly, oftentimes quietly -- on behalf of the Bush administration.

.....Name: Jay Sekulow
Position: Chief Counsel for the American Center for Law & Justice
Background: A leading Supreme Court advocate, particularly on church-state issues; <b>faculty member for DOJ's Office of Legal Education.
Role: One of the so-called "four horsemen" who met last week at the White House to discuss high court strategy (the others being Gray, Leo, and Meese) Sekulow will help coordinate the Republican outreach.</b> With his nationally broadcast radio show and organization's close ties to the Christian right (it was founded by television evangelist Pat Robertson), Sekulow will play a key role in galvanizing support for one of Bush's key constituencies. He has already met with officials at the White House and Justice Department. On July 1, he sent e-mails to 850,000 supporters and spoke on his daily radio show. "Now the focus is on the base," Sekulow says. "Once the president makes a decision we want to make sure that we get a confirmation." .......
Quote:
http://www.aclj.org/About/default.aspx?Section=10
HISTORY OF ACLJ
......The ACLJ began its operations in Virginia Beach, Virginia – where the ACLJ was founded by Dr. Pat Robertson, a Yale Law School graduate. Over the years, the ACLJ has expanded its work and reach with the creation of the European Centre for Law and Justice, based in Strasbourg, France and the Slavic Centre for Law and Justice, based in Moscow, Russia. Today, the ACLJ has a network of attorneys nationwide and its national headquarters is located in Washington, D.C. – just steps away from the Supreme Court and Congress.

In addition to its religious liberties work, the ACLJ also specializes in constitutional law involving the issues of national security, human life, marriage, judicial nominations, pornography, and protecting patriotic expression including our national motto and the Pledge of Allegiance.........
The Robertson, ACLJ "Op", in and of itself, coupled with the Rove/RNC perversion of the thinking of the members of the Christian "Right" convinces me that "mullah" is the approriate title for Robertson and a number of others who manipulate "JAY-sus" as an opiate for the masses who are duped into supporting their power and wealth grab. The Chavez "rant" is icing on the cake because it will prompt some of you here and elsewhere in the U.S. to focus some attention on the Rove/Delay/Frist/Dobson orchestration that makes the Bush/Cheney attack on the sensibilities, security, and constitutionally guaranteed "rights" of informed Americans, even possible......
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Old 08-25-2005, 07:19 AM   #82 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by filtherton
I'm just sitting here wondering where all the christian outrage is. It seems to me that the vast majority of christians, by not publicly expressing their disapproval of robertson's assassination call, are in fact giving implicit approval of said assassination call.
Given what has happened in the last few days, I'm wondering if you are still wondering.
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Old 08-25-2005, 08:09 AM   #83 (permalink)
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Yes. There is a difference between OBL's calls for war against the infidels, and Pat Robertson's war and violence incitement.

Pat Robertson is far better at it, and is speaking to people far more competent at mass civilian slaughter and megadeath.

OBL is a sick, old, weak man hiding in some cave somewhere.

Pat Robertson has the ear of the leader of the most aggressive military on earth, has millions of followers who believe he speaks the word of God, and has massive political power (volunteers, money, and seemingly policy) over large swaths of the dominant national party in the most militarially aggressive nation on earth.

OBL speaks those who feel hopeless and oppressed, and tells them to attack their oppressors. OBL is hunted by nearly every government on the planet. Pat Robertson is invited to the White House.

One side has nuclear bombs, can drop megatonnes of conventional explosive at will anywhere in the world -- and has shown a regular enthusiasm for doing it. The other can manage high-end paper cutters.

Forgive me if I consider Pat more dangerous than OBL.

Don't get me wrong. Both Pat and OBL are evil, dispicable men. They use religion, a tool that can bring harmony to mankind, and use it to incite death, destruction and murder. But don't expect me to respect Pat more simply because he wears suits and looks more like me.

So, what side are you on?
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Old 08-25-2005, 09:09 AM   #84 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Yakk
Yes. There is a difference between OBL's calls for war against the infidels, and Pat Robertson's war and violence incitement.

Pat Robertson is far better at it, and is speaking to people far more competent at mass civilian slaughter and megadeath.

OBL is a sick, old, weak man hiding in some cave somewhere.

Pat Robertson has the ear of the leader of the most aggressive military on earth, has millions of followers who believe he speaks the word of God, and has massive political power (volunteers, money, and seemingly policy) over large swaths of the dominant national party in the most militarially aggressive nation on earth.

OBL speaks those who feel hopeless and oppressed, and tells them to attack their oppressors. OBL is hunted by nearly every government on the planet. Pat Robertson is invited to the White House.

One side has nuclear bombs, can drop megatonnes of conventional explosive at will anywhere in the world -- and has shown a regular enthusiasm for doing it. The other can manage high-end paper cutters.

Forgive me if I consider Pat more dangerous than OBL.

Don't get me wrong. Both Pat and OBL are evil, dispicable men. They use religion, a tool that can bring harmony to mankind, and use it to incite death, destruction and murder. But don't expect me to respect Pat more simply because he wears suits and looks more like me.

So, what side are you on?
Pat Robertson is more dangerous than Osama bin Laden. Pat Robertson is more dangerous than Osama bin Laden. Pat Robertson is more dangerous than Osama bin Laden... - I thought that if I said it out loud a few times, I might be able to make sense of it.

Pat Robertson says that it would be a good idea to kill one person and you think that makes him more dangerous than the man who authorized the 9/11 attacks and God knows what else? I'm sorry, but I cannot understand this position. Where do Hitler and Stalin fit in? Maybe in between OBL and Robertson?

Back at you Jack: what side are you on?
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Old 08-25-2005, 09:57 AM   #85 (permalink)
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I'm on the side of truth, and I think they are on equal moral low ground. They're both espousing terrorism.
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Old 08-25-2005, 10:01 AM   #86 (permalink)
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Location: Ontario, Canada
Quote:
Originally Posted by politicophile
Pat Robertson is more dangerous than Osama bin Laden. Pat Robertson is more dangerous than Osama bin Laden. Pat Robertson is more dangerous than Osama bin Laden... - I thought that if I said it out loud a few times, I might be able to make sense of it.
The Terrorists are incompetent. Terrorism in general is a poor and ineffective way to cause harm to your opponents, unless your opponents sieze up and go into spasms.

The largest Terrorist attack in history managed to kill more people in that month than the number of traffic accidents -- in that same city -- in that same month. I believe by the second month, traffic accidents where once again ahead.

And that attack succeeded far beyond the wildest dreams of the attackers. They got increadibly "lucky", they had no idea they would cause nearly that much damage.

Terrorism, as an offensive weapon, is ineffective and gimpy.

The US military machine is highly effective at overthrowing nations, causing megacivilian deaths, and generally causing damage. Do I really need to provide citations of the nations which the US has invaded, attacked, overthrown, or destabalized? Here is a game! You pick a year -- any year from 1960 on -- and I'll tell you a nation that the US was destabalizing, attacking, or invading within 4 years of that date.

Maybe you'll win. But I doubt it. After all, the US election cycle is 8 years long, and what are the odds that a president would give up that big a popularity boost?

What I see is two men. One of which has a broken neck and is wielding a wet noodle, and swearing he wants to slice you open with it. The other has a rocket launcher aimed at you, and tells you to start dancing. Who is the more dangerous?

Because that is the relative power involved here.

Yes, OBL managed to encourage people to kill a few thousand people. This sucks. But at the scale of global conflict and US military power, it is a pittance.

Quote:
Pat Robertson says that it would be a good idea to kill one person and you think that makes him more dangerous than the man who authorized the 9/11 attacks and God knows what else? I'm sorry, but I cannot understand this position. Where do Hitler and Stalin fit in? Maybe in between OBL and Robertson?
Pat Robertson says it is a good idea for the US government to kill the democratically elected leader of a country that has engaged in nothing that even approximates acts of war against the USA.

Unilateral, covert, acts of war by the USA have caused untold damage over the world. The USA has been willing to engage in doings these thinly vieled acts, and the people of the USA have stood by and cheered. Continued support for such acts is dangerous, deadly, immorral and evil.

And I will not stand idly by, and pretend it doesn't matter. I mean, he just wants the US government to overthrow a popular, democratically elected, Latin American president. Nothing the US hasn't done before, anon and anon -- that makes it right and just? Right?

No. It does not. I will not pardon these acts. There is a line, and I will not cross it, nor will I excuse those who do.

