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	<title>Christianity QA &#187; Islam Christianity</title>
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		<title>Fun from the REBT department</title>
		<link>http://christianityqa.com/islam-christianity/fun-from-the-rebt-department-2076062.html</link>
		<comments>http://christianityqa.com/islam-christianity/fun-from-the-rebt-department-2076062.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 11 Nov 2005 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Islam Christianity]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Question:
Philip Peters &#160;wrote :  The majority opinion is that it could happen as a reaction to the  rioting in France&#44; Germany and even Belgium but that it&#8217;s not likely.   &#160; &#160; &#160; &#160; &#160;Is there rioting in Germany and Belgium too?   Forgot to add: a few relatively small riots [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h4><strong>Question:</strong></h4>
<p>Philip Peters &nbsp;wrote :  The majority opinion is that it could happen as a reaction to the  rioting in France&#44; Germany and even Belgium but that it&#8217;s not likely.   &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;Is there rioting in Germany and Belgium too?   Forgot to add: a few relatively small riots in Germany but nothing  like   France. The German&#44; Belgian and Rotterdam events seem to be *copycat*   activity (not so sure about Germany though where suburbs are rather   unpleasant too). </p>
<p>&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; This reminds me of this oldie:  They&#8217;re rioting in Africa&#44;  They&#8217;re starving in Spain.  There&#8217;s hurricanes in Florida&#44;  And Texas needs rain  The whole world is festering  With unhappy souls.  The French hate the Germans&#44;  The Germans hate the Poles;  Italians hate Yugoslavs&#44;  South Africans hate the Dutch&#44;  And I don&#8217;t like anybody very much!  But we can be tranquil  And thankful and proud&#44;  For man&#8217;s been endowed  With a mushroom-shaped cloud.  And we know for certain  That some lovely day  Someone will set the spark off&#44;  And we will all be blown away!  They&#8217;re rioting in Africa&#44;  There&#8217;s strife in Iran.  What nature doesn&#8217;t do to us  Will be done by our fellow man!  The Merry Minuet&#44; composed by Sheldon Hamrick  &#8212;  The charter is available at: http://readystump.algebra.com/~asapm </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>- Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text &#8211;  Philip Peters &nbsp;wrote :  The majority opinion is that it could happen as a reaction to the  rioting in France&#44; Germany and even Belgium but that it&#8217;s not likely.   &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Is there rioting in Germany and Belgium too?  Forgot to add: a few relatively small riots in Germany but nothing   like  France. The German&#44; Belgian and Rotterdam events seem to be *copycat*  activity (not so sure about Germany though where suburbs are rather  unpleasant too).   &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;This reminds me of this oldie:   They&#8217;re rioting in Africa&#44;   They&#8217;re starving in Spain.   There&#8217;s hurricanes in Florida&#44;   And Texas needs rain   The whole world is festering   With unhappy souls.   The French hate the Germans&#44;   The Germans hate the Poles;   Italians hate Yugoslavs&#44;   South Africans hate the Dutch&#44;   And I don&#8217;t like anybody very much!   But we can be tranquil   And thankful and proud&#44;   For man&#8217;s been endowed   With a mushroom-shaped cloud.   And we know for certain   That some lovely day   Someone will set the spark off&#44;   And we will all be blown away!   They&#8217;re rioting in Africa&#44;   There&#8217;s strife in Iran.   What nature doesn&#8217;t do to us   Will be done by our fellow man!   The Merry Minuet&#44; composed by Sheldon Hamrick </p>
<p>Good stuff!  P.   &#8212;  The charter is available at: http://readystump.algebra.com/~asapm </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>  Philip Peters &nbsp;wrote :  The majority opinion is that it could happen as a reaction to the  rioting in France&#44; Germany and even Belgium but that it&#8217;s not likely.   &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;Is there rioting in Germany and Belgium too?   Dennis </p>
<p>Forgot to add: a few relatively small riots in Germany but nothing like  France. The German&#44; Belgian and Rotterdam events seem to be *copycat*  activity (not so sure about Germany though where suburbs are rather  unpleasant too).  P.   &#8212;  The charter is available at: http://readystump.algebra.com/~asapm </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>Philip Peters &nbsp;wrote :   The majority opinion is that it could happen as a reaction to the   rioting in France&#44; Germany and even Belgium but that it&#8217;s not likely. </p>
<p>&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Is there rioting in Germany and Belgium too?  Dennis  &#8212;  The charter is available at: http://readystump.algebra.com/~asapm </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>  Philip Peters &nbsp;wrote :  The majority opinion is that it could happen as a reaction to the  rioting in France&#44; Germany and even Belgium but that it&#8217;s not likely.   &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;Is there rioting in Germany and Belgium too?   Dennis </p>
<p>There was some in Belgium (small scale) and in Rotterdam six cars were  burnt. I still don&#8217;t think it will get out of hand here.  Philip (but you never know)   &#8212;  The charter is available at: http://readystump.algebra.com/~asapm </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p> Inner Wisdom Revealed   4. I no longer need to punish&#44; deceive&#44; or compromise myself&#44; unless   I want to stay employed. </p>
<p>&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Been there&#44; done that. &nbsp;   8. I honor my personality flaws for without them I would have no   personality at all. </p>
<p>&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Nah. &nbsp;Speak for yourself! &nbsp;   9. Joan of Arc heard voices too. </p>
<p>&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; *That* problem I don&#8217;t have&#44; thank God (if you&#8217;ll pardon the  expression.) &nbsp;   10. I am grateful that I am not as judgmental as all those   censorious&#44; self-righteous people around me. </p>
<p>&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Hear&#44; hear! &nbsp;I judge those who are judgmental! &nbsp;Some ancient  philosopher said&#44; &quot;You can see a Cynic&#8217;s pride through the holes in his  shirt.&quot; &nbsp;  &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; A great collection!  Dennis  &#8212;  The charter is available at: http://readystump.algebra.com/~asapm </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>- Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text &#8211; &quot;4. I no longer need to punish&#44; deceive&#44; or compromise myself&#44; unless I   want  to stay employed.&quot;  That about sums up what my work place expects&#8230;but I do know what side   of  the line to stay on&#8230;  smiles&#44;  Elise  Yikeeeeeeeees doesn&#8217;t sound like a nice place to be <img src='http://christianityqa.com/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_sad.gif' alt=':-(' class='wp-smiley' />    Must be nice working for yourself&#44; Miss Anna. </p>
<p>&lt;Hand against forhead So difficult all this responsability <img src='http://christianityqa.com/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_wink.gif' alt=';-)' class='wp-smiley' />    Has Mr. Hendrick been behaving? &nbsp;;) </p>
<p>No way !   Has Miss Anna been behaving? &nbsp;;) </p>
<p>Absloutely not !   Chip </p>
<p>Love from Anna   &#8212;  The charter is available at: http://readystump.algebra.com/~asapm </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p> I think that depends on which news media you read/listen to. Most religions   say&#44; in one form or another&#44; &quot;Ours is the only true way and our god is the   only true god.&quot; In that way&#44; most religions encourage tension with other   belief systems. Islam is no better or worse in this regard than other   theologies. &nbsp;The problem in France right now seems to be economic class   struggles with racial/religious elements that inflame everybody. Much like   the hurricane disaster in New Orleans &#8212; the poor suffered the most&#44; and in   that area the poor were mostly African-Americans&#44; which sparked cries of   racism. Racism was certainly a factor&#44; but it&#8217;s class discrimination that   was the main culprit. </p>
<p>I agree the combinatin of economic discrimination and racial religious  elements are very dangerous !   It always grieves me to see things like this current situation in France. I   would hate to be suffering from anxiety/panic with all that violence around   me. </p>
<p>yes it is a sad situation and a no win situation also.  The only thing that could help is real emphaty and understanding !  Love from Anna  &#8212;  The charter is available at: http://readystump.algebra.com/~asapm </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p> That calmed down again but there is increasing tension between  between young Muslim guys and the autochtonous population.   And the news media (in the USA) keep saying there is nothing inherent in   Islam that encourages tension with other belief systems. IOW they say it&#8217;s   not the religion but a group of fringe elements in the religion.   Makes me wonder whether the news media says what is true&#44; or what they want   and hope to be true. </p>
<p>It&#8217;s true. 98% of the Dutch Muslim population is against any kind of  violence. What one sees is that the confusion of living &quot;in between&quot; two  cultures and feeling only partly accepted by the autochtonous population  can make young Muslims an easy prey for those who are trying to recruit  them for the *Jihad*; they radicalize easily as they need some kind of  *goal* and some kind of alternative *family*. It&#8217;s like a sect. It&#8217;s  most certainly not inherent to Islam as a whole.  Philip  Our suburbs are  not really ghettos like the French ones though. Of course there is a lot  of debate here whether the same thing will happen here. The majority  opinion is that it could happen as a reaction to the rioting in France&#44;  Germany and even Belgium but that it&#8217;s not likely. i agree woith that  assessment.   Time will tell.   Chip </p>
<p>&#8211;  The charter is available at: http://readystump.algebra.com/~asapm </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>    &quot;4. I no longer need to punish&#44; deceive&#44; or compromise myself&#44; unless I  want    to stay employed.&quot;    That about sums up what my work place expects&#8230;but I do know what side  of    the line to stay on&#8230;    smiles&#44;    Elise   Yikeeeeeeeees doesn&#8217;t sound like a nice place to be <img src='http://christianityqa.com/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_sad.gif' alt=':-(' class='wp-smiley' />  </p>
<p>Must be nice working for yourself&#44; Miss Anna.  Has Mr. Hendrick been behaving? &nbsp;;)  Has Miss Anna been behaving? &nbsp;;)  Chip  &#8212;  The charter is available at: http://readystump.algebra.com/~asapm </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>&quot;Chip&quot; wrote  &#8211; Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text &#8211;   On a more serious note&#44; is there any rioting and burning in the   Netherlands?    Chip   No&#44; there isn&#8217;t. After the Van Gogh murder a year ago there was a   beginning of racial riots but only in a very small way (relatively   speaking)   That calmed down again but there is increasing tension between   between young Muslim guys and the autochtonous population.   And the news media (in the USA) keep saying there is nothing inherent in   Islam that encourages tension with other belief systems. IOW they say it&#8217;s   not the religion but a group of fringe elements in the religion. </p>
<p>I think that it&#8217;s always the fanatics of any group who promote violence.  Islam suffers from suicide bombers and their ilk&#44; much like Christianity  suffered from the Inquisition&#44; among other atrocities.   Makes me wonder whether the news media says what is true&#44; or what they   want   and hope to be true. </p>
<p>I think that depends on which news media you read/listen to. Most religions  say&#44; in one form or another&#44; &quot;Ours is the only true way and our god is the  only true god.&quot; In that way&#44; most religions encourage tension with other  belief systems. Islam is no better or worse in this regard than other  theologies. &nbsp;The problem in France right now seems to be economic class  struggles with racial/religious elements that inflame everybody. Much like  the hurricane disaster in New Orleans &#8212; the poor suffered the most&#44; and in  that area the poor were mostly African-Americans&#44; which sparked cries of  racism. Racism was certainly a factor&#44; but it&#8217;s class discrimination that  was the main culprit.  It always grieves me to see things like this current situation in France. I  would hate to be suffering from anxiety/panic with all that violence around  me.  Deirdre  &#8212;  The charter is available at: http://readystump.algebra.com/~asapm </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>   On a more serious note&#44; is there any rioting and burning in the  Netherlands?    Chip   No&#44; there isn&#8217;t. After the Van Gogh murder a year ago there was a   beginning of racial riots but only in a very small way (relatively   speaking)   That calmed down again but there is increasing tension between   between young Muslim guys and the autochtonous population. </p>
