Genocide of Christians Reaches "Alarming Stage"

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
@squarepush3r actually lied about the 800 casualties. From the article:

The death toll in the attacks rose to 290, with about 500 people wounded, a police spokesman, Ruwan Gunasekera, said, although he would not give a breakdown of where the fatalities occurred.
It was pretty bad. 800 or 300, it matters only to the people directly affected. One is too many to me.

Was the attack at Christchurch that killed 50 Muslims perpetrated by a Christian or is squareanus calling the attacker at Christchurch a troubled person who shouldn't have been allowed access to guns?.

Christians also kill Christians. They forgot to mention that.
 

UncleBuck

Well-Known Member
Wow, I didn't know you had that in you :P

You're right about zealots of all sorts. However, we in the world we are not just dealing with religious zealots. They come in all forms. Some people are alt right.... others are extremely far left, in both cases these extremists are in fact zealots.

We should all remember the Catholics of Ireland vs the Protestants of N. Ireland. We should remember Sunnis vs Shiites. There's Hindus vs Sikhs, Buddhists vs Muslims.

In all the parts of this world, people are looking to hurt one another for various reasons. Our convictions can be so strong that they poison our thoughts, our hearts, our minds and souls, clouding our judgement and pushing a rhetoric/narrative.

Yes, Muslims in other parts of the world are terrorizing their Christian minorities. Yes, colonizers have terrorized indigenous peoples.
"All have sinned and fallen short to the glory of god."
Translation: we can all be assholes.

We shouldn't point fingers about who did what because of this or that in the annals of history. We should aggressively fight genocide and religious persecution. When an entire village of people are wiped out, that is a serious problem, emblematic of a large issue at hand.

I haven't insulted anybody, nor have I said anything that is meant to be argumentative.

Peace.
I’m ok with white genocide
 

squarepush3r

Well-Known Member
@squarepush3r actually lied about the 800 casualties. From the article:

The death toll in the attacks rose to 290, with about 500 people wounded, a police spokesman, Ruwan Gunasekera, said, although he would not give a breakdown of where the fatalities occurred.
500+ 290 is what? thats in a single day
290 dead christians is a pretty good start
Its funny how most people are just brainwashed into hating Christians, like why would you celebrate such a thing? The media and public schools/universities have been doing this for a long time, teaching people to hate Christians in particular. Christian movements were responsible for abolishing slavery, ending Suttee in India, higher education for women and lots of good we have in modern day.

In my entire post history on this site you would never find me encouraging or rejoicing in violence against a group of people, yet you vile person do some commonly.

I’m ok with white genocide
we know lol. you are basically extremely predictable in your positions.

What does @rollitup think about that?
 

UncleBuck

Well-Known Member
500+ 290 is what? thats in a single day

Its funny how most people are just brainwashed into hating Christians, like why would you celebrate such a thing? The media and public schools/universities have been doing this for a long time, teaching people to hate Christians in particular. Christian movements were responsible for abolishing slavery, ending Suttee in India, higher education for women and lots of good we have in modern day.

In my entire post history on this site you would never find me encouraging or rejoicing in violence against a group of people, yet you vile person do some commonly.


we know lol. you are basically extremely predictable in your positions.

What does @rollitup think about that?
I don’t have to be brainwashed into hating christians or whites

White christians committed the holocaust
 

Obepawn

Well-Known Member
White Christians also ended it and brought its perpetrators to justice.

Do you hate Muslim Turks for their genocide of Armenian Christians?
What about the Christian genocide, against native Americans. What about so call southern Christians posing in well documented photographs with blacks hanging by their necks.

Like I said before, I was born and raised Christian but the pendulum swings both ways.
 

TacoMac

Well-Known Member
Oh are you pretending to be from South Africa because you were IP banned and your IP spoofer puts you in south africa?

That’s interesting pikachu
That is why on the sites I set up Proxy Servers and VPN connections are automatically blocked.
 

zeddd

Well-Known Member
Genocide of Christians Reaches "Alarming Stage"
by Raymond Ibrahim
May 26, 2019 at 5:00 am


https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/14281/genocide-of-christians

  • Many of the world's most persecuted Christians have nothing whatsoever to do with colonialism or missionaries. Those most faced with the threat of genocide — including Syria's and Iraq's Assyrians or Egypt's Copts — were Christian several centuries before the ancestors of Europe's colonizers became Christian and went missionizing

  • The BBC report highlights "political correctness" as being especially responsible for the West's indifference....

  • Among the worst persecutors are those that rule according to Islamic law, or Sharia -- which academics such as Georgetown University's John Esposito insist is equitable and just. In Afghanistan (ranked #2), "Christianity is not permitted to exist."

UK Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt (pictured) commissioned an "Independent Review into the global persecution of Christians," which was recently published. (Photo by Jack Taylor/Getty Images)

"Christian persecution 'at near genocide levels,'" the title of a May 3 BBC report, cites a lengthy interim study ordered by British Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt and led by Rev. Philip Mounstephen, the Bishop of Truro.

According to the BBC report, one in three people around the world suffer from religious persecution, with Christians being "the most persecuted religious group". "Religion 'is at risk of disappearing' in some parts of the world," it noted, and "In some regions, the level and nature of persecution is arguably coming close to meeting the international definition of genocide, according to that adopted by the UN."

British Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt is also quoted on why Western governments have been "asleep" — his word — concerning this growing epidemic:

"I think there is a misplaced worry that it is somehow colonialist to talk about a religion [Christianity] that was associated with colonial powers rather than the countries that we marched into as colonisers. That has perhaps created an awkwardness in talking about this issue—the role of missionaries was always a controversial one and that has, I think, also led some people to shy away from this topic."

Whatever the merits of such thinking, the fact is that many of the world's most persecuted Christians have nothing whatsoever to do with colonialism or missionaries. Those most faced with the threat of genocide — including Syria's and Iraq's Assyrians or Egypt's Copts — were Christian several centuries before the ancestors of Europe's colonizers became Christian and went missionizing.

The BBC report highlights "political correctness" as being especially responsible for the West's indifference, and quotes Hunt again in this regard: "What we have forgotten in that atmosphere of political correctness is actually the Christians that are being persecuted are some of the poorest people on the planet."

Although the BBC report has an entire heading titled and devoted to the impact of "political correctness," ironically, it too succumbs to this contemporary Western malady. For while it did a fair job in highlighting the problem, it said nothing about its causes — not one word about who is persecuting Christians, or why.

The overwhelming majority of Christian persecution, however, evidently occurs in Muslim majority nations. According to Open Doors' World Watch List 2019 [WWL], which surveys the 50 nations where Christians are most persecuted, "Islamic oppression continues to impact millions of Christians." In seven of the absolute worst ten nations, "Islamic oppression" is the cause of persecution. "This means, for millions of Christians—particularly those who grew up Muslim or were born into Muslim families—openly following Jesus can have painful consequences," including death.

Among the worst persecutors are those that rule according to Islamic law, or Sharia -- which academics such as Georgetown University's John Esposito insist is equitable and just. In Afghanistan (ranked #2) , "Christianity is not permitted to exist," says the WWL 2019, because it "is an Islamic state by constitution, which means government officials, ethnic group leaders, religious officials and citizens are hostile toward" Christians. Similarly, in Somalia, (#3), "The Christian community is small and under constant threat of attack. Sharia law and Islam are enshrined in the country's constitution, and the persecution of Christians almost always involves violence." In Iran (#9), "society is governed by Islamic law, which means the rights and professional possibilities for Christians are heavily restricted."

Equally telling is that 38 of the 50 nations making the WWL 2019 are Muslim majority.

Perhaps the BBC succumbed to silence concerning the sources of Christian persecution — that is, succumbed to "the atmosphere of political correctness" which it ironically highlighted — because in its own report, it did not rely on the WWL. The problem with this interpretation is that the study the BBC did rely on, the Bishop of Truro's, is saturated with talk concerning the actual sources of Christian persecution. In this regard, the words "Islam" and "Islamist" appear 61 times; "Muslim" appears 56 times in this review on persecuted Christians.

Here are a few of the more significant quotes from the Bishop of Truro's report:

  • "The persecution of Christians is perhaps at its most virulent in the region of the birthplace of Christianity—the Middle East & North Africa."

  • "In countries such as Algeria, Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Syria and Saudi Arabia the situation of Christians and other minorities has reached an alarming stage."

  • "The eradication of Christians and other minorities on pain of 'the sword' or other violent means was revealed to be the specific and stated objective of [Islamic] extremist groups in Syria, Iraq, Egypt, north-east Nigeria and the Philippines."

  • "[T]here is mass violence which regularly expresses itself through the bombing of churches, as has been the case in countries such as Egypt, Pakistan, and Indonesia."

  • "The single-greatest threat to Christians [in Nigeria] ... came from Islamist militant group Boko Haram, with US intelligence reports in 2015 suggesting that 200,000 Christians were at risk of being killed... Those worst affected included Christian women and girls 'abducted, and forced to convert, enter forced marriages, sexual abuse and torture.'"

  • "An intent to erase all evidence of the Christian presence [in Syria, Iraq, Egypt, north-east Nigeria and the Philippines] was made plain by the removal of crosses, the destruction of Church buildings and other Church symbols. The killing and abduction of clergy represented a direct attack on the Church's structure and leadership."

  • "Christianity now faces the possibility of being wiped-out in parts of the Middle East where its roots go back furthest. In Palestine, Christian numbers are below 1.5 percent; in Syria the Christian population has declined from 1.7 million in 2011 to below 450,000 and in Iraq, Christian numbers have slumped from 1.5 million before 2003 to below 120,000 today. Christianity is at risk of disappearing, representing a massive setback for plurality in the region."
The BBC should be commended for (finally) reporting on this urgent issue — even if it is three years behind the times. As the Truro report correctly observes, "In 2016 various political bodies including the UK parliament, the European Parliament and the US House of Representatives, declared that ISIS atrocities against Christians and other religious minority groups such as Yazidis and Shi'a Muslims met the tests of genocide."

At the very least, it appears that the BBC has stopped trying to minimize the specter of Christian persecution as it did in 2013, when this situation was just starting to reach the boiling point.

Raymond Ibrahim, author of the new book, Sword and Scimitar, Fourteen Centuries of War between Islam and the West, is a Distinguished Senior Fellow at the Gatestone Institute and a Judith Rosen Friedman Fellow at the Middle East Forum.

That’s the dumbest shit I’ve never read. Fucking windbag
 
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