Religion in the World: A Contemporary Reflection

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“Citizenship is a tough occupation which obliges the citizen to make his own informed opinion and stand by it.” -Martha Gellhorn

We are citizens of the world, and in this regard, it is our duty to be informed and to inform so that we may create a more hospitable and humane world.

Let us raise the consciousness of how religion impacts the world so that we can begin to deal with one of the problems that the world suffers from. It doesn’t matter whether you are religious or not, we should do all that we can to put an end to the inhumane practices and beliefs associated with religious dogmas.

I will continually post articles and videos about what is going on in the world. Remember the words of the Dalai Lama: “Where ignorance is our master, there is no possibility of real peace.”
 

A Turkish teenager found dead in a hole next to her house was probably buried alive, a post-mortem examination has revealed.

Medine Memi, 16, was found in the hole in December. Large amounts of soil were in her lungs and stomach, according to a source who has seen the report.

Her father and grandfather have been arrested, but not charged.

So-called “honour killings” take place every year in Turkey despite government moves to stamp out the practice.

Two months after police found Medine’s body buried in the garden of her family home, a team of doctors at a university in Malatya has completed the post-mortem examination.

According to a source who has seen their report, there was only minor bruising on her body, and no evidence of her being drugged.

Concrete covered

Her hands had been tied behind her back, and they discovered large amounts of soil in her lungs and stomach.

The autopsy has concluded that she was almost certainly buried alive.

The police went to her home after a neighbour reported that Medine had not been seen for a month.
They found her body in a hole, newly covered with concrete, next to the hen-house.

A local organisation that campaigns against honour killings said the victim, one of 10 children, had gone three times to the police to complain that she was being beaten, but she was sent back to her family each time.

A member of the organisation visited Medine’s mother a few days after her body was found, but she was too distraught to give them much information.

Conservative community

Medine, who had never been to school, lived in Kahta, a town in the mainly Kurdish south-east of Turkey, where most honour killings have taken place.

The town is known for being very conservative and religious; it is a stronghold of the once powerful Naksibendi Islamic sect, which was banned by modern Turkey’s founding father Ataturk in 1925 but has revived in recent years.

But while it is true that most such killings are carried out in conservative Muslim communities, the practice is linked more to the customs of this region of Turkey, than to religious belief.

When girls or women are deemed to have stained the family honour, by behaviour as innocent as simply talking to boys, there is strong peer pressure from the community on the male members of the family to restore their honour, say groups working on the issue in the south-east.

The only way allowed by their code is to kill the girl or woman - usually a young man is given the task after a family council meeting, and the method and location of the killing are discussed in detail.

Emotional state

Afterwards, the family will try to pretend she never existed.

The government has tried to curb the practice by changing the guidance given to judges.

In the case of honour killings they are no longer allowed to use mitigating factors like the accused’s emotional state to reduce sentences.

But this has so far had a limited impact.

According the statistics from the prime minister’s office, there were 16 honour killings in Medine’s province of Adiyaman between 2003 and 2007.

NGOs say the official figures are almost certainly too low.

Last year a Turkish man was sentenced to life imprisonment in London for the murder of his 15-year-old daughter a decade earlier. Her body has never been found.

Source: news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/8501181.stm
More information: guardian.co.uk/world/2010/feb/04/girl-buried-alive-turkey
 
Rape victim receives 101 lashes for becoming pregnant

A 16-year-old girl who was raped in Bangladesh has been given 101 lashes for conceiving during the assault.

The girl’s father was also fined and warned the family would be branded outcasts from their village if he did not pay.

According to human rights activists, the girl, who was quickly married after the attack, was divorced weeks later after medical tests revealed she was pregnant.

The girl was raped by a 20-year-old villager in Brahmanbaria district in April last year.

Bangladesh’s Daily Star newspaper reported that she was so ashamed following the attack that she did not lodge a complaint.

Her rape emerged after her pregnancy test and Muslim elders in the village issued a fatwa insisting that the girl be kept in isolation until her family agreed to corporal punishment.

