| Topic: |
Science > Abortion |
| User: |
"Mimi Cohen" |
| Date: |
17 Feb 2006 06:52:29 PM |
| Object: |
Re: Brought Up To Hate |
DoD wrote:
The controversy regarding the Danish cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed
completely misses the point. Of course, the cartoons are offensive to
Muslims, but newspaper cartoons do not warrant the burning of buildings and
the killing of innocent people. The cartoons did not cause the disease of
hate that we are seeing in the Muslim world on our television screens at
night - they are only a symptom of a far greater disease.
I was born and raised as a Muslim in Cairo, Egypt and in the Gaza Strip. In
the 1950s, my father was sent by Egypt's President, Gamal Abdel Nasser, to
head the Egyptian military intelligence in Gaza and the Sinai where he
founded the Palestinian Fedayeen, or "armed resistance". They made
cross-border attacks into Israel, killing 400 Israelis and wounding more
than 900 others.
My father was killed as a result of the Fedayeen operations when I was eight
years old. He was hailed by Nasser as a national hero and was considered a
shaheed, or martyr. In his speech announcing the nationalisation of the Suez
Canal, Nasser vowed that all of Egypt would take revenge for my father's
death. My siblings and I were asked by Nasser: "Which one of you will avenge
your father's death by killing Jews?" We looked at each other speechless,
unable to answer.
In school in Gaza, I learned hate, vengeance and retaliation. Peace was
never an option, as it was considered a sign of defeat and weakness. At
school we sang songs with verses calling Jews "dogs" (in Arab culture, dogs
are considered unclean).
Criticism and questioning were forbidden. When I did either of these, I was
told: "Muslims cannot love the enemies of God, and those who do will get no
mercy in hell." As a young woman, I visited a Christian friend in Cairo
during Friday prayers, and we both heard the verbal attacks on Christians
and Jews from the loudspeakers outside the mosque. They said: "May God
destroy the infidels and the Jews, the enemies of God. We are not to
befriend them or make treaties with them." We heard worshippers respond
"Amen".
My friend looked scared; I was ashamed. That was when I first realised that
something was very wrong in the way my religion was taught and practised.
Sadly, the way I was raised was not unique. Hundreds of millions of other
Muslims also have been raised with the same hatred of the West and Israel as
a way to distract from the failings of their leaders. Things have not
changed since I was a little girl in the 1950s.
Palestinian television extols terrorists, and textbooks still deny the
existence of Israel. More than 300 Palestinians schools are named after
shaheeds, including my father. Roads in both Egypt and Gaza still bear his
name - as they do of other "martyrs". What sort of message does that send
about the role of terrorists? That they are heroes. Leaders who signed peace
treaties, such as President Anwar Sadat, have been assassinated. Today, the
Islamo-fascist president of Iran uses nuclear dreams, Holocaust denials and
threats to "wipe Israel off the map" as a way to maintain control of his
divided country.
Indeed, with Denmark set to assume the rotating presidency of the UN
Security Council, the flames of the cartoon controversy have been fanned by
Iran and Syria. This is critical since the International Atomic Energy
Agency is expected to refer Iran to the Security Council and demand
sanctions. At the same time, Syria is under scrutiny for its actions in
Lebanon. Both Iran and Syria cynically want to embarrass the Danes to
achieve their dangerous goals.
But the rallies and riots come from a public ripe with rage. From my
childhood in Gaza until today, blaming Israel and the West has been an
industry in the Muslim world. Whenever peace seemed attainable, Palestinian
leaders found groups who would do everything to sabotage it. They allowed
their people to be used as the front line of Arab jihad. Dictators in
countries surrounding the Palestinians were only too happy to exploit the
Palestinians as a diversion from problems in their own backyards. The only
voice outside of government control in these areas has been the mosques, and
these places of worship have been filled with talk of jihad.
Is it any surprise that after decades of indoctrination in a culture of
hate, that people actually do hate? Arab society has created a system of
relying on fear of a common enemy. It's a system that has brought them
much-needed unity, cohesion and compliance in a region ravaged by tribal
feuds, instability, violence, and selfish corruption. So Arab leaders blame
Jews and Christians rather than provide good schools, roads, hospitals,
housing, jobs, or hope to their people.
For 30 years I lived inside this war zone of oppressive dictatorships and
police states. Citizens competed to appease and glorify their dictators, but
they looked the other way when Muslims tortured and terrorised other
Muslims. I witnessed honour killings of girls, oppression of women, female
genital mutilation, polygamy and its devastating effect on family relations.
All of this is destroying the Muslim faith from within.
It's time for Arabs and Muslims to stand up for their families. We must stop
allowing our leaders to use the West and Israel as an excuse to distract
from their own failed leadership and their citizens' lack of freedoms. It's
time to stop allowing Arab leaders to complain about cartoons while turning
a blind eye to people who defame Islam by holding Korans in one hand while
murdering innocent people with the other.
Muslims need jobs - not jihad. Apologies about cartoons will not solve the
problems. What is needed is hope and not hate. Unless we recognise that the
culture of hate is the true root of the riots surrounding this cartoon
controversy, this violent overreaction will only be the start of a clash of
civilis-ations that the world cannot bear.
http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=21322
The only surprise here is that the author was allowed to write it.
.
|
|
| User: "Humbucker" |
|
| Title: Re: Brought Up To Hate |
18 Feb 2006 02:10:08 AM |
|
|
"Mimi Cohen" <mimiNOSPAMgal@cox.net> wrote in message
news:OcuJf.20$_87.11@fed1read06...
DoD wrote:
The controversy regarding the Danish cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed
completely misses the point. Of course, the cartoons are offensive to
Muslims, but newspaper cartoons do not warrant the burning of buildings
and
the killing of innocent people. The cartoons did not cause the disease of
hate that we are seeing in the Muslim world on our television screens at
night - they are only a symptom of a far greater disease.
I was born and raised as a Muslim in Cairo, Egypt and in the Gaza Strip.
In
the 1950s, my father was sent by Egypt's President, Gamal Abdel Nasser,
to
head the Egyptian military intelligence in Gaza and the Sinai where he
founded the Palestinian Fedayeen, or "armed resistance". They made
cross-border attacks into Israel, killing 400 Israelis and wounding more
than 900 others.
My father was killed as a result of the Fedayeen operations when I was
eight
years old. He was hailed by Nasser as a national hero and was considered
a
shaheed, or martyr. In his speech announcing the nationalisation of the
Suez
Canal, Nasser vowed that all of Egypt would take revenge for my father's
death. My siblings and I were asked by Nasser: "Which one of you will
avenge
your father's death by killing Jews?" We looked at each other speechless,
unable to answer.
In school in Gaza, I learned hate, vengeance and retaliation. Peace was
never an option, as it was considered a sign of defeat and weakness. At
school we sang songs with verses calling Jews "dogs" (in Arab culture,
dogs
are considered unclean).
Criticism and questioning were forbidden. When I did either of these, I
was
told: "Muslims cannot love the enemies of God, and those who do will get
no
mercy in hell." As a young woman, I visited a Christian friend in Cairo
during Friday prayers, and we both heard the verbal attacks on Christians
and Jews from the loudspeakers outside the mosque. They said: "May God
destroy the infidels and the Jews, the enemies of God. We are not to
befriend them or make treaties with them." We heard worshippers respond
"Amen".
My friend looked scared; I was ashamed. That was when I first realised
that
something was very wrong in the way my religion was taught and practised.
Sadly, the way I was raised was not unique. Hundreds of millions of other
Muslims also have been raised with the same hatred of the West and Israel
as
a way to distract from the failings of their leaders. Things have not
changed since I was a little girl in the 1950s.
Palestinian television extols terrorists, and textbooks still deny the
existence of Israel. More than 300 Palestinians schools are named after
shaheeds, including my father. Roads in both Egypt and Gaza still bear
his
name - as they do of other "martyrs". What sort of message does that send
about the role of terrorists? That they are heroes. Leaders who signed
peace
treaties, such as President Anwar Sadat, have been assassinated. Today,
the
Islamo-fascist president of Iran uses nuclear dreams, Holocaust denials
and
threats to "wipe Israel off the map" as a way to maintain control of his
divided country.
Indeed, with Denmark set to assume the rotating presidency of the UN
Security Council, the flames of the cartoon controversy have been fanned
by
Iran and Syria. This is critical since the International Atomic Energy
Agency is expected to refer Iran to the Security Council and demand
sanctions. At the same time, Syria is under scrutiny for its actions in
Lebanon. Both Iran and Syria cynically want to embarrass the Danes to
achieve their dangerous goals.