<p>And the news media (in the USA) keep saying there is nothing inherent in  Islam that encourages tension with other belief systems. IOW they say it&#8217;s  not the religion but a group of fringe elements in the religion.  Makes me wonder whether the news media says what is true&#44; or what they want  and hope to be true.   Our suburbs are   not really ghettos like the French ones though. Of course there is a lot   of debate here whether the same thing will happen here. The majority   opinion is that it could happen as a reaction to the rioting in France&#44;   Germany and even Belgium but that it&#8217;s not likely. i agree woith that   assessment. </p>
<p>Time will tell.  Chip  &#8212;  The charter is available at: http://readystump.algebra.com/~asapm </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>   9. Joan of Arc heard voices too.    And she lead the French army and kicked the English out of France. Not  too    many people who hear voices can do that.   Not many people who don&#8217;t hear voices do it either. As a matter of fact   it&#8217;s now considered bad form. </p>
<p>One never knows when something will come back into fashion.  On a more serious note&#44; is there any rioting and burning in the Netherlands?  Chip  &#8212;  The charter is available at: http://readystump.algebra.com/~asapm </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>- Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text &#8211; 9. Joan of Arc heard voices too.  And she lead the French army and kicked the English out of France. Not   too  many people who hear voices can do that.  Not many people who don&#8217;t hear voices do it either. As a matter of fact  it&#8217;s now considered bad form.   One never knows when something will come back into fashion.   On a more serious note&#44; is there any rioting and burning in the Netherlands?   Chip </p>
<p>No&#44; there isn&#8217;t. After the Van Gogh murder a year ago there was a  beginning of racial riots but only in a very small way (relatively  speaking) That calmed down again but there is increasing tension between  between young Muslim guys and the autochtonous population. Our suburbs are  not really ghettos like the French ones though. Of course there is a lot  of debate here whether the same thing will happen here. The majority  opinion is that it could happen as a reaction to the rioting in France&#44;  Germany and even Belgium but that it&#8217;s not likely. i agree woith that  assessment.  Philip  &#8212;  The charter is available at: http://readystump.algebra.com/~asapm </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p> 9. Joan of Arc heard voices too.   And she lead the French army and kicked the English out of France. Not too   many people who hear voices can do that. </p>
<p>Not many people who don&#8217;t hear voices do it either. As a matter of fact  it&#8217;s now considered bad form.  P.   &#8212;  The charter is available at: http://readystump.algebra.com/~asapm </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>  And then France let the English back in when they built the chunnel! </p>
<p>Very true. But then the chunnel goes both ways.  P.  &#8212;  The charter is available at: http://readystump.algebra.com/~asapm </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>&quot;4. I no longer need to punish&#44; deceive&#44; or compromise myself&#44; unless I want  to stay employed.&quot;  That about sums up what my work place expects&#8230;but I do know what side of  the line to stay on&#8230;  smiles&#44;  Elise </p>
<p> &#8211; Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text &#8211;  Inner Wisdom Revealed    1. As I let go of my feelings of guilt&#44; I am in touch with my inner    sociopath.    2. I have the power to channel my imagination into ever-soaring levels  of    suspicion and paranoia.    3. I assume full responsibility for my actions&#44; except the ones that are    someone else&#8217;s fault.    4. I no longer need to punish&#44; deceive&#44; or compromise myself&#44; unless I  want    to stay employed.    5. In some cultures&#44; what I do would be considered normal.    6. Having control over myself is almost as good as having control over    others.    7. My intuition nearly makes up for my lack of self-judgment.    8. I honor my personality flaws for without them I would have no  personality    at all.    9. Joan of Arc heard voices too.    10. I am grateful that I am not as judgmental as all those censorious&#44;    self-righteous people around me.    11. I need not suffer in silence while I can still moan&#44; whimper&#44; and    complain.    12. As I learn the innermost secrets of people around me&#44; they reward me  in    many ways to keep me quiet.    13. When someone hurts me&#44; I know that forgiveness is cheaper than a    lawsuit&#44; but not nearly as gratifying.    14. The first step is to say nice things about myself. The second&#44; to do    nice things for myself. The third&#44; to find someone to buy me nice  things.   &#8212;   The charter is available at: http://readystump.algebra.com/~asapm </p>
<p>&#8211;  The charter is available at: http://readystump.algebra.com/~asapm </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>  &quot;4. I no longer need to punish&#44; deceive&#44; or compromise myself&#44; unless I want   to stay employed.&quot;   That about sums up what my work place expects&#8230;but I do know what side of   the line to stay on&#8230;   smiles&#44;   Elise </p>
<p>Yikeeeeeeeees doesn&#8217;t sound like a nice place to be <img src='http://christianityqa.com/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_sad.gif' alt=':-(' class='wp-smiley' />   Love from Anna  &#8212;  The charter is available at: http://readystump.algebra.com/~asapm </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>- Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text &#8211;  9. Joan of Arc heard voices too.   And she lead the French army and kicked the English out of France. Not   too   many people who hear voices can do that.   Not many people who don&#8217;t hear voices do it either. As a matter of fact   it&#8217;s now considered bad form.   One never knows when something will come back into fashion.   On a more serious note&#44; is there any rioting and burning in the   Netherlands?   Chip   No&#44; there isn&#8217;t. After the Van Gogh murder a year ago there was a   beginning of racial riots but only in a very small way (relatively   speaking) That calmed down again but there is increasing tension between   between young Muslim guys and the autochtonous population. Our suburbs are   not really ghettos like the French ones though. Of course there is a lot   of debate here whether the same thing will happen here. The majority   opinion is that it could happen as a reaction to the rioting in France&#44;   Germany and even Belgium but that it&#8217;s not likely. i agree woith that   assessment.   Philip </p>
<p>OTOH there are some women going through meno pause that are most likely  want to start a riot hahahahaha  Love from Anna  &#8212;  The charter is available at: http://readystump.algebra.com/~asapm </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>And then France let the English back in when they built the chunnel!  &#8212;  there is no .sig </p>
<p> &#8211; Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text &#8211;   9. Joan of Arc heard voices too.   And she lead the French army and kicked the English out of France. Not too   many people who hear voices can do that.   Chip   &#8212;   The charter is available at: http://readystump.algebra.com/~asapm </p>
<p>&#8211;  The charter is available at: http://readystump.algebra.com/~asapm </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>   9. Joan of Arc heard voices too. </p>
<p>And she lead the French army and kicked the English out of France. Not too  many people who hear voices can do that.  Chip  &#8212;  The charter is available at: http://readystump.algebra.com/~asapm </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>- Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text &#8211; Inner Wisdom Revealed   1. As I let go of my feelings of guilt&#44; I am in touch with my inner   sociopath.   2. I have the power to channel my imagination into ever-soaring levels of   suspicion and paranoia.   3. I assume full responsibility for my actions&#44; except the ones that are   someone else&#8217;s fault.   4. I no longer need to punish&#44; deceive&#44; or compromise myself&#44; unless I want   to stay employed.   5. In some cultures&#44; what I do would be considered normal.   6. Having control over myself is almost as good as having control over   others.   7. My intuition nearly makes up for my lack of self-judgment.   8. I honor my personality flaws for without them I would have no personality   at all.   9. Joan of Arc heard voices too.   10. I am grateful that I am not as judgmental as all those censorious&#44;   self-righteous people around me.   11. I need not suffer in silence while I can still moan&#44; whimper&#44; and   complain.   12. As I learn the innermost secrets of people around me&#44; they reward me in   many ways to keep me quiet.   13. When someone hurts me&#44; I know that forgiveness is cheaper than a   lawsuit&#44; but not nearly as gratifying.   14. The first step is to say nice things about myself. The second&#44; to do   nice things for myself. The third&#44; to find someone to buy me nice things. </p>
<p>&#8211;  The charter is available at: http://readystump.algebra.com/~asapm </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>LOL. Like it. </p>
<p> &#8211; Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text &#8211; Inner Wisdom Revealed 1. As I let go of my feelings of guilt&#44; I am in   touch with my inner   sociopath.   2. I have the power to channel my imagination into ever-soaring levels of   suspicion and paranoia.   3. I assume full responsibility for my actions&#44; except the ones that are   someone else&#8217;s fault.   4. I no longer need to punish&#44; deceive&#44; or compromise myself&#44; unless I   want   to stay employed.   5. In some cultures&#44; what I do would be considered normal.   6. Having control over myself is almost as good as having control over   others.   7. My intuition nearly makes up for my lack of self-judgment.   8. I honor my personality flaws for without them I would have no   personality   at all.   9. Joan of Arc heard voices too.   10. I am grateful that I am not as judgmental as all those censorious&#44;   self-righteous people around me.   11. I need not suffer in silence while I can still moan&#44; whimper&#44; and   complain.   12. As I learn the innermost secrets of people around me&#44; they reward me   in   many ways to keep me quiet.   13. When someone hurts me&#44; I know that forgiveness is cheaper than a   lawsuit&#44; but not nearly as gratifying.   14. The first step is to say nice things about myself. The second&#44; to do   nice things for myself. The third&#44; to find someone to buy me nice things. </p>
<p>&#8211;  The charter is available at: http://readystump.algebra.com/~asapm </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>- Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text &#8211;  Inner Wisdom Revealed 1. As I let go of my feelings of guilt&#44; I am in   touch with my inner   sociopath.   2. I have the power to channel my imagination into ever-soaring levels of   suspicion and paranoia.   3. I assume full responsibility for my actions&#44; except the ones that are   someone else&#8217;s fault.   4. I no longer need to punish&#44; deceive&#44; or compromise myself&#44; unless I   want   to stay employed.   5. In some cultures&#44; what I do would be considered normal.   6. Having control over myself is almost as good as having control over   others.   7. My intuition nearly makes up for my lack of self-judgment.   8. I honor my personality flaws for without them I would have no   personality   at all.   9. Joan of Arc heard voices too.   10. I am grateful that I am not as judgmental as all those censorious&#44;   self-righteous people around me.   11. I need not suffer in silence while I can still moan&#44; whimper&#44; and   complain.   12. As I learn the innermost secrets of people around me&#44; they reward   me in   many ways to keep me quiet.   13. When someone hurts me&#44; I know that forgiveness is cheaper than a   lawsuit&#44; but not nearly as gratifying.   14. The first step is to say nice things about myself. The second&#44; to do   nice things for myself. The third&#44; to find someone to buy me nice things. </p>
<p>We must be seeing the same Dr.!!! &nbsp;;-)  Tono  &#8212;  The charter is available at: http://readystump.algebra.com/~asapm </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4></p>
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		<title>What is the biggest lie? on this planet&#8230;</title>
		<link>http://christianityqa.com/islam-christianity/what-is-the-biggest-lie-on-this-planet-2459994.html</link>
		<comments>http://christianityqa.com/islam-christianity/what-is-the-biggest-lie-on-this-planet-2459994.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 30 Oct 2005 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Islam Christianity]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://christianityqa.com/uncategorized/what-is-the-biggest-lie-on-this-planet-2459994.html</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Question:
- Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text -Your Name Here=Harvey wrote:  &#62; eg.  &#62; That death is the &#8216;end&#8217;. Life continues on&#44; death is merely a transistion  &#62; phase. The religions &#8211; Judaism&#44; Christianity and Islam have got it all wrong &#8211;  &#62; don&#8217;t believe a word they say about [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h4><strong>Question:</strong></h4>
