Sure you do. He was a mate of the radical Rabbit. Remember now?I don't recall being approached by a hate preaching gay shop assistant at a department store in the 1970s.
Sure you do. He was a mate of the radical Rabbit. Remember now?I don't recall being approached by a hate preaching gay shop assistant at a department store in the 1970s.
I don't recall being approached by a hate preaching gay shop assistant at a department store in the 1970s.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Yaya goes there for Juma and gets left well alone [so please no-one disturb him there]. Sadly, the only trouble I've ever know there was was family-related [my family, that is. #sigh].
How do you know they never come forward?
If a Muslim has concerns that an Imam (not an Inman) is trying to radicalise people then I'm guessing that they would perhaps go to the police before they create a thread on Bluemoon and tell you about it.
Too true, my new bro. ;)I was captain of one of the tug of war teams, bit odd being called brother by everyone but soon got used to it!
Mona Eltahawy @monaeltahawy 22m22 minutes agoSadly it seems correct about the UK. I said earlier that we are a post Christian society and it's true of several Western European countries. There is a growing disconnect between the generations too. Personally I look to the future with great apprehension, our culture seems to have been uprooted and is dying.Religious affiliation on a World wide scale, when compared to religious affiliation within the UK, seem to be on very different trends. According to the Pew Research Facility the religiously unaffiliated - referring to atheists, agnostics and other people who do not identify with a religion - are declining as a share of the world's overall population. However they also attest that, by 2100, it's distinctly possible that those who consider themselves to have no religion will outnumber the religious in the UK. In 2010 64.3% of UK residents were Christian, 4.8% Muslim and 1.4% Hindu, with 27.8% non-religious. By 2050 Pew estimates both Hindu and Muslim numbers will increase, to 2% and 11.3% respectively, however Christianity will decrease to 45.4%. Non-religious will increase to 38.9%. In fact, Europe as a whole, is expected to see a decrease, by something in the region of 100,000,000, of Christians by 2050. The Worldwide increase in religious affiliation by 2050 is attributed to the rampant growth in numbers of Muslims, facilitated by high birth rates, and high populations, in areas of high Muslim affiliation, such as western and northern Africa, the middle east, and the "stans" area of Asia (Afghanistan, Pakistan, Turkmenistan etc etc).
So, to summarise, overall religious numbers are on an upward trend, however this is primarily down to growth in the number of Muslims, predominantly in the 3rd World. The western world is seeing a decrease in the numbers of Christians, and an increase in the numbers of non-religious. It's entirely possible that, in 100 or so years time we'll see a western world which is more than 50% non-religious, and a third world which is 90%+ religious, with the vast majority being Muslim.
Absolutely correct, I said earlier that the UK was a post Christian society and it's true of several Western European countries. There is a growing disconnect between the generations too. Personally I look to the future with great apprehension, our culture seems to have been uprooted and is dying.
On the subject of religion, what I can' work out is this. Why did God send his son to redeem us all 2000 years ago and his main prophet Mo not long after? 2000 years ago there were no smart bombs, guns, nuclear weapons, no cctv, proper historical recordsites. Nor were we polluting the atmosphere or exhausting the earth's natural resources to the extent we are today.
Now I find it kind of difficult God is evil enough to watch us destroy ourselves like we are presently doing as the holy books suggest he/she/it is not. Is God unable to help us out? Did God play his joker 2000 years ago and is no longer able to help us out? Seems a bit strange that God would be impotent to help us out and has to sit there watching people blow each other up in his name.
If any religious people would like to clear that up for me then I would be grateful.
Are people talking about religion in this thread?Hey that would make a great new thread title....................
Anyway.... Paris last Friday...............
I don't need any sympathy, kind of you as it is.
Do yourself a favour and read between the lines that people write and see how the tilt is always to Islam and never to any other religion. Neither do I understand how the atheists seem to think that they can rise above the arguments that surround Middle East politics, such as oil, the arms trade and, inevitably, Israel.
Mate, rather than implying Islam gets more focus than other religions due to some kind of bigotry against Muslims, has it ever occurred to you that it's because Islam is currently responsible for the vast majority of religiously motivated violence in the world at present?
Suicide bombers, ethnic cleansing, genocide, rape and sex slaves, terrorism.
These are all things being done by people claiming to follow the 'right' interpretation of Islam as they see it at present.
Why would you be surprised when people are more fearful and critical of Islam than say Christianity or Hinduism in this context?
Mate, rather than implying Islam gets more focus than other religions due to some kind of bigotry against Muslims, has it ever occurred to you that it's because Islam is currently responsible for the vast majority of religiously motivated violence in the world at present?
Suicide bombers, ethnic cleansing, genocide, rape and sex slaves, terrorism.
These are all things being done by people claiming to follow the 'right' interpretation of Islam as they see it at present.
Why would you be surprised when people are more fearful and critical of Islam than say Christianity or Hinduism in this context?
SalaamToo true, my new bro. ;)