freediver
Gold Member
Offline
www.ozpolitic.com
Posts: 48860
At my desk.
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iraq now has democracy, muslims there are still murdering muslims
Christians murder Christians all the time. The point is, Muslims (not islam) were given a vote. They voted for democracy. I think it was you who claimed that Islam is inherently antidemocratic.
only one country has ever got out from under islam law
There was a time in history when only one country had broken free from Christian dictatorship. Soon it will be two. BTW, Iraq was an old fashioned dictatorship, not a theocracy.
All other beliefs can live in peace with one another, except one.
Wrong. In all beliefs, you get some people who can, and some who can't. It's no different with Islam.
That's what is says in their book, what hilali says, what mohammad did.
Well, millions of other Muslims think differently to them. If you give them freedom of choice, they will choose freedom. If you take away their freedom of religion, they will try to kill you. I wouldn't blame them.
Those who give up freedom for security deserve neither.
Japan votes to return to US-led 'war on terror'
http://news.smh.com.au/japan-votes-to-return-to-usled-war-on-terror/20080112-1ljf.html
Japan voted Friday to return to the US-led "war on terror" after a two-month gap as the government took the drastic step of overriding a rejection in parliament for the first time in the modern era.
Embattled Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda is expected to win praise from Western nations for restarting the mission, but analysts said he risked a domestic backlash by ramming the controversial legislation through parliament.
The opposition, which won control of one house of parliament last year, in November forced an end to the naval mission, under which Japan provided fuel in the Indian Ocean to coalition forces operating in Afghanistan.
The opposition-led upper house voted down legislation to restart the mission on Friday, the last day it had to take action on the bill.
But the move meant the bill returned to the lower house, where Fukuda's coalition still enjoys an overwhelming majority. The more powerful chamber immediately voted largely along party lines, 340-133, to approve the bill.
The disputed mission, which was a factor in the resignation of Fukuda's predecessor, is likely to resume as early as next month.
from an email:
I know nothing of the politics of the Downsize DC organization, but their "I am not afraid" campaign is something I can certainly get behind. I think we should all send a letter like this to our elected officials, whatever country we're in: "I am not afraid of terrorism, and I want you to stop being afraid on my behalf. Please start scaling back the official government war on terror. Please replace it with a smaller, more focused anti-terrorist police effort in keeping with the rule of law. Please stop overreacting. I understand that it will not be possible to stop all terrorist acts. I accept that. I am not afraid."
Refuse to be terrorized, and you deny the terrorists their most potent weapon -- your fear.
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