But the rallies and riots come from a public ripe with rage. From my
childhood in Gaza until today, blaming Israel and the West has been an
industry in the Muslim world. Whenever peace seemed attainable,
Palestinian
leaders found groups who would do everything to sabotage it. They allowed
their people to be used as the front line of Arab jihad. Dictators in
countries surrounding the Palestinians were only too happy to exploit the
Palestinians as a diversion from problems in their own backyards. The
only
voice outside of government control in these areas has been the mosques,
and
these places of worship have been filled with talk of jihad.
Is it any surprise that after decades of indoctrination in a culture of
hate, that people actually do hate? Arab society has created a system of
relying on fear of a common enemy. It's a system that has brought them
much-needed unity, cohesion and compliance in a region ravaged by tribal
feuds, instability, violence, and selfish corruption. So Arab leaders
blame
Jews and Christians rather than provide good schools, roads, hospitals,
housing, jobs, or hope to their people.
For 30 years I lived inside this war zone of oppressive dictatorships and
police states. Citizens competed to appease and glorify their dictators,
but
they looked the other way when Muslims tortured and terrorised other
Muslims. I witnessed honour killings of girls, oppression of women,
female
genital mutilation, polygamy and its devastating effect on family
relations.
All of this is destroying the Muslim faith from within.
It's time for Arabs and Muslims to stand up for their families. We must
stop
allowing our leaders to use the West and Israel as an excuse to distract
from their own failed leadership and their citizens' lack of freedoms.
It's
time to stop allowing Arab leaders to complain about cartoons while
turning
a blind eye to people who defame Islam by holding Korans in one hand
while
murdering innocent people with the other.
Muslims need jobs - not jihad. Apologies about cartoons will not solve
the
problems. What is needed is hope and not hate. Unless we recognise that
the
culture of hate is the true root of the riots surrounding this cartoon
controversy, this violent overreaction will only be the start of a clash
of
civilis-ations that the world cannot bear.
http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=21322
The only surprise here is that the author was allowed to write it.
Shut up you slovenly shylock ho'...
.
|
|
|
| User: "BTov" |
|
| Title: Re: Brought Up To Hate |
18 Feb 2006 02:30:39 AM |
|
|
Humbucker wrote:
"Mimi Cohen" <mimiNOSPAMgal@cox.net> wrote in message
news:OcuJf.20$_87.11@fed1read06...
DoD wrote:
The controversy regarding the Danish cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed
completely misses the point. Of course, the cartoons are offensive to
Muslims, but newspaper cartoons do not warrant the burning of buildings
and
the killing of innocent people. The cartoons did not cause the disease of
hate that we are seeing in the Muslim world on our television screens at
night - they are only a symptom of a far greater disease.
I was born and raised as a Muslim in Cairo, Egypt and in the Gaza Strip.
In
the 1950s, my father was sent by Egypt's President, Gamal Abdel Nasser,
to
head the Egyptian military intelligence in Gaza and the Sinai where he
founded the Palestinian Fedayeen, or "armed resistance". They made
cross-border attacks into Israel, killing 400 Israelis and wounding more
than 900 others.
My father was killed as a result of the Fedayeen operations when I was
eight
years old. He was hailed by Nasser as a national hero and was considered
a
shaheed, or martyr. In his speech announcing the nationalisation of the
Suez
Canal, Nasser vowed that all of Egypt would take revenge for my father's
death. My siblings and I were asked by Nasser: "Which one of you will
avenge
your father's death by killing Jews?" We looked at each other speechless,
unable to answer.
In school in Gaza, I learned hate, vengeance and retaliation. Peace was
never an option, as it was considered a sign of defeat and weakness. At
school we sang songs with verses calling Jews "dogs" (in Arab culture,
dogs
are considered unclean).
Criticism and questioning were forbidden. When I did either of these, I
was
told: "Muslims cannot love the enemies of God, and those who do will get
no
mercy in hell." As a young woman, I visited a Christian friend in Cairo
during Friday prayers, and we both heard the verbal attacks on Christians
and Jews from the loudspeakers outside the mosque. They said: "May God
destroy the infidels and the Jews, the enemies of God. We are not to
befriend them or make treaties with them." We heard worshippers respond
"Amen".
My friend looked scared; I was ashamed. That was when I first realised
that
something was very wrong in the way my religion was taught and practised.
Sadly, the way I was raised was not unique. Hundreds of millions of other
Muslims also have been raised with the same hatred of the West and Israel
as
a way to distract from the failings of their leaders. Things have not
changed since I was a little girl in the 1950s.
Palestinian television extols terrorists, and textbooks still deny the
existence of Israel. More than 300 Palestinians schools are named after
shaheeds, including my father. Roads in both Egypt and Gaza still bear
his
name - as they do of other "martyrs". What sort of message does that send
about the role of terrorists? That they are heroes. Leaders who signed
peace
treaties, such as President Anwar Sadat, have been assassinated. Today,
the
Islamo-fascist president of Iran uses nuclear dreams, Holocaust denials
and
threats to "wipe Israel off the map" as a way to maintain control of his
divided country.
Indeed, with Denmark set to assume the rotating presidency of the UN
Security Council, the flames of the cartoon controversy have been fanned
by
Iran and Syria. This is critical since the International Atomic Energy
Agency is expected to refer Iran to the Security Council and demand
sanctions. At the same time, Syria is under scrutiny for its actions in
Lebanon. Both Iran and Syria cynically want to embarrass the Danes to
achieve their dangerous goals.
But the rallies and riots come from a public ripe with rage. From my
childhood in Gaza until today, blaming Israel and the West has been an
industry in the Muslim world. Whenever peace seemed attainable,
Palestinian
leaders found groups who would do everything to sabotage it. They allowed
their people to be used as the front line of Arab jihad. Dictators in
countries surrounding the Palestinians were only too happy to exploit the
Palestinians as a diversion from problems in their own backyards. The
only
voice outside of government control in these areas has been the mosques,
and
these places of worship have been filled with talk of jihad.
Is it any surprise that after decades of indoctrination in a culture of
hate, that people actually do hate? Arab society has created a system of
relying on fear of a common enemy. It's a system that has brought them
much-needed unity, cohesion and compliance in a region ravaged by tribal
feuds, instability, violence, and selfish corruption. So Arab leaders
blame
Jews and Christians rather than provide good schools, roads, hospitals,
housing, jobs, or hope to their people.
For 30 years I lived inside this war zone of oppressive dictatorships and
police states. Citizens competed to appease and glorify their dictators,
but
they looked the other way when Muslims tortured and terrorised other
Muslims. I witnessed honour killings of girls, oppression of women,
female
genital mutilation, polygamy and its devastating effect on family
relations.
All of this is destroying the Muslim faith from within.
It's time for Arabs and Muslims to stand up for their families. We must
stop
allowing our leaders to use the West and Israel as an excuse to distract
from their own failed leadership and their citizens' lack of freedoms.
It's
time to stop allowing Arab leaders to complain about cartoons while
turning
a blind eye to people who defame Islam by holding Korans in one hand
while
murdering innocent people with the other.
Muslims need jobs - not jihad. Apologies about cartoons will not solve
the
problems. What is needed is hope and not hate. Unless we recognise that
the
culture of hate is the true root of the riots surrounding this cartoon
controversy, this violent overreaction will only be the start of a clash
of
civilis-ations that the world cannot bear.
http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=21322
The only surprise here is that the author was allowed to write it.
Shut up you slovenly shylock ho'...
mimi cohen infests alpine calif
she is joe b'runos exwife
b'wahahahahahahahaha!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
btov
.
|
|
|
| User: "serwad" |
|
| Title: Re: Brought Up To Hate |
18 Feb 2006 07:46:17 AM |
|
|
"BTov" <dkastor6@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:1140251439.241132.280940@f14g2000cwb.googlegroups.com...
Humbucker wrote:
"Mimi Cohen" <mimiNOSPAMgal@cox.net> wrote in message
news:OcuJf.20$_87.11@fed1read06...
DoD wrote:
The controversy regarding the Danish cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed
completely misses the point. Of course, the cartoons are offensive to
Muslims, but newspaper cartoons do not warrant the burning of
buildings
and
the killing of innocent people. The cartoons did not cause the disease
of
hate that we are seeing in the Muslim world on our television screens
at
night - they are only a symptom of a far greater disease.
I was born and raised as a Muslim in Cairo, Egypt and in the Gaza
Strip.
