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100,000 Christians are murdered for their faith each year

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Re: 100,000 Christians are murdered for their faith each yea

Postby saxitoxin on Fri Nov 15, 2013 2:53 am

mrswdk wrote:Christians and Jews.

All the others are engaged in slaughter to at least some extent.


Christians enjoy privileged status in Muslim-majority states until Christian nations blow the bejeezus out of their governments ...

In Iraq, Christians rose to the highest levels of society under Saddam Hussein’s regime, while in Egypt, Coptic Christians were protected from ultraconservative Salafists under Hosni Mubarak. As secular leaders from the secretive Alawite sect, the Assad dynasty largely preserved Christian life, protecting Syria’s minorities from what was perceived as a collective threat from the country’s Sunni majority.

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/06/29/opini ... .html?_r=0


The covenant that the Prophet concluded with St. Catherine's (http://www.islamicsupremecouncil.com/th ... romise.htm) prohibits obeisant Muslims from molesting Christians. That dates back to when Englishmen were running about in loincloths worshiping goats.*


    * not referring to my pool house, where this still occurs two weekends each month
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Re: 100,000 Christians are murdered for their faith each yea

Postby mrswdk on Fri Nov 15, 2013 3:01 am

Exactly. Muslims now persecute Christians in countries like Egypt.
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Re: 100,000 Christians are murdered for their faith each yea

Postby saxitoxin on Fri Nov 15, 2013 3:06 am

here is an historically accurate scene from a Hollywood movie-film about Saladin the Great which is, admittedly, just a gratuitous attempt by me to inject imagery of Orlando Bloom into this thread so Symmetry will like me :D

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Re: 100,000 Christians are murdered for their faith each yea

Postby Symmetry on Fri Nov 15, 2013 3:06 am

BigBallinStalin wrote:If a sentence has more than 10 words, can Sym not recall it?


I was with you up until you said "not".
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Re: 100,000 Christians are murdered for their faith each yea

Postby thegreekdog on Fri Nov 15, 2013 7:57 am

Metsfanmax wrote:Folks, this entire debate is asinine. I almost think you're debating about the meaning of the word crusade rather than actually discussing the specifics of a particular war.


Correct. Aren't most of our debates asinine? And by "our" I mean Symmetry and me. Basically, here, Symmetry doesn't like that he can't prove the war in Afghanistan was a religious war for the United States so he's going to try to make himself look good by asking me a bunch of questions. Then I ask some additional questions of him, which he doesn't answer. And sure enough he posts an entirely irrelevant link about how President Bush is going to talk to some messianic Jews about being messianic Jews.
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Re: 100,000 Christians are murdered for their faith each yea

Postby thegreekdog on Fri Nov 15, 2013 8:00 am

Symmetry wrote:
mrswdk wrote:I have myself argued that when George Bush used the term 'crusade' it was non-religious.

Seeing as Symmetry is now using outright lies to further a case that he is obviously only making to derail my thread I think we can dismiss his input and return to the original point: that Christians and Jews are the only religious followers who are not routinely slaughterly followers of other religions.


You know that I can read this, right? Who are you talking to?

Don't go playground/schoolyard on me now. "We're not talking to him now" got kinda dull after I was 8.


I'll still talk to you little buddy!

As I stated previously, you provided no evidence that the war in Afghanistan was a religious crusade except that the word "crusade" was used by a president who happens to be Christian. I gave you a number of elements of what I think of as a religious crusade. You ignored those, I suppose. And the term "crusade" is not necessarily religious in nature; it can be used in a non-religious context. Do you want to try again from the beginning?

(1) Symmetry, do you believe the war in Afghanistan was a religious crusade by the United States?
(2) If the answer to (1) is yes, why do you believe this? What evidence do you have?
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Re: 100,000 Christians are murdered for their faith each yea

Postby Symmetry on Fri Nov 15, 2013 8:10 am

thegreekdog wrote:
Symmetry wrote:
mrswdk wrote:I have myself argued that when George Bush used the term 'crusade' it was non-religious.

Seeing as Symmetry is now using outright lies to further a case that he is obviously only making to derail my thread I think we can dismiss his input and return to the original point: that Christians and Jews are the only religious followers who are not routinely slaughterly followers of other religions.