Quote:
Back at you Jack: what side are you on?
Truth. I will not ally with liars. I will not pretend murderers are not murderers. I will not excuse someone of their crimes just because they wear a suit, look like me, and speak honeyed words.
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Old 08-25-2005, 10:53 AM   #87 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Yakk
The Terrorists are incompetent. Terrorism in general is a poor and ineffective way to cause harm to your opponents, unless your opponents sieze up and go into spasms.

The largest Terrorist attack in history managed to kill more people in that month than the number of traffic accidents -- in that same city -- in that same month. I believe by the second month, traffic accidents where once again ahead.

And that attack succeeded far beyond the wildest dreams of the attackers. They got increadibly "lucky", they had no idea they would cause nearly that much damage.
Terrorism is ineffective? Tell that, first, to the families of the 9/11 victims. Then tell that to Zapatero and the other cowards in Spain. Terrorists kill people: they kill innocent people, which is the very thing you demonize the United States for doing. Let's try and avoid a double standard here.


Quote:
Originally Posted by Yakk
Terrorism, as an offensive weapon, is ineffective and gimpy.
Soviets in Afghanistan, Americans in Vietnam - 'nuff said.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Yakk
The US military machine is highly effective at overthrowing nations, causing megacivilian deaths, and generally causing damage. Do I really need to provide citations of the nations which the US has invaded, attacked, overthrown, or destabalized? Here is a game! You pick a year -- any year from 1960 on -- and I'll tell you a nation that the US was destabalizing, attacking, or invading within 4 years of that date.

Maybe you'll win. But I doubt it. After all, the US election cycle is 8 years long, and what are the odds that a president would give up that big a popularity boost?
A particularly smelly red herring, but nothing more. Pat Robertson, as a single American and not a political leader, cannot and should not be blamed for what you consider to be immoral actions of the United States. I don't blame OBL for forcing Saudi Arabian women to walk around in 100 degree heat wearing black shadoors.

Megadeaths are millions of deaths. The U.S. has participated in some conflicts where there were civilian megadeaths: WWI (I'm guessing), WWI, possibly Vietnam and Korea - that's all. Especially post-1960 (otherwise, you will invariably start talking about Native Americans or slavery), the United States has not been causing civilian megadeaths.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Yakk
What I see is two men. One of which has a broken neck and is wielding a wet noodle, and swearing he wants to slice you open with it. The other has a rocket launcher aimed at you, and tells you to start dancing. Who is the more dangerous?
I agree with you that this is the situation we are facing: now we need to stop worrying about Robertson's wet noodle (which is very small in the first place ) and focus on OBL's rocket launcher.


Quote:
Originally Posted by Yakk
Yes, OBL managed to encourage people to kill a few thousand people. This sucks. But at the scale of global conflict and US military power, it is a pittance.
Ooooookay. But Pat Robertson casually suggesting we off the President of Venezuela some how does measure on that scale? We're not comparing OBL with The Great Satan here - we're comparing him to the annoying, incorrect blowhard known as Pat Robertson.


Quote:
Originally Posted by Yakk
Pat Robertson says it is a good idea for the US government to kill the democratically elected leader of a country that has engaged in nothing that even approximates acts of war against the USA.

Unilateral, covert, acts of war by the USA have caused untold damage over the world. The USA has been willing to engage in doings these thinly vieled acts, and the people of the USA have stood by and cheered. Continued support for such acts is dangerous, deadly, immorral and evil.

And I will not stand idly by, and pretend it doesn't matter. I mean, he just wants the US government to overthrow a popular, democratically elected, Latin American president. Nothing the US hasn't done before, anon and anon -- that makes it right and just? Right?

No. It does not. I will not pardon these acts. There is a line, and I will not cross it, nor will I excuse those who do.
Part slippery slope, part red herring. The progression is facinating, but I still feel that your analogy here is entirely incorrect.



Quote:
Originally Posted by Yakk
[What side are you on?] Truth. I will not ally with liars. I will not pretend murderers are not murderers. I will not excuse someone of their crimes just because they wear a suit, look like me, and speak honeyed words.
I'm not suggesting you ally yourself with anybody, least of all Pat Robertson. I'm just suggesting you face the breath-takingly obvious reality that Osama bin Laden is more dangerous, more sinister, more evil, etc - than Pat Robertson. I can't put it any more clearly than that.
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Last edited by politicophile; 08-25-2005 at 10:56 AM..
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Old 08-25-2005, 11:12 AM   #88 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by politicophile
Soviets in Afghanistan, Americans in Vietnam - 'nuff said.
That wasn't terrorism that was either war or insurgency. I may be splitting hairs here but I don't think so.




Ultimately I agree with an earlier post... Robertson and someone like OBL are on the same moral ground. In this regard they are equal. I don't think there is any shading when it comes to calling for someone's death (whether it is an individual or the entire Western world).

Yes, Robertson has the ear of the leader of the US but the likelihood of the US Administration carrying out his wishes is rather remote.
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Old 08-25-2005, 11:20 AM   #89 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Lebell
Given what has happened in the last few days, I'm wondering if you are still wondering.
As far as i've heard, the vast majority of christians have said not a thing. I mean, it's one thing for a few christian leaders to decry such statements here or there, but you must understand that i've read parts of the bible and it is indeed seemingly a violent and bloodthirsty ideology. How many instances are there of the christian god destroying entire communities, civilizations even, as part of some sort of immature sense of vengeance? Have you heard the story of job? If this is the behavior of the christian god, the being in whose image christians believe themselves to be made, what reason do i have to believe that most christians are above the use of a little assassination if it furthers their agenda?

Last edited by filtherton; 08-25-2005 at 12:17 PM..
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Old 08-25-2005, 11:36 AM   #90 (permalink)
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Yakk...you've done a great job of explaining the point that the difference between the "mullahs" of the Muslim faith and the Christian "mullahs" here in the U.S., is that the ones here have the actual influence, power, and wealth to actually trun their hatred and ignorance into real attacks that result in death and injury to real people and further erode (if that is even possible to do to the current administration...) the reputation of our country in the eyes of our former allies.

Those who dismiss Robertson as irrelevant should reconsider........

We've discussed the federal republican politicians' relatiobship with the religious right, before.....here:
<a href="http://www.tfproject.org/tfp/showthread.php?t=83400">Do Religious Right's Beliefs Pose Threat to U.S.?</a>

Quote:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...070101831.html
Supreme Court Justice O'Connor Resigns

By Peter Baker
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, July 2, 2005; Page A01

......."This is the most important resignation and nomination . . . in our lifetime and probably more than that," said Jay Sekulow, chief counsel to the American Center for Law and Justice, an advocacy group founded by evangelist Pat Robertson. "It's very, very significant. Justice O'Connor is the pivotal vote on so many key cases. This has got gargantuan" implications, Sekulow said.........
If you think that 700 Club/CBN, are Robertson's only outlet for broadcasting misinformation and propaganda, think again;
the guy has the tentacles of an octopus, as far as the influence that he is capable of projecting. Robertson's puppet at ACLJ, Jay Sekulow, has his own daily call in, syndicated radio talk show.....
http://www.aclj.org/OnTheRadio/Archive.aspx

Jay Sekulow's "resume" from the ACLJ website
Quote:
http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php...aw_and_Justice
According to the website of the American Center for Law and Justice "in 1990, Dr. M.G. Pat Robertson, a Yale law school graduate, religious leader, entrepreneur, and concerned citizen, decided to act to undo the damage done by almost a century of liberal thinking and activism. He founded the American Center for Law and Justice".

In its profile, the Center states:

The ACLJ, in just a few years, has become this nation's pre-eminent public interest law firm and educational organization dedicated to defending and advancing religious liberty, the sanctity of human life, and the two-parent, marriage-bound family.....
Quote:
http://www.liberty.edu/academics/
The Liberty Difference

Liberty's professors integrate a Christian worldview into every subject area. This biblical foundation is the cornerstore upon which we build academic excellence.

Our faculty hold degrees from more than 400 colleges and universities. They join Liberty only after completing a rigorous interview process that confirms a born-again relationship with Christ, a clear understanding of the Purpose and Aims of Liberty, and a commitment to teaching excellence.

http://www.liberty.edu/index.cfm?PID=6909
Ten Liberty University Distinctives No Other University Can Claim

by Jerry Falwell, Founder/Chancellor

Liberty University surely is not the only Christian school in America. But I sincerely believe Liberty is the finest for training champions for Christ. Here is why:

4. An uncompromising doctrinal statement, based upon an inerrant Bible, a Christian worldview beginning with belief in biblical Creationism, an eschatological belief in the pre-millennial, pre-tribulational coming of Christ for all of His Church, dedication to world evangelization, an absolute repudiation of “political correctness,” a strong commitment to political conservatism, total rejection of socialism, and firm support for America’s economic system of free enterprise.