In
the 1950s, my father was sent by Egypt's President, Gamal Abdel
Nasser,
to
head the Egyptian military intelligence in Gaza and the Sinai where he
founded the Palestinian Fedayeen, or "armed resistance". They made
cross-border attacks into Israel, killing 400 Israelis and wounding
more
than 900 others.
My father was killed as a result of the Fedayeen operations when I was
eight
years old. He was hailed by Nasser as a national hero and was
considered
a
shaheed, or martyr. In his speech announcing the nationalisation of
the
Suez
Canal, Nasser vowed that all of Egypt would take revenge for my
father's
death. My siblings and I were asked by Nasser: "Which one of you will
avenge
your father's death by killing Jews?" We looked at each other
speechless,
unable to answer.
In school in Gaza, I learned hate, vengeance and retaliation. Peace
was
never an option, as it was considered a sign of defeat and weakness.
At
school we sang songs with verses calling Jews "dogs" (in Arab culture,
dogs
are considered unclean).
Criticism and questioning were forbidden. When I did either of these,
I
was
told: "Muslims cannot love the enemies of God, and those who do will
get
no
mercy in hell." As a young woman, I visited a Christian friend in
Cairo
during Friday prayers, and we both heard the verbal attacks on
Christians
and Jews from the loudspeakers outside the mosque. They said: "May God
destroy the infidels and the Jews, the enemies of God. We are not to
befriend them or make treaties with them." We heard worshippers
respond
"Amen".
My friend looked scared; I was ashamed. That was when I first realised
that
something was very wrong in the way my religion was taught and
practised.
Sadly, the way I was raised was not unique. Hundreds of millions of
other
Muslims also have been raised with the same hatred of the West and
Israel
as
a way to distract from the failings of their leaders. Things have not
changed since I was a little girl in the 1950s.
Palestinian television extols terrorists, and textbooks still deny the
existence of Israel. More than 300 Palestinians schools are named
after
shaheeds, including my father. Roads in both Egypt and Gaza still bear
his
name - as they do of other "martyrs". What sort of message does that
send
about the role of terrorists? That they are heroes. Leaders who signed
peace
treaties, such as President Anwar Sadat, have been assassinated.
Today,
the
Islamo-fascist president of Iran uses nuclear dreams, Holocaust
denials
and
threats to "wipe Israel off the map" as a way to maintain control of
his
divided country.
Indeed, with Denmark set to assume the rotating presidency of the UN
Security Council, the flames of the cartoon controversy have been
fanned
by
Iran and Syria. This is critical since the International Atomic Energy
Agency is expected to refer Iran to the Security Council and demand
sanctions. At the same time, Syria is under scrutiny for its actions
in
Lebanon. Both Iran and Syria cynically want to embarrass the Danes to
achieve their dangerous goals.
But the rallies and riots come from a public ripe with rage. From my
childhood in Gaza until today, blaming Israel and the West has been an
industry in the Muslim world. Whenever peace seemed attainable,
Palestinian
leaders found groups who would do everything to sabotage it. They
allowed
their people to be used as the front line of Arab jihad. Dictators in
countries surrounding the Palestinians were only too happy to exploit
the
Palestinians as a diversion from problems in their own backyards. The
only
voice outside of government control in these areas has been the
mosques,
and
these places of worship have been filled with talk of jihad.
Is it any surprise that after decades of indoctrination in a culture
of
hate, that people actually do hate? Arab society has created a system
of
relying on fear of a common enemy. It's a system that has brought them
much-needed unity, cohesion and compliance in a region ravaged by
tribal
feuds, instability, violence, and selfish corruption. So Arab leaders
blame
Jews and Christians rather than provide good schools, roads,
hospitals,
housing, jobs, or hope to their people.
For 30 years I lived inside this war zone of oppressive dictatorships
and
police states. Citizens competed to appease and glorify their
dictators,
but
they looked the other way when Muslims tortured and terrorised other
Muslims. I witnessed honour killings of girls, oppression of women,
female
genital mutilation, polygamy and its devastating effect on family
relations.
All of this is destroying the Muslim faith from within.
It's time for Arabs and Muslims to stand up for their families. We
must
stop
allowing our leaders to use the West and Israel as an excuse to
distract
from their own failed leadership and their citizens' lack of freedoms.
It's
time to stop allowing Arab leaders to complain about cartoons while
turning
a blind eye to people who defame Islam by holding Korans in one hand
while
murdering innocent people with the other.
Muslims need jobs - not jihad. Apologies about cartoons will not solve
the
problems. What is needed is hope and not hate. Unless we recognise
that
the
culture of hate is the true root of the riots surrounding this cartoon
controversy, this violent overreaction will only be the start of a
clash
of
civilis-ations that the world cannot bear.
http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=21322
The only surprise here is that the author was allowed to write it.
Shut up you slovenly shylock ho'...
mimi cohen infests alpine calif
she is joe b'runos exwife
b'wahahahahahahahaha!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
btov
HONORABLE REVEREND IS BACK. ZDRAVO!
.
|
|
|
| User: "BTov" |
|
| Title: Re: Brought Up To Hate |
18 Feb 2006 08:17:58 AM |
|
|
serwad wrote:
"BTov" <dkastor6@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:1140251439.241132.280940@f14g2000cwb.googlegroups.com...
Humbucker wrote:
"Mimi Cohen" <mimiNOSPAMgal@cox.net> wrote in message
news:OcuJf.20$_87.11@fed1read06...
DoD wrote:
The controversy regarding the Danish cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed
completely misses the point. Of course, the cartoons are offensive to
Muslims, but newspaper cartoons do not warrant the burning of
buildings
and
the killing of innocent people. The cartoons did not cause the disease
of
hate that we are seeing in the Muslim world on our television screens
at
night - they are only a symptom of a far greater disease.
I was born and raised as a Muslim in Cairo, Egypt and in the Gaza
Strip.
In
the 1950s, my father was sent by Egypt's President, Gamal Abdel
Nasser,
to
head the Egyptian military intelligence in Gaza and the Sinai where he
founded the Palestinian Fedayeen, or "armed resistance". They made
cross-border attacks into Israel, killing 400 Israelis and wounding
more
than 900 others.
My father was killed as a result of the Fedayeen operations when I was
eight
years old. He was hailed by Nasser as a national hero and was
considered
a
shaheed, or martyr. In his speech announcing the nationalisation of
the
Suez
Canal, Nasser vowed that all of Egypt would take revenge for my
father's
death. My siblings and I were asked by Nasser: "Which one of you will
avenge
your father's death by killing Jews?" We looked at each other
speechless,
unable to answer.
In school in Gaza, I learned hate, vengeance and retaliation. Peace
was
never an option, as it was considered a sign of defeat and weakness.
At
school we sang songs with verses calling Jews "dogs" (in Arab culture,
dogs
are considered unclean).
Criticism and questioning were forbidden. When I did either of these,
I
was
told: "Muslims cannot love the enemies of God, and those who do will
get
no
mercy in hell." As a young woman, I visited a Christian friend in
Cairo
during Friday prayers, and we both heard the verbal attacks on
Christians
and Jews from the loudspeakers outside the mosque. They said: "May God
destroy the infidels and the Jews, the enemies of God. We are not to
befriend them or make treaties with them." We heard worshippers
respond
"Amen".
My friend looked scared; I was ashamed. That was when I first realised
that
something was very wrong in the way my religion was taught and
practised.
Sadly, the way I was raised was not unique. Hundreds of millions of
other
Muslims also have been raised with the same hatred of the West and
Israel
as
a way to distract from the failings of their leaders. Things have not
changed since I was a little girl in the 1950s.
Palestinian television extols terrorists, and textbooks still deny the
existence of Israel. More than 300 Palestinians schools are named
after
shaheeds, including my father. Roads in both Egypt and Gaza still bear
his
name - as they do of other "martyrs". What sort of message does that
send
about the role of terrorists? That they are heroes. Leaders who signed
peace
treaties, such as President Anwar Sadat, have been assassinated.
Today,
the
Islamo-fascist president of Iran uses nuclear dreams, Holocaust
denials
and
threats to "wipe Israel off the map" as a way to maintain control of
his
divided country.
Indeed, with Denmark set to assume the rotating presidency of the UN
Security Council, the flames of the cartoon controversy have been
fanned
by
Iran and Syria. This is critical since the International Atomic Energy
Agency is expected to refer Iran to the Security Council and demand
sanctions. At the same time, Syria is under scrutiny for its actions
in
Lebanon. Both Iran and Syria cynically want to embarrass the Danes to
achieve their dangerous goals.
