Anti Islam rant goes wrong

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I would just like to add that hate can subside as well. There are people who were once filled with hate and eventually intellectualized it to a point where it vanished.

In one of the books by BBC political editor, John Simpson, he remarks on the irony of how the old provo leaders whom he regarded as gentlemen in manners, refused to accept the Northern Ireland peace process - while the very people he regarded as fringe and dangerous, such as Martin McGuiness and Jerry Adams, were the ones who actually embraced it.
 
As for Americans who would "call the IRA freedom fighters", I know the number is not zero, since I met one, thirty years ago, but I've never met a second one. They are not exactly thick on the ground.

In 2001 there were an estimated 40 million Irish-American's in the USA. If even half of them gave $1 a year to "the cause" the terrorists could buy a fair few weapons with that. Court hearings in the US during the 70's clearly publicised that funds raised for Ireland were being used for weapons and seized weapons in Ireland even had the American weapons dealers names engraved on them ... yet the funds kept pouring in.

I agree as a Brit I probably believe that American support was much wider reaching than it really was ... I wonder if you do the same when we discuss Palestinians and Hamas?

Greetings Muslimwoman, it is so seldom we speak together anymore.

Salam Juantoo

So true and I must make an effort to drop by more regularly but nice to talk with you now.

I must make a correction here though, please.

You do realize that 9/11 occurred prior to overt American involvement in Afghanistan, right? While we did go into Iraq previously, it was in defense of Kuwait. So if this is what Muslims are thinking...hurray! America got their comeuppance!...their clocks are backwards. America was struck first, 9/11 was the instigation for going (back) into Iraq and for going into Afghanistan for the first time.

I'm afraid that's only a correction if you look at it from our (the West's) perspective. We (the West) seem to have an infuriating habit of seperating everything out .. this war was named XYZ and started on this date ... in a neighbouring country we were supporting "freedom fighters" against our own enemy ... etc ... yet we never seem to string all of these things together. How does our foreign policy affect people's view of our country?!

Let's take Afghanistan as an example. At the turn of the century the Afghans were fighting the third war against the British (foreigners) .. they then had 4 decades of civil strife and attempted coups .. until the Russians (foreigners) invaded ... because of the Cold War the US wouldn't stand for that and financed and trained an army of "freedom fighters" ... of course these freedom fighters were meant to form a pro US government ... the Afghan people then had the Taliban leadership to contend with who rejected outright the US approaches to site an oilpipe through their country ... in the summer of 2001 English and French newspapers reported that the US was gathering support for an invasion of Afghanistan to oust the Taliban ... 9/11 happened and we had the perfect excuse to invade Afghanistan. What is startling is the brazenness with which the US began it's building of said oil pipline, only 6 months after the invasion began.

So if I were an Afghan I would not see it as a sudden invasion of my country in 2001 by a saviour force against the brutal Taliban or even a force determined to stop international terrorism, I would see it as just another war by foreign powers over oil. I would see my people dying, my religion and culture being eroded and outside countries determining my countries future and see a highly visible thread running through foreign policy toward the Middle East in the past few decades.

For Iraq we would have to look at the US policies in the Iran/Iraq war, at their sudden swing in changing sides and their influence in getting Saddam to invade Kuwait in the first place, in our lack of military force until Saddam refused to share the Kuwaiti oil with us and the sanctions against Iraq which led to hundreds of thousands of children dying ... long before the "second" Iraq war "after" 9/11.

Add to the pot the US and European attitude toward the Israel/Palestine conflict and you get a really pee'd off bunch of people who do not see Mid East history quite the way we do.

In my experience Arabs do not compartmentalise conflicts in the way we do (perhaps we do it because we are such experienced colonists) and they see outside influence or aggresion toward them or a neighbouring country as interference and intolerable.

As an aside, there is something I really don't understand about the Arabs, they will not lift a finger to help their neighbours but they see every external (ie non Arab) insult or attack on their neighbours as their own ... maybe it's like siblings, who will fight tooth and nail until the kid next door hits one of them and then the siblings stand together??

We have yet to address Saudi over it.

Why on earth would we address Saudi over it? First they have vast amounts of money invested in the US, enough to seriously damage the US and in turn European economies if they suddenly dropped all their stocks and withdrew their gold from banks. Second they have a hefty influence in OPEC and have been quite instrumental in ensuring that oil is still traded in dollars. Third they are basically the centre of the universe for Muslims, to be honest most Muslims I have met (if not all) see them as a bit on the crazy side but Mecca is in Saudi and any threat to Mecca or it's "guardians" would be akin to declaring all out war on Muslims (something the Saudi's have traded on for years).