You know that I can read this, right? Who are you talking to?

Don't go playground/schoolyard on me now. "We're not talking to him now" got kinda dull after I was 8.


I'll still talk to you little buddy!

As I stated previously, you provided no evidence that the war in Afghanistan was a religious crusade except that the word "crusade" was used by a president who happens to be Christian. I gave you a number of elements of what I think of as a religious crusade. You ignored those, I suppose. And the term "crusade" is not necessarily religious in nature; it can be used in a non-religious context. Do you want to try again from the beginning?

(1) Symmetry, do you believe the war in Afghanistan was a religious crusade by the United States?
(2) If the answer to (1) is yes, why do you believe this? What evidence do you have?


1) Sure.
2) Because it was declared a crusade.

Technically question 2) was 2 questions, but I think you accept that your country's leader declared that it was a crusade, so I probably don't have to post a vid.
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Re: 100,000 Christians are murdered for their faith each yea

Postby thegreekdog on Fri Nov 15, 2013 8:20 am

Right, that's what I thought and that's what we covered before and you're clearly wrong. So there's nothing more to discuss.

Some other discussions about crusades may be enlightening for you Symm.

General Dwight D. Eisenhower, June 6, 1944 - "You are about to embark upon the great crusade towards which we have striven these many months. The eyes of the world are upon you... I have full confidence in your courage, devotion to duty and skill in battle."

Lloyd George, May 1916 - Men are flocking to join "a great crusde" for justice and right.

Harold Macmillan, May 1916 - "Many of us could never stand the train and endure the horrors which we see every day, if we did not feel that this was more than a war - a Crusade."

I can find more if you'd like, but were World Wars One and Two religious crusades?
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Re: 100,000 Christians are murdered for their faith each yea

Postby Symmetry on Fri Nov 15, 2013 8:34 am

thegreekdog wrote:Right, that's what I thought and that's what we covered before and you're clearly wrong. So there's nothing more to discuss.

Some other discussions about crusades may be enlightening for you Symm.

General Dwight D. Eisenhower, June 6, 1944 - "You are about to embark upon the great crusade towards which we have striven these many months. The eyes of the world are upon you... I have full confidence in your courage, devotion to duty and skill in battle."

Lloyd George, May 1916 - Men are flocking to join "a great crusde" for justice and right.

Harold Macmillan, May 1916 - "Many of us could never stand the train and endure the horrors which we see every day, if we did not feel that this was more than a war - a Crusade."

I can find more if you'd like, but were World Wars One and Two religious crusades?


You seem unsure as to whether your points are clear and there is nothing to discuss, or you have a load of evidence and you want to discuss it.

Perhaps, in the interests of going back to basics, you can give me an example of a conflict that you consider to be a crusade, so that we have a point of comparison.
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Re: 100,000 Christians are murdered for their faith each yea

Postby thegreekdog on Fri Nov 15, 2013 9:27 am

Symmetry wrote:
thegreekdog wrote:Right, that's what I thought and that's what we covered before and you're clearly wrong. So there's nothing more to discuss.

Some other discussions about crusades may be enlightening for you Symm.

General Dwight D. Eisenhower, June 6, 1944 - "You are about to embark upon the great crusade towards which we have striven these many months. The eyes of the world are upon you... I have full confidence in your courage, devotion to duty and skill in battle."

Lloyd George, May 1916 - Men are flocking to join "a great crusde" for justice and right.

Harold Macmillan, May 1916 - "Many of us could never stand the train and endure the horrors which we see every day, if we did not feel that this was more than a war - a Crusade."

I can find more if you'd like, but were World Wars One and Two religious crusades?


You seem unsure as to whether your points are clear and there is nothing to discuss, or you have a load of evidence and you want to discuss it.

Perhaps, in the interests of going back to basics, you can give me an example of a conflict that you consider to be a crusade, so that we have a point of comparison.


No thanks. I think the onus is on you at this point. I await your response with bated breath.
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Re: 100,000 Christians are murdered for their faith each yea

Postby Symmetry on Fri Nov 15, 2013 9:44 am

thegreekdog wrote:
Symmetry wrote:
thegreekdog wrote:Right, that's what I thought and that's what we covered before and you're clearly wrong. So there's nothing more to discuss.