But the rallies and riots come from a public ripe with rage. From my
childhood in Gaza until today, blaming Israel and the West has been an
industry in the Muslim world. Whenever peace seemed attainable,
Palestinian
leaders found groups who would do everything to sabotage it. They
allowed
their people to be used as the front line of Arab jihad. Dictators in
countries surrounding the Palestinians were only too happy to exploit
the
Palestinians as a diversion from problems in their own backyards. The
only
voice outside of government control in these areas has been the
mosques,
and
these places of worship have been filled with talk of jihad.
Is it any surprise that after decades of indoctrination in a culture
of
hate, that people actually do hate? Arab society has created a system
of
relying on fear of a common enemy. It's a system that has brought them
much-needed unity, cohesion and compliance in a region ravaged by
tribal
feuds, instability, violence, and selfish corruption. So Arab leaders
blame
Jews and Christians rather than provide good schools, roads,
hospitals,
housing, jobs, or hope to their people.
For 30 years I lived inside this war zone of oppressive dictatorships
and
police states. Citizens competed to appease and glorify their
dictators,
but
they looked the other way when Muslims tortured and terrorised other
Muslims. I witnessed honour killings of girls, oppression of women,
female
genital mutilation, polygamy and its devastating effect on family
relations.
All of this is destroying the Muslim faith from within.
It's time for Arabs and Muslims to stand up for their families. We
must
stop
allowing our leaders to use the West and Israel as an excuse to
distract
from their own failed leadership and their citizens' lack of freedoms.
It's
time to stop allowing Arab leaders to complain about cartoons while
turning
a blind eye to people who defame Islam by holding Korans in one hand
while
murdering innocent people with the other.
Muslims need jobs - not jihad. Apologies about cartoons will not solve
the
problems. What is needed is hope and not hate. Unless we recognise
that
the
culture of hate is the true root of the riots surrounding this cartoon
controversy, this violent overreaction will only be the start of a
clash
of
civilis-ations that the world cannot bear.
http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=21322
The only surprise here is that the author was allowed to write it.
Shut up you slovenly shylock ho'...
mimi cohen infests alpine calif
she is joe b'runos exwife
b'wahahahahahahahaha!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
btov
HONORABLE REVEREND IS BACK. ZDRAVO!
shalom aleikum
juden raus
b'wahahahahahahaha!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Recent "truths", by Mickey Ben Tovim (a.k.a. Micky Marine, Micky Mouth
et. al.)
WARNING: Do not drink while reading this
"I am an Israeli"
"I am an American"
"People think I'm Italian"
"I have a B'rooklyn accent you could cut with a chainsaw"
"I served with the IDF"
"I served with the US Marines"
"I was wounded in Vietnam"
"I was decorated in Vietnam"
"I wasn't even in Vietnam most of the time"
"I played bridge with Omar Sharif"
"I am a multi-millionaire"
"I drive a Ferrari"
"I own 1.65 million shares of Comcast"
"My grandchildren couldn't spend all the money I made"
"I would starve on $250 million"
"I'm retired"
"I work as a systems analyst in Detroit"
"I get paid $155 an hour"
"I live in Tiberias, Israel"
"I live in Sarasota, Florida"
"I have an apartment in NYC"
"I have an apartment in Atlanta"
"I have an apartment in California"
"My wife is half-Italian"
"My wife is half-Scottish"
"My wife is Native American"
"My wife is jewish"
"I'm hung like a horse"
"I don't need Viagra"
"I have nine children"
"My eldest son died in his sleep"
"I have MS"
"Radavich is a jew"
"Radavich is a Serbian child-molestor"
"I pissed on the bathroom wall in Seredin's shop"
"The UN didn't create Israel, God did"
"I am a bullet-riddled half-cripple"
"I have proved everything I've said"
But the best I saved for last:
"If you and she are examples of what jewish women have come to, I'm
glad I didn't marry one. I would bet you could nag a man to death as
well."
Oh, we could go on for days, but you get the picture.
b'wahahahahahahahahaha!!!!!!
btov
port said
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| User: "Ray Fischer" |
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| Title: Re: Brought Up To Hate |
18 Feb 2006 07:01:37 AM |
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Mimi Cohen <mimiNOSPAMgal@cox.net> wrote:
DoD wrote:
The controversy regarding the Danish cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed
completely misses the point. Of course, the cartoons are offensive to
Muslims, but newspaper cartoons do not warrant the burning of buildings and
the killing of innocent people.
But you will not be allowed to prmote any ideas which might be too
critical of Jews in much of Europe where it is illegal to deal
with Nazi memorabilia or deny the existence of the Holocaust.
The cartoons did not cause the disease of
hate that we are seeing in the Muslim world on our television screens at
night - they are only a symptom of a far greater disease.
The disease of anti-Muslim bigotry and hate and persecution going back
decades.
--
Ray Fischer
rfischer@sonic.net
.
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| User: "Mimi Cohen" |
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| Title: Re: Brought Up To Hate |
18 Feb 2006 10:55:07 AM |
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|
On 18 Feb 2006 13:01:37 GMT, (Ray Fischer) wrote:
Mimi Cohen <mimiNOSPAMgal@cox.net> wrote:
DoD wrote:
The controversy regarding the Danish cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed
completely misses the point. Of course, the cartoons are offensive to
Muslims, but newspaper cartoons do not warrant the burning of buildings and
the killing of innocent people.
But you will not be allowed to prmote any ideas which might be too
critical of Jews in much of Europe where it is illegal to deal
with Nazi memorabilia or deny the existence of the Holocaust.
The cartoons did not cause the disease of
hate that we are seeing in the Muslim world on our television screens at
night - they are only a symptom of a far greater disease.
The disease of anti-Muslim bigotry and hate and persecution going back
decades.
Shut up you bigoted Xtian *****.
.
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| User: "Mimi Cohen" |
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| Title: Re: Brought Up To Hate |
18 Feb 2006 09:39:22 PM |
|
|
*NOT* Mimi Cohen, but the phony rev wrote:
On 18 Feb 2006 13:01:37 GMT, (Ray Fischer) wrote:
Mimi Cohen <mimiNOSPAMgal@cox.net> wrote:
DoD wrote:
The controversy regarding the Danish cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed
completely misses the point. Of course, the cartoons are offensive to
Muslims, but newspaper cartoons do not warrant the burning of buildings and
the killing of innocent people.
But you will not be allowed to prmote any ideas which might be too
critical of Jews in much of Europe where it is illegal to deal
with Nazi memorabilia or deny the existence of the Holocaust.
The cartoons did not cause the disease of
hate that we are seeing in the Muslim world on our television screens at
night - they are only a symptom of a far greater disease.
The disease of anti-Muslim bigotry and hate and persecution going back
decades.
Shut up you bigoted Xtian *****.
You stupid *****, *I* would never use the abbreviation "Xtian". An
obvious forgery, that some moronic bigoted terrorist loving idiot will
fall for even though he knows that *I* always use the abbreviation "xian".
.
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| User: "Ray Fischer" |
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| Title: Re: Brought Up To Hate |
19 Feb 2006 11:55:22 AM |
|
|
Mimi Cohen <mimiNOSPAMgal@cox.net> wrote:
*NOT* Mimi Cohen, but the phony rev wrote:
On 18 Feb 2006 13:01:37 GMT, (Ray Fischer) wrote:
Mimi Cohen <mimiNOSPAMgal@cox.net> wrote:
DoD wrote:
The controversy regarding the Danish cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed
completely misses the point. Of course, the cartoons are offensive to
Muslims, but newspaper cartoons do not warrant the burning of buildings and
the killing of innocent people.
But you will not be allowed to prmote any ideas which might be too
critical of Jews in much of Europe where it is illegal to deal
with Nazi memorabilia or deny the existence of the Holocaust.
The cartoons did not cause the disease of
hate that we are seeing in the Muslim world on our television screens at
night - they are only a symptom of a far greater disease.
The disease of anti-Muslim bigotry and hate and persecution going back
decades.
Shut up you bigoted Xtian *****.
You stupid *****, *I* would never use the abbreviation "Xtian". An
obvious forgery, that some moronic bigoted terrorist loving idiot will
fall for even though he knows that *I* always use the abbreviation "xian".
ROFL!
Oooo! Of COURSE the difference should be obvious! One screeching
lunatic pretending to be another screeching lunatic and the difference
is "Xtian" vs. "xian"!
Idiot.
