swilow
Bluelight Crew
^Its not at all clear that's what he means Soso.
There's no Catholic Church teaching or for that matter any Christian school of thought that justifies suicide in any way. IRA bombings were all pre-placed bombs and not suicide attacks (to my knowledge, this stuff was a bit before my time but I am of Irish heritage so did grow up hearing about this stuff and have a read a little)
Greater love has no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends.
John 15:13. I'll use the Revised Catholic Standard Edition:
Seems to justify suicide in certain circumstances, and even could be interpreted to justify suicidal attacks.
A quick search turns up the St. Maximilian Kolbe, who knowingly took the place of a condemned man at Auschwitz. He was canonized in 1982. He's also the patron saint of drug addicts. Huh.
Jesus knowingly went to his death (if you believe that) when he could have avoided it. Like suicide bombers, he 'knew' he would awaken in paradise.
Either way it's not relevant because NO Christian church condones suicide- it's a serious sin. They often can't receive Christian burials.
Now imagine if the Catholic Church at the time had been issuing fatwas and calling for a literal interpretation of some of the unsavoury old testament verses. Telling Catholics to chop the heads off Protestant infidels etc..
The point here being that an enemy who is quite happy to kill himself in the course of his attacks on you is far, far more dangerous than the one who values his own life too much.
ISIS members goal is a worldwide caliphate, BUT dying in the course of achieving this and going to paradise is a perfectly acceptable/desirable. In fact you could argue its more important.
That did happen during the Reformation and Counter Reformation, which ended in the 30 Years' War. It's also a much more fitting parallel to the current situation regarding Islamist (as opposed to Islamic) terrorism than Northern Ireland and England.
Authority to kill Protestants during the Reformation was issued by the Vatican up to the Pope (this covers a long time period so let's go with definitely church-sanctioned killing and oppression). Protestant efforts were somewhat more scattered as they were not subject to a single religious or secular authority, but they gutted it out as well.
While the conflict in Northern Ireland and England is interestingly regarded as having roots in the Reformation, as you pointed out it was not so much religious as it is ethno-nationalist conflict.
The parallels of the Reformation are more relevant to the current Islamist intrareligious conflict (unless you think the Sunni and Shia get along) and the use of terrorist tactics sanctioned by some religious and explicitly or implicitly by various state authorities.
If you're wondering "what about non-Christians during the Reformation"?, first of all, good for you!, and don't worry. Plenty of non-Christians (e.g., see "the Jews") were oppressed and killed by Catholics and Protestants before, during, and after the Reformation.
The Catholics and Protestants harbored deep hatred for the Jews for different and interesting but still horrible reasons. See the Catholic Papal Bull Cum nimis absurdum from 1555 and Protestant Martin Luther's later writings such as the rather obviously titled "On Jews and their Lies" and his vividly detailed call for a pogram. (Luther recanted these beliefs in his last sermon, for what it's worth).
(I'm just going to ignore a lot of stuff here... let me know if you want a reply to it.)
Only as a largely psychological strategy with casualties in relatively small numbers, with the exception of a highly coordinated and strategic attack like 9/11. I'm not in any way admirably commenting on it. It was a suicide attack with large numbers of casualties.
Arguably a large, well-armed force with troops that are willing to die is also very dangerous. Add the power to kill remotely with weapons that can be launched from an aircraft carrier or a submarine quickly or stealthily with drones and you have a formidable enemy.
Anyway, as of mid-2015 ~ three-quarters of all suicide attacks occurred in three countries: Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Iraq.
Ninety percent of suicide bomber attacks occurred in Afghanistan, Iraq, Israel, the Palestinian territories, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka.
Stay away from these places.
You could. But this isn't, no matter how much you want it to be, the philosophy of Islamic teachings accepted by the vast majority of Muslims.
And you write as if for time immemorial all Muslims have strapped bombs onto each other to kill everyone except them. They haven't.
And also by your reasoning, it is a central tenet, as opposed to a twisting of Islamic beliefs, to commit suicide and murder infidels, in which case there would be a consistent number of bombers everywhere there are Muslims and accessible infidels. This is simply not true.