7. A highly-qualified, non-tenured teaching faculty. More than 68% have terminal degrees. Unlike many major universities, graduate assistants do not stand-in for faculty. The faculty does the teaching.
Quote:
http://www.startribune.com/dynamic/s...&story=5575519
Last update: August 24, 2005 at 7:14 AM
Michael A. Babcock: Americans should accept and defend our imperialism
Michael A. Babcock
Published August 24, 2005

President Bush's basic vocabulary -- good and evil, war and victory -- always has made his liberal critics uncomfortable. But two weeks ago Bush seemed to be speaking to members of his own administration when he made it crystal clear to the world that we're fighting a "war" against terrorism.

It's not, as Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld recently has been nuancing it, a "global struggle against violent extremism." It's a war -- plain and simple.

Of course, wars are neither plain nor simple. They're messy and unpredictable affairs. But to his credit, the president seems to recognize -- in his gut -- that a shift in vocabulary will change nothing. A policy is either right or wrong.

So what are we to make of Rumsfeld's relabeling project -- and the president's very public rejection of a new vocabulary? It has settled one thing for sure: Bush has a firmer handle than even Rumsfeld does on how empires think and act.

And I don't mean that as a criticism. It's time for us to accept and defend our imperialism.

Imperialism has received bad press for most of the last hundred years. We think of pith helmets when we hear the word, and tiger hunts, and pathetic little bands in remote Indian provinces playing "God Save the King." We think of a stiff upper lip that looks, over time, more like foolish bravado than noble resolve. We think of colonial hubris and the blind assertion of cultural superiority.

But ancient Rome -- always the brand name in empires -- is the better model. Rome demonstrated that empires can be about much more than blood sports, tiger hunts, rapacious oil companies and military adventures in far-off places. Empires can also stand for things that make the world a better place. Political stability, the rule of law, the virtues of political enfranchisement, the preservation of learning and the arts, and respect for other cultures and religions: These are some of the better legacies left to us by the Romans. They pulled this off -- with all their faults -- because they believed in that quaint concept we call destiny.

Americans, too, always have believed in a higher purpose. Almost 400 years ago, John Winthrop envisioned America as a shining "city upon a hill." Ronald Reagan echoed that language in speeches that resonated deeply with the American people. The liberal elites in Europe and America never understood the mythic power of Reagan's rhetoric -- just as they don't understand Bush's simple vocabulary today. That disconnect is easy to explain. If you believe that history is the product only of material forces -- and is never nudged onward by some transcendent will -- then all this talk about destiny will strike you as, well, a bit spooky.

Bush has embraced the transcendent view -- and the clear-cut vocabulary of war that goes with it. That certainty may creep out a lot of people, but that doesn't keep the president from declaring -- repeatedly and rightly -- that we represent a force for good in the world. What we're fighting for cannot be reduced to "one set of interests" struggling against "another set of interests" in a world of diminishing natural resources. We are fighting a war over things that matter -- not the right to wear pith helmets, hunt tigers or drill oil wells in distant lands. We are fighting for ideals that transcend race, culture and religion -- ideals of freedom and human dignity.

And that's the kind of "imperialism" we should be willing to defend.

Michael A. Babcock, an associate professor of humanities at Liberty University in Lynchburg, Va., is the author of "The Night Attila Died: Solving the Murder of Attila the Hun." He wrote this article for Newsday


http://www.theunionleader.com/articl...?article=58280
Columns - July 27, 2005

Michael A. Babcock:
Al-Qaida has learned from the terror master: Attila the Hun
By MICHAEL A. BABCOCK
Guest Commentary

............Attila understood that the empire, like Europe today, had lost its will to survive. A handful of Romans, too few to change the tide of history, recognized the danger too late. They conspired to kill the Hun on his home turf, in his own bed, which is the best place, after all, to kill a terrorist who’s hell-bent on destroying you. We need this kind of resolve today, and we’ll need it for a very long time.
Quote:
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0149408/quotes
Memorable Quotes from
"The 700 Club"

Jerry Falwell: And, I know that I'll hear from them for this. But, throwing God out successfully with the help of the federal court system, throwing God out of the public square, out of the schools. The abortionists have got to bear some burden for this because God will not be mocked. And when we destroy 40 million little innocent babies, we make God mad. I really believe that the pagans, and the abortionists, and the feminists, and the gays and the lesbians who are actively trying to make that an alternative lifestyle, the ACLU, People For the American Way - all of them who have tried to secularize America - I point the finger in their face and say, "You helped this happen."
Pat Robertson: Well, I totally concur, and the problem is we have adopted that agenda at the highest levels of our government. And so we're responsible as a free society for what the top people do. And, the top people, of course, is the court system.
Pat Robertson: You say you're supposed to be nice to the Episcopalians and the Presbyterians and the Methodists and this, that, and the other thing. Nonsense. I don't have to be nice to the spirit of the Antichrist. I can love the people who hold false opinions but I don't have to be nice to them............

.......Pat Robertson: The courts are merely a ruse, if you will, for humanist, atheistic educators to beat up on Christians.

Pat Robertson: [during an interview] I read your book. When you get through, you say, "If I could just get a nuclear device inside Foggy Bottom, I think that's the answer." I mean, you get through this, and you say, "We've got to blow that thing up." I mean, is it as bad as you say?
Quote:
http://archives.cnn.com/2001/US/09/14/Falwell.apology/
Falwell apologizes to gays, feminists, lesbians

September 14, 2001 Posted: 2:55 AM EDT (0655 GMT)

LYNCHBURG, Virginia (CNN) -- The Rev. Jerry Falwell said late Thursday he did not mean to blame feminists, gays or lesbians for bringing on the terrorist attacks in New York and Washington this week, in remarks on a television program earlier in the day.

On the broadcast of the Christian television program "The 700 Club," Falwell made the following statement:

"I really believe that the pagans, and the abortionists, and the feminists, and the gays and the lesbians who are actively trying to make that an alternative lifestyle, the ACLU, People For the American Way, all of them who have tried to secularize America. I point the finger in their face and say 'you helped this happen.'"

Falwell, pastor of the 22,000-member Thomas Road Baptist Church, viewed the attacks as God's judgment on America for "throwing God out of the public square, out of the schools. The abortionists have got to bear some burden for this because God will not be mocked."

But in a phone call to CNN, Falwell said that only the hijackers and terrorists were responsible for the deadly attacks.

"I do believe, as a theologian, based upon many Scriptures and particularly Proverbs 14:23, which says 'living by God's principles promotes a nation to greatness, violating those principles brings a nation to shame,'" he said.

Falwell said he believes the ACLU and other organizations "which have attempted to secularize America, have removed our nation from its relationship with Christ on which it was founded."

"I therefore believe that that created an environment which possibly has caused God to lift the veil of protection which has allowed no one to attack America on our soil since 1812," he said.

Pat Robertson, host of the 700 Club program, seemed to agree with Falwell's earlier statements in a prayer during the program.

"We have sinned against Almighty God, at the highest level of our government, we've stuck our finger in your eye," said Robertson. "The Supreme Court has insulted you over and over again, Lord. They've taken your Bible away from the schools. They've forbidden little children to pray. They've taken the knowledge of God as best they can, and organizations have come into court to take the knowledge of God out of the public square of America."

National Gay and Lesbian Task Force Executive Director Lorri L. Jean bristled at the idea that gays and lesbians had anything to do with the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon that may have left thousands dead, and demanded an apology from Falwell.

"The terrible tragedy that has befallen our nation, and indeed the entire global community, is the sad byproduct of fanaticism. It has its roots in the same fanaticism that enables people like Jerry Falwell to preach hate against those who do not think, live, or love in the exact same way he does," she said.

"The tragedies that have occurred this week did not occur because someone made God mad, as Mr. Falwell asserts. They occurred because of hate, pure and simple. It is time to move beyond a place of hate and to a place of healing. We hope that Mr. Falwell will apologize to the U.S. and world communities."