--
Ray Fischer
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| User: "" |
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| Title: Re: Brought Up To Hate |
19 Feb 2006 05:17:25 PM |
|
|
On 19 Feb 2006 17:55:22 GMT, (Ray Fischer) wrote:
Mimi Cohen <mimiNOSPAMgal@cox.net> wrote:
*NOT* Mimi Cohen, but the phony rev wrote:
On 18 Feb 2006 13:01:37 GMT, (Ray Fischer) wrote:
Mimi Cohen <mimiNOSPAMgal@cox.net> wrote:
DoD wrote:
The controversy regarding the Danish cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed
completely misses the point. Of course, the cartoons are offensive to
Muslims, but newspaper cartoons do not warrant the burning of buildings and
the killing of innocent people.
But you will not be allowed to prmote any ideas which might be too
critical of Jews in much of Europe where it is illegal to deal
with Nazi memorabilia or deny the existence of the Holocaust.
The cartoons did not cause the disease of
hate that we are seeing in the Muslim world on our television screens at
night - they are only a symptom of a far greater disease.
The disease of anti-Muslim bigotry and hate and persecution going back
decades.
Shut up you bigoted Xtian *****.
You stupid *****, *I* would never use the abbreviation "Xtian". An
obvious forgery, that some moronic bigoted terrorist loving idiot will
fall for even though he knows that *I* always use the abbreviation "xian".
ROFL!
Oooo! Of COURSE the difference should be obvious! One screeching
lunatic pretending to be another screeching lunatic and the difference
is "Xtian" vs. "xian"!
Actually, there *is* a difference, bgot.
Idiot.
Your sig separator is missing.
Susan
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| User: "" |
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| Title: Re: Brought Up To Hate |
18 Feb 2006 10:13:02 PM |
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|
On Sat, 18 Feb 2006 19:39:22 -0800, Mimi Cohen <mimiNOSPAMgal@cox.net>
wrote:
*NOT* Mimi Cohen, but the phony rev wrote:
On 18 Feb 2006 13:01:37 GMT, (Ray Fischer) wrote:
Mimi Cohen <mimiNOSPAMgal@cox.net> wrote:
DoD wrote:
The controversy regarding the Danish cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed
completely misses the point. Of course, the cartoons are offensive to
Muslims, but newspaper cartoons do not warrant the burning of buildings and
the killing of innocent people.
But you will not be allowed to prmote any ideas which might be too
critical of Jews in much of Europe where it is illegal to deal
with Nazi memorabilia or deny the existence of the Holocaust.
The cartoons did not cause the disease of
hate that we are seeing in the Muslim world on our television screens at
night - they are only a symptom of a far greater disease.
The disease of anti-Muslim bigotry and hate and persecution going back
decades.
Shut up you bigoted Xtian *****.
You stupid *****, *I* would never use the abbreviation "Xtian". An
obvious forgery, that some moronic bigoted terrorist loving idiot will
fall for even though he knows that *I* always use the abbreviation "xian".
Well, *I* use the abbreviation "Xtian". If we don;t capitalize
"Xtian" how can we expect the goyim to capitalize "jews"?
At least that#s what they taught me in conversion classes at the
Baltimore shul.
And please don't forget to include agd/agr in the xposts.
Susan
.
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| User: "" |
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| Title: Re: Brought Up To Hate |
18 Feb 2006 10:13:52 PM |
|
|
On Sat, 18 Feb 2006 19:39:22 -0800, Mimi Cohen <mimiNOSPAMgal@cox.net>
wrote:
*NOT* Mimi Cohen, but the phony rev wrote:
On 18 Feb 2006 13:01:37 GMT, (Ray Fischer) wrote:
Mimi Cohen <mimiNOSPAMgal@cox.net> wrote:
DoD wrote:
The controversy regarding the Danish cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed
completely misses the point. Of course, the cartoons are offensive to
Muslims, but newspaper cartoons do not warrant the burning of buildings and
the killing of innocent people.
But you will not be allowed to prmote any ideas which might be too
critical of Jews in much of Europe where it is illegal to deal
with Nazi memorabilia or deny the existence of the Holocaust.
The cartoons did not cause the disease of
hate that we are seeing in the Muslim world on our television screens at
night - they are only a symptom of a far greater disease.
The disease of anti-Muslim bigotry and hate and persecution going back
decades.
Shut up you bigoted Xtian *****.
You stupid *****, *I* would never use the abbreviation "Xtian". An
obvious forgery, that some moronic bigoted terrorist loving idiot will
fall for even though he knows that *I* always use the abbreviation "xian".
Well, *I* use the abbreviation "Xtian". If we don;t capitalize
"Xtian" how can we expect the goyim to capitalize "jews"?
At least that#s what they taught me in conversion classes at the
Baltimore shul.
And please don't forget to include agd/agr in the xposts.
Susan
.
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| User: "Mimi Cohen" |
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| Title: Re: Brought Up To Hate |
19 Feb 2006 07:23:39 AM |
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|
*NOT* wrote:
On Sat, 18 Feb 2006 19:39:22 -0800, Mimi Cohen <mimiNOSPAMgal@cox.net>
wrote:
*NOT* Mimi Cohen, but the phony rev wrote:
On 18 Feb 2006 13:01:37 GMT, (Ray Fischer) wrote:
Mimi Cohen <mimiNOSPAMgal@cox.net> wrote:
DoD wrote:
The controversy regarding the Danish cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed
completely misses the point. Of course, the cartoons are offensive to
Muslims, but newspaper cartoons do not warrant the burning of buildings and
the killing of innocent people.
But you will not be allowed to prmote any ideas which might be too
critical of Jews in much of Europe where it is illegal to deal
with Nazi memorabilia or deny the existence of the Holocaust.
The cartoons did not cause the disease of
hate that we are seeing in the Muslim world on our television screens at
night - they are only a symptom of a far greater disease.
The disease of anti-Muslim bigotry and hate and persecution going back
decades.
Shut up you bigoted Xtian *****.
You stupid *****, *I* would never use the abbreviation "Xtian". An
obvious forgery, that some moronic bigoted terrorist loving idiot will
fall for even though he knows that *I* always use the abbreviation "xian".
Well, *I* use the abbreviation "Xtian". If we don;t capitalize
"Xtian" how can we expect the goyim to capitalize "jews"?
At least that#s what they taught me in conversion classes at the
Baltimore shul.
And please don't forget to include agd/agr in the xposts.
Susan
.
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| User: "serwad" |
|
| Title: Re: Brought Up To Hate |
19 Feb 2006 12:43:57 PM |
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At least that#s what they taught me in conversion classes at the
Baltimore shul.
***** YES, PITY THEY DID NOT TEACH YOU TO RESPECT THE FAITH YOU LEFT!
.
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| User: "" |
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| Title: Re: Brought Up To Hate |
20 Feb 2006 02:57:48 PM |
|
|
On 19-Feb-2006, Mimi Cohen <mimiNOSPAMgal@cox.net> wrote:
*NOT* wrote:
On Sat, 18 Feb 2006 19:39:22 -0800, Mimi Cohen <mimiNOSPAMgal@cox.net>
wrote:
*NOT* Mimi Cohen, but the phony rev wrote:
On 18 Feb 2006 13:01:37 GMT, (Ray Fischer) wrote:
Mimi Cohen <mimiNOSPAMgal@cox.net> wrote:
DoD wrote:
The controversy regarding the Danish cartoons of the Prophet
Mohammed
completely misses the point. Of course, the cartoons are offensive
to
Muslims, but newspaper cartoons do not warrant the burning of
buildings and
the killing of innocent people.
But you will not be allowed to prmote any ideas which might be too
critical of Jews in much of Europe where it is illegal to deal
with Nazi memorabilia or deny the existence of the Holocaust.
The cartoons did not cause the disease of
hate that we are seeing in the Muslim world on our television
screens at
night - they are only a symptom of a far greater disease.
The disease of anti-Muslim bigotry and hate and persecution going back
decades.
Shut up you bigoted Xtian *****.
You stupid *****, *I* would never use the abbreviation "Xtian". An
obvious forgery, that some moronic bigoted terrorist loving idiot will
fall for even though he knows that *I* always use the abbreviation
"xian".
Well, *I* use the abbreviation "Xtian".
I wonder if he's careful to write the mis-spelling only when he forges my
name so he can pretend he's tld the truth? Then again, more blatant lies
than this don;t bother him. Who can really fathom what passes for the
mind of a slimy bigot like this?
If we don;t capitalize
"Xtian" how can we expect the goyim to capitalize "jews"?
Now, is this "cart before the horse", or just a bass ackwards lie?
At least that#s what they taught me in conversion classes at the
Baltimore shul.
"Just keep those lies and nonsense coming!"
And please don't forget to include agd/agr in the xposts.
Proving better than Mimi or I could that this is definitely the
phony rev loser.