<p>- Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text -Your Name Here=Harvey wrote:  &gt; eg.  &gt; That death is the &#8216;end&#8217;. Life continues on&#44; death is merely a transistion  &gt; phase. The religions &#8211; Judaism&#44; Christianity and Islam have got it all wrong &#8211;  &gt; don&#8217;t believe a word they say about it (and other stuff too).  &gt; That there is a &quot;God&quot; (strange isn&#8217;t it&#44; that the God of the Jews and  &gt; Christians and Muslims are very very very similiar to each other).  &gt; There isn&#8217;t one or ones&#44; etc. It is all a lie&#44; a con foistered upon the  &gt; unsuspecting public&#44; all for power and control. Religions are power  &gt; control mechanisms which look after themselves first and foremost.  &gt; They are not spiritual organisations &#8211; they only put on that front and air&#44;  &gt; that they are&#44; and they have fooled the public into believing this.  &gt; That UFOs are not real. They are part of our human history.  &gt; Always was&#44; is and will be.  &gt; Those will do for starters &#8211; there are many more&#44; as big&#8230;  &gt; Harvey </p>
<p>George Bush dragging America into a war based on lies.  Amazingly&#44; there is no talk of impeachment&#8230; yet Clinton was impeached  for something that was essentially personal business. </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>In article &lt;aLednbR_DdsF_fPenZ2dnUVZ_t6dn&#8230;@is.co.za&gt;&#44; michaela says&#8230;  &#8211; Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text -&gt;Your Name Here=Harvey wrote:  &gt;&gt; Christianity has to grow up&#44; or be seriously left behind&#44; or ignored  &gt;&gt; altogether if it doesn&#8217;t change in the changing environment of  &gt;&gt; everyday  &gt;&gt; life. But even this is not sufficient for it to survive &#8211; because it  &gt;&gt; is simply&#44; not based upon &#8216;truth&#8217; at all&#44; or what happened&#44; as regards  &gt;&gt; the figure of &#8216;Jesus&#8217;.  &gt;So what? How does this affect *me*?  &gt;The Jews and Muslims don&#8217;t regard Jesus as  &gt;&gt; being a Saviour or Son of God.  &gt;So what? Are you implying that one group is /right/ and another  &gt;/wrong/?  &gt;- Michaela </p>
<p>In my view &#8211; religion has to grow up&#44; in this day and age&#44; and be  accountable for their beliefs&#44; information&#44; etc etc etc&#44;  or else they will all be swept away by sheer reason and logic.  Religion can be seen for what it is &#8211; today &#8211; more so&#44; than in previous  times&#44; when they got away with murder&#44; lies&#44; etc etc.  The Jews&#44; Christians and Muslims are all wrong&#44; ie. incorrect with their  information and beliefs&#44; etc etc. They are merely power control mechanisms&#44;  who make the claim they are spiritual organisations &#8211; they are not &#8211; that is  just a cover&#44; that allows them to get away with anything and everything&#44;  which they have&#44; when they were originally formed. And all later new groups  that formed out of nowhere (ie. someone&#8217;s imagination) suffer the same  distortions and lies.  This affects all of us &#8211; because we have swallowed their garbage for so long.  Harvey </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>Your Name Here=Harvey wrote:  &gt; In article &lt;aLednbR_DdsF_fPenZ2dnUVZ_t6dn&#8230;@is.co.za&gt;&#44; michaela says&#8230;  &gt; This affects all of us &#8211; because we have swallowed their garbage for so long.  &gt; Harvey </p>
<p>If by &quot;swallowed their garbage&quot; you mean: been duped&#44; then  count me out. I never fell for any religious organisation.  My spiritual awakening/whatever has been a result of my  own experiences. I discovered that what others think of  me is less important than what I think of myself and therefore  if others think less of me than I do of myself&#44; the error  lies in my inability to accept myself.  I have found many of my answers in the texts of various religions/  philosophies etc. and many of these religions etc. are saying the  same things in different ways. i.e. they all seem to be pointing  at the same things.  In another post you said something about having moved away  from the New Age perspective. IIRC your James Van Praagh  stage was not only shortlived&#44; but Van Praagh was also [arguably]  your first exposure to New Age perspectives. If you could fall as  hard as you did for Van Praagh&#8217;s ideas and then turn away  from them as sharply as you have then aren&#8217;t you potentially  the one who has been duped all these years?  Harvey&#44; there&#8217;s only one law I would like to live by and that&#8217;s  &quot;Love one another.&quot; To love everyone else&#44; I need to see the  perfection in those people. Your new philosophy/take on life  appears to be looking for faults. How loving is that?  &#8211; Michaela&#44; still learning to love. </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>Sorry to intrude again but&#8230;  &#8211; Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text -Michaela Mackenzie wrote:  &gt; Your Name Here=Harvey wrote:  &gt;&gt;This affects all of us &#8211; because we have swallowed their garbage for so long.  &gt;&gt;Harvey  &gt; If by &quot;swallowed their garbage&quot; you mean: been duped&#44; then  &gt; count me out. I never fell for any religious organisation.  &gt; My spiritual awakening/whatever has been a result of my  &gt; own experiences. I discovered that what others think of  &gt; me is less important than what I think of myself and therefore  &gt; if others think less of me than I do of myself&#44; the error  &gt; lies in my inability to accept myself. </p>
<p>I&#8217;m interested to know why we put so much store in what other people think  of us. This acceptance thing goes to the very heart of loneliness/social  isolation.  &#8211; Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text -&gt; I have found many of my answers in the texts of various religions/  &gt; philosophies etc. and many of these religions etc. are saying the  &gt; same things in different ways. i.e. they all seem to be pointing  &gt; at the same things.  &gt; In another post you said something about having moved away  &gt; from the New Age perspective. IIRC your James Van Praagh  &gt; stage was not only shortlived&#44; but Van Praagh was also [arguably]  &gt; your first exposure to New Age perspectives. If you could fall as  &gt; hard as you did for Van Praagh&#8217;s ideas and then turn away  &gt; from them as sharply as you have then aren&#8217;t you potentially  &gt; the one who has been duped all these years?  &gt; Harvey&#44; there&#8217;s only one law I would like to live by and that&#8217;s  &gt; &quot;Love one another.&quot; To love everyone else&#44; I need to see the  &gt; perfection in those people. Your new philosophy/take on life  &gt; appears to be looking for faults. How loving is that? </p>
<p>I&#8217;m trying to view this from your stated philosophy&#44; and this looks like a  question you need to answer rather than Harvey necessarily [although I  don't want to preempt his reply]; what do you suspect Harvey is helping  you to learn? How tolerant are you of other people&#8217;s &quot;imperfection?&quot; [I  don't really like this word it implies fault/blame]. This is a tough nut  to crack; don&#8217;t think I don&#8217;t get caught by this one time after time &#8211; you  know I do. Could we say that most people are &quot;fit for the purpose&quot; which  doesn&#8217;t imply blame or judgement&#44; it simply means we have the job of  finding out their purpose&#44; should we be so inclined.  &gt; &#8211; Michaela&#44; still learning to love. </p>
<p>And loving to learn.  &#8212;  9:18am and my eyes still haven&#8217;t begun to focus. Sklenge needs tea! Pout&#44;  stamp&#44; yell&#44; tantrum&#8230; silence. Oh&#44; I forgot&#44; he&#8217;s in Cirencester. It&#8217;s  at times like this when I really wish our cat could be trained to use the  kettle. [Lazy cat]. </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>I keep on planning to see that&#44; preferably in the theatre.  OTS  &quot;-Phil C&quot; &lt;m&#8230;@no.where&gt; wrote in message </p>
<p>news:11mrjvf8d5joh9a@news.supernews.com&#8230;  &#8211; Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text -&gt; &quot;Joe Canuck&quot; &lt;Joe.Can&#8230;@-remove-gmail.com&gt; wrote in message  &gt; news:ppqdnaax647c5ffenZ2dnUVZ_tydnZ2d@magma.ca&#8230;  &gt; &gt; Your Name Here=Harvey wrote:  &gt; &gt;&gt; eg.  &gt; &gt;&gt; That death is the &#8216;end&#8217;. Life continues on&#44; death is merely a  transistion  &gt; &gt;&gt; phase. The religions &#8211; Judaism&#44; Christianity and Islam have got it all  &gt; &gt;&gt; wrong &#8211;  &gt; &gt;&gt; don&#8217;t believe a word they say about it (and other stuff too).  &gt; Yep! Of course after we die it is all black and our brain stops working so  &gt; we will have no thoughts and just a tiny bit of energy gets returned to  the  &gt; environment.  &gt; But life continues. We just don&#8217;t know about it. We&#8217;re deader than rocks  &gt; then!  &gt; &gt;&gt; That there is a &quot;God&quot; (strange isn&#8217;t it&#44; that the God of the Jews and  &gt; &gt;&gt; Christians and Muslims are very very very similiar to each other).  &gt; &gt;&gt; There isn&#8217;t one or ones&#44; etc. It is all a lie&#44; a con foistered upon the  &gt; &gt;&gt; unsuspecting public&#44; all for power and control. Religions are power  &gt; &gt;&gt; control mechanisms which look after themselves first and foremost.  &gt; &gt;&gt; They are not spiritual organisations &#8211; they only put on that front and  &gt; &gt;&gt; air&#44;  &gt; &gt;&gt; that they are&#44; and they have fooled the public into believing this.  &gt; Yep! There is no God. God is something we can&#8217;t image&#44; and there is  nothing  &gt; we can&#8217;t imagine so there is no God.  &gt; Imagine that!  &gt; &gt;&gt; That UFOs are not real. They are part of our human history.  &gt; &gt;&gt; Always was&#44; is and will be.  &gt; Yep! There have&#44; and always will be&#44; Unidentified Flying Objects.  &gt; Since they will always be Unidentified maybe we are really alone.  &gt; Well&#44; at least we won&#8217;t have to worry about supplying quintillions of M&amp;Ms  &gt; to aliens.  &gt; &gt;&gt; Those will do for starters &#8211; there are many more&#44; as big&#8230;  &gt; &gt;&gt; Harvey  &gt; &gt; George Bush dragging America into a war based on lies.  &gt; &gt; Amazingly&#44; there is no talk of impeachment&#8230; yet Clinton was impeached  &gt; &gt; for something that was essentially personal business.  &gt; Yep! That cigar thing started as personal business&#44; about which he lied  &gt; under oath which was not essentially personal business.  &gt; It really irritates me when you try to twist it.  &gt; .. ahh &#8230;. maybe a bad choice of words.  &gt; I think this is the biggest lie on the planet.  &gt; http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0042546/plotsummary  &gt; If what it says is true&#44; who started this thread!?  &gt; -Phil C  </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>In article &lt;11mrhfdkgsf6&#8230;@news.supernews.com&gt;&#44; m&#8230;@no.where says&#8230;  &#8211; Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text -&gt;&quot;Your Name Here=Harvey&quot; &lt;k&#8230;@ing.notin.aus&gt; wrote in message  &gt;news:dkghf2$l1v$1@lust.ihug.co.nz&#8230;  &gt;&gt; In article &lt;ppqdnaax647c5ffenZ2dnUVZ_tydn&#8230;@magma.ca&gt;&#44;  &gt;&gt; Joe.Can&#8230;@-remove-gmail.com says&#8230;  &gt;&gt;&gt;Your Name Here=Harvey wrote:  &gt;&gt;&gt;&gt; eg.  &gt;&gt;&gt;&gt; That death is the &#8216;end&#8217;. Life continues on&#44; death is merely a  &gt;&gt;&gt;&gt; transistion  &gt;&gt;&gt;&gt; phase. The religions &#8211; Judaism&#44; Christianity and Islam have got it all  &gt;&gt; wrong &#8211;  &gt;&gt;&gt;&gt; don&#8217;t believe a word they say about it (and other stuff too).  &gt;&gt;&gt;&gt; That there is a &quot;God&quot; (strange isn&#8217;t it&#44; that the God of the Jews and  &gt;&gt;&gt;&gt; Christians and Muslims are very very very similiar to each other).  &gt;&gt;&gt;&gt; There isn&#8217;t one or ones&#44; etc. It is all a lie&#44; a con foistered upon the  &gt;&gt;&gt;&gt; unsuspecting public&#44; all for power and control. Religions are power  &gt;&gt;&gt;&gt; control mechanisms which look after themselves first and foremost.  &gt;&gt;&gt;&gt; They are not spiritual organisations &#8211; they only put on that front and  &gt;&gt;&gt;&gt; air&#44;  &gt;&gt;&gt;&gt; that they are&#44; and they have fooled the public into believing this.  &gt;&gt;&gt;&gt; That UFOs are not real. They are part of our human history.  &gt;&gt;&gt;&gt; Always was&#44; is and will be.  &gt;&gt;&gt;&gt; Those will do for starters &#8211; there are many more&#44; as big&#8230;  &gt;&gt;&gt;&gt; Harvey  &gt;&gt;&gt;George Bush dragging America into a war based on lies.  &gt;&gt;&gt;Amazingly&#44; there is no talk of impeachment&#8230; yet Clinton was impeached  &gt;&gt;&gt;for something that was essentially personal business.  &gt;&gt; There is a prophecy that there will be no peace on this planet&#44; until  &gt;&gt; the likes of Bush&#44; Blair and Sharon are dethroned and are replaced with  &gt;&gt; peaceful leaders. That Iraq will see peace after the US withdraw&#44; that  &gt;&gt; peace will be in the middle east when the Arabs get their land back.  &gt;&gt; That the US withdraws from countries it has no right to be in&#44; and stop  &gt;&gt; being a belligerent force in this world&#44; openly and covertly. It is not  &gt;&gt; the police force of this world.  &gt;&gt; Harvey  &gt;Who made that prophecy?  &gt;Do you have a link to their website?  &gt;-Phil C </p>
<p>Prophecies of this kind&#44; has been made by the Plejarens through Billy Meier.  The above particular one was from a pdf document titled  &#8216;UFO &#8211; The Gods of Earth were Human &#8211; Vivienne Legg&#8217;  I believe she&#8217;s behind the www.gaiaguys.net site.  Prophecies of this type are discussed at www.figu.org in the  English Discussion forum. There is a search engine which will easily find  the various comments for you&#44; there.  Harvey </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>Your Name Here=Harvey wrote:  &gt; Christianity has to grow up&#44; or be seriously left behind&#44; or ignored  &gt; altogether if it doesn&#8217;t change in the changing environment of  &gt; everyday  &gt; life. But even this is not sufficient for it to survive &#8211; because it  &gt; is simply&#44; not based upon &#8216;truth&#8217; at all&#44; or what happened&#44; as regards  &gt; the figure of &#8216;Jesus&#8217;. </p>