Some other discussions about crusades may be enlightening for you Symm.

General Dwight D. Eisenhower, June 6, 1944 - "You are about to embark upon the great crusade towards which we have striven these many months. The eyes of the world are upon you... I have full confidence in your courage, devotion to duty and skill in battle."

Lloyd George, May 1916 - Men are flocking to join "a great crusde" for justice and right.

Harold Macmillan, May 1916 - "Many of us could never stand the train and endure the horrors which we see every day, if we did not feel that this was more than a war - a Crusade."

I can find more if you'd like, but were World Wars One and Two religious crusades?


You seem unsure as to whether your points are clear and there is nothing to discuss, or you have a load of evidence and you want to discuss it.

Perhaps, in the interests of going back to basics, you can give me an example of a conflict that you consider to be a crusade, so that we have a point of comparison.


No thanks. I think the onus is on you at this point. I await your response with bated breath.


Well throw me a bone here, I've answered some your questions, and just have a few of my own. It's basic really, if you don't consider anything to be a crusade, then I have virtually no chance at all in persuading you that something is a crusade.

If you can provide an example of something you consider to be a crusade, then we can discuss what differentiates your ideal crusade from my case.
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Re: 100,000 Christians are murdered for their faith each yea

Postby mrswdk on Fri Nov 15, 2013 9:54 am

Symmetry's input to debate on this forum generally seems to shift between making assertions that he clearly knows are false and puerile name calling. I somewhat doubt that his time away from this forum was spent in meaningful introspection.
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Re: 100,000 Christians are murdered for their faith each yea

Postby Symmetry on Fri Nov 15, 2013 9:57 am

mrswdk wrote:Symmetry's input to debate on this forum generally seems to shift between making assertions that he clearly knows are false and puerile name calling. Somehow I doubt his time away from this forum has been spent in meaningful introspection.


Still here dude. But thanks for the enlightening contribution.
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Postby 2dimes on Fri Nov 15, 2013 10:41 am

2dimes wrote:You don't seem aware that most of the nazis were fascist atheists. Any I have known certainly were. 2 I think but only 1 absolutely for sure in case you're planning to ask how many.

chang50 wrote: You don't seem aware that Fascism and Catholicism were deeply intertwined in 1930's and 40's Europe.There was a neo-pagan element amongst some Nazis,Himmler for one,but I've never heard this theory advanced before.In fact the Nazis if anything hated the Bolsheviks so much that anything related to it in the culture of the time such as atheism was hated as well.

saxitoxin wrote:
2dimes is correct; atheists or creative pagans - fascism is a traditionalist worldview and Christianity is an anti-traditionalist religion; the two are totally incompatible* ... if GreecePWNS is here I think he could note that the current Golden Dawn party in Greece used to espouse a pagan outlook until they had to switch to run-of-the-mill Christianity to mainstream themselves ... that rank-and-file party members were Christians, or that there was never suppression of Christianity in Germany, was because the party intelligentsia had to respond to functional political realities (anti-Hitler faction Nazis like the Strasser brothers didn't have to deal with these realities and you can see a purer form of Nazi theology in their writings)


Besides my anecdotal claim from talking to real people who stated their beliefs and those of their families. I probably should have wrote "met" instead of known since I have met several. (No memorable count.) And really only spent a little time around 1 or 2.

I think declaring your self to be a follower of the one well known for teaching "Love even your enemy."
then killing people seems at minimum a bit disingenuous. Could it be some of the "Christians" are fibbing, just a little?
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Re: 100,000 Christians are murdered for their faith each yea

Postby BigBallinStalin on Fri Nov 15, 2013 11:16 am

Symmetry wrote:
thegreekdog wrote:Right, that's what I thought and that's what we covered before and you're clearly wrong. So there's nothing more to discuss.

Some other discussions about crusades may be enlightening for you Symm.

General Dwight D. Eisenhower, June 6, 1944 - "You are about to embark upon the great crusade towards which we have striven these many months. The eyes of the world are upon you... I have full confidence in your courage, devotion to duty and skill in battle."

Lloyd George, May 1916 - Men are flocking to join "a great crusde" for justice and right.

Harold Macmillan, May 1916 - "Many of us could never stand the train and endure the horrors which we see every day, if we did not feel that this was more than a war - a Crusade."