Susan
.
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| User: "" |
|
| Title: Re: Brought Up To Hate |
19 Feb 2006 05:12:22 PM |
|
|
On Sun, 19 Feb 2006 05:23:39 -0800, *NOT* Mimi Cohen but the phony
revd <mimiNOSPAMgal@cox.net> wrote:
*NOT* wrote:
On Sat, 18 Feb 2006 19:39:22 -0800, Mimi Cohen <mimiNOSPAMgal@cox.net>
wrote:
*NOT* Mimi Cohen, but the phony rev wrote:
On 18 Feb 2006 13:01:37 GMT, (Ray Fischer) wrote:
Mimi Cohen <mimiNOSPAMgal@cox.net> wrote:
DoD wrote:
The controversy regarding the Danish cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed
completely misses the point. Of course, the cartoons are offensive to
Muslims, but newspaper cartoons do not warrant the burning of buildings and
the killing of innocent people.
But you will not be allowed to prmote any ideas which might be too
critical of Jews in much of Europe where it is illegal to deal
with Nazi memorabilia or deny the existence of the Holocaust.
The cartoons did not cause the disease of
hate that we are seeing in the Muslim world on our television screens at
night - they are only a symptom of a far greater disease.
The disease of anti-Muslim bigotry and hate and persecution going back
decades.
Shut up you bigoted Xtian *****.
You stupid *****, *I* would never use the abbreviation "Xtian". An
obvious forgery, that some moronic bigoted terrorist loving idiot will
fall for even though he knows that *I* always use the abbreviation "xian".
Well, *I* use the abbreviation "Xtian". If we don;t capitalize
"Xtian" how can we expect the goyim to capitalize "jews"?
At least that#s what they taught me in conversion classes at the
Baltimore shul.
And please don't forget to include agd/agr in the xposts.
Susan
.
|
|
|
|
|
|
| User: "" |
|
| Title: Re: Brought Up To Hate |
18 Feb 2006 10:14:04 PM |
|
|
On Sat, 18 Feb 2006 19:39:22 -0800, Mimi Cohen <mimiNOSPAMgal@cox.net>
wrote:
*NOT* Mimi Cohen, but the phony rev wrote:
On 18 Feb 2006 13:01:37 GMT, (Ray Fischer) wrote:
Mimi Cohen <mimiNOSPAMgal@cox.net> wrote:
DoD wrote:
The controversy regarding the Danish cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed
completely misses the point. Of course, the cartoons are offensive to
Muslims, but newspaper cartoons do not warrant the burning of buildings and
the killing of innocent people.
But you will not be allowed to prmote any ideas which might be too
critical of Jews in much of Europe where it is illegal to deal
with Nazi memorabilia or deny the existence of the Holocaust.
The cartoons did not cause the disease of
hate that we are seeing in the Muslim world on our television screens at
night - they are only a symptom of a far greater disease.
The disease of anti-Muslim bigotry and hate and persecution going back
decades.
Shut up you bigoted Xtian *****.
You stupid *****, *I* would never use the abbreviation "Xtian". An
obvious forgery, that some moronic bigoted terrorist loving idiot will
fall for even though he knows that *I* always use the abbreviation "xian".
Well, *I* use the abbreviation "Xtian". If we don;t capitalize
"Xtian" how can we expect the goyim to capitalize "jews"?
At least that#s what they taught me in conversion classes at the
Baltimore shul.
And please don't forget to include agd/agr in the xposts.
Susan
.
|
|
|
|
| User: "" |
|
| Title: Re: Brought Up To Hate |
18 Feb 2006 10:14:20 PM |
|
|
On Sat, 18 Feb 2006 19:39:22 -0800, Mimi Cohen <mimiNOSPAMgal@cox.net>
wrote:
*NOT* Mimi Cohen, but the phony rev wrote:
On 18 Feb 2006 13:01:37 GMT, (Ray Fischer) wrote:
Mimi Cohen <mimiNOSPAMgal@cox.net> wrote:
DoD wrote:
The controversy regarding the Danish cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed
completely misses the point. Of course, the cartoons are offensive to
Muslims, but newspaper cartoons do not warrant the burning of buildings and
the killing of innocent people.
But you will not be allowed to prmote any ideas which might be too
critical of Jews in much of Europe where it is illegal to deal
with Nazi memorabilia or deny the existence of the Holocaust.
The cartoons did not cause the disease of
hate that we are seeing in the Muslim world on our television screens at
night - they are only a symptom of a far greater disease.
The disease of anti-Muslim bigotry and hate and persecution going back
decades.
Shut up you bigoted Xtian *****.
You stupid *****, *I* would never use the abbreviation "Xtian". An
obvious forgery, that some moronic bigoted terrorist loving idiot will
fall for even though he knows that *I* always use the abbreviation "xian".
Well, *I* use the abbreviation "Xtian". If we don;t capitalize
"Xtian" how can we expect the goyim to capitalize "jews"?
At least that#s what they taught me in conversion classes at the
Baltimore shul.
And please don't forget to include agd/agr in the xposts.
Susan
.
|
|
|
|
| User: "" |
|
| Title: Re: Brought Up To Hate |
18 Feb 2006 10:14:57 PM |
|
|
On Sat, 18 Feb 2006 19:39:22 -0800, Mimi Cohen <mimiNOSPAMgal@cox.net>
wrote:
*NOT* Mimi Cohen, but the phony rev wrote:
On 18 Feb 2006 13:01:37 GMT, (Ray Fischer) wrote:
Mimi Cohen <mimiNOSPAMgal@cox.net> wrote:
DoD wrote:
The controversy regarding the Danish cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed
completely misses the point. Of course, the cartoons are offensive to
Muslims, but newspaper cartoons do not warrant the burning of buildings and
the killing of innocent people.
But you will not be allowed to prmote any ideas which might be too
critical of Jews in much of Europe where it is illegal to deal
with Nazi memorabilia or deny the existence of the Holocaust.
The cartoons did not cause the disease of
hate that we are seeing in the Muslim world on our television screens at
night - they are only a symptom of a far greater disease.
The disease of anti-Muslim bigotry and hate and persecution going back
decades.
Shut up you bigoted Xtian *****.
You stupid *****, *I* would never use the abbreviation "Xtian". An
obvious forgery, that some moronic bigoted terrorist loving idiot will
fall for even though he knows that *I* always use the abbreviation "xian".
Well, *I* use the abbreviation "Xtian". If we don;t capitalize
"Xtian" how can we expect the goyim to capitalize "jews"?
At least that#s what they taught me in conversion classes at the
Baltimore shul.
And please don't forget to include agd/agr in the xposts.
Susan
.
|
|
|
|
|
| User: "Ray Fischer" |
|
| Title: Re: Brought Up To Hate |
18 Feb 2006 12:46:19 PM |
|
|
Mimi Cohen <mimiNOSPAMgal@cox.net> wrote:
On 18 Feb 2006 13:01:37 GMT, (Ray Fischer) wrote:
Mimi Cohen <mimiNOSPAMgal@cox.net> wrote:
DoD wrote:
The controversy regarding the Danish cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed
completely misses the point. Of course, the cartoons are offensive to
Muslims, but newspaper cartoons do not warrant the burning of buildings and
the killing of innocent people.
But you will not be allowed to prmote any ideas which might be too
critical of Jews in much of Europe where it is illegal to deal
with Nazi memorabilia or deny the existence of the Holocaust.
The cartoons did not cause the disease of
hate that we are seeing in the Muslim world on our television screens at
night - they are only a symptom of a far greater disease.
The disease of anti-Muslim bigotry and hate and persecution going back
decades.
Shut up you bigoted Xtian *****.
Still screeching your hate at anybody who dares to be critical of your
insane hatred of Arabs?
--
Ray Fischer
.
|
|
|
| User: "DoD" |
|
| Title: Re: Brought Up To Hate |
18 Feb 2006 01:02:00 PM |
|
|
"Ray Fischer" <> wrote in message
news:43f76b7b$0$58124$742ec2ed@news.sonic.net...
Mimi Cohen <mimiNOSPAMgal@cox.net> wrote:
On 18 Feb 2006 13:01:37 GMT, (Ray Fischer) wrote:
Mimi Cohen <mimiNOSPAMgal@cox.net> wrote:
DoD wrote:
The controversy regarding the Danish cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed
completely misses the point. Of course, the cartoons are offensive to
Muslims, but newspaper cartoons do not warrant the burning of
buildings and
the killing of innocent people.
But you will not be allowed to prmote any ideas which might be too
critical of Jews in much of Europe where it is illegal to deal
with Nazi memorabilia or deny the existence of the Holocaust.