<p>So what? How does this affect *me*?  The Jews and Muslims don&#8217;t regard Jesus as  &gt; being a Saviour or Son of God. </p>
<p>So what? Are you implying that one group is /right/ and another  /wrong/?  &#8211; Michaela </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>In article &lt;ppqdnaax647c5ffenZ2dnUVZ_tydn&#8230;@magma.ca&gt;&#44;  Joe.Can&#8230;@-remove-gmail.com says&#8230;  &#8211; Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text -&gt;Your Name Here=Harvey wrote:  &gt;&gt; eg.  &gt;&gt; That death is the &#8216;end&#8217;. Life continues on&#44; death is merely a transistion  &gt;&gt; phase. The religions &#8211; Judaism&#44; Christianity and Islam have got it all  wrong &#8211;  &gt;&gt; don&#8217;t believe a word they say about it (and other stuff too).  &gt;&gt; That there is a &quot;God&quot; (strange isn&#8217;t it&#44; that the God of the Jews and  &gt;&gt; Christians and Muslims are very very very similiar to each other).  &gt;&gt; There isn&#8217;t one or ones&#44; etc. It is all a lie&#44; a con foistered upon the  &gt;&gt; unsuspecting public&#44; all for power and control. Religions are power  &gt;&gt; control mechanisms which look after themselves first and foremost.  &gt;&gt; They are not spiritual organisations &#8211; they only put on that front and air&#44;  &gt;&gt; that they are&#44; and they have fooled the public into believing this.  &gt;&gt; That UFOs are not real. They are part of our human history.  &gt;&gt; Always was&#44; is and will be.  &gt;&gt; Those will do for starters &#8211; there are many more&#44; as big&#8230;  &gt;&gt; Harvey  &gt;George Bush dragging America into a war based on lies.  &gt;Amazingly&#44; there is no talk of impeachment&#8230; yet Clinton was impeached  &gt;for something that was essentially personal business. </p>
<p>There is a prophecy that there will be no peace on this planet&#44; until  the likes of Bush&#44; Blair and Sharon are dethroned and are replaced with  peaceful leaders. That Iraq will see peace after the US withdraw&#44; that  peace will be in the middle east when the Arabs get their land back.  That the US withdraws from countries it has no right to be in&#44; and stop  being a belligerent force in this world&#44; openly and covertly. It is not  the police force of this world.  Harvey </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>So what Eddy Meier was harping on about was the exact opposite of quackery?  Far out.  OTS  &quot;Your Name Here=Harvey&quot; &lt;k&#8230;@ing.notin.aus&gt; wrote in message  news:dk8mif$sm7$1@lust.ihug.co.nz&#8230;  &#8211; Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text -&gt; In article &lt;1130858464.796468.149&#8230;@g49g2000cwa.googlegroups.com&gt;&#44;  &gt; yamunamy&#8230;@yahoo.com says&#8230;  &gt; &gt;I saw this post soon after you posted and wanted to say that there are  &gt; &gt;so many biggest lies on this planet&#44; I didn&#8217;t know where to begin:)-  &gt; I would say that is true &#8211; and it is because of the nature of  &gt; &#8216;establishments&#8217; being the problem.  &gt; Authorities of this and that&#44; act like they know everything &#8211; especially  &gt; over the area they preside.  &gt; When you look at the information they preach &#8211; often it appears to be  &gt; quackery &#8211; whether it be religion&#44; politics&#44; and even science.  &gt; Over issues like death and dying &#8211; is there anything afterwards?  &gt; There is enough information out there &#8211; to sort out who is very likely  &gt; lying to us&#44; who has no clue&#44; and who may have possible answers.  &gt; Harvey  </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>&quot;Your Name Here=Harvey&quot; &lt;k&#8230;@ing.notin.aus&gt; wrote in message  news:dkghf2$l1v$1@lust.ihug.co.nz&#8230;  &#8211; Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text -&gt; In article &lt;ppqdnaax647c5ffenZ2dnUVZ_tydn&#8230;@magma.ca&gt;&#44;  &gt; Joe.Can&#8230;@-remove-gmail.com says&#8230;  &gt;&gt;Your Name Here=Harvey wrote:  &gt;&gt;&gt; eg.  &gt;&gt;&gt; That death is the &#8216;end&#8217;. Life continues on&#44; death is merely a  &gt;&gt;&gt; transistion  &gt;&gt;&gt; phase. The religions &#8211; Judaism&#44; Christianity and Islam have got it all  &gt; wrong &#8211;  &gt;&gt;&gt; don&#8217;t believe a word they say about it (and other stuff too).  &gt;&gt;&gt; That there is a &quot;God&quot; (strange isn&#8217;t it&#44; that the God of the Jews and  &gt;&gt;&gt; Christians and Muslims are very very very similiar to each other).  &gt;&gt;&gt; There isn&#8217;t one or ones&#44; etc. It is all a lie&#44; a con foistered upon the  &gt;&gt;&gt; unsuspecting public&#44; all for power and control. Religions are power  &gt;&gt;&gt; control mechanisms which look after themselves first and foremost.  &gt;&gt;&gt; They are not spiritual organisations &#8211; they only put on that front and  &gt;&gt;&gt; air&#44;  &gt;&gt;&gt; that they are&#44; and they have fooled the public into believing this.  &gt;&gt;&gt; That UFOs are not real. They are part of our human history.  &gt;&gt;&gt; Always was&#44; is and will be.  &gt;&gt;&gt; Those will do for starters &#8211; there are many more&#44; as big&#8230;  &gt;&gt;&gt; Harvey  &gt;&gt;George Bush dragging America into a war based on lies.  &gt;&gt;Amazingly&#44; there is no talk of impeachment&#8230; yet Clinton was impeached  &gt;&gt;for something that was essentially personal business.  &gt; There is a prophecy that there will be no peace on this planet&#44; until  &gt; the likes of Bush&#44; Blair and Sharon are dethroned and are replaced with  &gt; peaceful leaders. That Iraq will see peace after the US withdraw&#44; that  &gt; peace will be in the middle east when the Arabs get their land back.  &gt; That the US withdraws from countries it has no right to be in&#44; and stop  &gt; being a belligerent force in this world&#44; openly and covertly. It is not  &gt; the police force of this world.  &gt; Harvey </p>
<p>Who made that prophecy?  Do you have a link to their website?  -Phil C </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>&quot;Joe Canuck&quot; &lt;Joe.Can&#8230;@-remove-gmail.com&gt; wrote in message </p>
<p>news:ppqdnaax647c5ffenZ2dnUVZ_tydnZ2d@magma.ca&#8230;  &gt; Your Name Here=Harvey wrote:  &gt;&gt; eg.  &gt;&gt; That death is the &#8216;end&#8217;. Life continues on&#44; death is merely a transistion  &gt;&gt; phase. The religions &#8211; Judaism&#44; Christianity and Islam have got it all  &gt;&gt; wrong &#8211;  &gt;&gt; don&#8217;t believe a word they say about it (and other stuff too). </p>
<p>Yep! Of course after we die it is all black and our brain stops working so  we will have no thoughts and just a tiny bit of energy gets returned to the  environment.  But life continues. We just don&#8217;t know about it. We&#8217;re deader than rocks  then!  &gt;&gt; That there is a &quot;God&quot; (strange isn&#8217;t it&#44; that the God of the Jews and  &gt;&gt; Christians and Muslims are very very very similiar to each other).  &gt;&gt; There isn&#8217;t one or ones&#44; etc. It is all a lie&#44; a con foistered upon the  &gt;&gt; unsuspecting public&#44; all for power and control. Religions are power  &gt;&gt; control mechanisms which look after themselves first and foremost.  &gt;&gt; They are not spiritual organisations &#8211; they only put on that front and  &gt;&gt; air&#44;  &gt;&gt; that they are&#44; and they have fooled the public into believing this. </p>
<p>Yep! There is no God. God is something we can&#8217;t image&#44; and there is nothing  we can&#8217;t imagine so there is no God.  Imagine that!  &gt;&gt; That UFOs are not real. They are part of our human history.  &gt;&gt; Always was&#44; is and will be. </p>
<p>Yep! There have&#44; and always will be&#44; Unidentified Flying Objects.  Since they will always be Unidentified maybe we are really alone.  Well&#44; at least we won&#8217;t have to worry about supplying quintillions of M&amp;Ms  to aliens.  &gt;&gt; Those will do for starters &#8211; there are many more&#44; as big&#8230;  &gt;&gt; Harvey  &gt; George Bush dragging America into a war based on lies.  &gt; Amazingly&#44; there is no talk of impeachment&#8230; yet Clinton was impeached  &gt; for something that was essentially personal business. </p>
<p>Yep! That cigar thing started as personal business&#44; about which he lied  under oath which was not essentially personal business.  It really irritates me when you try to twist it.  .. ahh &#8230;. maybe a bad choice of words.  I think this is the biggest lie on the planet.  http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0042546/plotsummary  If what it says is true&#44; who started this thread!?  -Phil C </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>- Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text -Joe Canuck (Joe.Can&#8230;@-remove-gmail.com) writes:  &gt; Your Name Here=Harvey wrote:  &gt;&gt; eg.  &gt;&gt; That death is the &#8216;end&#8217;. Life continues on&#44; death is merely a transistion  &gt;&gt; phase. The religions &#8211; Judaism&#44; Christianity and Islam have got it all wrong &#8211;  &gt;&gt; don&#8217;t believe a word they say about it (and other stuff too).  &gt;&gt; That there is a &quot;God&quot; (strange isn&#8217;t it&#44; that the God of the Jews and  &gt;&gt; Christians and Muslims are very very very similiar to each other).  &gt;&gt; There isn&#8217;t one or ones&#44; etc. It is all a lie&#44; a con foistered upon the  &gt;&gt; unsuspecting public&#44; all for power and control. Religions are power  &gt;&gt; control mechanisms which look after themselves first and foremost.  &gt;&gt; They are not spiritual organisations &#8211; they only put on that front and air&#44;  &gt;&gt; that they are&#44; and they have fooled the public into believing this.  &gt;&gt; That UFOs are not real. They are part of our human history.  &gt;&gt; Always was&#44; is and will be.  &gt;&gt; Those will do for starters &#8211; there are many more&#44; as big&#8230;  &gt;&gt; Harvey  &gt; George Bush dragging America into a war based on lies.  &gt; Amazingly&#44; there is no talk of impeachment&#8230; yet Clinton was impeached  &gt; for something that was essentially personal business. </p>
<p>Smokers always get the wrong end of the bat&#8230;.Erm&#8230;or smokers&#8217; mates anyway  LOL:)  Or somethign like that.  When there is smoke&#8230;.there&#8217;s no Andre Boisclair&#8230;.  (eew&#8230;Having images of what he;d do with a cigar. Baaad&#8230;.;-)  Hehehee. Perhaps only you coudl get that one.  I mean&#8230;I did not mean you coudl literally get it&#44; nonono&#8230;  ARGH.  Okay. I&#8217;m gone&#8230;  ZIP!  No&#44; I mean zipping it up&#8230;  Nononononono!! I don&#8217;t mean that either!!!  AAAARGHHHHHHHhhhhhhhhhhhhhh!  C  &#8212;  Come over here boy&#44; have a cigar  You gonna go far  They call it riding the gravy train..&#8217;s cigar  Mppft:)  &#8212; </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>Sklenge wrote: </p>
<p>&nbsp;I&#8217;m not sure if I  &gt; /can/ be sure of Shell. </p>
<p>You too? O man!  &#8211; Michaela </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>I just happen to be 50? years ahead of my time&#44; that is all.  Aquarians are noted for that &#8211; and being true to my inner character and  person &#8211; I say verily that there will come a day&#44; when my so-called opinion  will be proved as fact &#8211; by whatever means you care to name.  I was into computers 20 years ago &#8211; could I have imagined then&#44; what we  are doing now with computers?  I do assure you I&#8217;ve been doing 30+ years of serious thinking about  all those &#8216;truths&#8217; I&#8217;ve been harping on about &#8211; that they do fit together  and explain the universe adequately&#44; compared to our hodge podge knowledge  of established and accepted thinking today &#8211; and yesterday.  Harvey  In article &lt;1130738641.723975.17&#8230;@g44g2000cwa.googlegroups.com&gt;&#44;  michaelamackenzie05072&#8230;@yahoo.com says&#8230;  &#8211; Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text -&gt;Stating opinion as fact&#44; Harvey?  &gt;- Michaela  &gt;Your Name Here=Harvey wrote:  &gt;&gt; eg.  &gt;&gt; That death is the &#8216;end&#8217;. Life continues on&#44; death is merely a transistion  &gt;&gt; phase. The religions &#8211; Judaism&#44; Christianity and Islam have got it all  wrong &#8211;  &gt;&gt; don&#8217;t believe a word they say about it (and other stuff too).  &gt;&gt; That there is a &quot;God&quot; (strange isn&#8217;t it&#44; that the God of the Jews and  &gt;&gt; Christians and Muslims are very very very similiar to each other).  &gt;&gt; There isn&#8217;t one or ones&#44; etc. It is all a lie&#44; a con foistered upon the  &gt;&gt; unsuspecting public&#44; all for power and control. Religions are power  &gt;&gt; control mechanisms which look after themselves first and foremost.  &gt;&gt; They are not spiritual organisations &#8211; they only put on that front and air&#44;  &gt;&gt; that they are&#44; and they have fooled the public into believing this.  &gt;&gt; That UFOs are not real. They are part of our human history.  &gt;&gt; Always was&#44; is and will be.  &gt;&gt; Those will do for starters &#8211; there are many more&#44; as big&#8230;  &gt;&gt; Harvey  </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>The Jewish holocaust. </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>In article &lt;1130821063.990267.9&#8230;@g14g2000cwa.googlegroups.com&gt;&#44;  darkfal&#8230;@gmail.com says&#8230;  &gt;The Jewish holocaust. </p>