Her rapist was pardoned by the elders. She told the newspaper the rapist had “spoiled” her life.

“I want justice,” she said.

Source: telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/bangladesh/7073191/Rape-victim-receives-101-lashes-for-becoming-pregnant.html
 
African Children Denounced As “Witches” By Christian Pastors



The nine-year-old boy lay on a bloodstained hospital sheet crawling with ants, staring blindly at the wall.

His family pastor had accused him of being a witch, and his father then tried to force acid down his throat as an exorcism. It spilled as he struggled, burning away his face and eyes. The emaciated boy barely had strength left to whisper the name of the church that had denounced him – Mount Zion Lighthouse.

A month later, he died.

Nwanaokwo Edet was one of an increasing number of children in Africa accused of witchcraft by pastors and then tortured or killed, often by family members. Pastors were involved in half of 200 cases of “witch children” reviewed by the AP, and 13 churches were named in the case files.

Some of the churches involved are renegade local branches of international franchises. Their parishioners take literally the Biblical exhortation, “Thou shalt not suffer a witch to live.”

“It is an outrage what they are allowing to take place in the name of Christianity,” said Gary Foxcroft, head of nonprofit Stepping Stones Nigeria.

For their part, the families are often extremely poor, and sometimes even relieved to have one less mouth to feed. Poverty, conflict and poor education lay the foundation for accusations, which are then triggered by the death of a relative, the loss of a job or the denunciation of a pastor on the make, said Martin Dawes, a spokesman for the United Nations Children’s Fund.

“When communities come under pressure, they look for scapegoats,” he said. “It plays into traditional beliefs that someone is responsible for a negative change … and children are defenseless.”

The idea of witchcraft is hardly new, but it has taken on new life recently partly because of a rapid growth in evangelical Christianity. Campaigners against the practice say around 15,000 children have been accused in two of Nigeria’s 36 states over the past decade and around 1,000 have been murdered. In the past month alone, three Nigerian children accused of witchcraft were killed and another three were set on fire.

Nigeria is one of the heartlands of abuse, but hardly the only one: the United Nations Children’s Fund says tens of thousands of children have been targeted throughout Africa.

Church signs sprout around every twist of the road snaking through the jungle between Uyo, the capital of the southern Akwa Ibom state where Nwanaokwo lay, and Eket, home to many more rejected “witch children.” Churches outnumber schools, clinics and banks put together. Many promise to solve parishioner’s material worries as well as spiritual ones – eight out of ten Nigerians struggle by on less than $2 a day.

“Poverty must catch fire,” insists the Born 2 Rule Crusade on one of Uyo’s main streets.

“Where little shots become big shots in a short time,” promises the Winner’s Chapel down the road.

“Pray your way to riches,” advises Embassy of Christ a few blocks away.

It’s hard for churches to carve out a congregation with so much competition. So some pastors establish their credentials by accusing children of witchcraft.

Nwanaokwo said he knew the pastor who accused him only as Pastor King. Mount Zion Lighthouse in Nigeria at first confirmed that a Pastor King worked for them, then denied that they knew any such person.

Bishop A.D. Ayakndue, the head of the church in Nigeria, said pastors were encouraged to pray about witchcraft, but not to abuse children.

“We pray over that problem (of witchcraft) very powerfully,” he said. “But we can never hurt a child.”

The Nigerian church is a branch of a Californian church by the same name. But the California church says it lost touch with its Nigerian offshoots several years ago.

“I had no idea,” said church elder Carrie King by phone from Tracy, Calif. “I knew people believed in witchcraft over there but we believe in the power of prayer, not physically harming people.”

The Mount Zion Lighthouse – also named by three other families as the accuser of their children – is part of the powerful Pentecostal Fellowship of Nigeria. The Fellowship’s president, Ayo Oritsejafor, said the Fellowship was the fastest-growing religious group in Nigeria, with more than 30 million members.

“We have grown so much in the past few years we cannot keep an eye on everybody,” he explained.