Falwell told CNN: "I would never blame any human being except the terrorists, and if I left that impression with gays or lesbians or anyone else, I apologize."
Quote:
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.p...&articleId=845
CBC News Rebroadcasts Pat Robertson's Call to Murder President Hugo Chavez
Text of Open Letter to the Complaint Department of CBC Radio News

by Charles Boylan

August 24, 2005
GlobalResearch.ca

Dear Sir/Madam:

I strongly object to CBC Radio News broadcasting at 6 a.m. and 7 a.m. August 23, 2005 the call of U.S. politician, Pat Robertson, for the government of the United States to carry out yet one more terrorist act, namely the assassination of the President of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, Hugo Chavez Frias.

The CBC broadcast simply stated that this non-elected politician has given this call, and then proceeded to hand over the microphone to this criminal element to argue for this terrorist act of murder. There was no effort by the CBC to counter his outrageous statements with any response from the Venezuelan government, nor from the Canadian government nor anyone else in fact.

Some questions come to my mind. Is it the CBC's policy to provide free national radio time to any politician who calls for the assassination of a head of state? For example, would the CBC give such prominence as was given to Robertson this morning, to a criminal political element in Iraq or Palestine calling for the assassination of George Bush or Ariel Sharon?..........
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Old 08-25-2005, 11:54 AM   #91 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by politicophile
Terrorism is ineffective? Tell that, first, to the families of the 9/11 victims. Then tell that to Zapatero and the other cowards in Spain. Terrorists kill people: they kill innocent people, which is the very thing you demonize the United States for doing. Let's try and avoid a double standard here.
I am talking about scale. Death is death. Death sucks. Do you understand that 1 million deaths sucks more than 1 thousand deaths?

Terrorism is evil. Terrorism is, compared to nations making War, incompetent at doing evil. Because War causes evil with far less effort and with far greater efficiency than Terrorism ever has.

If you cannot tell the different between millions of innocent people killed, and thousands of innocent people killed, I cannot help you understand it.

Yes, Terrorists kills people. I claim that, compared to the modern military, they are ineffective at it. Terrorism kills people retail, while modern war kills people wholesale.

I have never not demonized OBL. He's an evil fuck. But he's a gimpy, ineffective evil fuck if you compare him on a world-wide scale.

Quote:
Originally Posted by politicophile
But Pat Robertson casually suggesting we off the President of Venezuela some how does measure on that scale?
Given the USAs history, the USA is quite likely to off the President of Venezuela. The USA has a pattern and habit of killing Latin American elected leaders and overthrowing their governments. The USA has tolerated one nation in it's hemisphere that is constistently openly defiant of it (Cuba), and it took the threat of nuclear holocaust for that to happen.

http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB4/

So, no, I do not consider Pat's comments to be idle threats. They fit the pattern of US foreign-policy behaviour in the region quite accurately.

Quote:
Originally Posted by politicophile
Quote:
Originally Posted by Yakk
Terrorism, as an offensive weapon, is ineffective and gimpy.
Soviets in Afghanistan, Americans in Vietnam - 'nuff said.
Both instances of defensive guerilla warfare -- of people pushing occupiers off of the land they grew up on. I stated that Terrorism is an ineffective offensive weapon.

Quote:
A particularly smelly red herring, but nothing more. Pat Robertson, as a single American and not a political leader, cannot and should not be blamed for what you consider to be immoral actions of the United States. I don't blame OBL for forcing Saudi Arabian women to walk around in 100 degree heat wearing black shadoors.
Pat Robertson has influence over millions of Americans, a non-trivial percentage of political activists in the USA, a good chunk of the US House of Representatives and Senate, and is complemented and invited to visit by the president of the USA.

So, no, Pat Roberston is not just "some blowhard". Ayn Coultier is "some blowhard". Ayn Rand is "some blowhard". Pat Robertson is someone with influence.

Possibly Pat is in the midst of seeing his influence be destroyed. All the better. But claiming that Pat has no influence is disingenious.

I don't blame OBL for every act of terrorism in the world. But the weapon OBL is using -- terrorism -- is ineffective as an offensive weapon. The weapon Pat is waving around is not.

Quote:
Megadeaths are millions of deaths. The U.S. has participated in some conflicts where there were civilian megadeaths: WWI (I'm guessing), WWI, possibly Vietnam and Korea - that's all. Especially post-1960 (otherwise, you will invariably start talking about Native Americans or slavery), the United States has not been causing civilian megadeaths.
So, other than a number of examples, the US has not been causing civilian megadeaths. I'm sorry, but I won't brush Vietnam under the carpet.

Anyhow, the US is working on a new megadeath. What was the official US government Iraqi civilian bodycount for current 15 year old War in the Gulf? If not, have any decent estimates?

How does that compare to the American bodycount caused by OBL -- heck, caused by all terrorists -- in the same period of time?

I am getting this mental image of a pile of pebbles next to a mountain.

Scale matters.

OBL and Pat Robertson are the same -- people who use religion to generate hate. The difference is, Pat Robertson has influence over people who are far more deadly than OBL does.
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Old 08-25-2005, 12:42 PM   #92 (permalink)
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Didn't Robertson also call for the death of Supreme Court Justices? In fact, didn't he pray for it? I thought I read that he prayed for O'Connor's "resignation" (one way or the other) and that G*d answered his prayers after 2 years.
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Old 08-25-2005, 12:45 PM   #93 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by jorgelito
Didn't Robertson also call for the death of Supreme Court Justices? In fact, didn't he pray for it? I thought I read that he prayed for O'Connor's "resignation" (one way or the other) and that G*d answered his prayers after 2 years.
He didn't call for the death of SC justices, but he definitely called for people to pray for them to retire, as you say, one way or the other. He said he thought it was time for them to move on. The non-conservative ones, that is. When reminded that they are given lifetime appointments, he reiterated that it was just time for them to move on. He obviously doesn't respect our constitution.
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Old 08-25-2005, 12:56 PM   #94 (permalink)
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Thanks for the clarification.

The whole thing just seems so....childish.
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Old 08-25-2005, 12:58 PM   #95 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Yakk
I am talking about scale. Death is death. Death sucks. Do you understand that 1 million deaths sucks more than 1 thousand deaths?... ...If you cannot tell the different between millions of innocent people killed, and thousands of innocent people killed, I cannot help you understand it.
Yes, I understand that. But do you understand that threatening one person with death sucks less than plotting to and succeeding in killing thousands of civilians?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Yakk
Terrorism is evil. Terrorism is, compared to nations making War, incompetent at doing evil. Because War causes evil with far less effort and with far greater efficiency than Terrorism ever has.
Terrorism is a specific act that happens in war. It is an atrocity, often during a war, where civilians are attacked and killed in order to damage the enemy's resolve and morale. So saying that terrorism is less effective at "causing evil" than war doesn't make a lot of sense. Certainly, your typical large battle is more costly in terms of lives than your average terrorist attack, but, since terrorism is an act of war, divorcing it from other kinds of warfare is unwarranted.


Quote:
Originally Posted by Yakk
Yes, Terrorists kills people. I claim that, compared to the modern military, they are ineffective at it. Terrorism kills people retail, while modern war kills people wholesale.
...while Pat Robertson hasn't killed anyone at all. Can't say that about Osama, can we?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Yakk
I have never not demonized OBL. He's an evil fuck. But he's a gimpy, ineffective evil fuck if you compare him on a world-wide scale.
Not as ineffective as Pat Robertson.



Quote:
Originally Posted by Yakk
Given the USAs history, the USA is quite likely to off the President of Venezuela. The USA has a pattern and habit of killing Latin American elected leaders and overthrowing their governments. The USA has tolerated one nation in it's hemisphere that is constistently openly defiant of it (Cuba), and it took the threat of nuclear holocaust for that to happen.
You sure like to hold grudges against entire nations years after the perpetrators are gone from power. Does it seem "quite likely" to you that Germany will invade France again? Given their history...

Quote:
Originally Posted by Yakk
So, no, I do not consider Pat's comments to be idle threats. They fit the pattern of US foreign-policy behaviour in the region quite accurately.
Yeah, but Robertson doesn't speak for the government! If a prominent neo-Nazi in Germany suggested that we should kill the President of France, say, would you be worried that another blitzkreig is around the corner?



Quote:
Originally Posted by Yakk
Both instances of defensive guerilla warfare -- of people pushing occupiers off of the land they grew up on. I stated that Terrorism is an ineffective offensive weapon.
How about the IRA bombing campaign in England, then, if you don't like those examples?



Quote:
Originally Posted by Yakk
Pat Robertson has influence over millions of Americans, a non-trivial percentage of political activists in the USA, a good chunk of the US House of Representatives and Senate, and is complemented and invited to visit by the president of the USA.