So "all of Islam" isn't quite correct

I'm sorry but from where I am sitting "all of Islam" is unfortunately quite correct. I just did a google search for "islam+1999" and looked at the first 3 pages of google results (I discounted anything which is written after Sep 2001 but happens to have the date 1999 in).

The third link on the first page is a news article about a House of Lords legal case involving a man named Islam and there is an article on Human Rights in Islam (which appears to be from a Jewish source as it has the words Bat Ye'or in the title).

Other than that there is the usual spattering of religious sites, women's rights ssues from sites like Middle East Quarterly and a couple of sites about history.

Now a search for islam+2002 and a look at the first 3 pages

The first result on page one is Inside Islam (2002) (TV) .. a documentary. Clearly this was int eh response to the question "who are thes people that flew planes into buildings??!!

Then we have Inside Islam the movie, The History of Tafsir, Leaving Islam, Unholy War the future of Islam, Islam Watch and finally More than Islamic Extremists and all that just on the first page, just one link to a Muslim site.

This was a change that may not seem obvious to non Muslims but is very frightening for ordinary Muslims around the world. We now see dress bans, people demand that peaceful Muslims do something .. like we all have a OBL's mobile number and that doesn't even tackle the issue of Muslim countries being invaded based on a whole load of lies and scaremongering.

...I grew up a poor Catholic with Irish ancestry, living in the UK. weight of propaganda and half-truths.

Catch idealists early, and they make great terrorists... Give them a figure to hate, to blame, they'll go for it. People is people.

Thank you for your openess Sam, a very insightful read.

May I ask how much religion was used to influence your learning process or was it simply a label to identify them and us?

Reading your post I was reminded of a documentary interview I watched with a British woman who had been in Nazi Germany and she said during rallies, with all the flag waving and singing she had to force her arm not to go up in a Nazi salute. She explained that there is something hypnotic about belonging to a strong group, a group with a purpose and even though she was there to fight this very enemy it was hard not to be drawn in by the power such a group/crowd projects.
 
...In 2001 there were an estimated 40 million Irish-American's in the USA. If even half of them gave $1 a year to "the cause" the terrorists could buy a fair few weapons with that. Court hearings in the US during the 70's clearly publicised that funds raised for Ireland were being used for weapons and seized weapons in Ireland even had the American weapons dealers names engraved on them ... yet the funds kept pouring in....
If...and that is the key to this stereotypical diatribe MS. You insulted every American who happens to be of Irish decent. You are no better than the rest of the world.

I am surprised and stymied...I thought you bridging two worlds, would be above such garbage...
 
If...and that is the key to this stereotypical diatribe MS. You insulted every American who happens to be of Irish decent. You are no better than the rest of the world.

I am surprised and stymied...I thought you bridging two worlds, would be above such garbage...

LOL when did I ever claim to be better than anyone in the rest of the world? I, like everyone, am a result of my life experiences .. so no better or worse than anyone else. Sam I can respect, he is honest about his loyalties and life experiences but your usual American holier than thou attitude is wearing a bit thin.

Surprised and Stymied :eek: don't be a drama queen. I potentially insulted about a quarter of Irish Americans but someone was putting those coins in the buckets and I doubt it was Italian Americans.

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A US President welcomes a known terrorist to the White House as though he was a legitimate politician. I wonder if we should invite OBL to Downing Street?

Senior political figures go on record to endorse IRA activities (look up Kennedy and his cronies).

Noraid were able to run $175 a plate fund raisers in cities like NY and your government did diddly squat to stop it or even investigate where the raised money was going.

The UK provided all the evidence needed to show that NORAID were collecting funds for arms but it wasn't a good political move for the US government to accept or act on because it could potentially lose them millions of votes .. so they had a couple of court cases to keep us Brits quiet but ensured NORAID was never involved in them.

Americans trained IRA members both in the US and in Ireland. (ironic isn't it that since 9/11 the US is demanding to know what the UK and Pakistan are doing to stop UK citizens going to Pakistan to train people in the terrorist camps)!!!!

Weapons were smuggled from the USA to UK (amazing that since 9/11 we can't take a bottle of water onto a plane but during the troubles in Ireland the US government claimed it was impossible to stop arms or currency smuggling to Ireland).