But Foxcroft, the head of Stepping Stones, said if the organization was able to collect membership fees, it could also police its members better. He had already written to the organization twice to alert it to the abuse, he said. He suggested the fellowship ask members to sign forms denouncing abuse or hold meetings to educate pastors about the new child rights law in the state of Akwa Ibom, which makes it illegal to denounce children as witches. Similar laws and education were needed in other states, he said.

Sam Itauma of the Children’s Rights and Rehabilitation Network said it is the most vulnerable children – the orphaned, sick, disabled or poor – who are most often denounced. In Nwanaokwo’s case, his poor father and dead mother made him an easy target.

“Even churches who didn’t use to ‘find’ child witches are being forced into it by the competition,” said Itauma. “They are seen as spiritually powerful because they can detect witchcraft and the parents may even pay them money for an exorcism.”

Members of two other families said pastors from the Apostolic Church had accused their children of witchcraft, but asked not to be named for fear of retaliation.

The Nigeria Apostolic Church refused repeated requests made by phone, e-mail and in person for comment.

Source:huffingtonpost.com/2009/10/18/african-children-denounce_n_324943.html
 
Somali woman stoned for adultery
http://www.iranfreedomconcert.com/stoning-iran.gif
A 20-year-old woman divorcee accused of committing adultery in Somalia has been stoned to death by Islamists in front of a crowd of about 200 people.

A judge working for the militant group al-Shabab said she had had an affair with an unmarried 29-year-old man.

He said she gave birth to a still-born baby and was found guilty of adultery. Her boyfriend was given 100 lashes.

It is thought to be the second time a woman has been stoned to death for adultery by al-Shabab.

The group controls large swathes of southern Somalia where they have imposed a strict interpretation of Islamic law which has been unpopular with many Somalis.

‘Lenient’

According to reports from a small village near the town of Wajid, 250 miles (400km) north-west of the capital, Mogadishu, the woman was taken to the public grounds where she was buried up to her waist.

The Islamists want to impose a strict version of Sharia on Somalia
She was then stoned to death in front of the crowds on Tuesday afternoon.

The judge, Sheikh Ibrahim Abdirahman, said her unmarried boyfriend was given 100 lashes at the same venue.

Under al-Shabab’s interpretation of Sharia law, anyone who has ever been married - even a divorcee - who has an affair is liable to be found guilty of adultery, punishable by stoning to death.

An unmarried person who has sex before marriage is liable to be given 100 lashes.

BBC East Africa correspondent Will Ross says the stoning is at least the fourth for adultery in Somalia over the last year.

Earlier this month, a man was stoned to death for adultery in the port town of Merka, south of Mogadishu.

His pregnant girlfriend was spared, until she gives birth.

A girl was stoned to death for adultery in the southern town of Kismayo last year. Human rights groups said she was 13 years old and had been raped, but the Islamists said she was older and had been married.

Last month, two men were stoned to death in Merka after being accused of spying.

President Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed, a moderate Islamist, was sworn in as president after UN-brokered peace talks in January.

Although he says he also wants to implement Sharia, al-Shabab says his version of Islamic law would be too lenient.

The country has not had a functioning national government for 18 years.

Source: news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/8366197.stm
 
Oregon couple guilty in faith healing death
Oregon couple guilty in faith healing death. Jeff and Marci Beagley did nothing but pray as their 16-year-old son Neil died. Today an Oregon jury has found the couple guilty of negligent homicide for failing to seek medical attention for their son.

Neil Beagley of Oregon City was only 16 when he died in June 2008 of complications from a urinary tract blockage that could have been easily treated. Neil and his parents refused to seek medical treatment in favor of prayer. The decision proved fatal.

The couple now faces a maximum of 10 years in prison. Judge Steven Maurer ruled Tuesday the couple can remain out of custody because they are not a flight risk. Sentencing is set for Feb. 18. Because they have no criminal record, the normal sentencing range would be 16 to 18 months in prison.

The Beagley’s belong to Followers of Christ Church in Oregon City, Oregon. The church teaches that modern medicine should be shunned in favor of prayer.