So, no, Pat Roberston is not just "some blowhard". Ayn Coultier is "some blowhard". Ayn Rand is "some blowhard". Pat Robertson is someone with influence.
Vastly overstated. The sensationalism does not help your cause. Can you find a Congressman, Senator, or President that has made a statement supporting Robertson's suggestion?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Yakk
So, other than a number of examples, the US has not been causing civilian megadeaths. I'm sorry, but I won't brush Vietnam under the carpet.
Research *chuckle*... MEGADEATHS! - in the Soviet Union and youo might have a better understanding of why we did what we did in Vietnam.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Yakk
Anyhow, the US is working on a new megadeath. What was the official US government Iraqi civilian bodycount for current 15 year old War in the Gulf? If not, have any decent estimates?

How does that compare to the American bodycount caused by OBL -- heck, caused by all terrorists -- in the same period of time?

I am getting this mental image of a pile of pebbles next to a mountain.
Well, if you take into account the number of Iraqi civilians that are killed by the insurgency every day, I'd say we're running pretty close to even, with the terrorists gaining every day.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Yakk
OBL and Pat Robertson are the same -- people who use religion to generate hate. The difference is, Pat Robertson has influence over people who are far more deadly than OBL does.
Oh yeah? Like who? Who are these deadly people Pat Robertson can motivate to action?
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Old 08-25-2005, 01:36 PM   #96 (permalink)
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Quote:
Terrorism is a specific act that happens in war. It is an atrocity, often during a war, where civilians are attacked and killed in order to damage the enemy's resolve and morale. So saying that terrorism is less effective at "causing evil" than war doesn't make a lot of sense. Certainly, your typical large battle is more costly in terms of lives than your average terrorist attack, but, since terrorism is an act of war, divorcing it from other kinds of warfare is unwarranted.
Sorry to threadjack for the moment but I found this statement interesting (I added some bold for emphasis).

By this reasoning, the US committed acts of terrorism when they dropped the nukes on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The allies committed acts of Terrorism when they bombed civilian tragets in Germany (just as the Germans did in London).

Are you sure you want to stand by this definition of Terrorism?
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Old 08-25-2005, 01:52 PM   #97 (permalink)
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Any attack on civilians is a de facto terrorist attack - the point of the attack being to create an environment of fear and demoralization to one side or the other.

Having said that, in wholesale war, like WW2, where - unlike today - it truly was "us" or "them" to the virtual finish, there may be greater justification.
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Old 08-25-2005, 02:08 PM   #98 (permalink)
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...while Pat Robertson hasn't killed anyone at all. Can't say that about Osama, can we?
Quote:
Not as ineffective as Pat Robertson.
http://www.holysmoke.org/wb/wb0239.htm
Quote:
These bright statistics don't obscure Robertson's notorious
involvement in Central America. It began with the March 1982 coup
in Guatemala which brought General Efrain Rios Montt to power.
Montt is a member of Gospel Outreach, a fundamentalist sect based
in Eureka, California. Within a week of the coup, Robertson flew
to Guatemala to meet with Montt.

Robertson told the New York Times (5/20/82) that CBN would
send missionaries and "more than a billion dollars" to Guatemala.
While this promise was not fully met, Montt used the pledges of
support from U.S. evangelicals to convince Congress that he would
not seek massive sums of U.S. aid.
Pat doesn't just talk. He acts.

Quote:
In 1984 CBN donated $3 million to the contras through the
Nicaraguan Patriotic Association whose Vice President Juan Sacasa
is the Houston representative of the FDN. By the end of 1985 CBN
had supplied at least $7 million in aid to the contras, and to
the governments of El Salvador and Guatemala. These were not
secret contributions: Robertson solicited viewers' donations
through simulated mailgrams and a special May telethon for the
"freedom fighters."
Political policy in the middle east, inspired by scripture!

What kind of people does Pat have influence over? He's a massive fund-raiser and volunteer-raiser for the Republican party. Obviously he has no influence with the government...

http://www.rotten.com/library/bio/re...pat-robertson/
Quote:
In appreciation, the guerrillas named one of their units the Pat Robertson Brigade.
As an aside, I've got a bridge to sell you.

Quote:
In September 1986, Pat announced that he would be willing to seek the Republican party's nomination for President if and only if three million people would sign up as volunteers on his campaign over the next year. It worked, and the political donations flowed in. Pat had generated a heaping war chest by the time he officially announced his candidacy in September 1987.
The acts of a man with no influence.

He lost the 1988 nomination because he lied and claimed he was a combat marine, when he never saw a day of combat during his tour in Korea. If not for that, he was viewed as a decent chance of becoming the Republican nominee.

Quote:
Whatever the answer, Pat realized that he could never run for office again. It was pointless. But that didn't mean he couldn't get somebody else elected. He immediately set to work building his own political organization. He called it the Christian Coalition. It was conceived as Pat's attempt to insinuate himself into the Republican party leadership.

The Christian Coalition became a huge force, almost overnight. In a fundraising letter from the Democratic National Committee, the chairman wrote: "Pat Robertson has the most powerful political organization in America."
Quote:
A blaring neon example of the group's intentions to influence politics directly came on September 17th of 1997, when Pat Robertson addressed about 100 members of the Christian Coalition's state branches. He made a speech wherein he spoke admiringly of the Tammany Hall political machine and declared his desire to select the next President.
In its heyday, the Christian Coalition campaigned hard for high-profile, Christian-minded candidates. They supported Oliver North's run for the Senate seat in Virginia. Likewise, John Ashcroft's Senate bid in Missouri. And, of course, they endorsed both George HW Bush (grudgingly) and George W Bush (enthusiastically) in their Presidential campaigns.

Then they got caught improperly using funds to promote specific candidates, and the FEC slapped them with fines. The membership dwindled, and Pat abandoned the organization in December 2001.
No influence. Just a blowhard.

I disagree. Pat Robertson is dangerous. He encourages people, from sentators to members of your house of representatives, to voters, to volunteers, to support the use of the US military as an aggressive military force.

This makes him dangerous.

Quote:
You sure like to hold grudges against entire nations years after the perpetrators are gone from power. Does it seem "quite likely" to you that Germany will invade France again? Given their history...
There are some nations which have expressed regret over their past actions, and have changed their patterns of foreign policy. Germany, for example, is a nation that has changed more than night and day since the first half of the 20th century. The same with Japan, to a slightly lesser degree.

Other nations have expressed little to no regret, and even hold up their past to be emulated.

Quote:
Yeah, but Robertson doesn't speak for the government! If a prominent neo-Nazi in Germany suggested that we should kill the President of France, say, would you be worried that another blitzkreig is around the corner?
Did that neo-Nazi almost become chancellor of Germany 15 years ago, have an audience of millions in a daily or weekly broadcast, get invited to the house of the head of state and government regularly, is a major fundraiser for the government's election efforts, and is generally a mover and shaker?

Why yes, that would worry me.

The thing is, neo-Nazis are villified in much of Germany. Much like the KKK is villified in much of the USA.

Pat Robertson isn't. People who think like him are not. Their money is welcomed. Their support is welcomed. Their opinions are valued.

This makes them extremely dangerous.

You may remember something that happened in the American Democratic party a while ago. The democrats looked at their rolls, and saw something they would not tolerate. A racist wing of the party remained, a legacy of the civil war in the south.

Thus was born the Dixiecrats, who formed a splinter party and won a number of states in a presidential election. The democratic party kicked out a large source of power and votes in the south, because they would not stand for it anymore.

There is something a moral person must do. Even if someone will call you ally, and offer to help you, a moral person must determine what it means to call a person friend.

Possibly the Republicans can show this fibre. But so long as they call Pat Robertson friend and accept his aid, I cannot believe he has no influence over the Republican party.

Draw a line. Show your fibre.

Quote:
How about the IRA bombing campaign in England, then, if you don't like those examples?
The IRA bombing campaign in England was a resounding success!

Oh wait, it really wasn't. Northern Ireland is pretty much one of the most tightly held remnants of the UK's global empire, and is only now starting to be set free.

How many people did the IRA kill in England?

Ask the people of England if they will bow to terror.

Quote:
Research *chuckle*... MEGADEATHS! - in the Soviet Union and youo might have a better understanding of why we did what we did in Vietnam.
You did it because you screwed up. You assumed that any two communists where allies, and that Vietnam would be an ally or puppet of this vast communist world-wide menace.

