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JimCM

Advanced Member
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Everything posted by JimCM

  1. See the silliness? Did you blame all Catholics? This is how foolish it would be to do what you are doing by blaming all Muslims because of the actions of two extremists.
  2. You are so confused, you probably blamed the Pope when the IRA blew up Norman Tebbbit and co.
  3. @Evil Penevil here is the thread. Why are you avoiding it?
  4. Troll. You are using an attack on a Jewish community to brandish your hate at an entire religion of 2 million people. You self righteous @#&£
  5. Bibi, you mean? Yes, he even helped finance Hamas in order to prevent a two-state solution. It's his goals and actions, which are being supported by Trump that are causing these attacks.
  6. Like the head of the UN said in regards to Oct 7, "it didn't happen in a vacuum". There are people here that are Islamophobic and can't get their bigoted heads as round that fact.
  7. Not 'possible' , come on get real, it's the reason for increasing antisemitism around the world, the only reason. So the blame is on ALL Muslims? Unbelievable you can say that.
  8. What teachings ? Do you think the current Genocide in Gaza could have anything to do with the increase in violence against Jews around the world?
  9. Go on be brave and say what you mean, instead of trying to hide your vile islamophobia.
  10. Are you really saying no Muslims should be allowed to emigrate? You're Islamophobic to the max.
  11. .Australia allowed millions of Jews to enter as refugees. Only an Israeli could assume all people from Gaza are terrorists. Where do you want these oppressed people to go? "Gaza and other places issues" is called Genocide by most around the world, including Amnesty International. https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/2025/11/israels-genocide-against-palestinians-in-gaza-continues-unabated-despite-ceasefire/ I've said before, your country's continued Genocide is causing danger to normal Jews around the world.
  12. Another horrific act, and my condolences to those affected. But calling a religion “the religion of peace” is bigoted and wrong. Violence comes from extremists, not from an entire faith followed peacefully by millions. And that Muslim hero, who saved probably tens of lives <removed> Well done Ahmed al-Ahmed !!
  13. So you support Daniella Weiss, the settler Queen, thanks at least for admitting it.
  14. Disgracefully misleading quoting a Hamas 1988 Charter when you know very well it was changed more recently. Also Hezbollah was formed partly due to the US US military presence (1982–1984) After Israel invaded Lebanon in 1982, the US led a Multinational Force (MNF) How it was perceived locally: The US Marines were not neutral They were seen as protecting Israel’s gains and supporting Lebanon’s Christian-led government US naval forces bombarded Muslim and Druze areas For many Lebanese Shiites, this looked like foreign military control, not peacekeeping.
  15. You bigot. This is racist, saying ban all Muslim. If you don't mean Muslims, I'll apologize.
  16. What the hell does he expect after taking $400 million of extremist Israeli, Miriam Adelson and husband, and sending 20,000 lb bombs that killed 25,000 children in Gaza. Did he learn nothing from unjust wars resulting in the formation of Al Queda and 9/11. Why was Hezbollah formed? Hamas? All to do with US supporting crimes in ME. Supporting illegal settlements in West Bank, separate roads for Jews etc Get the hell out of the middle east, it's got nothing to do with USA.
  17. Do you condone Daniella Weiss? Do you, or did you support thugs taking settlements in the West Bank, or turn a blind eye as the IDF do?
  18. Some can't get their head around that. I get called lefty, as if it's an insult. I vote Reform and like Trump lol. That guy supports the illegal settlements in the West Bank and justified Israel's destruction of Gaza.
  19. You are islamophobic, full stop. I'm not sure your fear but you should work on it. Bigotry is not a quality most men want in t he eir character. I'll bet my bottom baht you don't have any Thai male friends. Ironic as you are an immigrant and refuse to integrate.
  20. Scroll through certain corners of the internet and you’ll find no shortage of self-styled “defenders of Britain” sounding the alarm about Muslim immigrants. The tone is familiar: the country is under threat, its identity is being erased, and only the loudest voices on social media are brave enough to tell the truth. But if this sounds new, it shouldn’t. Britain has lived through this kind of moral panic before. Four hundred years ago, the supposed threat came from Catholics. In the aftermath of the Reformation, English Protestants convinced themselves that Catholics were a shadowy internal enemy—agents of foreign powers, plotting to overturn the nation from within. Political tensions and a handful of real conspiracies gave fuel to a fear far larger than the facts, and pamphlets of the time dripped with righteous certainty that the country was on the brink. Today, the pamphlets have been replaced by memes, but the pattern is strikingly similar. Islamophobic corners of social media frame Muslim immigrants not as ordinary people building lives here, but as part of a coordinated “invasion”. The claims are just as dramatic, and just as thinly supported. The focus is not on lived reality but on the thrill of outrage, amplified by algorithms and tribalism. What both eras show is that Britain’s greatest religious panics have rarely been about theology. They have been about social change, uncertainty, and the fear of losing control. When people feel destabilised—by war, economic hardship, or simply rapid change—they look for someone to blame. In the 17th century, it was Catholics. Today, it is often Muslims. The target shifts; the anxiety remains. And yet history also shows something else: these panics pass. Over time, British Catholics became part of the fabric of national life. The same, quietly and steadily, is happening with Britain’s Muslim communities. People work together, live alongside one another, raise families, and share neighbourhoods. The everyday reality of coexistence always outlives the noise of those who insist that the sky is falling. Panic has a short lifespan. Society does not. And each time Britain survives a wave of fear, it learns again what should be obvious: that ordinary people, whatever their faith, are rarely the threat they are made out to be.

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