Certain American media organisations referred to the Provisional IRA as freedom fighters and not terrorists, right through the troubles.

Hunted IRA terrorists were shipped to the US where the Brits couldn't touch them and the American government refused to deport them for trial in the UK. (hmm I wonder how Americans would react if we let Ayman al-Zawahiri into our country to fund raise and refused to deport him to the US??)

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In Aug 2001 the Columbia 3 cast a shadow over fund raising in America .. the IRA training FARC rebels didn't sit so well with Americans, it was way too close to your own doorstep.

Just a month later terrorism hit the US homeland and hey presto, not only did NORAID find it's funding dried up but the US attitude toward bombings and terrorists changed instantly, along with changes in your legal system ... where were these legal changes during the decades people lay dead, dying and maimed in the streets of Belfast or when our Government was bombed in a hotel in England?

Guilt comes in the form of complicity as well as direct action.

Not until you experienced terrorism for yourselves did your country change it's stance and change it's laws to ensure you couldn't have expensive dinners to raise funds for terrorist organisations and that bank accounts of suspected terrorist supporters would be scrutinised. Your country then expected the entire world to support it and act on it's behalf.

I understand that you want to live in a happy little bubble where your country does no wrong but one day you'll need to join the real world where our governments tell lies to go to war over oil and portions of our citizens fund terrorism.

So here's my question. If say, just for example, the UK did all of this for AlQ and the BBC referred to OBL as a freedom fighter how would you as an American react? Would you support the US/UK "special relationship" or would you think the Brit's were a bunch of terrorist loving hypocrites? Just asking.
 
LOL when did I ever claim to be better than anyone in the rest of the world? I, like everyone, am a result of my life experiences .. so no better or worse than anyone else. Sam I can respect, he is honest about his loyalties and life experiences but your usual American holier than thou attitude is wearing a bit thin.

Surprised and Stymied :eek: don't be a drama queen. I potentially insulted about a quarter of Irish Americans but someone was putting those coins in the buckets and I doubt it was Italian Americans...
ah, I see now.
 
In 2001 there were an estimated 40 million Irish-American's in the USA. If even half of them gave $1 a year...
There are an estimated billion-plus Muslims in the world. If even half of them gave $1 a year...
Even half of one percent of the Irish-Americans in the USA would be a gross overestimate.
I agree as a Brit I probably believe that American support was much wider reaching than it really was ... I wonder if you do the same when we discuss Palestinians and Hamas?
Polls in Muslim countries always find double-digit support for violent terrorism. Support in the US is too small to measure. You are several orders of magnitude off.
 
Polls in Muslim countries always find double-digit support for violent terrorism. Support in the US is too small to measure. You are several orders of magnitude off.
So how much support is there in US for violent mass murder and loot (provided that they actually know in how many countries its actually happening under the euphemisms like democracy, freedoms, interests & ofcourse the sick joke, peace).
 
There are an estimated billion-plus Muslims in the world. If even half of them gave $1 a year...

then our idiots would have a little over .5 billion

much less than 660 billion, which is what your idiots are getting for the year 2010

Everyone knows you yanks reign supreme in the "violent terrorism" department dude. You should be open & proud. Why hide in the closet? ; ) Personally, i think your congress should quit whinnin about economic problems and restart all the projects they canceled. Case in point: production for F-22s. Right now, even the Indians with their Flanker MKIs can rape the F-15C! that's just sad... and i'm not even a fan of india!
 
Right now, even the Indians with their Flanker MKIs can rape the F-15C! You guy's are slackin man...
...is this a segue?

F-15s are on their way out... even so..."according to Aviation Week and Space Technology, [April 10, 2004] "Two major factors stand out: None of the six 3rd Wing F-15Cs was equipped with the newest long-range, active electronically scanned array (AESA) radars. These Raytheon APG-63(V)2 radars were designed to find small and stealthy targets. At India's request, the U.S. agreed to mock combat at 3-to-1 odds and without the use of simulated long-range, radar-guided AIM-120 Amraams that even the odds with beyond-visual-range kills."

And I'd like to hear more about the "Yankee, violent terrorism" part...
 
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So how much support is there in US for violent mass murder and loot (provided that they actually know in how many countries its actually happening under the euphemisms like democracy, freedoms, interests & ofcourse the sick joke, peace).
How many countries are there? Please give country names, statistics, etc., or at least a link that we can check for ourselves.