<p>Nope can&#8217;t agree with that&#44; although I haven&#8217;t read into the  question about this&#44; at all. Just going by what I know about WWII history&#44;  and world history&#44; etc.  Probably even stranger&#44; is the story that Hitler was not the brains  behind his own plans&#44; etc &#8212; that he himself was merely a puppet of  the atrocities of WWII.  This story does make sense&#44; because he alone could not do what is claimed&#44;  he did &#8211; formed the Nazi Party&#44; etc etc etc.  It was all cleverly orchestrated to happen&#44; which means there was a lot of  people involved &#8211; Hitler is merely the figurehead &#8211; and is no way the  organiser of what he did&#44; etc.  The same with other so-called &#8216;great&#8217; leaders&#44; etc etc etc. The puppet  is not solely responsible for all that did happen.  Harvey </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>&gt; Nope can&#8217;t agree with that&#44; although I haven&#8217;t read into the  &gt; question about this&#44; at all. Just going by what I know about WWII history&#44;  &gt; and world history&#44; etc.  &gt; Probably even stranger&#44; is the story that Hitler was not the brains  &gt; behind his own plans&#44; etc &#8212; that he himself was merely a puppet of  &gt; the atrocities of WWII. </p>
<p>Atrocities like Dresden and Hiroshima?  &gt; This story does make sense&#44; because he alone could not do what is claimed&#44;  &gt; he did &#8211; formed the Nazi Party&#44; etc etc etc.  &gt; It was all cleverly orchestrated to happen&#44; which means there was a lot of  &gt; people involved &#8211; Hitler is merely the figurehead &#8211; and is no way the  &gt; organiser of what he did&#44; etc.  &gt; The same with other so-called &#8216;great&#8217; leaders&#44; etc etc etc. The puppet  &gt; is not solely responsible for all that did happen. </p>
<p>Wrong&#44; but thanks for trying.  HEIL HITLER. </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>Your Name Here=Harvey (k&#8230;@ing.notin.aus) writes:  &gt; I just happen to be 50? years ahead of my time&#44; that is all.  &gt; Aquarians are noted for that &#8211; and being true to my inner character and  &gt; person &#8211; I say verily that there will come a day&#44; when my so-called opinion  &gt; will be proved as fact &#8211; by whatever means you care to name.  &gt; I was into computers 20 years ago &#8211; could I have imagined then&#44; what we  &gt; are doing now with computers?  &gt; I do assure you I&#8217;ve been doing 30+ years of serious thinking about  &gt; all those &#8216;truths&#8217; I&#8217;ve been harping on about &#8211; that they do fit together  &gt; and explain the universe adequately&#44; compared to our hodge podge knowledge  &gt; of established and accepted thinking today &#8211; and yesterday. </p>
<p>I don&#8217;t know how accepted they are where you live.  In the US&#44; the beliefs you write against -rather than writing about yours-  are quite dead compared to 100 years ago&#44; say&#44; in many areas. The bible  belt remains where the belief is religiosity more often than not&#44; with  the letter being taken literally and the spirit too often passed by.  But take here in Canada. If many will say they believe in God&#44; not so many  do much. It is not even an each sunday thing for most poeple. Chruches are  deserted save for the elderly&#44; and every now and then a younger adult that  was raised with granny&#44; sort of thing.  People&#8217;s beliefs are&#44; for those areas where religiosity died&#44; more  self-adapted&#44; and often more sefl serving too.  Even reincarnation is rather seen as a way to blame one&#8217;s misadventures  -but mostly the neighbor&#8217;s- on. They are havign a hard time? Bah&#44; they  asked for it in a previous life&#44; certainly&#44; and so it is fair and let&#8217;s  let them in it&quot; sort of thing.  As for the UFOs and ideas you talk about&#44; again&#44; they were blooming here in  the early 80s&#44; if they were increasingly so already in the 60s and 70s&#44; where  then reading your words is making me wonder at times  if in NZ&#44; things are stuck in a time warp of 20 years ago. What seems new  to you or &quot;50 years ahead&quot; rings &quot;30 years behind&quot; to me&#44; for instance&#44;  cause I heard it all to satiety and then some in those decades.  Anoher thing everyone hard of till bored is the anti religious belifes.  Here&#44;t hat happened in the early 60s. Action was joined to words where  churches suddenly emtied&#44; more than half sold as residences after some  contractor got them for cheap and renovated them. In the seventies&#44; the  fashion was to live in a renovated ex church. I can think of 3 out of four  in the village where my parents live that were closed so fast&#44; I do not  remember theirt having ever been opened in fact. I think they all closed  within a year&#44; the first year of our moving there&#44; in 68.  One remains. For weddings and baptisms and funerals -and masses for the  elederly&#44; sort of thing.  Except for maybe some unknown cases of psychopathic religosity adepts&#44;  Quebec is pretty much done since 4 decades with the rituals and hypocrisy  of pseudo christian pedophile priests.  Which does not mean that christianity is dead. Rather&#44; it is revisited&#44;  cleansed from all the encumbring rituals built through centuries to hold  people prisoners of fears&#44; and is based on more and more common sense.  Many remain yet that do not really adapt&#44; and who need to be good ole  followers&#44; where sects started abounding the minte the catchlic church was  no longer &quot;in fashion&quot;.  Rael and his followers&#44; for instance&#44; where Rael claimed that ETs talked  to him and told him he had to build an embassy for them for when they  would land. Only&#44; they were to land in was it year 2000&#44; and did not&#8230;.  So then&#44; bored&#44; Rael had to come up with soemthign to still find  followers. He then declares he ahd this or that message where he was to  pick anyone he wants to have sex with and they gotta say yes and their  husband -and or wife- has to agree to it.  In other words&#44; he really misses the old pedophile priests and the sexual  offenders mentality and recreated it for those who like him also missed it  obvioulsy.  Given that&#44; the ret of the population around these neck-of-the-woods would  not give much *belief* interest in one more book about ETs wanting us to  this and that. We already have plenty of those declarations here  &quot;&quot;thanks&quot;&quot; to Rael.  So &quot;ETs mean to tell you this&quot;&#44; and &quot;ETs want you to do that&quot; (or &quot;God&quot; wants  you to do put money in the trunk&#44; what;s the difference&#44; really?) and the  &quot;the church is lying!!!&quot; declarations are all soporific since long around  here&#44; where a book on that alone would not reach a market save that of the  already saturated one of Rael (and his sosies) and followers.  You base your ideas on the books of anoher writer&#44; a fiction writer&#44; in  fact&#44; where then there can not be much new stuff in that&#44; since it is  about ideas already published and that already made there wave that then  crashed later on.  Again&#44; what do YOU mean to say in your book that is different?  What IS new in the ideas?  If no new ideas&#44; then making it so much thought to write would not be  wise. The best would maybe be to think of the market there is&#44; one that  likes to spend an hour or two everyonce in a while looking at pics of what  so called &quot;unexplained&quot; is around&#44; wiht a short text to say where the pic  was taken and by what person&#44; and what is special about it.  Trying to sell a belief to people is not 50 years ahead. Or maybe it will  be as poeple pretty much loive cycles&#44; where after a time of making  obesity be the fashion&#44; they will then make anorexy the fashion&#44; to then  again go back to obesity and so on&#44; in pretty much all areas.  So maybe in 50 years people will again go back to superstition thinking  and to hanging on to any forged set of beliefs that does not hold water  when it comes to what it brings poele in their daily life for a guidance  and to sustain them and each other.  Maybe in 50 years&#44; newborn will never have heard of Rael&#44; and will never  have seen a church and mass&#44; where then that will be as interestign to  them as vampirism or goths are interestign to some teens.  The fashion of the 60s had a short come back.  Maybe the fashion of Sunday mass with pedophiles telling you ewhat to  believe in the good there would eb to leave kids with them will be  feasable again&#44; etc&#44; etc.  Until then&#44; I&#8217;d not mind owning a book to flip pages on a rainy Saturday&#44;  iwith pics and legends under them.  But like most persons&#44; the seond it has text tryign to tell me what to  make of it all&#44; and what belief is suppssedly the one one should have&#44; the  second it manipulates or tries to&#44; the book it put back on the store  shelf&#44; with me being annoyed&#8230;.  You might want to consider this: the average writer makes 2&#44;000 bucks per  book.  It then means that if one can write 25 a year&#44; they maybe can make 50&#44;000.  Maybe one of them will sell more. Maybe one among will happen to hit some  timing ion peole&#8217;s mind or with things &quot;in the air&quot; where that ne will  bring more than 2&#44;000 dollars. Everyonce in a while&#44; some author falls on  a book that sells hot&#44; they donlt even know why&#44; and that makes it so all  lil followers will go buy everythign they wrote before that never was that  interesting to start with&#44; but that now is inserted in a legend they make  in their lil heads&#8230;.  I still am amazed at how poeple need to follow some leader&#44; and to even  create instant just add water leaders to follow rather than to assert  themself and think and reflect for themself. But what makes them tick and  follow only dependant followers and their controlelrs know. Often&#44; not  even the controller&#44; it just happens:)  So all in all&#8230;Donlt sweat it so much.Use the research you did over the  years&#44; and present it in an agglomeration of pics and subjects&#44; without  them leading anyone to think this a way or that a way. Let poeple free to  think what they want. Anythign else is just religiosity all over again.  C  &nbsp;&gt; &nbsp;&gt;  Harvey &gt;  &#8211; Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text -&gt; In article &lt;1130738641.723975.17&#8230;@g44g2000cwa.googlegroups.com&gt;&#44;  &gt; michaelamackenzie05072&#8230;@yahoo.com says&#8230;  &gt;&gt;Stating opinion as fact&#44; Harvey?  &gt;&gt;- Michaela  &gt;&gt;Your Name Here=Harvey wrote:  &gt;&gt;&gt; eg.  &gt;&gt;&gt; That death is the &#8216;end&#8217;. Life continues on&#44; death is merely a transistion  &gt;&gt;&gt; phase. The religions &#8211; Judaism&#44; Christianity and Islam have got it all  &gt; wrong &#8211;  &gt;&gt;&gt; don&#8217;t believe a word they say about it (and other stuff too).  &gt;&gt;&gt; That there is a &quot;God&quot; (strange isn&#8217;t it&#44; that the God of the Jews and  &gt;&gt;&gt; Christians and Muslims are very very very similiar to each other).  &gt;&gt;&gt; There isn&#8217;t one or ones&#44; etc. It is all a lie&#44; a con foistered upon the  &gt;&gt;&gt; unsuspecting public&#44; all for power and control. Religions are power  &gt;&gt;&gt; control mechanisms which look after themselves first and foremost.  &gt;&gt;&gt; They are not spiritual organisations &#8211; they only put on that front and air&#44;  &gt;&gt;&gt; that they are&#44; and they have fooled the public into believing this.  &gt;&gt;&gt; That UFOs are not real. They are part of our human history.  &gt;&gt;&gt; Always was&#44; is and will be.  &gt;&gt;&gt; Those will do for starters &#8211; there are many more&#44; as big&#8230;  &gt;&gt;&gt; Harvey </p>
<p>&#8211; </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>In article &lt;dk7k0f$kg&#8230;@theodyn.ncf.ca&gt;&#44; bc&#8230;@FreeNet.Carleton.CA says&#8230;  &#8211; Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text -&gt;Your Name Here=Harvey (k&#8230;@ing.notin.aus) writes:  &gt;&gt; I just happen to be 50? years ahead of my time&#44; that is all.  &gt;&gt; Aquarians are noted for that &#8211; and being true to my inner character and  &gt;&gt; person &#8211; I say verily that there will come a day&#44; when my so-called opinion  &gt;&gt; will be proved as fact &#8211; by whatever means you care to name.  &gt;&gt; I was into computers 20 years ago &#8211; could I have imagined then&#44; what we  &gt;&gt; are doing now with computers?  &gt;&gt; I do assure you I&#8217;ve been doing 30+ years of serious thinking about  &gt;&gt; all those &#8216;truths&#8217; I&#8217;ve been harping on about &#8211; that they do fit together  &gt;&gt; and explain the universe adequately&#44; compared to our hodge podge knowledge  &gt;&gt; of established and accepted thinking today &#8211; and yesterday.  &gt;I don&#8217;t know how accepted they are where you live.  &gt;In the US&#44; the beliefs you write against -rather than writing about yours-  &gt;are quite dead compared to 100 years ago&#44; say&#44; in many areas. The bible  &gt;belt remains where the belief is religiosity more often than not&#44; with  &gt;the letter being taken literally and the spirit too often passed by.  &gt;But take here in Canada. If many will say they believe in God&#44; not so many  &gt;do much. It is not even an each sunday thing for most poeple. Chruches are  &gt;deserted save for the elderly&#44; and every now and then a younger adult that  &gt;was raised with granny&#44; sort of thing. </p>