Vietnam was fighting a war against imperialist occupation. The USA came into this war on the French side of this colonial rebellion, and set up puppet governments to justify their intervention. Enough Vietnamese would rather die than live under occupation that the USA failed.

Most of the world figured this out, and stayed out of Vietnam.

The US blundered in, and megadeath resulted.
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Old 08-25-2005, 02:15 PM   #99 (permalink)
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I agree that the nuclear bombings of Japan were terrorist attacks, albeit justified ones. The purpose of those attacks was to cause so much devastation that the enemy became completely demoralized and surrendered. Not all terrorist attacks are cowardly and unjustified, at least by definition. I think the decisions have to be viewed in context of the alternatives, however, where hundreds of thousands of poeple were going to die no matter what at the close of WWII.
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Old 08-25-2005, 02:48 PM   #100 (permalink)
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Hmmm... given this assesment of terrorism it really starts to make me wonder.

Terrorism that benefits us = good

Terrorism that doesn't benefit us = bad


I'm sorry but I just don't see how the ends justify the means. Terrorism is wrong and that all there is really is to it.
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Old 08-25-2005, 03:09 PM   #101 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by filtherton
... If this is the behavior of the christian god, the being in whose image christians believe themselves to be made, what reason do i have to believe that most christians are above the use of a little assassination if it furthers their agenda?
Instead of Job, I suggest reading the Gospels if you want to understand how the Christians I know view God and how to act.

As to the outrage, I am suspecting that no amount would satisfy you as you seem to have separate issues with Christians and Christianity.
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Old 08-25-2005, 03:30 PM   #102 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Lebell
Instead of Job, I suggest reading the Gospels if you want to understand how the Christians I know view God and how to act.

As to the outrage, I am suspecting that no amount would satisfy you as you seem to have separate issues with Christians and Christianity.
Well, we aren't talking about the christians you know. We're talking about the ones who embrace a god who compels them to smite his enemies. A god who compelled syria to invade israel because the israelis angered him, and then punished syria for obliging. I have no doubt assassination falls in line with the biblically endorsed practice of enemy smiting. Chavez would be lucky if the christians didn't bury him up to his head in sand and then take turns throwing hand-sized rocks at his skull.

If the bible is the word of god, as many christians believe, how are we to reconcile their potential behavior with the behavior of their diety, a diety who oversaw the bloodening of rivers and the cold blooded murder of first born children, or the murder by drowning of nearly an entire region?

Just because you know many peaceful christians doesn't mean that christianity is not a violent religion and can't be used quite easily to justify any number of atrocities.
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Old 08-25-2005, 03:40 PM   #103 (permalink)
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Except that the Christians in Venezuela seem to really like Chavez...

You are confusing hypocrites with Christians... not that they are mutually exclusive.
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Old 08-25-2005, 04:06 PM   #104 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by Yakk

There are some nations which have expressed regret over their past actions, and have changed their patterns of foreign policy. Germany, for example, is a nation that has changed more than night and day since the first half of the 20th century. The same with Japan, to a slightly lesser degree.

Other nations have expressed little to no regret, and even hold up their past to be emulated.
I bolded for emphasis: Japan has not really changed much, at least like Germany has. They still see themselves as victims of WWII instead of as aggressors and still see themselves as an example to Asians, as liberators. In fact, Japan is becoming more militant these days and their leadership worships war criminals (class A war criminals)[End threadjack]
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Old 08-25-2005, 07:57 PM   #105 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Elphaba
Robertson is now claiming that he was misinterpreted. How could we have all been so mistaken in what he said.
The root of the problem seems to be the fact that we're listening to him in the first place.
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Old 08-25-2005, 10:47 PM   #106 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by MrSelfDestruct
The root of the problem seems to be the fact that we're listening to him in the first place.
His audience is far greater than this little forum. Or did you mean the global "we're listening" which has now become the case?

The "root of the problem" is a tad bit larger than you have expressed IMO.
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Old 08-26-2005, 06:36 AM   #107 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by filtherton
Well, we aren't talking about the christians you know. We're talking about the ones who embrace a god who compels them to smite his enemies. A god who compelled syria to invade israel because the israelis angered him, and then punished syria for obliging. I have no doubt assassination falls in line with the biblically endorsed practice of enemy smiting. Chavez would be lucky if the christians didn't bury him up to his head in sand and then take turns throwing hand-sized rocks at his skull.

If the bible is the word of god, as many christians believe, how are we to reconcile their potential behavior with the behavior of their diety, a diety who oversaw the bloodening of rivers and the cold blooded murder of first born children, or the murder by drowning of nearly an entire region?

Just because you know many peaceful christians doesn't mean that christianity is not a violent religion and can't be used quite easily to justify any number of atrocities.
I'd be pleased to discuss this in depth in "Philosophy", but in short a Christian's understanding of who God is stems (or should stem) from Christ's teachings.

I don't think Jesus would approve in this case.
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Old 08-26-2005, 07:55 AM   #108 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Lebell
I'd be pleased to discuss this in depth in "Philosophy", but in short a Christian's understanding of who God is stems (or should stem) from Christ's teachings.

I don't think Jesus would approve in this case.
I know, i'm just fucking around. I was seeing how difficult it would be to use the common, usually conservative, argument against islam as a template to create an argument against christianity. Seems like a pretty efficient way to pretend to engage in a discussion without actually attempting to get anything out of it.
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Old 09-15-2005, 10:25 AM   #109 (permalink)
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On August 29, FEMA issued a disaster relief announcement that listed and linked Pat's "Operation Blessing" as fourth on it's list of organizations to donate money to NOLA relief efforts...........
http://www.fema.gov/news/newsrelease.fema?id=18473
Quote:
http://abcnews.go.com/WNT/HurricaneK...1112518&page=1
Operation Blessing Is Second on FEMA's List for Donations for Hurricane Victims

By BRIAN ROSS

Sept. 9, 2005 — Charity and religious leaders are questioning why the Federal Emergency Management Agency designated Operation Blessing as the No. 2 charity for donations in the wake of Hurricane Katrina.

Operation Blessing is the charity founded and still chaired by Pat Robertson, the politically well-connected television evangelist, who recently called for the assassination of Hugo Chavez, the president of Venezuela.

"Ladies and gentlemen, we've never had anything like this," Robertson told his audience. "Let's rally together and do what we can."

In the immediate aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, the federal government, through FEMA, issued a list of charities to which Americans should donate. On that list, Operation Blessing was only second to the American Red Cross.

Charity leaders say this FEMA recommendation is a huge boost for Robertson's charity.

"It could be worth tens of millions of dollars," said Richard Walden, president and founder of Operation USA, a non-governmental organization specializing in disaster relief.

However, as Robertson hosted his daily television show in Mississippi this week, other charity leaders were questioning why FEMA had recommended Robertson's operation and left others off the list, including Walden's Operation USA.

"I was shocked," said Walden upon seeing Robertson's charity so prominently displayed on the FEMA Web site. "It stuck out for a reason because of Pat Robertson's activities over the years."

Questions of Accountability

Seven years ago, those activities led Virginia investigators to say there was evidence to prove Robertson "willfully induced contributions from the public through the use of misleading statements." Robertson denied the allegations. He then personally reimbursed Operation Blessing. No action was taken.

"Based on their track record, I would say that, as an individual, I would not give to Operational Blessing," admitted the Rev. Charles Henderson, a Presbyterian minister, who is the executive director of the Association for Religion and Intellectual Life.

<h4>According to its most recent filing with the Internal Revenue Service, Operation Blessing gave more than half of its yearly allocation of cash donations — $885,000 — to the Christian Broadcasting Network, or CBN, of which Robertson is also the chairman.</h4>

"There is no accountability when you have two boards working hand in hand like this," said Henderson. "One never knows when you're contributing to Operation Blessing whether the money is really going to the hurricane victims, or whether it's going to pay for some more television time for Pat Robertson's television show."

Some charity watchdog groups have given high marks to Operation Blessing. Bill Horan, the charity's president, at first denied his charity gave any money to Robertson's television operation..........
Quote:
http://www.nydailynews.com/front/sto...p-293221c.html


........FEMA's official Web site (www.fema.gov) is encouraging concerned citizens to help Katrina victims by giving money to the Robertson-run relief organization Operation Blessing.

Operation Blessing - which Robertson founded in 1978 - is listed third on FEMA's site, right after the American Red Cross and America's Second Harvest.