I can find more if you'd like, but were World Wars One and Two religious crusades?


You seem unsure as to whether your points are clear and there is nothing to discuss, or you have a load of evidence and you want to discuss it.

Perhaps, in the interests of going back to basics, you can give me an example of a conflict that you consider to be a crusade, so that we have a point of comparison.


Haha! You'd have to say, "Yes, TGD, WW1 and WW2 are crusades."

Since you didn't, you're being illogical, or you're trolling--neither of which is surprising.
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Re:

Postby saxitoxin on Fri Nov 15, 2013 1:44 pm

2dimes wrote:
2dimes wrote:You don't seem aware that most of the nazis were fascist atheists. Any I have known certainly were. 2 I think but only 1 absolutely for sure in case you're planning to ask how many.

chang50 wrote: You don't seem aware that Fascism and Catholicism were deeply intertwined in 1930's and 40's Europe.There was a neo-pagan element amongst some Nazis,Himmler for one,but I've never heard this theory advanced before.In fact the Nazis if anything hated the Bolsheviks so much that anything related to it in the culture of the time such as atheism was hated as well.

saxitoxin wrote:
2dimes is correct; atheists or creative pagans - fascism is a traditionalist worldview and Christianity is an anti-traditionalist religion; the two are totally incompatible* ... if GreecePWNS is here I think he could note that the current Golden Dawn party in Greece used to espouse a pagan outlook until they had to switch to run-of-the-mill Christianity to mainstream themselves ... that rank-and-file party members were Christians, or that there was never suppression of Christianity in Germany, was because the party intelligentsia had to respond to functional political realities (anti-Hitler faction Nazis like the Strasser brothers didn't have to deal with these realities and you can see a purer form of Nazi theology in their writings)


Besides my anecdotal claim from talking to real people who stated their beliefs and those of their families. I probably should have wrote "met" instead of known since I have met several. (No memorable count.) And really only spent a little time around 1 or 2.

I think declaring your self to be a follower of the one well known for teaching "Love even your enemy."
then killing people seems at minimum a bit disingenuous. Could it be some of the "Christians" are fibbing, just a little?


2dimes may be able to offer first-hand testimony to this, but many contemporary (I'm not sure if this is the case or not with historic) Nazis, reject Christianity as a Jewish conspiracy to enslave Aryans through tricksterdom, or to suppress knowledge originating with Abraxas with false teachings from the Jewish prophet, Jesus. This is an easy way to tell the difference between fascists and coarse conservative racists like the KKK / English Defense League or intellectual conservative racists like that Mankow / Macknow (sp?) guy up in Manitoba or wherever he's at, who don't subscribe to any of that.

    edit - just bing-dot-commed him, it's Makow ... I must have been thinking of the radio DJ Mancow
Last edited by saxitoxin on Fri Nov 15, 2013 1:50 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: 100,000 Christians are murdered for their faith each yea

Postby mrswdk on Fri Nov 15, 2013 1:46 pm

Mankiw?
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Postby 2dimes on Sat Nov 16, 2013 10:56 am

saxitoxin wrote:...many contemporary (I'm not sure if this is the case or not with historic) Nazis, reject Christianity as a Jewish conspiracy to enslave Aryans through tricksterdom, or to suppress knowledge originating with Abraxas with false teachings from the Jewish prophet, Jesus.


Right, which for anyone who values that knowledge and uses it as a base for their religion would be logical.

Christianity was the most vocal claim of the west up until this century. Even during the hippy/new age movements leading up to Aquarius.

Sure there are some denying it here but go to any allied cemetery in the world. What do you think the plus signs represent?

The one thing that puzzles me is how the Christians tend to distance themselves from the fact that Jesus was a Hebrew. To the point of changing his name. It must stem from fear.
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Re: 100,000 Christians are murdered for their faith each yea

Postby _sabotage_ on Sat Nov 16, 2013 1:20 pm

If Jesus were a considered a "Jew" then the law which he suggested we uphold

"The scribes and the Pharisees have seated themselves in the chair of Moses; 3 therefore all that they tell you, do and observe, but do not do according to their deeds; for they say things and do not do them. 4"They tie up heavy burdens and lay them on men's shoulders, but they themselves are unwilling to move them with so much as a finger."