Thanks.

Q
 
"according to Aviation Week and Space Technology, [April 10, 2004] "Two major factors stand out: None of the six 3rd Wing F-15Cs was equipped with the newest long-range, active electronically scanned array (AESA) radars. These Raytheon APG-63(V)2 radars were designed to find small and stealthy targets. At India's request, the U.S. agreed to mock combat at 3-to-1 odds and without the use of simulated long-range, radar-guided AIM-120 Amraams that even the odds with beyond-visual-range kills.".

That's because the Indians weren't using their classified Russian N011M BARS radar during the exercises, (which has a search range of 350km and makes each MKI Flanker a "mini AWACS").

And only 18 F15s have been upgraded with the AESA radar. So dont get too excited.

F-15s are on their way out...
to be replaced by what? only 180 f22s are being produced. There are over a 1000 F15s that are outdated TODAY. Who's gonna fill the gap? The f35 isnt even gonna begin to be introduced until 2014

and by the way, the reliance on the F35 over the F22 was a BIG mistake... the f35 was not designed as a pure air superiority fighter like the f22... you guys are cuttin' corners. All the while, the Russians, Chinese and Indians are catchin up with their own 5th generation devices. case in point:




Do you realize that right now, if there was a conflict between china and taiwan,the US would be forced to NOT deploy its carriers? It has nothing to adequately counter new gen ASM missiles + supercavitating torpedoes (which even the Iranians have, by the way).

but at least you got the taliban under control... oh wait, YOU DON'T


And I'd like to hear more about the "Yankee, violent terrorism" part...
civilian deaths in 9/11 WTC = 3000+

civilian deaths in Afghanistan (as a result of American operations) = 24000+
 
That's because the Indians weren't using their classified Russian N011M BARS radar during the exercises, (which has a search range of 350km and makes each MKI Flanker a "mini AWACS").

And only 18 F15s have been upgraded with the AESA radar. So dont get too excited.

to be replaced by what? only 180 f22s are being produced. There are over a 1000 F15s that are outdated TODAY. Who's gonna fill the gap? The f35 isnt even gonna begin to be introduced until 2014

and by the way, the reliance on the F35 over the F22 was a BIG mistake... the f35 was not designed as a pure air superiority fighter like the f22... you guys are cuttin' corners. All the while, the Russians, Chinese and Indians are catchin up with their own 5th generation devices. case in point:




Do you realize that right now, if there was a conflict between china and taiwan,the US would be forced to NOT deploy its carriers? It has nothing to adequately counter new gen ASM missiles + supercavitating torpedoes (which even the Iranians have, by the way).

but at least you got the taliban under control... oh wait, YOU DON'T


civilian deaths in 9/11 WTC = 3000+

civilian deaths in Afghanistan (as a result of American operations) = 24000+
American operations?

Better check again.

...and F-15s are on their way out....
 
American operations?

Technical term: "US-led operations" ... happy?

Better check again.
Better idea: you check

Civilian casualties of the War in Afghanistan (2001?present) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


...and F-15s are on their way out....

oh, so we're just repeating ourselves now?
i think i missed that memo... fine by me though.

"to be replaced by what? only 180 f22s are being produced. There are over a 1000 F15s that are outdated TODAY. Who's gonna fill the gap? The f35 isnt even gonna begin to be introduced until 2014

and by the way, the reliance on the F35 over the F22 was a BIG mistake... the f35 was not designed as a pure air superiority fighter like the f22... you guys are cuttin' corners. All the while, the Russians, Chinese and Indians are catchin up with their own 5th generation devices."
 
Technical term: "US-led operations" ... happy?

Better idea: you check

Civilian casualties of the War in Afghanistan (2001?present) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia




oh, so we're just repeating ourselves now?
i think i missed that memo... fine by me though.

"to be replaced by what? only 180 f22s are being produced. There are over a 1000 F15s that are outdated TODAY. Who's gonna fill the gap? The f35 isnt even gonna begin to be introduced until 2014

and by the way, the reliance on the F35 over the F22 was a BIG mistake... the f35 was not designed as a pure air superiority fighter like the f22... you guys are cuttin' corners. All the while, the Russians, Chinese and Indians are catchin up with their own 5th generation devices."
Nah, I don't have to check anything. I don't even want us there. I want my sons home, and that place can blow itself to hell just fine without our help.

Survived this long killing each other, they'll manage to survive another millenia doing the same. What a sad shame.
 
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