The Followers of Christ Church is a small but notorious congregation that makes a habit of watching their children die rather than seeking medical attention. Four months prior to Neil’s death, his young cousin also died at home because her parents, Carl and Raylene Worthington, refused to get her medical attention.

The intellectual incompetence and moral failure of the Beagley’s is astonishing. The case is paradigmatic of the extreme depravity religious faith makes manifest.

Poor Neil never had a chance. Home schooled and isolated, surrounded by religious ignorance and superstition, raised by religious zealots lacking any moral compass, brainwashed from birth, Neil’s life and death was one of tragedy.

Source: examiner.com/humanist-in-portland/religion-oregon-couple-guilty-faith-healing-death
 
Uganda considers death sentence for gay sex in bill before parliament
http://imgs.sfgate.com/c/pictures/2010/01/03/mn-UGANDA_GAYS_0501015148.jpg
• Minimum penalty is life in jail, under anti-homosexuality bill
• US evangelical activists pressed for restrictive measures

As a gay Ugandan, Frank Mugisha has endured insults from strangers, hate messages on his phone, police harassment and being outed in a tabloid as one of the country’s “top homos”. That may soon seem like the good old days.

Life imprisonment is the minimum punishment for anyone convicted of having gay sex, under an anti-homosexuality bill currently before Uganda’s parliament. If the accused person is HIV positive or a serial offender, or a “person of authority” over the other partner, or if the “victim” is under 18, a conviction will result in the death penalty.

Members of the public are obliged to report any homosexual activity to police with 24 hours or risk up to three years in jail – a scenario that human rights campaigners say will result in a witchhunt. Ugandans breaking the new law abroad will be subject to extradition requests.

“The bill is haunting us,” said Mugisha, 25, chairman of Sexual Minorities Uganda, a coalition of local lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex groups that will all be banned under the law. “If this passes we will have to leave the country.”

Human rights groups within and outside Uganda have condemned the proposed legislation, which is designed to strengthen colonial-era laws that already criminalise gay sex. The issue threatened to overshadow the Commonwealth heads of government meeting that ended in Trinidad and Tobago today, with the UK and Canada both expressing strong concerns. Ahead of the meeting Stephen Lewis, a former UN envoy on Aids in Africa, said the law “makes a mockery of Commonwealth principles” and has “a taste of fascism” about it.

But within Uganda deeply-rooted homophobia, aided by a US-linked evangelical campaign alleging that gay men are trying to “recruit” schoolchildren, and that homosexuality is a habit that can be “cured”, has ensured widespread public support for the bill.

President Yoweri Museveni appeared to add his backing earlier this month, warning youths in Kampala that he had heard that “European homosexuals are recruiting in Africa”, and saying gay relationships were against God’s will.

“We used to say Mr and Mrs, but now it is Mr and Mr. What is that now?” he said. In a interview with the Guardian, James Nsaba Buturo, the minister of state for ethics and integrity, said the government was determined to pass the legislation, ideally before the end of 2009, even if meant withdrawing from international treaties and conventions such as the UN’s Universal Declaration on Human Rights, and foregoing donor funding.

“We are talking about anal sex. Not even animals do that,” Butoro said, adding that he was personally caring for six “former homosexuals” who had been traumatised by the experience. “We believe there are limits to human rights.”

Homosexuality has always been a taboo subject in Uganda, and is considered by many to be an affront both to local culture and religion, which plays a strong role in family life. This stigma and the real threat of job loss means that no public personality has ever “come out”.

Source: guardian.co.uk/world/2009/nov/29/uganda-death-sentence-gay-sex
 
Texas Constitution: Atheists Need Not Apply
HOUSTON - If you don’t believe in God, you can’t serve as Governor. Or even dog-catcher, for that matter.

So says the Texas Constitution.

America’s President is black, Houston’s Mayor is gay and Texas’ Attorney General gets around in a wheelchair.

Each is shielded by law from government bigotry.

But there is no such protection for atheists. On the contrary, here’s the tortured logic of the Texas Constitution, Article 1, Section 4:

“…nor shall any one be excluded from holding office on account of his religious sentiments, provided he acknowledge the existence of a Supreme Being.”