The cartoons did not cause the disease of
hate that we are seeing in the Muslim world on our television screens
at
night - they are only a symptom of a far greater disease.
The disease of anti-Muslim bigotry and hate and persecution going back
decades.
Shut up you bigoted Xtian *****.
Still screeching your hate at anybody who dares to be critical of your
insane hatred of Arabs?
Listen *****, there is no hatred of Arabs, just an unbalanced hatred of Jews,
on your part.
.
|
|
|
| User: "Ray Fischer" |
|
| Title: Re: Brought Up To Hate |
18 Feb 2006 03:41:51 PM |
|
|
DoD <thecats@ss.mil> wrote:
"Ray Fischer" < > wrote in message
news:43f76b7b$0$58124$742ec2ed@news.sonic.net...
Mimi Cohen <mimiNOSPAMgal@cox.net> wrote:
On 18 Feb 2006 13:01:37 GMT, (Ray Fischer) wrote:
Mimi Cohen <mimiNOSPAMgal@cox.net> wrote:
DoD wrote:
The controversy regarding the Danish cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed
completely misses the point. Of course, the cartoons are offensive to
Muslims, but newspaper cartoons do not warrant the burning of
buildings and
the killing of innocent people.
But you will not be allowed to prmote any ideas which might be too
critical of Jews in much of Europe where it is illegal to deal
with Nazi memorabilia or deny the existence of the Holocaust.
The cartoons did not cause the disease of
hate that we are seeing in the Muslim world on our television screens
at
night - they are only a symptom of a far greater disease.
The disease of anti-Muslim bigotry and hate and persecution going back
decades.
Shut up you bigoted Xtian *****.
Still screeching your hate at anybody who dares to be critical of your
insane hatred of Arabs?
Listen *****, there is no hatred of Arabs,
LOL! And there was no hatred of Jews because they really were
subhuman, and there was no hatred of blacks because they really were
lazy and stupid.
just an unbalanced hatred of Jews,
None of which you have been able to identify. All you have been able
to do is screech in outrAge at any criticism of Israel or your
anti-arab bigotry.
--
Ray Fischer
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| User: "Mimi Cohen" |
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| Title: Re: Brought Up To Hate |
18 Feb 2006 09:40:46 PM |
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DoD wrote:
"Ray Fischer" < > wrote in message
news:43f76b7b$0$58124$742ec2ed@news.sonic.net...
Mimi Cohen <mimiNOSPAMgal@cox.net> wrote:
On 18 Feb 2006 13:01:37 GMT, (Ray Fischer) wrote:
Mimi Cohen <mimiNOSPAMgal@cox.net> wrote:
DoD wrote:
The controversy regarding the Danish cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed
completely misses the point. Of course, the cartoons are offensive to
Muslims, but newspaper cartoons do not warrant the burning of
buildings and
the killing of innocent people.
But you will not be allowed to prmote any ideas which might be too
critical of Jews in much of Europe where it is illegal to deal
with Nazi memorabilia or deny the existence of the Holocaust.
The cartoons did not cause the disease of
hate that we are seeing in the Muslim world on our television screens
at
night - they are only a symptom of a far greater disease.
The disease of anti-Muslim bigotry and hate and persecution going back
decades.
Shut up you bigoted Xtian *****.
Still screeching your hate at anybody who dares to be critical of your
insane hatred of Arabs?
Listen *****, there is no hatred of Arabs, just an unbalanced hatred of Jews,
on your part.
Did you see how the moron, yet again fell for the forgery by the phony
rev? He's so stupid even rocks have higher IQs!
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| User: "jgarbuz" |
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| Title: Re: Brought Up To Hate |
18 Feb 2006 01:25:18 PM |
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Ray Fischer wrote:
Mimi Cohen <mimiNOSPAMgal@cox.net> wrote:
DoD wrote:
The controversy regarding the Danish cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed
completely misses the point. Of course, the cartoons are offensive to
Muslims, but newspaper cartoons do not warrant the burning of buildings and
the killing of innocent people.
But you will not be allowed to prmote any ideas which might be too
critical of Jews in much of Europe where it is illegal to deal
with Nazi memorabilia or deny the existence of the Holocaust.<
But Mein Kampf and The Protocols of the Elders of Zion have been best
sellers in the Arab world for many decades! Some Arabs and Muslims
have been making derogatory and hateful statements about Jews since
even
before Israel became a state!
And Muslims don't seem to want to talk about the robbery, beheading and
expulsion of Jews from Medina and the Hijaz by Muhammad! Or about the
majority pro-Nazi stance of most Arab and Muslim countries during WWII!
The truth is that Muhammad was NO man of peace! When he was initially
welcomed
by the wealthy and powerful Jews of Yathrib, little did they know that
he was going
to be raiding caravans of the Meccans, who had done no wrong to the
Jews for
500 years there, and that he was going to take over a town they had
founded
and been influential in for centuries, and in the end, because most
refused
to accept this Arab as their messiah or prophet of God, that he would
ultimately
rob, behead, and expel them all forever! ? So I see no reason why they
should
get so pissed just because some Jewish paper editor decides to run a
cartoon
with a bomb in his turban! For 5 centuries the Jews had lived in
relative harmony
alongside their pagan Arab neighbors, and suddenly this Arab pretender
to the
line of Hebrew prophets comes along and tries to entice the JEws to go
along
with his nonsense! And when they don't, he eyes their gold and silver
and
rich farms, and seizes upon a way to get rid of this opposition and a
way to enrich himself
and his followers to boot!
The cartoons did not cause the disease of
hate that we are seeing in the Muslim world on our television screens at
night - they are only a symptom of a far greater disease.
The disease of anti-Muslim bigotry and hate and persecution going back
decades.
--
Ray Fischer
rfischer@sonic.net
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| User: "serwad" |
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| Title: Re: Brought Up To Hate |
19 Feb 2006 12:39:24 PM |
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"jgarbuz" <jgarbuz@netzero.com> wrote in message
news:1140290718.055695.165390@z14g2000cwz.googlegroups.com...
Ray Fischer wrote:
Mimi Cohen <mimiNOSPAMgal@cox.net> wrote:
DoD wrote:
The controversy regarding the Danish cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed
completely misses the point. Of course, the cartoons are offensive to
Muslims, but newspaper cartoons do not warrant the burning of
buildings and
the killing of innocent people.
But you will not be allowed to prmote any ideas which might be too
critical of Jews in much of Europe where it is illegal to deal
with Nazi memorabilia or deny the existence of the Holocaust.<
But Mein Kampf and The Protocols of the Elders of Zion have been best
sellers in the Arab world for many decades! Some Arabs and Muslims
have been making derogatory and hateful statements about Jews since
even
before Israel became a state!
So what?
And Muslims don't seem to want to talk about the robbery, beheading and
expulsion of Jews from Medina and the Hijaz by Muhammad!
Jews were beheading muslims also in those days, it was the custom of the
time
Or about the
majority pro-Nazi stance of most Arab and Muslim countries during WWII!
German military had units in it formed by all nationalities including
British unit, and an American one. There were no Arab units in German army
The truth is that Muhammad was NO man of peace! When he was initially
welcomed
by the wealthy and powerful Jews of Yathrib, little did they know that
he was going
to be raiding caravans of the Meccans, who had done no wrong to the
Jews for
500 years there, and that he was going to take over a town they had
founded
That is your story you are stuck with it, even though it is completely false
and been influential in for centuries, and in the end, because most
refused
to accept this Arab as their messiah or prophet of God, that he would
ultimately
rob, behead, and expel them all forever! ?
LIAR!
So I see no reason why they
should
get so pissed just because some Jewish paper editor decides to run a
cartoon
with a bomb in his turban! For 5 centuries the Jews had lived in
relative harmony
alongside their pagan Arab neighbors, and suddenly this Arab pretender
to the
line of Hebrew prophets comes along and tries to entice the JEws to go
along
with his nonsense! And when they don't, he eyes their gold and silver
and
rich farms, and seizes upon a way to get rid of this opposition and a
way to enrich himself
and his followers to boot!
SEEMS TO ME THAT YOU HAVE BEEN INDOCTRINATED BY THE RABBIS!
GO TO THE MOSQUE TO LEARN THE REAL STORY!
The cartoons did not cause the disease of
hate that we are seeing in the Muslim world on our television screens
at
night - they are only a symptom of a far greater disease.
The disease of anti-Muslim bigotry and hate and persecution going back
decades.