<p>Yes &#8211; churches here have been closed down (because of fewer followers)  and sold off&#44; with plain folk living in them &#8211; down here.  And new churches have sprung up &#8211; a former car tyres building has been  renovated into a new church &#8211; first it was Green Hills or something like  and changed to Nation something. And it doesn&#8217;t look like a church.  &gt;People&#8217;s beliefs are&#44; for those areas where religiosity died&#44; more  &gt;self-adapted&#44; and often more sefl serving too.  &gt;Even reincarnation is rather seen as a way to blame one&#8217;s misadventures  &gt;-but mostly the neighbor&#8217;s- on. They are havign a hard time? Bah&#44; they  &gt;asked for it in a previous life&#44; certainly&#44; and so it is fair and let&#8217;s  &gt;let them in it&quot; sort of thing.  &gt;As for the UFOs and ideas you talk about&#44; again&#44; they were blooming here in  &gt;the early 80s&#44; if they were increasingly so already in the 60s and 70s&#44; where  &gt;then reading your words is making me wonder at times  &gt;if in NZ&#44; things are stuck in a time warp of 20 years ago. What seems new  &gt;to you or &quot;50 years ahead&quot; rings &quot;30 years behind&quot; to me&#44; for instance&#44;  &gt;cause I heard it all to satiety and then some in those decades. </p>
<p>Everything goes in cycles &#8211; they come around again&#44; are popularised again.  There has been always been &#8216;alternatives&#8217; to the belief of that time.  Think of so-called Christianity being a breakaway from the current beliefs  of it&#8217;s time&#44; when it was formed&#44; so too for Islam.  And in the 18th Century so many new? breakaways were formed then.  Name them christian&#44; or spiritualist or whatever.  &gt;Anoher thing everyone hard of till bored is the anti religious belifes.  &gt;Here&#44;t hat happened in the early 60s. Action was joined to words where  &gt;churches suddenly emtied&#44; more than half sold as residences after some  &gt;contractor got them for cheap and renovated them. In the seventies&#44; the  &gt;fashion was to live in a renovated ex church. I can think of 3 out of four  &gt;in the village where my parents live that were closed so fast&#44; I do not  &gt;remember theirt having ever been opened in fact. I think they all closed  &gt;within a year&#44; the first year of our moving there&#44; in 68.  &gt;One remains. For weddings and baptisms and funerals -and masses for the  &gt;elederly&#44; sort of thing. </p>
<p>Maybe you can draw a parallel with new entertainments that appeal to  people more&#44; than going to church? Like with the advent of radio&#44;  then television &#8211; and along with these&#44; enlighten the audience as well&#44;  that the beliefs of the church simply don&#8217;t stand up to inspection.  ie. They are not truths at all&#44; but simply dogma and rhetoric.  Believers have simply been conned &#8211; that is the only truthful way of  putting it.  &gt;Except for maybe some unknown cases of psychopathic religosity adepts&#44;  &gt;Quebec is pretty much done since 4 decades with the rituals and hypocrisy  &gt;of pseudo christian pedophile priests.  &gt;Which does not mean that christianity is dead. Rather&#44; it is revisited&#44;  &gt;cleansed from all the encumbring rituals built through centuries to hold  &gt;people prisoners of fears&#44; and is based on more and more common sense. </p>
<p>Christianity has to grow up&#44; or be seriously left behind&#44; or ignored  altogether if it doesn&#8217;t change in the changing environment of everyday  life. But even this is not sufficient for it to survive &#8211; because it is  simply&#44; not based upon &#8216;truth&#8217; at all&#44; or what happened&#44; as regards  the figure of &#8216;Jesus&#8217;. The Jews and Muslims don&#8217;t regard Jesus as being  a Saviour or Son of God.  &gt;Many remain yet that do not really adapt&#44; and who need to be good ole  &gt;followers&#44; where sects started abounding the minte the catchlic church was  &gt;no longer &quot;in fashion&quot;.  &gt;Rael and his followers&#44; for instance&#44; where Rael claimed that ETs talked  &gt;to him and told him he had to build an embassy for them for when they  &gt;would land. Only&#44; they were to land in was it year 2000&#44; and did not&#8230;.  &gt;So then&#44; bored&#44; Rael had to come up with soemthign to still find  &gt;followers. He then declares he ahd this or that message where he was to  &gt;pick anyone he wants to have sex with and they gotta say yes and their  &gt;husband -and or wife- has to agree to it. </p>
<p>Rael is a pure nut &#8211; as seen clearly in his television and media  presentations.  &#8211; Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text -&gt;In other words&#44; he really misses the old pedophile priests and the sexual  &gt;offenders mentality and recreated it for those who like him also missed it  &gt;obvioulsy.  &gt;Given that&#44; the ret of the population around these neck-of-the-woods would  &gt;not give much *belief* interest in one more book about ETs wanting us to  &gt;this and that. We already have plenty of those declarations here  &gt;&quot;&quot;thanks&quot;&quot; to Rael.  &gt;So &quot;ETs mean to tell you this&quot;&#44; and &quot;ETs want you to do that&quot; (or &quot;God&quot; wants  &gt;you to do put money in the trunk&#44; what;s the difference&#44; really?) and the  &gt;&quot;the church is lying!!!&quot; declarations are all soporific since long around  &gt;here&#44; where a book on that alone would not reach a market save that of the  &gt;already saturated one of Rael (and his sosies) and followers.  &gt;You base your ideas on the books of anoher writer&#44; a fiction writer&#44; in  &gt;fact&#44; where then there can not be much new stuff in that&#44; since it is  &gt;about ideas already published and that already made there wave that then  &gt;crashed later on. </p>
<p>Nothing is ever &#8216;new&#8217; as such.  There is no such thing as original thought? I don&#8217;t think so.  We are the product of our times. Some people sense the future and are  better prepared (mentally) to step into it&#44; than others.  There should be a recognition of that which is truly archaic and in  error &#8211; which needs correction &#8211; which needs to be dealt with.  ie. adjustments/corrections need to be made&#44; or else devious people  will use it as a means of control and terror.  Which is what terrorists are exploiting now&#44; or rather their masters  are. There is a woman&#44; a widow of one of the recent Londom bombers&#44;  that she recognised her husband was a changed man &#8211; because of his  passion for his religion.  &#8211; Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text -&gt;Again&#44; what do YOU mean to say in your book that is different?  &gt;What IS new in the ideas?  &gt;If no new ideas&#44; then making it so much thought to write would not be  &gt;wise. The best would maybe be to think of the market there is&#44; one that  &gt;likes to spend an hour or two everyonce in a while looking at pics of what  &gt;so called &quot;unexplained&quot; is around&#44; wiht a short text to say where the pic  &gt;was taken and by what person&#44; and what is special about it.  &gt;Trying to sell a belief to people is not 50 years ahead. Or maybe it will  &gt;be as poeple pretty much loive cycles&#44; where after a time of making  &gt;obesity be the fashion&#44; they will then make anorexy the fashion&#44; to then  &gt;again go back to obesity and so on&#44; in pretty much all areas.  &gt;So maybe in 50 years people will again go back to superstition thinking  &gt;and to hanging on to any forged set of beliefs that does not hold water  &gt;when it comes to what it brings poele in their daily life for a guidance  &gt;and to sustain them and each other.  &gt;Maybe in 50 years&#44; newborn will never have heard of Rael&#44; and will never  &gt;have seen a church and mass&#44; where then that will be as interestign to  &gt;them as vampirism or goths are interestign to some teens.  &gt;The fashion of the 60s had a short come back.  &gt;Maybe the fashion of Sunday mass with pedophiles telling you ewhat to  &gt;believe in the good there would eb to leave kids with them will be  &gt;feasable again&#44; etc&#44; etc.  &gt;Until then&#44; I&#8217;d not mind owning a book to flip pages on a rainy Saturday&#44;  &gt;iwith pics and legends under them. </p>
<p>There is a large format book series for children&#44; that was done many years  ago. It had one dealing with UFOs&#44; another with monsters.  These were rather well done&#44; with nice artwork and a good recap of the  area they covered.  There was a good series&#44; in the small medium sized book range&#44; I think it  was called &#8216;MacDonald&#8217;s Guidelines&#8217; &#8211; well some MacName anyway.  Most dealt with ordinary everyday hobbies&#44; like photography&#44; gardening&#44;  looking after your car&#44; etc. There was one about ESP. These gave excellent  coverage about the particular subject with photographs and artwork.  It would be nice to see one about &#8216;religion&#8217; and philosophy&#44; which  gives adequate coverage about all the mainstream religions and ideas&#44; and  also cover the more borderline-strange stuff too.  I do have an old Pears Cyclopaedia from the 70s&#8217; &#8211; I only got it because it  was on sale. Anyway it has an excellent section on &#8216;Ideas and Beliefs&#8217; ie.  world religions&#44; etc. Gives a summary and history about most religious groups&#44;  etc.  &#8211; Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text -&gt;But like most persons&#44; the seond it has text tryign to tell me what to  &gt;make of it all&#44; and what belief is suppssedly the one one should have&#44; the  &gt;second it  </p>
<p>  &#8230; read more &raquo;    </p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>I saw this post soon after you posted and wanted to say that there are  so many biggest lies on this planet&#44; I didn&#8217;t know where to begin:)- </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>In article &lt;1130858464.796468.149&#8230;@g49g2000cwa.googlegroups.com&gt;&#44;  yamunamy&#8230;@yahoo.com says&#8230;  &gt;I saw this post soon after you posted and wanted to say that there are  &gt;so many biggest lies on this planet&#44; I didn&#8217;t know where to begin:)- </p>
<p>I would say that is true &#8211; and it is because of the nature of  &#8216;establishments&#8217; being the problem.  Authorities of this and that&#44; act like they know everything &#8211; especially  over the area they preside.  When you look at the information they preach &#8211; often it appears to be  quackery &#8211; whether it be religion&#44; politics&#44; and even science.  Over issues like death and dying &#8211; is there anything afterwards?  There is enough information out there &#8211; to sort out who is very likely  lying to us&#44; who has no clue&#44; and who may have possible answers.  Harvey </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>Yes&#44; but I&#8217;m not buying into this until giant radioactive dinosaurs enter  the mythos.  OTS  &quot;Your Name Here=Harvey&quot; &lt;k&#8230;@ing.notin.aus&gt; wrote in message  news:dk264q$mj5$2@lust.ihug.co.nz&#8230;  &#8211; Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text -&gt; eg.  &gt; That death is the &#8216;end&#8217;. Life continues on&#44; death is merely a transistion  &gt; phase. The religions &#8211; Judaism&#44; Christianity and Islam have got it all  wrong &#8211;  &gt; don&#8217;t believe a word they say about it (and other stuff too).  &gt; That there is a &quot;God&quot; (strange isn&#8217;t it&#44; that the God of the Jews and  &gt; Christians and Muslims are very very very similiar to each other).  &gt; There isn&#8217;t one or ones&#44; etc. It is all a lie&#44; a con foistered upon the  &gt; unsuspecting public&#44; all for power and control. Religions are power  &gt; control mechanisms which look after themselves first and foremost.  &gt; They are not spiritual organisations &#8211; they only put on that front and  air&#44;  &gt; that they are&#44; and they have fooled the public into believing this.  &gt; That UFOs are not real. They are part of our human history.  &gt; Always was&#44; is and will be.  &gt; Those will do for starters &#8211; there are many more&#44; as big&#8230;  &gt; Harvey  </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>Michaela Mackenzie on 31/10/2005 6:04 am wrote:  &gt; Stating opinion as fact&#44; Harvey? </p>
<p>Quite.  I&#8217;d also like to add that I&#8217;m not overly impressed with the honesty of  politicians&#44; PR &quot;spin doctors&quot; and advertisers. I&#8217;m not sure if I /can/ be  sure of Shell.  &#8211; Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text -&gt; &#8211; Michaela  &gt; Your Name Here=Harvey wrote:  &gt;&gt; eg.  &gt;&gt; That death is the &#8216;end&#8217;. Life continues on&#44; death is merely a transistion  &gt;&gt; phase. The religions &#8211; Judaism&#44; Christianity and Islam have got it all wrong  &gt;&gt; &#8211;  &gt;&gt; don&#8217;t believe a word they say about it (and other stuff too).  &gt;&gt; That there is a &quot;God&quot; (strange isn&#8217;t it&#44; that the God of the Jews and  &gt;&gt; Christians and Muslims are very very very similiar to each other).  &gt;&gt; There isn&#8217;t one or ones&#44; etc. It is all a lie&#44; a con foistered upon the  &gt;&gt; unsuspecting public&#44; all for power and control. Religions are power  &gt;&gt; control mechanisms which look after themselves first and foremost.  &gt;&gt; They are not spiritual organisations &#8211; they only put on that front and air&#44;  &gt;&gt; that they are&#44; and they have fooled the public into believing this.  &gt;&gt; That UFOs are not real. They are part of our human history.  &gt;&gt; Always was&#44; is and will be.  &gt;&gt; Those will do for starters &#8211; there are many more&#44; as big&#8230;  &gt;&gt; Harvey </p>