“It’s sometimes a real challenge to know that that kind of discrimination still exists,” said Noelle George, who doesn’t believe God exists.

Good thing George has no interest in serving in public office. Presumably, she would be disqualified by the state Constitution.

“In this case, we do have a constitution that’s unconstitutional,” said Deana Pollard, a law professor at Texas Southern University’s Thurgood Marshall School of Law.

“To force someone to have a certain belief system to hold a public office,” Pollard continued, “is contrary to the entire idea behind our constitution.”

Our U.S. Constitution, that is.

“It’s hard to be a part of a greater community that doesn’t appreciate what you’re trying to contribute,” said Noelle George, whose organization, SECULAR Center USA, carries the motto, “Godless for Good.”

George has heard the argument that atheists lack a moral compass.

But research published Monday found no difference between atheists and believers when it comes to moral judgment.

“They always say atheists don’t believe in anything, but that’s not true,” said Noelle George. “We believe in people and we believe that people are good and we try to be good.”

In fact, George and a group of her fellow atheists and free-thinkers spent Tuesday night raising money and showing support for an Iowa woman seeking treatment in Houston for a brain tumor.

Source: myfoxhouston.com/dpp/news/politics/100209-texas-constitution-governor
 
Malawi launches operation against high-profile gay and lesbian people

Fears of backlash across Africa as US evangelists accused of spreading religious zeal behind homophobic campaigns



Police in Malawi have launched an operation to hunt down and arrest high-profile gays and lesbians in the southern African state.

Fears of an anti-gay backlash across Africa are intensifying after the prosecution of the first gay couple to seek marriage in Malawi, and thousands of Ugandans demonstrated this week in support of a bill proposing the death penalty for some offences involving homosexual acts. Last week five men were arrested at an alleged gay wedding in Kenya.

Dave Chingwalu, a spokesman for police in Malawi, said a 60-year-old man was arrested yesterday and charged with sodomy. Chingwalu said he received a complaint from a young man that he had been asked to undress by the older man and was then sodomised. Police investigations had uncovered a network of high-profile people involved homosexual acts, investigations were under way “and we will arrest them all”, Chingwalu said.

Malawi has been criticised by international groups for the prosecution of Steven Monjeza, 26, and 20-year-old Tiwonge Chimbalanga, jailed in December for holding a wedding ceremony. The men were charged with unnatural acts and gross indecency and could be imprisoned for up to 14 years if found guilty.

A 21-year-old man was recently sentenced to two months’ community service for putting up pro-gay rights posters, and a senior minister expelled a woman from her town even after a court acquitted her on charges of having sex with two girls.

Campaigners in Malawi say homophobic legislation is driving gays and lesbians underground, making them hard to reach with information that could protect them from Aids.“In Malawi it’s a complete witch-hunt that denies the people the right to self-determination,” said Phumi Mtetwa, executive director of the Lesbian and Gay Equality Project, based in South Africa. “We are deeply concerned about this spate of homophobia across the continent.”

Mtetwa said the recent series of incidents was no accident but rather the work of US evangelical Christian groups. “It’s very well calculated. It’s exploding at the moment but it’s been happening for a year and a half. We have proof of American evangelical churches driving the religious fundamentalism in Uganda.”

The Ugandan parliament is considering a bill that would impose life imprisonment as the minimum punishment for anyone convicted of having gay sex. If the accused person is HIV positive or a serial offender, or a “person of authority” over the other partner, or if the “victim” is under 18, a conviction will result in the death penalty.

Members of the public are obliged to report any homosexual activity to police within 24 hours or risk up to three years in jail.

The legislation has earned international condemnation - Barack Obama described it as “odious” - but has received vocal backing within Uganda. Thousands of protesters took to the streets in Jinja, about 40 miles east of the capital, Kampala, in the biggest demonstration against homosexuals since the bill was introduced.

Okware Romano, a protester, said: “I have a verse in the bible in Leviticus 20 verse 13. It says that homosexuals should be put to death … yes.”