Never mind that on his religious show, "700 Club," Robertson urged a sudden death for U.S. critic Chavez, saying: "We have the ability to take him out, and I think the time has come that we exercise that ability."

I wanted to find out more about our government's endorsement of Robertson's efforts, but calls to Robertson, Operation Blessing and FEMA weren't returned.

True, Robertson seems to think of himself as an expert on hurricanes and other disasters.

In 1998 - when the citizens of Orlando planned to observe Gay Pride Month by flying special flags - he warned them: "You're right in the way of some serious hurricanes, and I don't think I'd be waving those flags in God's face if I were you. ... A condition like this will bring about the destruction of your nation. It'll bring about terrorist bombs. It'll bring earthquakes, tornadoes and possibly a meteor."

As for FEMA's advice to donate to Robertson's group, one wag quipped: "Maybe we can have him take a small part of that [money] to hire a hit team to take out Chavez, put in a puppet government and take control over Venezuela's oil and help our suffering oil companies."
Faith based, compassionate conservatism at work.....provocative statements advocating the assassination of a foreign, democratically elected head of state are "no problemo", nor are controversies of past "Operation Blessing" performance, I guess......

Last edited by host; 09-15-2005 at 10:50 AM..
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Old 09-20-2005, 07:12 PM   #110 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Smooth
I think the irony is how you've constructed a completely inappropriate analogy.
You are certainly entitled to your thoughts, but your own words demonstrate that my statement is appropriate.

Quote:
2) these same people, along with others, usually can't seem to understand the difference between a fanatic religious segment of muslims, a non-fanatic religious segment of muslims, and the hinge of all this--that muslim is an ethnicity, not necessarily tied to the religion Islam.
Interesting.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muslim

Quote:
A Muslim is an adherent of Islam. Literally, the word means someone who has submitted him or herself to God.

The declaration of submission to God, called Shahada that includes the recognition of Muhammad as the last prophet constitutes the main condition to be considered a Muslim. Muslims describe many Biblical figures, such as Musa (Moses) and Isa (Jesus), as Muslims, because, as prophets, they submitted completely to God.
This appears to contradict your statement regarding both ethnicity and that a Muslim is not necessarily tied to the religion Islam, the last sentence (using the literal translation of "Muslim") notwithstanding.

Furthermore, there are a "host" of examples on the TFP in which someone lumps all Christians in with people such as Pat Robertson, Jerry Falwell, or George W. Bush. Occasionally they will refer to the lunatic fringe as the "radical right," or "extremist Christians" in an attempt to disguise the inherent bigotry. However, within their thinking is the fundamental assumption that ALL Christians are "radical" and "extremist."

Such a position remains "ignorant," to use your word.

Quote:
3) political parties are chosen, presumably, by their adherents because they share the views of other members of the party and want to implement similar policies. So they band together and elect representatives in the hopes those people will effect their will.

4) religious groups, while many people might be born into them, are by and large chosen by the adults because they share the perspective of the other members in their congregation.
This appears to be a distinction without a difference. For example, it would be just as accurate to say that "religious membership is chosen, presumably, by its adherents because they share the views of other members of the religion."

There is also no shortage of religions/denominations that attempt to sway their members into electing representatives who are likely to effect the church's position. The fear of losing tax-exempt status has been the only limitation on the activities of the larger ones.


Quote:
So it seems perfectly reasonable and accurate to me that when you have a group of people sharing a religious perspective AND a political party that you will find those people tend to think along similar lines and desire to plot courses of action in conjunction with one another.
Like "Muslims" from the Middle East?

Quote:
It seems really odd to me that you would equate such a statement with "all caucasians are the same" or "all italians are the same." You might have had a stronger case if you had used "all Islamics are the same."

I simply used the verbiage that would be the most familiar to the most people. I have not observed any of the national media using the word "Islamics" in the manner you prefer.


Quote:
These comments are all based on my premise that political parties are self-selected groups of people who think about particular problems in similar ways and want a coordinated effort to address those problems.
Like Arabic suicide bombers?


Quote:
I definately don't see the same patterns of behavior and choice when it comes to ethnicity or racial categorization.

Although, one might make a case for broad characterizations of a particular ethnic groups as it pertains to cultural notions.

But those same people would have to be very careful when they decide to shift from the aggregate to the personal...
My entire premise (admittedly couched in sarcasm) was based on the philosophy that Republicans do not all think alike and look alike.

It would appear that we are at least partially in agreement: Generalizations do not always apply to individuals within the specified group.
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Old 09-21-2005, 08:15 AM   #111 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Marvelous Marv
You are certainly entitled to your thoughts, but your own words demonstrate that my statement is appropriate.



Interesting.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muslim

Quote:
A Muslim is an adherent of Islam. Literally, the word means someone who has submitted him or herself to God.

The declaration of submission to God, called Shahada that includes the recognition of Muhammad as the last prophet constitutes the main condition to be considered a Muslim. Muslims describe many Biblical figures, such as Musa (Moses) and Isa (Jesus), as Muslims, because, as prophets, they submitted completely to God.
This appears to contradict your statement regarding both ethnicity and that a Muslim is not necessarily tied to the religion Islam, the last sentence (using the literal translation of "Muslim") notwithstanding.
Well, it would contradict my statement if one could ignore the last sentence. It's wikpedia and usually I would recommend one refrain from posting publicly editable internet information as fact. In this case, however, you including a definition that supports my contention and then calling me wrong is just laughable...the first sentence in your quote is an excellent example of a logical error called an undistributed middle term. All followers of Islam are muslims (this is how the first sentence should be worded--and actually could be changed given it's wikpedia *hint*), not all muslims are followers of Islam (this is incorrect as the following sentences point out that some muslims are NOT followers of Islam).

How exactly do you just ignore the last sentence? Muslims aren't necessarily followers of Islam. Moses and Jesus were Jewish, dude, no way around it. Mother Teresa wasn't Islam, but she certainly fits that definition of a muslim. I mean, I could argue that apples are red, sure I've seen some green ones, but if you ignore that last part, all apples are red...but that'd be an equally illogical argument as all muslims are followers of Islam, ignoring Moses and Jesus, among others...

Perhaps you would be interested in reading what some muslims (the Progressive Muslim Union North America) have to say about this issue:
http://pmunadebate.blogspot.com/2004...ethnicity.html


Quote:
Furthermore, there are a "host" of examples on the TFP in which someone lumps all Christians in with people such as Pat Robertson, Jerry Falwell, or George W. Bush. Occasionally they will refer to the lunatic fringe as the "radical right," or "extremist Christians" in an attempt to disguise the inherent bigotry. However, within their thinking is the fundamental assumption that ALL Christians are "radical" and "extremist."

Such a position remains "ignorant," to use your word.
If someone lumps all christians into a radical and extremist group of ideologues, then I would agree their position is an ignorant one. All the threads I've seen, however, don't do that and many go to great lengths to clarify that they are speaking about a particular group of people. Lotsa christians take umbrage at what they read into the post rather than what is there. Also, a lot of people are religious and progressive in their politics and a lot of people post here who are christian but aren't offended by statements made by host himself. The utmost irony would be if host were a christian himself. I would laugh my ass of because I haven't ever seen you avail yourself of the option to not insult him, and I've never seen the reverse in action.

Quote:
Quote:
3) political parties are chosen, presumably, by their adherents because they share the views of other members of the party and want to implement similar policies. So they band together and elect representatives in the hopes those people will effect their will.

4) religious groups, while many people might be born into them, are by and large chosen by the adults because they share the perspective of the other members in their congregation.


This appears to be a distinction without a difference. For example, it would be just as accurate to say that "religious membership is chosen, presumably, by its adherents because they share the views of other members of the religion."
This is interesting and follows the trend you set in the opening. You want to disagree with me, so you say I'm wrong and then paraphrase my point. That's cool, I mean I'm all for you understanding what I wrote better so please paraphrase away.




Quote:
I simply used the verbiage that would be the most familiar to the most people. I have not observed any of the national media using the word "Islamics" in the manner you prefer.
Me neither, but I didn't want to type out "followers of Islam" and I couldn't really figure out how to parse the term any other way. I actually thought you would follow what I was writing.

Quote:
My entire premise (admittedly couched in sarcasm) was based on the philosophy that Republicans do not all think alike and look alike.

It would appear that we are at least partially in agreement: Generalizations do not always apply to individuals within the specified group.

If by philosophy, you meant personal belief, then who am I to falsify it? But if you really feel that Republicans think and "look" (I don't know what kind of meaning I should infer from this; do you mean racially? phenotypically? But I find it interested that you would read "act" as "look") differently than you, your interests would be better served finding or creating a different political party. Poltiics are about securing the interests of your self-selected group.

