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Swiss Woman Killed in Attack by Algerian shouting "Allahu Akbar"


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11 hours ago, MarkyM3 said:

You clearly know little about the true causes of the conflict in NI. Religion was the side issue. 

 

Why don't you educate us about Aisha, Mohamed's 6 year old wife by the way? Or kuffar. Or are these made up as well?

Religion was an issue, as you confirm. I've never suggested it was the whole issue. Thanks.

 

Are your examples from the Quran made up? I can't confirm either way. Neither can you. 

 

How about Noah's ark or the talking snake in the garden of Eden? Are they real?

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2 hours ago, youreavinalaff said:

Religion was an issue, as you confirm. I've never suggested it was the whole issue. Thanks.

 

Are your examples from the Quran made up? I can't confirm either way. Neither can you. 

 

How about Noah's ark or the talking snake in the garden of Eden? Are they real?

If you're saying that Aisha was made up then I don't think your Islamic friends will be too impressed. Or are you a kuffar in disguise? 

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2 hours ago, youreavinalaff said:

Religion was an issue, as you confirm. I've never suggested it was the whole issue. Thanks

 

The point is that the IRA and its members did not act in the name of the Catholic Church, nor were they primarily motivated by religion.  The jihadis who shout "Allahu akbar" are motivated by religion.

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12 minutes ago, MarkyM3 said:

If you're saying that Aisha was made up then I don't think your Islamic friends will be too impressed. Or are you a kuffar in disguise? 

I love the assumptions and the digs. They speak volumes.

Edited by youreavinalaff
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8 minutes ago, Evil Penevil said:

 

The point is that the IRA and its members did not act in the name of the Catholic Church, nor were they primarily motivated by religion.  The jihadis who shout "Allahu akbar" are motivated by religion.

 

They also didn't stab children, or gang rape women, or go door-to-door killing innocent families, like Hamas did last year, while Palestine and Muslims celebrated globally. 

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9 minutes ago, Evil Penevil said:

 

The point is that the IRA and its members did not act in the name of the Catholic Church, nor were they primarily motivated by religion.  The jihadis who shout "Allahu akbar" are motivated by religion.

How many protestant IRA members do you know?

 

How many protestants do you know who would have willingly walked into a catholic area during the troubles?

 

How about the Catholic groom in a wedding party who was gunned down for marrying a non Catholic?

 

You're saying the above were not motivated by religion? How strange.

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1 minute ago, FruitPudding said:

 

They also didn't stab children, or gang rape women, or go door-to-door killing innocent families, like Hamas did last year, while Palestine and Muslims celebrated globally. 

Did they not?

 

A pregnant woman and her child didn't die in an IRA bombing?

 

Innocent people weren't maimed by their terrorist attacks?

 

As for the stabbing you mention, if you're referring to Stockport, you've incorrectly linked to Islam.

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2 minutes ago, youreavinalaff said:

I love the assumptions and the digs. They dpeak volumes.

Are Aisha's existence and the concept of kuffar assumptions and digs? I think not, they are factually correct. And I'm not seeing any other "peaceful" religion pushing global domination of their ideology in the way this does. Someone earlier mentioned over 48k separate Islamic-related incidents I believe. Speaks volumes. 

 

The NI conflict you were pushing was about the fate of the 6 counties and whether they rejoined Eire. Not about Catholicism v Protestantism. Using that as an example didn't work too well.

 

Palestinian conflict is again about land rights primarily, not about the merits of Judaism v Islam. 

 

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14 minutes ago, MarkyM3 said:

The NI conflict you were pushing was about the fate of the 6 counties and whether they rejoined Eire. Not about Catholicism v Protestantism. Using that as an example didn't work too well.

It works perfectly well, when you actually look at the reasons why there was a divide. 

 

Religion was most certainly a reason.

 

You don't need me to point out your own digs.

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3 minutes ago, Neeranam said:

What about Israel murdering innocent civilians in Gaza in May 2023, does that not count? 

 

At least 15 Palestinians, including three commanders of the militant group Islamic Jihad, have been killed in Israeli air strikes on the Gaza Strip.

Palestinian health officials said eight women and children were among the dead. Another 22 people were injured.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-65529490

 

 

17 minutes ago, Neeranam said:

ISIS, Hamas, and Hezbollah have committed acts of violence, but you don't understand the broader context in which these groups operate. Many of these organizations emerged in response to historical grievances, including colonialism, foreign intervention, and ongoing conflicts that have destabilized regions.

The formation of Hamas can be linked to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Hezbollah arose in 1982 in the struggle against Israeli incursions.

ISIS emerged in part due to the circumstances created by the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003.

 

The vast majority of Muslims worldwide do not support these groups and actively work against extremism. The portrayal of Muslims as monolithic or inherently violent is misleading. 

 

   Put your post in a Check on the A.I detector .

Result :

 

100%
of text is likely AI-generated

 

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2 hours ago, Nick Carter icp said:

 

 

 

   Put your post in a Check on the A.I detector .

Result :

 

100%
of text is likely AI-generated

 

 

 

 

I'll have to learn how to check text like you have done here, to find out the possibility if it has been AI generated.

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7 hours ago, youreavinalaff said:

How many protestant IRA members do you know?

 

I know there were some, just as there were a few  Catholic unionists.  However, in both cases, it's a very small number and an obvious exception to the dominant trends.  What does that prove?   If you are telling us the vast majority of IRA members were Irish nationqlits who opposed British rule in Northern Ireland and the corresponding majority of Protestants were loyalists/unionists who wanted to remain in the U.K., that's never been disputed.

 

7 hours ago, youreavinalaff said:

How many protestants do you know who would have willingly walked into a catholic area during the troubles?

Depends how you are using the word Protestant.  If you mean Ulster Protestants, very, very few, but Protestants from outside Northern ireland faced no more danger than anyone else.     Local Protestant unionists and loalists were the enemy, not all Protestants.

 

In cities all over the world, outsiders can become targets in some neighborhoods, while they are both safe and welcome in others.  The danger of a neighborhood depends on socio-economic factors that breed crime.

 

7 hours ago, youreavinalaff said:

How about the Catholic groom in a wedding party who was gunned down for marrying a non Catholic?

 

You're saying the above were not motivated by religion? How strange.

 

I'm not familiar with the shooting incident, so I can't comment on whether it was motivated by relligion,  personal grudge or some other factor.  You keep ignoring the point that unlike Muslim terrorists,  the IRA didn't have a religious agenda.  It DID NOT act in the name of the Catholic Church, nor it ever seek to force the conversion of Protestants or give the Catholic Church and its members special status non-Catholics couldn't enjoy.

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