Last week police in Kenya said they had arrested five men whom they believed were homosexual in Kikambala beach resort near Mombasa. District officer George Matandura said two of the men had been found with wedding rings, attempting to get married.

“It is an offence, an unnatural offence, and also their behaviour is repugnant to the morality of the people,” Matandura said.

The other three men were turned in to the police by members of the public. Two of them had reportedly been beaten.

Gay sex is illegal in 36 countries in Africa. Only South Africa has legalised same sex marriage, and even there campaigners say the fight against bigotry is far from over.

**Source: ** guardian.co.uk/world/2010/feb/16/malawi-operation-against-gays-lesbians
 
Al-Qaeda’s North African offshoot has said it has killed a French hostage being held in Mali, in an audio statement broadcast by al-Jazeera.

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The leader of al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), Abdelmalek Droukdel, said Michel Germaneau was killed on Saturday in revenge for a failed rescue raid by French and Mauritanian troops.

Six militants were killed in the cross-border operation on Thursday, he added.

French officials said there had been no confirmation of Mr Germaneau’s death.

The French government said it was investigating the report and President Nicolas Sarkozy held an emergency meeting of his top defence and security officials to address the case on Monday.

The 78-year-old retired engineer was kidnapped in Niger in April and was reportedly being held by Abdelhamid Abou Zeid, the leader of one of two al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb factions operating in the Sahara desert.

In a message posted on the internet last month, the group had said it would execute him by 26 July unless some of its members were released from prisons in several North African countries.

‘Treacherous operation’

In a statement issued following Thursday’s raid, the French defence ministry said al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb had “refused to give a proof of life or engage in negotiations to release our compatriot Michel Germaneau”.

The operation “was able to neutralise the group of terrorists and to prevent the planned attack against Mauritanian targets”, it added.

But in the audio recording sent to al-Jazeera, Abdelmalek Droukdel said that President Sarkozy had not only “failed to free his compatriot” but “opened the doors of hell for himself and his people”.

“As a quick response to the despicable French act, we confirm that we have killed the hostage Germaneau in revenge for our six brothers who were killed in the treacherous operation,” he added.

Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb emerged in early 2007, after an Algerian militant group, the Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat (GSPC), aligned itself with Osama Bin Laden’s international network.

It has waged a campaign of suicide bomb attacks and ambushes in Algeria, and in recent years has become more active in the Sahara, where governments struggle to impose their authority and gangs of smugglers, bandits and rebels operate alongside the militants.

Last year, the group said it had executed the British hostage, Edwin Dyer, and it is still thought to be holding two Spanish aid workers, Roque Pascual and Albert Vilalta, who were seized in Mauritania in November.

**Source: **bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-10757199
 
Man posts bomb instructions on Facebook, is charged in plot
http://media.charlotteobserver.com/...+JustinMoose2.embedded.prod_affiliate.138.jpg
A Concord man was charged with describing how to make explosives, in an effort to bomb an abortion clinic, after FBI agents found instructions on the man’s Facebook page and caught him in a sting, officials said Thursday.

Justin Carl Moose, 26, is a self-described “extremist, radical” and the “Christian counterpart of Osama bin Laden,” according to an affidavit filed by FBI agents. Agents arrested Moose, who lives in a northwest Concord neighborhood, on Tuesday.

His arrest followed an investigation that began after Planned Parenthood alerted the FBI to a Facebook page registered to Moose, which the group said was advocating extreme violence against abortion providers.

Agents began monitoring the page and Moose’s private messages. They say he collaborated last week with a confidential informant to plan the bombing of an abortion clinic in North Carolina.

Moose’s relatives were reached by phone Thursday and declined to comment. He faces up to 20 years in prison if convicted on federal charges of distribution of information relating to explosives.

According to the FBI affidavit, Moose advocated violence for a variety of causes and communicated with like-minded abortion opponents online.

