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BarbaraTherese
Guest
I do not understand at all what the Muslim religion is all about, not at all. Not knowing I neither condemn nor condone.
What I do know is that in our culture, shared by many nations, to murder the innocent is a capital offence. If a group declares war on our culture including the premeditated murder of innocent people, then we are at war with them. In other words we seek to stop them. We either fight for our freedom or we turn to pacificism. (fight or flight and the other alternative if all are willing is communication) In that is the quandry. The Catholic Catechism does outline conditions for a ‘just war’.
Frankly I see parallels with Naziism…it seems these terrorist wish to rule the world and impose their beliefs on the rest of us which we must accept or die…it seeks to slaughter not a race as with the Nazis, but those adhering to other religions. Nazis wished to eradicate a race…terrorists it seems alternative religions.
Well anyway, that is the excuse they seem to be using. In a nutshell they are seeking absolute power, which was the same as the Nazi’s. The war they are waging in type…has changed the face of war as we know it. So did World War 1. World War 11 revealed a war in which the innocent were premeditatively slaughted on a mass scale. Vietnam revealed a war where the enemy could not be identified often and included in their military women and children…terrorism has identified a war where the oppressor is potentially living in our neighbourhood and even more unidentifiable often and where the innocent are very much a target and on home soil.
Barb
Arguing points of religion could be (not necessarily!)like sitting outside a paddock while the horses bolt arguing over who is to close the gate and why when sitting in the group is a person who plans to open the gate no matter who closes it nor why.
What I do know is that in our culture, shared by many nations, to murder the innocent is a capital offence. If a group declares war on our culture including the premeditated murder of innocent people, then we are at war with them. In other words we seek to stop them. We either fight for our freedom or we turn to pacificism. (fight or flight and the other alternative if all are willing is communication) In that is the quandry. The Catholic Catechism does outline conditions for a ‘just war’.
Frankly I see parallels with Naziism…it seems these terrorist wish to rule the world and impose their beliefs on the rest of us which we must accept or die…it seeks to slaughter not a race as with the Nazis, but those adhering to other religions. Nazis wished to eradicate a race…terrorists it seems alternative religions.
Well anyway, that is the excuse they seem to be using. In a nutshell they are seeking absolute power, which was the same as the Nazi’s. The war they are waging in type…has changed the face of war as we know it. So did World War 1. World War 11 revealed a war in which the innocent were premeditatively slaughted on a mass scale. Vietnam revealed a war where the enemy could not be identified often and included in their military women and children…terrorism has identified a war where the oppressor is potentially living in our neighbourhood and even more unidentifiable often and where the innocent are very much a target and on home soil.
Barb
Arguing points of religion could be (not necessarily!)like sitting outside a paddock while the horses bolt arguing over who is to close the gate and why when sitting in the group is a person who plans to open the gate no matter who closes it nor why.