<p>Here&#8217;s a site you might like Harvey&#8230;  http://www.exchristian.net/testimonies/2005/02/flying-zombie-jews-don&#8230;  ss-me.php  Loads of testimonials from ex- and recovering Christians. </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>Stating opinion as fact&#44; Harvey?  &#8211; Michaela  &#8211; Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text -Your Name Here=Harvey wrote:  &gt; eg.  &gt; That death is the &#8216;end&#8217;. Life continues on&#44; death is merely a transistion  &gt; phase. The religions &#8211; Judaism&#44; Christianity and Islam have got it all wrong &#8211;  &gt; don&#8217;t believe a word they say about it (and other stuff too).  &gt; That there is a &quot;God&quot; (strange isn&#8217;t it&#44; that the God of the Jews and  &gt; Christians and Muslims are very very very similiar to each other).  &gt; There isn&#8217;t one or ones&#44; etc. It is all a lie&#44; a con foistered upon the  &gt; unsuspecting public&#44; all for power and control. Religions are power  &gt; control mechanisms which look after themselves first and foremost.  &gt; They are not spiritual organisations &#8211; they only put on that front and air&#44;  &gt; that they are&#44; and they have fooled the public into believing this.  &gt; That UFOs are not real. They are part of our human history.  &gt; Always was&#44; is and will be.  &gt; Those will do for starters &#8211; there are many more&#44; as big&#8230;  &gt; Harvey  </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>eg.  That death is the &#8216;end&#8217;. Life continues on&#44; death is merely a transistion  phase. The religions &#8211; Judaism&#44; Christianity and Islam have got it all wrong &#8211;  don&#8217;t believe a word they say about it (and other stuff too).  That there is a &quot;God&quot; (strange isn&#8217;t it&#44; that the God of the Jews and  Christians and Muslims are very very very similiar to each other).  There isn&#8217;t one or ones&#44; etc. It is all a lie&#44; a con foistered upon the  unsuspecting public&#44; all for power and control. Religions are power  control mechanisms which look after themselves first and foremost.  They are not spiritual organisations &#8211; they only put on that front and air&#44;  that they are&#44; and they have fooled the public into believing this.  That UFOs are not real. They are part of our human history.  Always was&#44; is and will be.  Those will do for starters &#8211; there are many more&#44; as big&#8230;  Harvey </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4></p>
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		<item>
		<title>The book I&#039;m writing, or trying to write&#8230;</title>
		<link>http://christianityqa.com/islam-christianity/the-book-im-writing.html</link>
		<comments>http://christianityqa.com/islam-christianity/the-book-im-writing.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 07 Oct 2005 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Islam Christianity]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://christianityqa.com/uncategorized/the-book-im-writing.html</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Question:
- Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text -Your Name Here=Harvey wrote:  &#62; Michaela says&#8230;  &#62;&#62; Your Name Here=Harvey wrote:  &#62;&#62;&#62; The format at the moment&#44; is in the form of a letter &#8211; this of  &#62;&#62;&#62; course&#44; will be changed towards something more suitable for a book  &#62;&#62;&#62; format. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h4><strong>Question:</strong></h4>
<p>- Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text -Your Name Here=Harvey wrote:  &gt; Michaela says&#8230;  &gt;&gt; Your Name Here=Harvey wrote:  &gt;&gt;&gt; The format at the moment&#44; is in the form of a letter &#8211; this of  &gt;&gt;&gt; course&#44; will be changed towards something more suitable for a book  &gt;&gt;&gt; format. The letter is for a specific person&#44; so note&#44; that it&#8217;s not  &gt;&gt;&gt; for you personally&#44; so allow for us&#8230; in your reading.  &gt;&gt;&gt; It is time to change the paradigm on this planet &#8211; because we are in  &gt;&gt;&gt; need of it &#8211; change &#8211; towards a better&#44; more peaceful and  &gt;&gt;&gt; understanding world&#44; that of sense and sensibility.  &gt;&gt;&gt; It is of a very sensitive nature&#44; that I write about &#8211; that is  &gt;&gt;&gt; important to fully understand and comprehend.  &gt;&gt;&gt; You&#44; yourself are of an &#8216;age&#8217; in which you can verify known facts  &gt;&gt;&gt; and information&#44; and verify that which is only hinted and guessed  &gt;&gt;&gt; at.  &gt;&gt;&gt; You know fact from fiction? Don&#8217;t you?  &gt;&gt;&gt; You know of the human imagination&#44; and how much it affects our  &gt;&gt;&gt; lives &#8211; to be able to dream/imagine the possibilities of a future&#44;  &gt;&gt;&gt; and hopefully to move towards it &#8211; to what was imagined.  &gt;&gt;&gt; You know of human creativity and how important that is in our lives.  &gt;&gt;&gt; That expression of the &#8216;arts&#8217; is important to those who exercise  &gt;&gt;&gt; their creativity&#44; and also how it is received and perceived by  &gt;&gt;&gt; those who appreciate it.  &gt;&gt;&gt; I will come full circle to this particular point &#8211; that of the above  &gt;&gt;&gt; two paragraphs&#44; above&#44; in due course. Please realise how powerful  &gt;&gt;&gt; the human imagination is.  &gt;&gt; I&#8217;ve found that people (at least on usenet) don&#8217;t seem to believe our  &gt;&gt; imaginations have any power whatsoever&#44; or if they do&#44; then it&#8217;s kind  &gt;&gt; of vague&#8230;  &gt; Imagination and creativeness (or creative energy/etc) are very  &gt; powerful things we have&#44; and should be acknowledged and used more. </p>
<p>Which is why I posted that &quot;OT: &#8216;Exorcist talked me into sex&#8217;&quot; thread.  But again I couldn&#8217;t get anyone interested in discussing imagination.  All anyone (iirc) seemed to talk about was that the woman was stupid  to let the guy have sex with her. No one seemed to want to consider  that she may (and I&#8217;m not saying that this is how it went) have believed  his smooth tongue because she needed company so badly. I don&#8217;t know  if you&#8217;ve ever done something crazy because you think it&#8217;ll please  someone else&#44; but I certainly have.  At the moment we&#8217;re busy watching a friend walk into a high risk  relationship and we know there&#8217;s nothing we can say or do. He&#8217;s  just gotta go through it and hopefully eventually learn his lesson.  Or perhaps they&#8217;ll surprise us all. I know I certainly hope they do.  &gt;&gt;&gt; Back to the point about the paradigm shift &#8211; that is important to  &gt;&gt;&gt; us&#44;  &gt;&gt; Arie spoke about getting rid of all paradigms. I like that. But it&#8217;s  &gt;&gt; scary.  &gt; We need to understand what paradigm means. </p>
<p>Without getting too into it&#44; I would say it means &quot;model of the  world&quot;.  So getting rid of all paradigms would end up with oneness; a single  wholeness.  Something I imagine John Lennon was thinking of when he wrote  &quot;Imagine&quot;.  &gt; I was using it as &#8216;example&#8217; &#8211; the examples being shown on this planet&#44;  &gt; are not good&#44; as far as worldwide actions in the news&#44; by leaders. </p>
<p>Everyone&#8217;s only doing the best they can&#44; Harvey. So you think you know  better&#44; write a book about it. But I&#8217;m not sure all this finger-pointing  is going to do much good.  &gt; If you view it as &#8216;idea&#8217; &#8211; then&#44; there&#8217;s nothing wrong with old  &gt; morals&#44; such as &#8216;be honest and truthful&#8217; or more specifically&#44; &#8216;only  &gt; speak the truth&#8217; or &#8216;don&#8217;t lie&#8217; then do it. Which is the whole point  &gt; here. </p>
<p>Harvey. Of course the ideal is &quot;do not lie.&quot; But we are also humans  and as such we *do* lie. And we must learn to put in our own effort  not to lie. But the problem with pressuring people not to lie is that in  itself pressure doesn&#8217;t help the person not to lie and it doesn&#8217;t stop the  feelings of guilt</p>
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		<title>Life Plans [Was Re: Help please - breathing and high anxiety]</title>
		<link>http://christianityqa.com/islam-christianity/life-plans-was-re-help-please-breathing-and-high-anxiety-2455734.html</link>
		<comments>http://christianityqa.com/islam-christianity/life-plans-was-re-help-please-breathing-and-high-anxiety-2455734.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 21 Sep 2005 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Islam Christianity]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Question:
&#34;pegasus&#34; &#60;pega&#8230;@asarian-host.net&#62; wrote in message 
news:54f440626864c91ca8876.aeb3947b86d15@asarian-host.net&#8230;  &#8211; Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text -&#62; X-No-Archive: Yes  &#62; So&#44; I was suggesting earlier this month that posters indicate their  current  &#62; goals and occasionally post updates on progress. &#160;There are a couple of  &#62; things I&#8217;m hoping to fit in [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h4><strong>Question:</strong></h4>
<p>&quot;pegasus&quot; &lt;pega&#8230;@asarian-host.net&gt; wrote in message </p>
<p>news:54f440626864c91ca8876.aeb3947b86d15@asarian-host.net&#8230;  &#8211; Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text -&gt; X-No-Archive: Yes  &gt; So&#44; I was suggesting earlier this month that posters indicate their  current  &gt; goals and occasionally post updates on progress. &nbsp;There are a couple of  &gt; things I&#8217;m hoping to fit in this autumn. &nbsp;At work the theme for the  &gt; residents&#8217; Christmas party this year is going to be &#8216;Stars in their Eyes&#8217;&#44;  &gt; where we&#8217;ll help them get dressed up as their favourite singer and put on  a  &gt; performance (maybe miming and dancing&#44; or karaoke-style if they prefer).  &gt; Staff are being encouraged to participate as well. &nbsp;Now the strange thing  is  &gt; that even though I was the most painfully&#44; incredibly shy thing you could  &gt; possibly imagine as a young child&#44; as a &#8216;growed-up&#8217; I enjoy performing&#44; so  &gt; whilst all the other members of staff are groaning in mock horror at the  &gt; thought&#44; I&#8217;m bouncing with tigger-ish enthusiasm and excitement about the  &gt; whole business! &nbsp;The only problem is &#8230; I can neither sing nor dance.  I&#8217;ve  &gt; heard robust&#44; confident people state with absolute certainty that ANYONE  can  &gt; sing (and dance) with a little bit of coaching. &nbsp;With that thought in  mind&#44;  &gt; here is my goal: &nbsp;between now and Christmas&#44; to prepare a worthy  performance  &gt; for the party. &nbsp;I think maybe my first step is finding a singing teacher.  &gt; The other goal is to learn to use Corel Draw Graphics Suite 12. &nbsp;Hmmmm.  &gt; Don&#8217;t even know what my first step is towards that goal. &nbsp;Adult ed.  classes&#44;  &gt; maybe. &nbsp;The difficulty is fitting all this sort of thing around the weird  &gt; shift-pattern I work.  &gt; Comments welcome &nbsp;:-)  &gt; Anyone else got any goals to share? </p>
<p>Well&#44; I&#8217;d like to have enough money to own my own island so that the RSPCA  can send all the unwanted animals over in a boat instead of putting them  down.  Step 1 of 2341 &#8211; get a job.  Not going so great. Another rejection letter. It&#8217;s a bit difficult when you  need 3 references to flip burgers at McDonalds these days &#8211; let alone your  average uni graduate job&#44; and I&#8217;ve been out of work due to various emotional  problems for about 5 years.  &nbsp;Do I know 3 references? I&#8217;m struggling to even think of 3 people that I  know. (outside the family that is.)  Step 2 of 2341 &#8211; &#8230;. </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>paneon on 22/09/2005 11:51 am wrote:  &#8211; Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text -&gt; &quot;pegasus&quot; &lt;pega&#8230;@asarian-host.net&gt; wrote in message  &gt; news:54f440626864c91ca8876.aeb3947b86d15@asarian-host.net&#8230;  &gt;&gt; X-No-Archive: Yes  &gt;&gt; So&#44; I was suggesting earlier this month that posters indicate their  &gt; current  &gt;&gt; goals and occasionally post updates on progress. &nbsp;There are a couple of  &gt;&gt; things I&#8217;m hoping to fit in this autumn. &nbsp;At work the theme for the  &gt;&gt; residents&#8217; Christmas party this year is going to be &#8216;Stars in their Eyes&#8217;&#44;  &gt;&gt; where we&#8217;ll help them get dressed up as their favourite singer and put on  &gt; a  &gt;&gt; performance (maybe miming and dancing&#44; or karaoke-style if they prefer).  &gt;&gt; Staff are being encouraged to participate as well. &nbsp;Now the strange thing  &gt; is  &gt;&gt; that even though I was the most painfully&#44; incredibly shy thing you could  &gt;&gt; possibly imagine as a young child&#44; as a &#8216;growed-up&#8217; I enjoy performing&#44; so  &gt;&gt; whilst all the other members of staff are groaning in mock horror at the  &gt;&gt; thought&#44; I&#8217;m bouncing with tigger-ish enthusiasm and excitement about the  &gt;&gt; whole business! &nbsp;The only problem is &#8230; I can neither sing nor dance.  &gt; I&#8217;ve  &gt;&gt; heard robust&#44; confident people state with absolute certainty that ANYONE  &gt; can  &gt;&gt; sing (and dance) with a little bit of coaching. &nbsp;With that thought in  &gt; mind&#44;  &gt;&gt; here is my goal: &nbsp;between now and Christmas&#44; to prepare a worthy  &gt; performance  &gt;&gt; for the party. &nbsp;I think maybe my first step is finding a singing teacher.  &gt;&gt; The other goal is to learn to use Corel Draw Graphics Suite 12. &nbsp;Hmmmm.  &gt;&gt; Don&#8217;t even know what my first step is towards that goal. &nbsp;Adult ed.  &gt; classes&#44;  &gt;&gt; maybe. &nbsp;The difficulty is fitting all this sort of thing around the weird  &gt;&gt; shift-pattern I work.  &gt;&gt; Comments welcome &nbsp;:-)  &gt;&gt; Anyone else got any goals to share?  &gt; Well&#44; I&#8217;d like to have enough money to own my own island so that the RSPCA  &gt; can send all the unwanted animals over in a boat instead of putting them  &gt; down. </p>