Moose’s Facebook page, which was still public Thursday, contained posts expressing anger at abortion doctors, President Barack Obama’s health care plan, and plans to build a mosque near ground zero in New York City. It also included expressions of support for those who have killed abortion providers.

“Whatever you may think about me, you’re probably right,” he wrote on his Facebook page, according to the affidavit.

“Extremist, Radical, Fundamentalist…? Yep! Terrorist…? Well, I prefer the term ‘freedom Fighter.’”

The page also said Moose is the father of three and searching for employment.

Status updates posted beginning in January urge violence, FBI agents said in their affidavit.

“The Death Care Bill passed last night,” he wrote when Obama’s health care plan was approved in March. “Keep your phone and rifle close and wait.”

"There are few problems in life that can’t be solved with the proper application of high explosives " Moose wrote two months later.

“If a mosque is built on ground zero, it will be removed. Oklahoma City style. Tim’s not the only man out there that knows how to do it,” the affidavit says he wrote in July, in a reference to Timothy McVeigh, who bombed a federal building in Oklahoma City.

In August, the affidavit says, Moose posted detailed instructions for making TATP, an acronym for an explosive like that used by terrorists in the 2005 London subway bombings.

FBI agents obtained search warrants and started reading his private messages. In one sent to a fellow abortion opponent, agents say Moose wrote: “I have learned a lot from the muslim terrorists and have no problem using their tactics.”

On Sept. 3, agents put their plan in motion. Their confidential source phoned Moose and told him that his best friend’s wife was going to have an abortion.

FBI agents recorded the call. “Say no more,” Moose said, according to the affidavit. “I understand and I can help.”

On Friday, Sept. 4, the confidential source met Moose at the TGIFridays restaurant at Concord Mills, the affidavit says. There, in a conversation recorded by the FBI, Moose described several bombs the source could make in order to destroy the abortion clinic the woman was planning to use.

Moose also gave the source advice on how to conduct surveillance. He told the source to drink several beers and stagger around the clinic pretending to be drunk. If authorities confronted him, Moose explained, the man could tell them he was just looking for a place to urinate.

Finally, on Sept. 5, the confidential source called Moose again and said he had obtained the chemicals to make the explosive TATP. Moose talked him through the process of making the explosive and answered his questions, the affidavit says.

Moose was arrested two days later. A neighbor said she saw unmarked cars and FBI agents with guns drawn around the house that day.

Court records show Moose has no criminal history in North Carolina other than minor traffic charges. In 2006, a woman took out a domestic violence restraining order against him in Cabarrus County, but it was voluntarily dismissed days later. The woman declined to comment Thursday.

**Source: **charlotteobserver.com/2010/09/10/1680125/man-charged-in-abortion-clinic.html#ixzz0zWEwtMAB
 
Wrong forum. I also don’t know what your intent here is. You can find fringe elements in any group - ethnic, economic, social, political, ideological, whatever. To pin these fringe on religion is definitely bigoted.
 
Wrong forum. I also don’t know what your intent here is. You can find fringe elements in any group - ethnic, economic, social, political, ideological, whatever. To pin these fringe on religion is definitely bigoted.
youtube.com/watch?v=89E9tGCeLIY

“Truth and clarity exist in all religions to an extent, wisdom is wisdom no matter which organization supports it.”
 
I explicitly invite religious people to also post articles on the matter in the opening post. It **doesn’t matter **if you criticize people of your own faith!

There needs to be more dialogue and awareness of the importance of reason and its application in our lives.

If you wish to say that I am blindly attacking faith, so be it. Hopefully others will be able to realize what I am saying and will play some role in** making this world a better place**.

This isn’t a thread bashing religion. It is a thread to show the extremist in the religions. Once people get passed these problems, I have no problem with man kind.
 
Christian Ignorance Revives Discrimination in Virginia

youtube.com/watch?v=xVPR4A8pVq0&feature=player_embedded#

Homosexuals may now be refused a job because of their sexual orientation.

Why do basic human rights have to submit to the zealous and blind religious authority? This is an abomination. They are actively taking the rights away from fellow citizens.

Who will stand up for the marginalized?
 
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