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more money than God
(05-11-2012, 04:29 PM)
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#152
I'm neither Muslim nor Arab, and the FBI has been to my house. I'm an Assyrian Christian from Iraq.
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Member
(05-11-2012, 04:36 PM)
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#154
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Banned
(05-11-2012, 04:37 PM)
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#155
Out of interest, why were they there or is it a personal matter? Planning to nuke a country when you don't have nukes and have made it clear you have no intention of ever having nukes. Makes sense. |
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more money than God
(05-11-2012, 04:39 PM)
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#157
I'm not justifying anything, I'm not condoning anything. I'll admit that it's illogical and bitter anger. Now, I do tend to roll my eyes at Muslims who complain about discrimination, especially immigrants. They now want the American people to stand up for them, when they themselves did nothing to stand up for my family. I'm sorry, and I do mean the apology. It's ignorance on my part, but I just want you to understand where I'm coming from.
Last edited by SoulPlaya; 05-11-2012 at 04:42 PM.
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more money than God
(05-11-2012, 04:40 PM)
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#158
I can't really remember, as it was 10 years ago. It wasn't anything bad. I think they wanted to know if anyone was interested in working with them, maybe as a translator or something. They were very kind, left afterwards, and we were never bothered again.
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Member
(05-11-2012, 04:41 PM)
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#159
The song is recent, but the phrase is older. (I admit that you don't see it in speeches as much as you do in the post-WWII era.) But I think people who find it to be evidence that the US president is some kind of religious fanatic would also have to find "God save the king" disturbing, and the British phrase has been around longer than an independent US has.
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Member
(05-11-2012, 04:44 PM)
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#160
My uncle was killed by Saddam's goons. My father, was captured, but temporarily released because he was the only doctor in a village he worked in (worked in the public health system). At that point, my father (and the family) fled. This is why everything is so fucked right now. Libya gets "liberated" and then the minorities suffer, Shia get killed, Christians get killed, and even more so if you happen to be black. This is why I CAN NOT and WILL NOT support the opposition (mind you, I'm not supporting Assad either) in Syria because the minorities will get wiped out. Egypt is getting heavy Christian persecution as well... we all know how tolerant Saudi Arabia is... Anyway... they saw you as Iraqi and they came to your house, plain and simple.
I was in Jr. High at that point. Scared as to why they would come to our house. They tapped our phone lines as well. They did so for years, then it suddenly stopped after that. Luckily there hasn't been anything since.
Last edited by phosphor112; 05-11-2012 at 04:47 PM.
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more money than God
(05-11-2012, 04:50 PM)
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#161
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Member
(05-11-2012, 05:14 PM)
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#163
Dude, of course I understand. The Muslim Brotherhood is threatening the existence of my people! And you're right, a lot of people don't see this. It's really dangerous.
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Member
(05-11-2012, 05:33 PM)
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#166
Its a bit of stretch to say that minorities are getting slaughtered in arab countries like libya,egypt e.t.c there are assholes everywhere and even though i accept that their is a high level of intolerance in middle east when it comes to religion,but it shouldn't overemphasized....
Saudi are racist even with other arabs,as for syria,i only blame asaad...by not listening to the demands of ordinary syrians early on,he helped hardcore radicals to penetrate within the opposition...there was already significant al qaeeda presence in syria before the revolution but the revolution wasn't much sectarian when it started, it is now because the involvement of iran and Hezbollah gives the perspective that minority alwaites are killing the majority sunnis to save their control over the country. |
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Member
(05-11-2012, 05:53 PM)
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#169
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Banned
(05-11-2012, 06:15 PM)
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#170
L-O-FUCKING-L We brushed with fully out nuclear war multiple times during that period. And unlike now there was next to no benefit keeping our enemies and rivals well. Political unrest is nothing new. Yes there is some shit going down now, but nothing World War-like. |
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more money than God
(05-11-2012, 09:06 PM)
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#172
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Member
(05-11-2012, 09:42 PM)
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#173
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Member
(05-11-2012, 09:57 PM)
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#174
Compared to the rest of the middle east? Yeah, they are by far the best. Sure, they don't take well to apostates, but considering a Jew can live there and there are plenty of synagogues there.. yeah... they are the poster boy.
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Member
(05-11-2012, 10:14 PM)
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#177
Unfortunately some of the beliefs of the older generation of people still exist and still have weight and so the hate crimes will continue. :( There is some light at the end of the tunnel though and that is the younger generation are starting to not tolerate such beliefs as much anymore and in recent years there has been marches for example in Egypt with muslims and coptic christians together in religious unity... The problems might get worse though if muslims continue to feel it's an "us and them" situation...which is why the muslim brotherhood and other conservative parties have come up strongly post-arab spring. |
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Member
(05-11-2012, 10:15 PM)
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#178
The exception to the rule are groups that are considered blasphemous. As one said, the Bahai. They follow someone else as a prophet after Muhammad. |
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Member
(05-11-2012, 11:14 PM)
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#179
How did this suddenly turn into a 'bashing Sunni Muslims' thread?
You think that the Ahlul'Sunnah had it good under Saddam? The dude didn't care what sect you were from, he was a psychopath. Also the assertion that every Sunni from Libya to Syria is hot for killing Shia and Nasiri as soon as they get rid of the dictators that apparently stop it happening is BS. It is the kind of stuff that the dictators tell their minorities to convince them to not withdraw their support. What it actually does is create that kind of backlash, as the Shia and the Nasiri back Assad out of fear he creates of a backlash, which creates a backlash because they support him. |
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Member
(05-12-2012, 12:12 AM)
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#180
OBVIOUSLY Sunnis are dealing with the bullshit from Assad but the shia are also clearly outnumbered and more prone to persecution. |
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more money than God
(05-12-2012, 12:44 AM)
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#181
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"playing" dumb? unpossible
(05-12-2012, 12:45 AM)
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#182
Non-sunni minorities have it so bad in the middle east, it's not even funny. Hell go beyond that, non-Arab sunni minorities as well are treated like compost; just ask the Kurds. It happened in Iraq, it happened in Egypt, it happened in Libya, it's going to happen in Syria, and the Gulf states are what they are. Anyone who thinks this is sunni bashing, well, go cry me a fucking river.
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Member
(05-12-2012, 07:53 AM)
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#183
Quote:
The 'sectarian' card cuts all directions. You will find the region more understandable if you view it through the lens of material conflict rather than some 'Muslims killing non-Muslims' simplistic view.
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He was a Baathist first and a Sunni barely at all. Similarly what are you talking about with Egypt? A few wackjobs attack churches and while the majority of the population opposes attacks on the Nasiri? How does that narrative work? By your logic, the torturers in Abu Ghraib and this dude in American training camps represents the entirety of America. What is going to happen in Syria? Syria doesn't get a look in as an example of the way in which a minority uses violence to suppress dissent of the majority? The problem isn't some persecution of non-Sunni minorities, the problem is instability created in the wake of fallen dictators, none of whom represented Sunnis, or any other religious group for that matter. |
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Member
(05-12-2012, 08:49 AM)
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#185
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