They needed to establish themselves in the seat of Moses in order to demand our subservience. If Jesus is a Jew (there is no dispute about this) then we are under the commands of the Jewish seat of Moses rather than their superimposed one.
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Re: 100,000 Christians are murdered for their faith each yea

Postby Symmetry on Mon Nov 18, 2013 2:33 am

BigBallinStalin wrote:
Symmetry wrote:
thegreekdog wrote:Right, that's what I thought and that's what we covered before and you're clearly wrong. So there's nothing more to discuss.

Some other discussions about crusades may be enlightening for you Symm.

General Dwight D. Eisenhower, June 6, 1944 - "You are about to embark upon the great crusade towards which we have striven these many months. The eyes of the world are upon you... I have full confidence in your courage, devotion to duty and skill in battle."

Lloyd George, May 1916 - Men are flocking to join "a great crusde" for justice and right.

Harold Macmillan, May 1916 - "Many of us could never stand the train and endure the horrors which we see every day, if we did not feel that this was more than a war - a Crusade."

I can find more if you'd like, but were World Wars One and Two religious crusades?


You seem unsure as to whether your points are clear and there is nothing to discuss, or you have a load of evidence and you want to discuss it.

Perhaps, in the interests of going back to basics, you can give me an example of a conflict that you consider to be a crusade, so that we have a point of comparison.


Haha! You'd have to say, "Yes, TGD, WW1 and WW2 are crusades."

Since you didn't, you're being illogical, or you're trolling--neither of which is surprising.


But I haven't considered those wars as part of my argument. That would require deeper analysis- but TGD's point seemed to be that either nothing could be considered a crusade, or anything can.

His criticisms are fair, but it's not trolling to ask if he thinks it can ever apply, and to provide an example.
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Re: 100,000 Christians are murdered for their faith each yea

Postby thegreekdog on Mon Nov 18, 2013 8:54 am

Symmetry wrote:
BigBallinStalin wrote:
Symmetry wrote:
thegreekdog wrote:Right, that's what I thought and that's what we covered before and you're clearly wrong. So there's nothing more to discuss.

Some other discussions about crusades may be enlightening for you Symm.

General Dwight D. Eisenhower, June 6, 1944 - "You are about to embark upon the great crusade towards which we have striven these many months. The eyes of the world are upon you... I have full confidence in your courage, devotion to duty and skill in battle."

Lloyd George, May 1916 - Men are flocking to join "a great crusde" for justice and right.

Harold Macmillan, May 1916 - "Many of us could never stand the train and endure the horrors which we see every day, if we did not feel that this was more than a war - a Crusade."

I can find more if you'd like, but were World Wars One and Two religious crusades?


You seem unsure as to whether your points are clear and there is nothing to discuss, or you have a load of evidence and you want to discuss it.

Perhaps, in the interests of going back to basics, you can give me an example of a conflict that you consider to be a crusade, so that we have a point of comparison.


Haha! You'd have to say, "Yes, TGD, WW1 and WW2 are crusades."

Since you didn't, you're being illogical, or you're trolling--neither of which is surprising.


But I haven't considered those wars as part of my argument. That would require deeper analysis- but TGD's point seemed to be that either nothing could be considered a crusade, or anything can.

His criticisms are fair, but it's not trolling to ask if he thinks it can ever apply, and to provide an example.


Your analysis that the war in Afghanistan was a religious crusade because the president said "crusade" doesn't seem that deep of an analysis. Based on your construct for what constitutes a religious crusade (namely calling something a "crusade"), World Wars One and Two should be crusades, no? That doesn't seem like a very deep analysis. So, all you really have to do is confirm your analysis that calling a war a "crusade" makes that war a religious crusade and we can call it a day.
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Re: 100,000 Christians are murdered for their faith each yea

Postby Sapient on Mon Nov 18, 2013 4:40 pm

mrswdk wrote:"Credible research has reached the shocking conclusion that every year an estimate of more than 100,000 Christians are killed because of some relation to their faith" - Vatican spokesman Archbishop Silvano Maria Tomasi.

Are Muslims murdering Christians wholesale? Is it unfeasibly dangerous to live as a Christian in the Middle East or South Asia?


