Originally posted by pdrprst+Feb 2 2005, 03:07 AM--><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(pdrprst @ Feb 2 2005, 03:07 AM)</div><div class='quotemain'>Originally posted by jay_too@Feb 2 2005, 12:52 AM
<!--QuoteBegin-Pecker@Feb 1 2005, 08:41 PM
I guess, if the USA were to build a great wall to keep the bad guys out, half of us would be relieved.
The other half, however, would fuss and fume that the wall was actually a govenment scheme to keep us inside.[post=279327]Quoted post[/post]
I think that this sums up the great Republican/Democrat divide.
For one group only guns and physical barriers [think Maiginot Line] are protection; for the other, civil liberties are under attack.
Maybe, both are correct. It is interesting that for one group the 2d Amendment is the only one worth paying lip service to....and that refers only to an armed state militia and not the promise of an AK-47 in every closet.
jay
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i have to differ with you. Most wars are fought on economics. Religion is used to get the masses stirred up. Look what Bush has successfully done with the religious fundies. I doubt Bush gives a flip about God himself. The Crusades weren't really about religion as much as an effort to control trade. But they got a lot of the common folk and local noblemen stirred up to do their bidding based on religion. The best and the worst is found in religion. Nothing better than a true person of God that is loving, kind, genuine, giving. Nothing is worst then a religious fanatic, fake, full of hatred for other religions, takers.Originally posted by KinkGuy@Feb 3 2005, 12:03 AM
Most of the wars in history, with a few exceptions, WERE religious wars.
Crusades, The Dark Ages for example.
And anyway, what's the Bible got to do with it when God speaks to you and tells you to invade a sovereign nation and kill thousands upon thousands?
After all, the shrub himself defined it, in a speech as a "crusade."
The inmates REALLY ARE running the asylum.
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Indeed. However, from my study of US foreign policy over the last 50 years, shows that there has been no policy deviations at all. No change in administration ever deviates. Do you not find this interesting or suspicious? Like how Carter managed to preside over the dirtiest secret wars? (Actually more than JFK and that says something). Doesn't that sound a bit odd? Eisenhower was disgusted by what he learned as POTUS. There is something rotten in Washington, no doubt of that. In my mind, what we have with the Bush Administration that is different than previous administrations is that this administration seems to be a bit more blatant about it all. It doesn't disturb the ruling elite class because this is how things have always been done. It does disturb many average people because they are now becoming aware of this.Originally posted by Pecker@Feb 1 2005, 08:41 PM
I just can't fathom this conspiracy-theory mindset that seems to make the current administration so threatening.
Originally posted by jonb@Feb 4 2005, 06:30 PM
Passion is inversely correlated with evidence.
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Originally posted by gwinea2000+Feb 4 2005, 08:32 PM--><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(gwinea2000 @ Feb 4 2005, 08:32 PM)</div><div class='quotemain'><!--QuoteBegin-jonb@Feb 4 2005, 06:30 PM
Passion is inversely correlated with evidence.
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I'm not sure. If you add culture to the mix, probably so. I know that in the Catholic and Protestent fight in Ireland, many of the zealots haven't been in a church very many times. I know that most of the preachers and priests have condemned the fighting. Anyone who knows anything about Christianity would know that both groups fighting are violating the tenets of their own religion.Originally posted by lacsap1@Feb 3 2005, 06:08 PM
Feddie,
May we say; Religion is the greatest "factor" responsible in the world history that led to death of millions of people in so-called holy wars ?
Even though ethnic & nationalistic conflict has resulted in great number of killings in the world history, I donât think, the number is more than those killed in religious holy war since the beginning of human history. Itâs thought that the number of people killed in religious conflicts through the centuries exceeds 100 million (in early civilization various religious killing were in epidemic proportion all over the world), but an exact number would be impossible for any historian to learn. Nevertheless, within whatever has been recorded in the history, some examples are as follows:
-The Taiping Rebellion was launched in China in the 1850s by a Christian convert who said God appeared to him in a vision, told him he was a younger brother of Jesus, and told him to "kill demons." He raised a religious army and waged a horrendous war that killed as many as 20 million people, most encyclopedia say.
-The Thirty Years War between Protestants and Catholics in the 1600s killed an estimated one-third of Germany's population and left the region devastated.
-A half-dozen religious wars between France's Catholics and Protestant Huguenots killed hundreds of thousands. This was part of the Reformation and Counter-Reformation, which caused bloodshed all over Europe.
-The half-dozen Christian Crusades into the Holy Land butchered an untold number of people - and then popes began waging "internal crusades" against deviant Christians around Europe. The Hussite Wars were part of this nightmare. So was the Catholic war against Cathari Christians, which killed an estimated 20,000 people at the French city of Beziers.
-Christian pogroms and massacres of Jews recurred for centuries, fueling the anti-Semitism that culminated in Hitler's Holocaust. Many theologians say the Holocaust was a natural outgrowth of Christian hatred for Jews.
-A Buddhist-Hindu civil war is killing great numbers on the island of Sri Lanka(formerlyCeylon).
-Don't forget Ulster, where Catholics and Protestants murder each other
-10,000 Muslims were killed by Muslims themselves by civil war of Jamal. Another 70,000 were killed in siffen war between Hazrat Ali and Hazrat Muaiba.
-Muslim holy wars spread Islam westward across North Africa and up through Spain - and eastward into India - and northward through the Balkans into Austria. God only knows how many died in all those centuries of fighting.
The recent horror in the Balkans (between Catholic Croatians, Orthodox Serbs and Muslim Bosnians and Kosovars) is historic fallout from the ancient Muslim conquest.
-Around 1 million Hindus and Muslims were killed in rioting when India and Pakistan split in the late 1940s - and murder among Hindus, Muslims and Sikhs has continued sporadically ever since.
-The Muslim-Christian civil war in Sudan has been recurring since the 1960s, and has killed about 2 million. Civil war between religious militias devastated Lebanon during the 1980s.
-Also in 1971, Pakistan created one of the cruelest genocides in world
history by killing 3 million Bangalees in then East Pakistan (present
Bangladesh) in the name of protecting religion.
Even today we do see that most of the killings directly or indirectly are related to religion......
[post=279886]Quoted post[/post]
Which is why a White House aide referred to aforementioned Bush-haters as "the reality-based community". You really shouldn't talk about facts, given the history of think tanks. Here are some facts:Originally posted by gwinea2000@Feb 4 2005, 12:32 PM
Sounds about right. Example: Many people on this site are quite 'passionate' in their hatred for Bush and the current administration -- so much so that they lose sight of both logic and common sense. It's the same old story: Reach a conclusion, then set out to find some corroborative evidence. Heck, that's why conspiracies sell!Â
I don't mind. It humors me daily.
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Why is it that some of these stupid people are doctors, lawyers, CEO and on and on. Are they playing a game of charade or something?Originally posted by madame_zora@Feb 6 2005, 11:16 PM
Unfortunately, the stupid stories stick around longer because they're easier for the stupid people to understand. You posted a news story on statistical differentials in the Celebrity thread, you can't really think Joe Sixpack has a chance in hell of even grasping those concepts, let alone comprehending the gravity of them. But a blow job- by God, that's just not right! I love statistics, and I find that stuff tough to read. There are no jokes, the writer doesn't try very hard to accomodate the reader, it's just a littany of facts and sources- not a fun read at all.
Oh well, it's Superbowl Sunday, the election's over, middle America settles for beer and TV anesthesia.
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