>
> Yes? This may help explain why it is that
> Islamic cultures (all of which started out
> from pluralistic non-Islamic civilizations)
> are everywhere today a monolithic Islamic
> mind-control culture where even the mere
> expression of a possible change of religion
> is instantly punished by death (and where
> children are encouraged to murder their
> parents, brothers, and sisters ... and it is
> demanded of parents they murder their
> children if they stray from Islamic law).
>
> Today only a few Christian souls remain of
> what was an Egypt which was once all Christian.
> The last few surviving Christians are even now
> leaving Iran and Iraq. In the East, where Islam
> has but only recently taken over countries like
> Indonesia, Thailand, and the like... and in Africa
> the old civilizations there are in abeyance and
> steady retreat under the unrelenting violence
> and intimidation of Islam--so too there soon you
> will see nothing but the soulless mind-control
> slavery you see everywhere in the Islamic world.
>
> DO NOT FALL FOR THE MUSLIM PROPAGANDA.
>
> Look into the history of the Islamic Plague
> which has devastated a third of humanity.
> The answer is in history, not in articles by
> Muslim propagandists like Eboo Patel & others.
>
> VISIT
THOUhttp://islamisbad.com
>
> You can begin from there, and Google your way
> to the truth, maybe even before it's too late.
>
> S D
Rodrianhttp://poems.sdrodrian.comhttp://thesolutionisthis.comhttp://mp3.sdrodrian...
>
> All religions are local.
> Only science is universal.
>
> *********************************
>
> Islam Under Scrutiny by Ex-Muslims
>
> Islam, the Multicultural Cemetery --
> An Open Letter to an Educated Liberal
> by Alexander Maistrovoy 09 Jul, 2007
>
> "And for the first time, with a sudden shiver,
> came the clear knowledge of what the meat
> I had seen in the Underworld might be. These
> careless Eloi were mere fatted cattle, which
> the ant-like Morlocks preserved and preyed
> upon." "The Time Machine" of H G Wells
>
> My dear brainy friend!
>
> The communist slogan in the former Soviet
> Union was: "We say Lenin, we mean the Party,
> we say the Party, we mean Lenin". For you it
> could sound like this: "We say multiculturalism,
> we mean Islam, we say Islam, we mean
> multiculturalism". The Muslim world is the last
> and sole barrier on the way to your dream
> about cultural pluralistic society. "Even a
> Spaniard can be French.* An Arab cannot
> be." In despair you are ready to fasten on a
> kaffiyeh on yourself and a yashmak on your
> wife in order to drag a Muslim into your Cloud
> Castle.
>
> * "To be French today means not only to be
> ethnically French, but also Italian, Vietnamese,
> Chinese, Jew, Arab, Spanish..." (F. Mitterrand)
>
> It's your fixed idea, your choice. I will only
> remind you, my starry-eyed friend, what the
> role of a "true believer" is in the multicultural
> society, whether he comes there invited or
> uninvited. For hundreds of years the Middle
> East was the embodiment of the real
> multicultural ideal, the thesaurus of spiritual
> and philosophical knowledge. Antique mystery
> religions and Zoroastrism; the Ebonites and
> the first Christian sects; Gnosticism and
> Kabbalistic teachings; the Neoplatonics and
> the Manichees, the Arians and the Nestorians"
> all of them had co-existed in harmony. They
> conveyed their ideas and views of the world
> from one to another in this gigantic melting-pot
> of human spirit. Whether you know about it or
> not, it was from this fathomless source, that
> European philosophy, theology and learning
> got strength which paved the way to freedom
> and liberal values.
>
> One of the first acts of triumphant Islam was
> the burning of the famous Alexandrine library.*
> But it was only the beginning, because at that
> time Islam was relatively tolerant and noble.
> And what is more, it joined this melting-pot
> (so, my dear friend, don't blame me of jaundice).
> Islam showed the world the mysticism of Sufis
> with their poetry of Life and extenuation of
> material benefits, expressed in Druze religion.
