Darth Wong wrote:Admiral_K wrote:Simply acknowledging a factual statement by someone is not an endorsement of that person.
Yet again you demonstrate your profound stupidity, since it does not have to be an endorsement of the person. It only has to be a defense of his doctrine.
I disagree that aknowledging something as fact is the same as "defending" it. If Bush were to come out and say 2+2=4 and I said that he was correct, would you say I was "defending" his mathematical doctrine?
Thats mighty funny because the founders of this nation primarily were Christians.
Which is why the original Constitution had no human rights at all in it, and Jefferson (not a Christian) pushed through the Bill of Rights and the First Amendment.
Jefferson may not have been a Christian in the traditional sense, but he thought very highly of the teachings and morality of Jesus.
I briefly researched your point. I didn't find much. I never said that Militant Christians didn't exist, but they are far fewer in number and are just as guilty of perverting Christianity as Islamic Militants are.
I already answered this moronic point earlier. Answer my rebuttal.
I have no comment on your rebuttal. You introduced this element into the discussion not me. I have constantly tried to shift this discussion back on the topic of Islamic militants opposing democracy and freedom and you keep trying to make this a "Christianity vs Islam" battle royal.
Bullshit. Public opinion in Jordan is massively weighted in favour of crushingly oppressive social policies, you idiot. If you made it a democracy, these oppressive social policies would still exist.
Source? I tried to research this, but didn't find much. And your oppinion on what democracy might or might not do is strictly your oppinion.
You actually demand a "source" for the fact that Jordanian societal traditions are oppressive? The place where women are routinely executed for violating Sharia law?
Well, I actually wanted a source for showing that the general populace (including WOMEN) was in favor of oppressive policies as you stated. But if you don't have anything, then thats ok since it is quite irrelevant as Jordan is NOT a democracy. Hell, I bet "public oppinion" would show very high approval ratings for Saddam Hussein's policies if he were still in power.
The sources I cited directly quoted from the Koran and how terrorists had perverted and twisted its meanings. They aren't simply stating "They have twisted the religion" without showing where and how.
They do this by ignoring the nasty parts themselves. See
http://www.skepticsannotatedbible.com/quran/index.html for more.
Religious texts are greatly open to interpretation. However, the militant islamic groups have twisted the religion by focusing on and embracing the violent "Death to the infidel" parts and completely ignoring the parts about free will, and the part about not killing other Muslims (which they do rather frequently in Iraq).
Oh wow, you're a mind-reader now? You can describe their inner motivations? That's an amazing talent; perhaps you should go to Las Vegas and use that talent to win high-stakes poker games for big bucks.
They clearly stated in their "press release" that they oppose democracy for fear that it could lead to the passing of un-islamic laws by the people. Now, unless the people had the
freedom to vote for and pass un-islamic laws, this would be impossible. Perhaps you too can one day have this wonderful power known as reading comprehension and use it to your advantage as well.
And when I started this discussion I was specifically targeting the "resistance" in Iraq. I simply wanted to point out that these groups aren't "fighting for their freedom", they are fighting to become top dogs in the next dictatorship. It is you and others who have broadend this to include "all anti US terror groups".
Your first post said nothing whatsoever about Iraq, but thanks for demonstrating that you will gladly stoop to backpedaling and bullfuckery.
Backpedalling eh? Well lets look at what I wrote. First of all, I quote from a news article that referenced militant groups in Iraq and their opposition to democracy. Then I made the following comment:
Seems pretty clear to me. The Bush administration line about these groups "hating freedom" isn't without base. They aren't against democratic elections because of the American occuption. They are against democratic elections because they believe democracy is a crime against God.
Now, if the key phrase
"American Occupation" didn't tip you off, then the part about
elections should have. I obviously wasn't talking about Afghanistan since their elections have been completed. Now, if we put the pieces together we are left with what? Did you say IRAQ? Why thats absoutely right!. That darn reading comprehension seems to bite you in the ass again Mike...
Um what is your point exactly?
My point is that George W. Bush can't condemn others for opposing "freedom" when he himself wants to shove his own religious values down the throats of others. And you can't say that democracy = freedom, no matter how much bullshit you fling.
Why you are absolutely correct Mike. I can't tell you how bad its been here in the U.S. Since Bush made Christianity the only legal religion. And the torture for missing Sunday services at church is just brutal... Oh wait, none of those things have happened.
But I guess you are right in that Bush comdemning these groups is hypocritical. Surely everyone can agree that being in favor of laws against late term abortion, and gay marriage is equivalent to killing people who don't follow your religous doctrine.
Of course they do; how is that different from Christians who complain that constitutional human rights guarantees can let people make lifestyle choices that go against Biblical values?
It is different because the Christians in this country (with a few nutcase exceptions) aren't threatening to kill those who disagree with them. If these anti Democratic islamists managed to convince a majority of the people to vote their way then great! The problem is, they know and we know that is not likely to happen.
It is about George W. Bush's rhetoric. You say it is validated by these statements. I say that A) it is not validated since democracy != freedom, and B) his constant rhetoric about "freedom" is grossly hypocritical.
Believe it or not Mike, you CAN take parts of a rhetoric in context and yet not endorse the rest of the rhetoric or the actions taken based on that rhetoric. If for example in a speech Hitler would include statements about Germany's harsh treatment at the end of WWI by the allies would it be a validation of his actions to admit that the statement was true?
You really know nothing about Jordan, do you?
I know he won 6 NBA titles with the Bulls...
To be quite honest mike, its a red herring. One I shouldn't have bother to even address. Jordan is not a democracy, therefore any speculation as to how the populace would vote if it were is strictly that: Speculation.