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kanelli wrote:So BB, if the US was not supporting Israel and not meddling in Middle East affairs, do you think that Muslims would be attacking the US in religious jihad?
shafique wrote:Well, I'd like to just state that I DO indeed believe there are indeed jihadists and other religiously motivated terrorists out there (Goldstein was one, Brievik another - and there are many Muslim groups who target other sects and religions because of their religious views).
However, the point in the 'motives for suicide bombing thread' is that the reason for many terror attacks by Muslims is actually political.
The WTC 93 bombing is a case in point - here the unequivocable and clear reasons specified do not include religion, but only foreign policy.
The attack was therefore no different from other trans-national terrorist attacks, such as the blowing up of Cuban airliner by terrorists who are living free in the USA.
Baruch Goldstein, on the other hand, was a trans-national terrorist who did kill in the name of religion.
Cheers,
Shafique
After a failed attempt to bomb the Israeli embassy in Bangkok, Thailand, Yousef moved back to Pakistan and plotted a bombing inside Iran. Yousef has a deep hatred of Shiite Muslims, and most Iranians are Shiites. On June 20, 1994, a Shiite holy day, Yousef bombed the Imam Reza shrine in Mashhad, Iran, one of the holiest and most important Shiite shrines. The attack killed 26 people and injured over 200. The group Yousef worked with this time included his younger brother, Abdul Muneem, and his own father, who was arrested and detained in Iran. While Yousef generally worked in concert with, or by orders from, Osama bin Laden, the Mashhad bombing ran counter to bin Laden’s efforts that year to work with the Iranian-influenced Hezbollah militant group. [16]
The WTC 93 bombing is a case in point - here the unequivocable and clear reasons specified do not include religion, but only foreign policy.
Bora Bora wrote: I don't recall reading what terrorist group Baruch Goldstein was affiliated with?? Can you provide the name of that group?
kanelli wrote:Good grief, did you miss Shaf's first paragraph? He said there are religiously motivated terrorists including Muslims.
Does Baruch Goldstein need to be affiliated with a group of people in order to be a religious terrorist?
kanelli wrote:Herve, you come to this forum to try to convince Muslims how terrible they are. A bit daft really.
It seems strange to construct elaborate logic hoops to explain why the reasons given did NOT mention Islam, but only foreign policy. It is stranger still to criticise me for not jumping through them.
herve wrote:Hi Kanelli, I don't need to convince anyone, just read the news and the quran, it is all there.
Look, this week alone, 6 convicted in the UK, 5 in spain, 5 in germany, all moslems, all for terrorist conspiracy.
But please enlight me, really, tell me who in this world like moslems beside moslems. Because from where I stand, i see repulsion.
I will never forget my first encounter with a moslem, it was thirty years ago. Young navy officer i shared my cabin with an algerian navy officer who was on training on my ship (We trained the Algerian navy). Every morning i suffered the terrible sighting of his ablutions in the sink, blowing his nose of his boggers with his bare fingers. then one night he trew up in my hamper. did he care? hell no, gentleman, fu(k no. 3 days later i pulled a brick of my clothes solidified with his vomit.
I dont know if you shared privacy with moslems , but they pretty di$gusting.
Now, by contrast - the self-styled 'Christian Crusader' terrorist Brievik also published his reasons for his attacks. His manifesto praised Bob Spencer (your Guru) and he shares your extreme Islamophobia. He does indeed give reasons why he shot up Norwegian kids - and that does stem from his extremist views.
Would you therefore call Brievik a Christian fundamentalist terrorist?
Q: Do I have to believe in God or Jesus in order to become a Justiciar Knight?
A: As this is a cultural war, our definition of being a Christian does not necessarily constitute that you are required to have a personal relationship with God or Jesus.
Christian fundamentalist theocracy is everything we DO NOT want and a secular European society is what we DO want.
It is enough that you are a Christian-agnostic or a Christian-atheist.
kanelli wrote:BB, I have not once baited or attacked you in this thread. I am discussing the topic. Re-read my posts. If you can't answer my questions which are on the topic, that is one thing, but don't claim I am trying to pick a fight with you. I discuss and question the same way with others - you are not being treated as a special case.
However, the main reason is political, which was what was stated in the terrorists letter.
Do you think that if US foreign policy regarding Israel, Palestine and the Middle East was different there would be less terrorist attacks committed by extremist Muslims?
Do you really think it is the goal of foreign religious extremists or even home-grown religious extremists to try to turn the US in a nation under complete Islamic rule?
Bora Bora wrote:kanelli wrote:BB, I have not once baited or attacked you in this thread. I am discussing the topic. Re-read my posts. If you can't answer my questions which are on the topic, that is one thing, but don't claim I am trying to pick a fight with you. I discuss and question the same way with others - you are not being treated as a special case.
Call in BM's buddies wasn't baiting?? I guess if you had used your usual term "BM's lackies" then it would be baiting - my bad. Maybe you should re-read the "tone" of your post. There is a difference between can't and don't care to. FYI, your question was not on topic hence my suggestion that you start a new thread. How about it ends here???