> Much later, the most humanistic religion of
> the present times (the Baha¡ Faith) arose
> from Islam. It also gave birth to Ahmadiyya
> movement, which believed in the improvement
> of the world through love. Unfortunately,
> obsession and obscurantism intensified. First,
> Sunni in Saudi Arabia found themselves under
> the dogmatic and obscure Wahhabite rule,
> then Salafies and Muslim brothers appeared.
> Formerly latent Utopias in Shi'a Islam turned
> into paranoia before our eyes.
>
> * This "library" was burnt and re-built several
> times: It was reportedly first burnt down by or
> at the time of Caesar (48 BC). Rebuilt by Marc
> Anthony, it may have been destroyed in the
> Emperor Aurelian's sack of the city (270-275).
> In 391, Christian Emperor Theodosius I ordered
> the destruction of pagan temples, and as the
> "library" was such, it was destroyed by bishop
> Theophilus of Alexandria. Finally, a Muslim army
> led by Amr ibn al Aas sacked the city in 642 AD.
> Infamously, the general asked the Caliph Umar
> what to do with the library, and received the
> legendary reply, "If what is written in them (the
> library books) agrees with the Koran, they are
> not required; and if they disagree, they are not
> desired. Therefore: Destroy them all." True or
> not, this legendary principium has pretty much
> encapsulated the Islamic attitude towards all
> aspects of humanity not considered by the Islamic
> holy texts across the length & breadth of Islamic
> history... and explains the dearth of progress/
> backwardness/ignorance which has gripped the
> Muslims for well over a thousand years now. SDR
>
> Even in the time of medieval inquisition in
> Europe fresh ideas existed. There were different
> philosophic schools: from Albert the Great to
> Thomas Aquinas to Meister Eckhart to Roger
> Bacon. There was Italian Proto-Renaissance
> with Dante Alighieri, Giovanni Pisano and Giotto.
> There was craving for freedom, personified in
> the Katars, Waldenses, Czech Hussites, and
> Lollards. And now tell me, my clever friend,
> what kinds of philosophic, spiritual schools do
> you know in the modern Islamic world?
> Enlighten me, I will be happy! There are few
> courageous people, who denounce dogmatic
> Wahhabites, like Sheikh Abdul Hadi Palazzi
> and Dr. Taufik Hamid from Egypt. But they
> are social outcasts of the Muslim world and
> they live beyond the bounds of it.
>
> Let me ask you: what has remained from the
> multicultural world of the Middle East? Do the
> Zoroastrians and Baha¡s stay in Iran, their
> homeland? It will be easer to find them in a
> cemetery in that country, than living. Those
> who could escape flew to India and the West.
> Had the Sufis remained in Saudi Arabia? No,
> they were annihilated by the regime as the
> enemies of "true Islam". Can you find a
> branch of Ahmadiyya movement at least in
> one of the countries of the Middle East?
>
> You can do it only in one place: so hated
> by you Israel (although I make no question
> of you being a Jew), the "state-of-racism-
> apartheid-and-coercion". Their centre is in
> Haifa. So is the famous Baha¡ sanctuary.
> The Sufis are free in Israel, and the Druzes
> are enjoying full civic rights in Israel.
>
> Not long ago the Arabian East was a palette
> of ancient and unique Christian sects. Waves
> of Islamic fanaticism swept away all of them.
> The Christians of Iraq and the West Bank
> escaped to the USA and Canada. Copts left
> Egypt. It may happen to the Maronites in
> Lebanon: the country is on the verge of the
> "Green revolt". Iraqi Gnostics-Mandaeans
> are exposed to genocide and on the verge
> of annihilation. Not mentioning about Darfur.
> And you don't see it! Because the Mandaeans
> are not the beloved Palestinians, who claim
> for your special attention! In 20-30 years
> the Middle East will turn into a multicultural
> cemetery with an oasis in the form of Israel.
> If only you, my brainy friend, will not do
> your best to help the desert to swallow up
> this oasis. But you will, I have no doubts.
>
> One more step, and instead of the cradle of
> humanity only a scorched desert of hatred
> will be left here. And this desert will spread
> to the North and South, to the East and West.