Actually, many countries don't have a problem with Christians in the middle east, such as the Levant. Syria and Egypt have large Christian populations, and Lebanon holds a population majority when it comes to Christians.

In fact, the Lebanese Christians take their majority and upper class status and persecute Muslims. Just like the Catholics did back in the day, or the Anglican Church, or the Puritans. It basically comes down to corrupt, evil people in power. Not one's religious beliefs.

thegreekdog wrote:Your analysis that the war in Afghanistan was a religious crusade because the president said "crusade" doesn't seem that deep of an analysis. Based on your construct for what constitutes a religious crusade (namely calling something a "crusade"), World Wars One and Two should be crusades, no? That doesn't seem like a very deep analysis. So, all you really have to do is confirm your analysis that calling a war a "crusade" makes that war a religious crusade and we can call it a day.


If you believe this senior Palestinian politician, then you could call it a religious crusade.

cru·sade
kro͞oˈsād/Submit
noun
1.
a medieval military expedition, one of a series made by Europeans to recover the Holy Land from the Muslims in the 11th, 12th, and 13th centuries.
; plural noun: crusades
synonyms: holy war More
an organized campaign concerning a political, social, or religious issue, typically motivated by a fervent desire for change.
"a crusade against crime"
synonyms: campaign, drive, push, movement, effort, struggle; More
verb
verb: crusade; 3rd person present: crusades; past tense: crusaded; past participle: crusaded; gerund or present participle: crusading
1.
lead or take part in an energetic and organized campaign concerning a social, political, or religious issue.


Obviously the noun wouldn't apply, but it could be used in a verbal context, negative connotations aside.
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Re: 100,000 Christians are murdered for their faith each yea

Postby Symmetry on Mon Nov 18, 2013 5:50 pm

thegreekdog wrote:
Symmetry wrote:
BigBallinStalin wrote:
Symmetry wrote:
thegreekdog wrote:Right, that's what I thought and that's what we covered before and you're clearly wrong. So there's nothing more to discuss.

Some other discussions about crusades may be enlightening for you Symm.

General Dwight D. Eisenhower, June 6, 1944 - "You are about to embark upon the great crusade towards which we have striven these many months. The eyes of the world are upon you... I have full confidence in your courage, devotion to duty and skill in battle."

Lloyd George, May 1916 - Men are flocking to join "a great crusde" for justice and right.

Harold Macmillan, May 1916 - "Many of us could never stand the train and endure the horrors which we see every day, if we did not feel that this was more than a war - a Crusade."

I can find more if you'd like, but were World Wars One and Two religious crusades?


You seem unsure as to whether your points are clear and there is nothing to discuss, or you have a load of evidence and you want to discuss it.

Perhaps, in the interests of going back to basics, you can give me an example of a conflict that you consider to be a crusade, so that we have a point of comparison.


Haha! You'd have to say, "Yes, TGD, WW1 and WW2 are crusades."

Since you didn't, you're being illogical, or you're trolling--neither of which is surprising.


But I haven't considered those wars as part of my argument. That would require deeper analysis- but TGD's point seemed to be that either nothing could be considered a crusade, or anything can.

His criticisms are fair, but it's not trolling to ask if he thinks it can ever apply, and to provide an example.


Your analysis that the war in Afghanistan was a religious crusade because the president said "crusade" doesn't seem that deep of an analysis. Based on your construct for what constitutes a religious crusade (namely calling something a "crusade"), World Wars One and Two should be crusades, no? That doesn't seem like a very deep analysis. So, all you really have to do is confirm your analysis that calling a war a "crusade" makes that war a religious crusade and we can call it a day.


Ah, I see where you got confused. I was trying to suggest that we could have a deeper analysis of what constitutes a crusade if you could offer an example of a conflict you considered to be a crusade.

If you don't think any crusades have ever occurred, we can only ever have a discussion on a superficial level.
the world is in greater peril from those who tolerate or encourage evil than from those who actually commit it- Albert Einstein
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Re: 100,000 Christians are murdered for their faith each yea

Postby thegreekdog on Mon Nov 18, 2013 7:52 pm

Unfortunately, I don't think putting the question a different way is going to get you to answer it. So, I'll say again, you're wrong.
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