It would indeed be better for us all, but it won't be going away anytime soon.Elbow beards said:I've said it before and I'll say it again
"FUCK EACH AND EVERY RELIGION ON THE PLANET, IT WILL BE THE END OF US ALL"
The sooner people stop believing in cloud fairies the better
The sooner people stop thinking all this is about religon the better. If all religion was forgotten tomorrow these very same people would be fighting over land or money, resources etc. Their way of life is being eroded in a modern world. All islamic terrorism is in response to that, whether subconciously or not.Elbow beards said:I've said it before and I'll say it again
"FUCK EACH AND EVERY RELIGION ON THE PLANET, IT WILL BE THE END OF US ALL"
The sooner people stop believing in cloud fairies the better
everythingchangesbutblue said:The sooner people stop thinking all this is about religon the better. If all religion was forgotten tomorrow these very same pople would be fighting over land or money, resources etc. Their way of life is being eroded in a modern world. All islamic terrorism is in response to that, whether subconciously or not.Elbow beards said:I've said it before and I'll say it again
"FUCK EACH AND EVERY RELIGION ON THE PLANET, IT WILL BE THE END OF US ALL"
The sooner people stop believing in cloud fairies the better
everythingchangesbutblue said:The sooner people stop thinking all this is about religon the better. If all religion was forgotten tomorrow these very same pople would be fighting over land or money, resources etc. Their way of life is being eroded in a modern world. All islamic terrorism is in response to that, whether subconciously or not.Elbow beards said:I've said it before and I'll say it again
"FUCK EACH AND EVERY RELIGION ON THE PLANET, IT WILL BE THE END OF US ALL"
The sooner people stop believing in cloud fairies the better
By definition, without religion there wouldn't be any Muslims, moderate or otherwise.whp.blue said:everythingchangesbutblue said:The sooner people stop thinking all this is about religon the better. If all religion was forgotten tomorrow these very same pople would be fighting over land or money, resources etc. Their way of life is being eroded in a modern world. All islamic terrorism is in response to that, whether subconciously or not.Elbow beards said:I've said it before and I'll say it again
"FUCK EACH AND EVERY RELIGION ON THE PLANET, IT WILL BE THE END OF US ALL"
The sooner people stop believing in cloud fairies the better
This is true however without the Religion to hide behind what would the so called Moderate Muslim do?
everythingchangesbutblue said:The sooner people stop thinking all this is about religon the better. If all religion was forgotten tomorrow these very same people would be fighting over land or money, resources etc. Their way of life is being eroded in a modern world. All islamic terrorism is in response to that, whether subconciously or not.Elbow beards said:I've said it before and I'll say it again
"FUCK EACH AND EVERY RELIGION ON THE PLANET, IT WILL BE THE END OF US ALL"
The sooner people stop believing in cloud fairies the better
I wonder what this female jihadist was promised in paradise by the IS brethren for strapping herself up with semtex?oakiecokie said:That didn`t take long for the retribution to start :
4 February 2015, 5:28
Iraqi Militant Executed After IS Murders Pilot
Jordan has executed two prisoners after Islamic State murdered one of their pilots, a government spokesman has said.
One of those executed was Iraqi would-be suicide bomber Sajida al Rishawi, who was on death row for her role in a hotel attack that killed 60 people.
The other was Ziad al Karbouli, who had been an aide to the late former leader of Al Qaeda in Iraq, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, and who was sentenced to death in 2008 for plotting terror attacks on Jordanians in Iraq.
Jordan had promised a swift and lethal response after IS released a video showing captured pilot Mu'ath Al Kassasbeh being burned alive in a cage.
IS had demanded the release of Rishawi in exchange for Mr Al Kassasbeh and Japanese journalist Kenji Goto, who the militant group killed in a video posted online three days ago.
Jordan had agreed to the swap, but called off the deal after saying it had received no proof that the pilot was still alive.
Some Arab commentators had suggested jihadist Al Karbouli could also form part of a prisoner swap.
The killing of the pilot outraged Jordanians and drew worldwide condemnation, including from President Barack Obama and the UN Security Council.
Mr Al Kassasbeh was captured by the militants in December when his F-16 crashed near Raqqa, Syria, the de facto capital of the Islamic State group's self-styled caliphate.
The 26-year-old's murder appeared to be aimed at pressuring the government of Jordan - a close US ally - to leave the coalition that has carried out months of airstrikes on IS positions in Syria and Iraq.
But observers say the extremists' brutality against a fellow Muslim could backfire and galvanise other Sunni Muslims in the region against them.
King Abdullah II, Jordan's leader, has portrayed the campaign against the extremists as a battle over values.