Of course, I didn't see the original discussion revolve around whether Republicans looked and thought the same; rather that Republican, conservative christians thought along the same lines and acted in similar ways. This is an intersection of at least three classes of belief: conservatives within christianity (a self-selected group of individuals working toward an end in the larger umbrella of their religion) espousing adherence to a political party that promises to secure their ideological interests.

I can't think of a single person on this board who thinks that all generalizations apply to all individuals within a specified group. weeell, you might get some flamboyant post that floats a variant of the idea that all leftists are enemies of America. but hopefully that won't happen this time because I'd rather not be proved wrong on this point.
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Old 09-21-2005, 08:39 AM   #112 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by smooth
Well, it would contradict my statement if one could ignore the last sentence. It's wikpedia and usually I would recommend one refrain from posting publicly editable internet information as fact. In this case, however, you including a definition that supports my contention and then calling me wrong is just laughable...the first sentence in your quote is an excellent example of a logical error called an undistributed middle term. All followers of Islam are muslims (this is how the first sentence should be worded--and actually could be changed given it's wikpedia *hint*), not all muslims are followers of Islam (this is incorrect as the following sentences point out that some muslims are NOT followers of Islam).
How about looking somewhere other than wikpedia...like dictionary.com
Quote:
Originally Posted by dictionary.com
Mus·lim ( P ) Pronunciation Key (mzlm, mz-, ms-, ms-)
n.
also Mos·lem (mzlm, ms-) A believer in or adherent of Islam.
A member of the Nation of Islam; a Black Muslim.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[Arabic muslim, one who surrenders, active participle of ’aslama, to surrender. See Islam.]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Muslim adj.

[Download Now or Buy the Book]
Source: The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.


muslim

adj : of or relating to or supporting Islamism; "Islamic art" [syn: Muslim, Moslem, Islamic] n : a believer or follower of Islam [syn: Muslim, Moslem, Mohammedan, Muhammedan, Muhammadan, Islamist]


Source: WordNet ® 2.0, © 2003 Princeton University
Um. so should I call The American Heritage Dictionary and Princton University and tell them they are wrong? or will you?

Quote:
Originally Posted by smooth
Perhaps you would be interested in reading what some muslims (the Progressive Muslim Union North America) have to say about this issue:
http://pmunadebate.blogspot.com/2004...ethnicity.html
Maybe I misread the post on the blog you linked to...but the way I read the last paragraph, I understood it to say that it is pointless to have Islam as only a cultural identity not tied to religion. correct me if I'm wrong.

Quote:
Originally Posted by NMA member
To include "Muslim atheists" defies the purpose of the organisation as I see it and wastes what has been achieved.

There is a fundamental difference between a progressive agenda _within_ Islam and one that sees its purpose in _overcoming_ Islam. If someone doesn't believe in the fundamentals of the faith (the existence of a single supreme God, ultimate judgement etc.), then the only sensible aim must be to get rid of it. What's the point in 'reforming' something that doesn't have any substance? "Islam" as a mere cultural identity is pointless.
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Old 09-21-2005, 08:48 AM   #113 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by stevo
How about looking somewhere other than wikpedia...like dictionary.com
Um. so should I call The American Heritage Dictionary and Princton University and tell them they are wrong? or will you?
OMG, if you guys spent half as much time researching things rather than just doing google searches in attempts to prove me wrong you'd quit wasting all of our time...

Before you make any calls, research the difference between Nation of Islam, Black muslims, and followers of Islam (all part of the definition you cited). THEN get back to me on whether you think muslism are only adherents to the theology of Islam. This has now become a case of RTFM or STFU.

Quote:
Maybe I misread the post on the blog you linked to...but the way I read the last paragraph, I understood it to say that it is pointless to have Islam as only a cultural identity not tied to religion. correct me if I'm wrong.
No, you read it correctly. One group of muslims are concerned that other muslims aren't adherents to the Islam theology. That's because non-Islam muslims exist...

...even more thought provoking is the notion that atheist muslims exist...which interestingly mirrors the existence of atheist Jews. Or even atheist Rabbis...giving rise to the claim that century old religions also work as ethnic identities for people.
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Old 09-21-2005, 12:46 PM   #114 (permalink)
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Are you confusing non-Islam muslim with Arab? Because in that case Jesus and Moses would be Arabs, they were not Muslim.
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Old 09-21-2005, 01:34 PM   #115 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mojo_PeiPei
Are you confusing non-Islam muslim with Arab? Because in that case Jesus and Moses would be Arabs, they were not Muslim.
Since the Arab invasion of Isreal didn't happn until well after Jesus was dead, I rather doubt he would be Arab (this is in the philosphy board btw).

Also the concept that saying 'muslim' is different from saying 'Islamist' is kinda silly.

Quote:
Origin of Islam:

The name of this religion, Islam, is derived from the word "salam," which is often interpreted as meaning "peace." However "submission" would be a better translation. A Muslim is a follower of Islam. "Muslim" is an Arabic word that refers to a person who submits themselves to the will of God.
http://www.religioustolerance.org/isl_intr.htm
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Old 09-21-2005, 02:08 PM   #116 (permalink)
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Nevermind...
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Old 09-21-2005, 10:08 PM   #117 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by smooth
OMG, if you guys spent half as much time researching things rather than just doing google searches in attempts to prove me wrong you'd quit wasting all of our time...

Before you make any calls, research the difference between Nation of Islam, Black muslims, and followers of Islam (all part of the definition you cited). THEN get back to me on whether you think muslism are only adherents to the theology of Islam. This has now become a case of RTFM or STFU.
(Sigh) Some people won't even let you agree with them...

I choose not to accept your polite invitation, but I will provide some reading material for YOU:

Merriam-Webster

Link

Quote:
Muslim

1 : an adherent of Islam
Cambridge Dictionary

Link

Quote:
Definition
Muslim [Show phonetics]
noun [C] (ALSO Moslem)
a person who follows the religion of Islam
American heritage dictionary:

Link

Quote:
1. also Mos·lem ( mzlm, ms-) A believer in or adherent of Islam.
Microsoft Encarta

Link

Quote:
Muslim

Mus·lim

noun (plural Mus·lims)
Definitions:

follower of Islam: somebody whose religion is Islam
AskOxford.com (Compact Oxford English Dictionary)

Link

Quote:
Muslim

(also Moslem)

• noun a follower of Islam.

Also from the Compact Oxford English Dictionary

Quote:
Islam

/izlaam/

• noun 1 the monotheistic religion of the Muslims, regarded by them to have been revealed through Muhammad as the Prophet of Allah. 2 the Muslim world.

Quote:
No, you read it correctly. One group of muslims are concerned that other muslims aren't adherents to the Islam theology. That's because non-Islam muslims exist...

...even more thought provoking is the notion that atheist muslims exist...which interestingly mirrors the existence of atheist Jews. Or even atheist Rabbis...giving rise to the claim that century old religions also work as ethnic identities for people.
I was going to ask if, in the face of the overwhelming evidence to the contrary, you still stood by this statement:


Quote:
Originally Posted by smooth
2) these same people, along with others, usually can't seem to understand the difference between a fanatic religious segment of muslims, a non-fanatic religious segment of muslims, and the hinge of all this--that muslim is an ethnicity, not necessarily tied to the religion Islam.
You've been kind enough to answer that already. If Sammy Davis Jr. were still alive, he'd probably be surprised to know that his ethnicity was Jewish, not African.

But I guess that's Sociology for you. It reminds me of this old joke:

Quote:
An old cowboy sat down at the bar and ordered a drink. As he sat sipping his drink, a young woman sat down next to him. She turned to the cowboy and asked, "Are you a real cowboy?"

He replied, "Well, I've spent my whole life, breaking colts, working cows, going to rodeos, fixing fences, pulling calves, bailing hay, doctoring calves, cleaning my barn, fixing flats, working on tractors, and feeding my dogs, so I guess I am a cowboy."

She said, "I'm a lesbian. I spend my whole day thinking about women. As soon as I get up in the morning, I think about women. When I shower, I think about women. When I watch TV, I think about women. I even think about women when I eat. It seems that everything makes me think of women."

The two sat sipping in silence.

A little while later, a man sat down on the other side of the old cowboy and asked, "Are you a real cowboy?"

He replied, "I always thought I was, but I just found out I'm a lesbian."
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