> It will enter the open doors of your house;
> devour you and your family, your clubs ...
> cafes, libraries, theaters, and galleries. You
> have got used to freedom; you don't know
> what the world without freedom is. I know
> it because I have grown up in communist
> Moscow. But I also know the Middle East.
> And believe me, in comparison to the new
> Caliphate the Soviet empire of the 60ies and
> 70ies would seem a paradise. The new rulers
> of the world will not only shut your mouth,
> but turn your soul inside out.
>
> I pity you. Though, sorry. Not any longer.
>
> Alexander Maistrovoy [is a journalist of
> Russian-language newspaper "Novosty
> Nedely" in Israel. He writes about political
> & religious issues.]
>
> "Multiculturalism has come to be understood as
> something for immigrants, something devoid of
> interest for citizens in general or for their country."
> and "If the most pampered, the best and the
> brightest, of European Islam are turning against
> European culture and democracy, then multicultural
> policies as they have been carried out for a
> generation are at a dead end." Therefore, because
> of the above and many other reasons ...
> "multiculturalism is not working." THE WEST'S
> LAST CHANCE by Tony Blankley p. 87,92,93,189.
>
> *************************************
>
> Muslims Nations: Defame Islam, Get Sued?
> A.P. Mar 14, 6:26 PM (ET) By R. Callimachi
>
> DAKAR, Senegal (AP) - The Muslim world has
> created a battle plan to defend its religion from
> political cartoonists and bigots. Concerned about
> what they see as a rise in the defamation of Islam,
> leaders of the world's Muslim nations are
> considering taking legal action against those that
> slight their religion or its sacred symbols. It was
> a key issue during a two-day summit that ended
> Friday in this western Africa capital. The Muslim
> leaders are attempting to demand redress from
> nations like Denmark, which allowed the publication
> of cartoons portraying the Prophet Muhammad in
> 2006 and again last month, to the fury of the
> Muslim world. Though the legal measures being
> considered have not been spelled out, the idea pits
> many Muslims against principles of freedom of
> speech enshrined in the constitutions of numerous
> Western governments. "I don't think freedom of
> expression should mean freedom from blasphemy,"
> said Senegal's President Abdoulaye Wade, the
> chairman of the 57-member Organization of the
> Islamic Conference. "There can be no freedom
> without limits."
>
> Delegates were given a voluminous report by the
> OIC that recorded anti-Islamic speech and actions
> from around the world. The report concludes that
> Islam is under attack and that a defense must be
> mounted. "Muslims are being targeted by a campaign
> of defamation, denigration, stereotyping, intolerance
> and discrimination," charged Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu,
> the secretary general of the group. The report urges
> the creation of a "legal instrument" to crack down
> on defamation of Islam. Some delegates point to laws
> in Europe criminalizing the denial of the Holocaust
> and other anti-Semitic rhetoric. They also point to
> articles within various U.N. charters that condemn
> discrimination based on religion and argue that these
> should be ramped up.
>
> The International Humanist and Ethical Union in
> Geneva released a statement accusing the Islamic
> states of attempting to limit freedom of expression
> and of attempting to misuse the U.N. Human Rights
> Watch said in a statement that objectionable
> depictions of the Prophet Muhammad do not "give
> them the right under international human rights
> law to insist that others abide by their views."
>
> To protect the faith, Muslim nations have created
> an "observatory" that meets regularly to monitor
> Islamophobia. It examines lectures and workshops
> taking place around the world and prints a monthly
> record of offensive content.
>
> "America has a deep respect for the religion of Islam,"
> Cumber told The Associated Press. "The freedom of
> faith that we exercise, that we enjoy in America,
> that is also a very important aspect of the American
> core values. Anyone who wants to practice any faith
> is never stopped or discouraged."
>
> I wonder how long that's going to last after
> Sharia becomes America's law-of-the-land?
> The answer is contained in the pages of history.
> I advise you to start reading up. SDR
>
>
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/education/student/new...
>
>
http://www.danielpipes.org/article/3075
> .