Suicide bombers were unheard of in Iraq until the US invaded. Afghanistan followed a similar pattern.
I leave you with this sobering analysis: "foreign military occupation accounts for 98.5%, and the deployment of American combat forces for 92%, of all the 1,833 suicide terrorist attacks around the world" between 2004 and 2009."
Pape (2010), Cutting the Fuse: The Explosion of Global Suicide Terrorism and How to Stop It
To everyone: "Let's kill them all" is a so-so chant, but a stupid idea. Let's look at the current American President's policy to see why.
In his infinitesimal wisdom, Trump has let loose control of the US war machine. Frantically signing executive orders to shift military authority to the Pentagon, using skills he acquired after his harrowing experience avoiding fighting in an actual war, a qualitative shift in target areas and significant increases in US-attributed civilian casualties are occurring in Iraq and Syria.
So?
I would suggest looking at Somalia circa 1993 for a great answer. The US came in with good intentions, accidentally killed almost all of our influential allies in one swoop and despite sending an elite military team to kill Mohamed Farrah Aidid ended up evacuating with 19 killed, 73 wounded and 1 captured and a lot of dead Somali civilians. (Yes, Black Hawk Down).
The lesson was that if you turn the local people against you en masse (Somalis initially embraced American presence), say by indiscriminately killing a lot of innocent civilians, despite superiority in technology and military might, you either end up in a quagmire or accept your losses and leave.
This isn't our first rodeo. The US has played a major role in the current situation in the Middle East and it escalated during the Afghan War (the one where the US-backed mujahideen defeated the Soviet-backed Afghans in a sort of proxy Cold War). Leaders in the Mujahideen network joined something called the Taliban and had ties to someone named Osama bin Laden. We intervened and fought the Taliban... and so on.
So instead of trying to look decisive, gutting humanitarian aid and deciding diplomacy is for losers and dropping some more big bombs in a place from which we won't accept the refugees we are creating, it's time to understand that every time we do this in the Middle East things get worse. We need to partner with (not create) the governments of countries that have some interests that align with ours and some that don't, but do have a stake in ending ISIS and help them, except Russia. And accept that, in large part, we've created something we can't just bomb out of existence.
It's less satisfying and takes longer than bombing a bunch of people and accepting their collateral damage as unimportant, but that approach clearly isn't working.
Or we can build walls and do extreme vetting and deport all the Muslims and just hope they don't hijack some planes flying to the US or shoot down American planes or put anything in a shipping container like a dirty bomb, etc. In other words, we can try to hide geographically while simultaneously being part of the global economy.
Unfortunately it looks like we are choosing the worst of both options.
tl;dr Maybe we'll do better with the next mess we create in the Middle East, or I've vastly underestimated Jared Kushner.
Ask me for any sources.
I'm really starting to see why isis likes working with left wing activists.
Sweden will be the same country when muslims are 51% of the population, yes or no?
I'm really starting to see why isis likes working with left wing activists.
Sweden will be the same country when muslims are 51% of the population, yes or no?
I am noticing this question is ignored. The resounding answer is an obvious NO.
Already there are areas of German cities that are majority Moslem migrant / refugee. These areas are particularly dangerous to women and also to gay people. Paris is exactly the same: 'no go' areas for women, who risk verbal harassment and worse, simply for holding their heads high or dressing in a normal western manner.
If we were talking about Euro-colonialism of Moslem countries (see Israel, a country I fully support) then there would be uproar among many of the leftist posters, and yet they are welcoming what ultimately amounts to de facto colonialism by Moslems with no interest in integrating or respecting the culture and customs of their hosts. No wonder western Europa is seen as such a soft target.
France fought recently against Islamists in Mali.
Also, Algeria.
Not justifying the attacks on France, just pointing out that they have 'meddled' in the Islamic world.
The Sweden Democrats are now the second largest party in Sweden, and they are 100% anti-immigration: https://www.thelocal.se/20170601/an...oderates-as-swedens-second-largest-party-poll