--
Ray Fischer
rfischer@sonic.net
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| User: "jgarbuz" |
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| Title: Re: Brought Up To Hate |
22 Feb 2006 01:04:18 PM |
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serwad wrote:
"jgarbuz" <jgarbuz@netzero.com> wrote in message
news:1140290718.055695.165390@z14g2000cwz.googlegroups.com...
....
So I see no reason why they
should
get so pissed just because some Jewish paper editor decides to run a
cartoon
with a bomb in his turban! For 5 centuries the Jews had lived in
relative harmony
alongside their pagan Arab neighbors, and suddenly this Arab pretender
to the
line of Hebrew prophets comes along and tries to entice the JEws to go
along
with his nonsense! And when they don't, he eyes their gold and silver
and
rich farms, and seizes upon a way to get rid of this opposition and a
way to enrich himself
and his followers to boot!
SEEMS TO ME THAT YOU HAVE BEEN INDOCTRINATED BY THE RABBIS!
GO TO THE MOSQUE TO LEARN THE REAL STORY!<
I heard none of this from any rabbis. It was written by a Muslim.
Last place anyone
will ever find anything truthful would be in a mosque.
And, btw,
BOSNIAN MUSLIMS VOLUNTEER EN MASSE
INTO NAZI SS
Most of the basic literature, while talking about WWII Independent
State of Croatia (ISC), does not fail to mention that entire
Bosnia-Herzegovina was part of this Nazi satellite. Whether the source
is Jewish written "Encyclopedia of the Holocaust" or recently written
book by British schollar Professor Cleve Ponting ("Armageddon") there
is no dispute in the literature about the total count of the population
of that country:
Out of total 6.5 to 7 million people of (ISC)
round 3.5 million were Croats
round 2 million were Serbs
Muslims totalled between 700,000 and 750,000
40,000 were Jews, 30,000 Gypsies
It is obvious that Croatian fascists were at enormous task to
exterminate almost a third of the population they got to control. This
is why they tried hard to attract the Bosnian Muslims to help them. The
response was overwhelming...
Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Edition 1990, Volume 2, Pages 706 and
707, entry Husseini, Hajj Amin Al ; The main Hitler's supporter among
Palestinian Arabs...
Quote:
It so happened that Husseini made his contribution to the Axis war
effort in his capacity as a Muslim, rather than as an Arab leader, by
recruiting and organizing in RECORD TIME, during the spring of 1943,
BOSNIAN MUSLIM BATTALIONS in Croatia comprising some TWENTY THOUSAND
MEN. These MUSLIM VOLUNTEER units, called Hanjar (Sword), were put in
WAFFEN-SS fought Yugoslav partisans in Bosnia, and carried out police
and security duties in Hungary. THEY PARTICIPATED IN THE MASSACRE OF
CIVILIANS IN BOSNIA and VOLUNTEERED TO JOIN IN THE HUNT FOR JEWS IN
CROATIA... The Germans made a point of publicizing the fact that
Husseini had flown from Berlin to Sarajevo for the sole purpose of
giving his blessing to the Muslim army and inspecting its arms and
training exercises.
(End quote).
A photograph, on page 704, shows al-Husseini inspecting Muslim troops
in Bosnia and saluting them fascist way. The same photograph appears in
"The Marshall Cavendish Illustrated Encyclopedia of WWII".
TWENTY THOUSAND (20,000) Muslim volunteers for the Nazi SS - out of
total population of 700,000 - that's a HUGE response.
Time-Life books: "The SS", Edition 1989
Bosnian Muslims of Hanjar SS division study anti-Semitic literature
(page 161).
Muslims are called by Croatian Ustashi to volunteer into Croatian Black
Legion SS (page 159).
Many different European nations were called by Himmler to join SS...
and many did (Belgians, Danes, Norwegians,... even Russian Cossacks). A
photograph on page 160 shows happy SS volunteers from The Hague leaving
for a training camp in Germany. Himmler knew he would not get Serbs to
volunteer in the SS and they are among rare people not called.
"Uniforms, Organizations and History of the Waffen-SS" by R. Bender and
Hugh Taylor
The following photograph is on display at the Imperial War Museum in
London: Heinrich Himmler inspects the Bosnian Muslim 13th Waffen-SS
Division.
"The Marshal Cavendish Illustrated Encyclopedia of World War II",
Edition 1985, Vol. 10, page 2824, while talking about different SS
divisions says (quote:)
Then there were atempts to exploit nationalist sectarian groups in
Yugoslavia, raising anti-Serb forces to fight against Tito's partisans.
This produced the "Handschar" Division: the 13th Waffen Gebirgsdivision
der S.S. This was a force of Croatian volunteers, raised in 1943 and
originally entitled "Bosnien-Herzegowina". A Moslem unit, its men wore
fez, complete with silver skull-and-crossbones and eagle... When put to
work in Yugoslavia it did little damage to Tito's partisans but showed
itself adept in dealing out enthusiastic brutality to Yugoslav
civilians. [We know which ones as they were themselves - Muslim and
operated in Independent State of Croatia which left Serbs, Jews and
Gypsies as the only targets of the brutality]. It was eventually
disbanded and reformed as a mountain regiment, retaining the same name.
Even less efective were the Albanian S.S. volunteers, from whom the
21st Waffen Gebirgsdivision "Skanderbeg" was formed in 1944. Its chief
problem was desertion, which finally necessitated its disbandment. The
same held true for the short-lived "Kama" [dagger], a force of
Croatians.
(End quote).
NOTE: Today, it was Imperial America to use ancient method of Divide et
Impera ... and "to exploit nationalist sectarian groups in Yugoslavia,
rising anti-Serb forces" in order to dismantle Yugoslavia and
ethnically cleans the Serbian people.
A photograph, on page 1062 (Vol. 4) of the same encyclopedia shows
Ustashi SS Black Legion, so much praised by today's Croatia . The
caption underneath the photograph says (quote:)
Young volunteers take the oath of allegiance on joining a Croatian
legion of the Waffen S.S. The Signal caption reads: "Young men follow
in their father's footsteps. The independent State of Croatia is allied
to the Axis powers. Her youth fights for the future of Europe. The
young soldiers of the Croatian divisions, with their country's coat of
arms [Ustashi red and white checkerboard] on their steel helmets, swear
allegiance to Adolf Hitler. Their fathers themselves fought, in a
spirit of brotherhood, beside the Germans and the Austrians."
(End quote.)
And how little have changed! Substitute "Axis powers" for "NATO powers"
(as those are the newest Croatian-Nazi protectors) and read the above
quote once again. Not a word other than those is to be changed!... For
the third time in this century Croats are proxies of evil powers to
roll over Europe.
From our own files:
The Grand Mufti's last "Sieg Heil!" as he leaves the Muslim SS division
he helped be formed.
Would the children of these SS-Muslims be able to finish under Bill
Clinton what they could not during Adolf Hitler's time?
Today, Bosnian Muslims revived their SS roots and their SS-Hanjar
division... And BRAG ABOUT THEIR NAZI PAST.
Where am I? PATH:
Book of facts
* History of the Balkans
o Before World War One
(Who got to the Balkans and when.)
o World War One
(The formation of the first Yugoslavia.)
o World War II
(Who was Nazi and who was not.)
o After WWII - Tito's Yugoslavia
(Who controlled the country.)
* Big powers and civil wars in Yugoslavia
(How was Yugoslavia dismantled and why.)
* Proxies at work
(Muslims and Croats were only proxies of the big powers)
* The Aftermath
The truth belongs to us all.
Feel free to download, copy and redistribute.
Last revised: December 29, 1997
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| User: "jgarbuz" |
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| Title: Re: Brought Up To Hate |
22 Feb 2006 12:57:14 PM |
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serwad wrote:
But Mein Kampf and The Protocols of the Elders of Zion have been best
sellers in the Arab world for many decades! Some Arabs and Muslims
have been making derogatory and hateful statements about Jews since
even
before Israel became a state!
So what?<
So I wish more anti-Muslim and anti-Arab literature was available in
ISrael when
I lived there. In Israel, the shut down the Kach party just for
advocationg the
expulsion of Arabs from the Land of Israel.
And Muslims don't seem to want to talk about the robbery, beheading and
expulsion of Jews from Medina and the Hijaz by Muhammad!
Jews were beheading muslims also in those days, it was the custom of the
time<
That is a fucking lie. I dare you to find even ONE reference in any
historic Muslim literature
of a Muslim being beheaded by a Jew! Even one, and I'll shut my mouth
about it!
Or about the
majority pro-Nazi stance of most Arab and Muslim countries during WWII!
German military had units in it formed by all national | | | | |