<p>I saw a programme the other day&#44; it had a couple looking for property in  Fiji or Tahiti or somewhere. They turned their collective noses up at a  whole island for something like </p>
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		<title>Islam Attracts Top Britons in a Growing Trend</title>
		<link>http://christianityqa.com/islam-christianity/islam-attracts-top-britons-in-a-growing-trend-850960.html</link>
		<comments>http://christianityqa.com/islam-christianity/islam-attracts-top-britons-in-a-growing-trend-850960.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 11 Sep 2005 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Islam Christianity]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Question:
- Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text &#8211;  Islam Attracts Top Britons in a Growing Trend   Over 14&#44;000 Britons have embraced Islam&#44; according to the UK&#8217;s Sunday   Times. Citing the first authoritative study of the phenomenon&#44; the   paper said that they had done so because of disillusionment [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h4><strong>Question:</strong></h4>
<p>- Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text &#8211;  Islam Attracts Top Britons in a Growing Trend   Over 14&#44;000 Britons have embraced Islam&#44; according to the UK&#8217;s Sunday   Times. Citing the first authoritative study of the phenomenon&#44; the   paper said that they had done so because of disillusionment with   Western values. Some of Britain&#8217;s top landowners&#44; celebrities and the   offspring of senior Establishment figures have embraced Islam.   The trend is being encouraged by Muslim leaders who are convinced that   the conversion of prominent figures will help protect a community   stigmatized by terrorism and fundamentalism.   Zaki Badawi&#44; chairman of the Imams and Mosques Council&#44; said: &quot;The   community has been unfairly targeted and these developments encourage   it in a time of difficulty.&quot; </p>
<p>Well&#44; the Islamic community can do itself a favor by answering the  question&#44; &quot;Are you here to establish Islamic law?&quot;  Pretty simple yes/no. &nbsp;But for some reason it isn&#8217;t being asked&#44; and it  certainly isn&#8217;t being answered. </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>   Islam Attracts Top Britons in a Growing Trend </p>
<p>Imagine that! Militants infiltrating Britain&#8217;s top companies. A lot of the  terrorists are on the dole in Britain. &nbsp;And they have the gall to criticize  our President for &#8216;bungling&#8217; something? &nbsp;Go figure.  How militant Islamists are infiltrating Britain&#8217;s top companies  11 September 2005  A militant Islamist group that Tony Blair has said should be banned has  members in some of Britain&#8217;s most important institutions&#44; including the NHS  and blue-chip companies such as IBM and Reuters&#44; an Independent on Sunday  investigation has revealed.  The Government is due to publish legislation this week to ban Hizb  ut-Tahrir&#44; which is already proscribed in European countries such as Germany  and in most of the Middle East. The Home Secretary&#44; Charles Clarke&#44; has  undertaken to give the wording of the ban to the Opposition to secure  cross-party agreement.  In contrast to other groups that the Government intends to ban&#44; the  membership of Hizb ut-Tahrir is mainly middle-class and well-qualified. A  significant proportion are university-educated and work in areas such as  finance&#44; information technology&#44; health and education.  Recently&#44; the IoS disclosed that The Guardian had employed Dilpazier Aslam&#44;  a Hizb member&#44; as a trainee journalist&#44; and articles he wrote after the  London bombings did not mention his connection with the group. He lost his  job at the paper after refusing to give up his membership.  The IoS has now learned that at least two members of Hizb&#44; which seeks to  form a global Islamic state regulated by sharia law&#44; work for the computer  giant IBM&#44; and that Reuters&#44; the international news and financial  information agency&#44; has at least one member among its employees.  After being informed of this&#44; a Reuters spokesperson said: &quot;We require our  journalists to be very sensitive to any activities which might lead to their  impartiality being questioned. We of course recognise the right of people to  hold their own views.  &quot;We are not aware of any of our employees being members of Hizb ut-Tahrir.  If it becomes illegal&#44; then certainly we would review the matter on the &#8216;Do  their private actions impact our public reputation?&#8217; principle.&quot;  An IBM spokesperson said the company was assessing the impact of any new  legislation. It would not disclose personnel information &quot;for reasons of  data protection&quot;.  Sajjad Khan&#44; a prominent member of Hizb who runs classes on the group&#8217;s  ideology and has delivered speeches at the group&#8217;s congresses&#44; said: &quot;Most  of our members are graduates who work and pay taxes. Very few of them are  unemployed or rely on state benefits.&quot; A finance and IT specialist&#44; he said  he had worked for a number of large companies&#44; including Tesco.  Several members of Hizb are medical practitioners&#44; including its spokesman&#44;  Dr Imran Waheed&#44; a psychiatrist practising in London. Its women&#8217;s  representative&#44; Nazreen Nawaz&#44; is a qualified doctor who worked in cancer  research. Another member is a manager at University College Hospital&#44;  London.  The group is also strong in the education sector&#44; where a former member of  the executive board lectures in IT in an east London college. The former  headmistress of a prominent Islamic primary school in the same area is also  a member of Hizb&#44; as is the landlord of the building.  Although Hizb ut-Tahrir insists that it has never supported violence in  Britain or the Middle East&#44; security sources accuse it of being among groups  which radicalise Muslims to the point where they attract the attention of  terrorist recruiters.  A former Hizb ut-Tahrir activist told the IoS that behind closed doors he  was encouraged to take up boxing and self-defence classes in order to  &quot;prepare for jihad&quot;. Although he never accepted full membership&#44; he was  associated with the group for nearly a decade&#44; and said two members had told  him how they had joined the Territorial Army in order to get &quot;real&quot; military  training. After TA rules were changed and it was no longer possible to opt  out of military action if asked to take part&#44; this stopped.  The organisation&#8217;s well-designed www.hizb.org.uk website replaced earlier  sites such as www.1924.org&#44; which until the London bombings used to contain  material from the 100&#44;000 leaflets and flyers handed out at mosques across  Britain every Friday.  Though Hizb denies being anti-Semitic&#44; a leaflet first published in 1999  said: &quot;The Jews &#8230; are a poisoned dagger thrust into the heart of the  Islamic Ummah and [sic] evil cancerous gland which spreads deep within the  Islamic countries.&quot; Until last year the same statement was carried on Hizb&#8217;s  websites.  When Britain&#8217;s first successful suicide bomber&#44; Asif Hanif&#44; blew himself up  in a Tel Aviv bar in April 2003&#44; he killed three others and injured 55. His  partner&#44; Omar Sharif&#44; also from Derby&#44; was found dead floating in the sea  two weeks later&#44; after his bomb failed to detonate.  The June edition of Khilafah magazine that year said: &quot;This case more than  anything has shown that though the Kaffir [unbelievers] wish to seduce the  Ummah away from the problems Muslims face with corrupt Western ideas such as  nation statehood and the British Muslim identity&#44; it has certainly not  deterred these two young men who grew up in Britain.&quot;  A discussion on a Hizb website about Western citizenship spoke of killing  kaffirs &#8211; infidels or non-Muslims. &quot;Their bonds&#44; equality and freedoms are  lies and false &#8230; We saw an Immigrant [muhajir] from Quraysh drawing closer  to Allah by killing his kaffir relative&#44;&quot; it said. This was removed days  after the 7 July attacks in London.  Approached for comment&#44; Dr Waheed said the group always espoused  non-violence. He denied that the Khilafah article could be interpreted &quot;in  any way&quot; as praising violence. He refused to discuss the organisation&#8217;s  membership beyond saying that they were professionals &quot;serving their local  communities&quot;.  INSIDE HIZB  Hizb ut-Tahrir (Party of Liberation) was founded in 1953 by a Palestinian  court clerk&#44; Taqiuddin al-Nabhani. Its aim is to establish the Caliphate&#44; a  state based upon and governed by Islamic law.In Britain&#44; the party is headed  by Jalaluddin Patel&#44; 28&#44; an Indian IT engineer&#44; and has up to 10&#44;000  members. In 2002 it was outlawed in Germany after allegations of  anti-Semitism and last year three British members were sentenced to five  years in jail in Egypt.  http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/crime/article311824.ece </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>Islam Attracts Top Britons in a Growing Trend  Over 14&#44;000 Britons have embraced Islam&#44; according to the UK&#8217;s Sunday  Times. Citing the first authoritative study of the phenomenon&#44; the  paper said that they had done so because of disillusionment with  Western values. Some of Britain&#8217;s top landowners&#44; celebrities and the  offspring of senior Establishment figures have embraced Islam.  The trend is being encouraged by Muslim leaders who are convinced that  the conversion of prominent figures will help protect a community  stigmatized by terrorism and fundamentalism.  Zaki Badawi&#44; chairman of the Imams and Mosques Council&#44; said: &quot;The  community has been unfairly targeted and these developments encourage  it in a time of difficulty.&quot;  Meanwhile&#44; the Muslim Council of Britain has co-opted Joe Ahmed-Dobson&#44;  son of Frank Dobson&#44; the former Labor health secretary&#44; to chair its  regeneration committee.  The study by Yahya (formerly Jonathan) Birt&#44; son of Lord Birt&#44; former  director-general of the BBC&#44; provides the first reliable data on the  sensitive subject of the movement of Christians into Islam. He uses a  breakdown of the latest census figures to conclude that there are now  14&#44;200 white converts in Britain.  Speaking publicly for the first time about his faith&#44; Birt&#44; whose  doctorate at Oxford University is on young British Muslims&#44; argued that  an inspirational figure&#44; similar to the American convert Malcolm X for  Afro-Caribbeans&#44; would first have to emerge if the next stage&#44; a mass  conversion among white Britons&#44; were to happen.  &quot;You need great transitional figures to translate something alien (like  Islam) into the vernacular&#44;&quot; he said. &quot;The image of Islam projected by  political Islamic movements is not very attractive.&quot;  Initially&#44; Birt said&#44; he had no coherent reasons for converting&#44; but:  &quot;In the longer term&#44; I think it was the overall profundity&#44; balance&#44;  coherence and spirituality of the Muslim way of life which convinced  me.&quot;  The faith has made inroads into the Establishment. It emerged this  weekend that the great-granddaughter of a British prime minister has  converted. Emma Clark&#44; whose ancestor&#44; the Liberal Prime Minister  Herbert Asquith&#44; took Britain into the First World War&#44; said: &quot;We&#8217;re  all the rage; I hope it&#8217;s not a passing fashion.&quot;  Clark&#44; who helped design an Islamic garden for the Prince of Wales at  Highgrove&#44; his Gloucestershire home&#44; is now helping create a similar  garden for a mosque in Woking&#44; Surrey&#44; on the site of a car park.  Many converts have been inspired by the writings of Charles Le Gai  Eaton&#44; a former Foreign Office diplomat. Eaton&#44; author of &#8216;Islam and  the Destiny of Man&#44;&#8217; said: &quot;I have received letters from people who are  put off by the wishy-washy standards of contemporary Christianity and  they are looking for a religion which does not compromise too much with  the modern world.&quot;  Others have come to Islam through love or marriage. Kristiane Backer&#44; a  former friend of the cricketer Imran Khan&#44; said she was introduced to  the religion by him. She had shrunk from speaking publicly about Islam  before because of fears it might affect her work prospects.  Some prominent converts are even more wary. The Earl of Yarborough&#44; 40&#44;  who owns a 28&#44;000-acre estate in Lincolnshire&#44; declined to discuss  anything about his faith. &quot;I have nothing to say to you&#44;&quot; said  Yarborough&#44; who has apparently taken the name Abdul Mateen.  Muslim leaders are harnessing modern campaigning methods to promote  their faith. Groups have sprung up on the Internet publishing &quot;trophy  lists&quot; of white converts. The state-funded school in London established  by Yusuf Islam&#44; formerly the singer Cat Stevens&#44; has turned to  Premiership footballers to provide role models. Sources close to the  school say converts including Nicolas Anelka&#44; the Manchester City  striker&#44; and Omer &quot;Freddie&quot; Kanoute&#44; of Tottenham Hotspur&#44; have made  visits.  Fresh evidence came this weekend that Islam has received formal  acceptance at the heart of the Establishment. The Queen has approved  arrangements to allow Muslim staff at Buckingham Palace time off to  attend Friday prayers at a mosque: a member of staff in the finance  department is the first to take advantage of it.  http://www.islamweb.net/ver2/archive/article.php?lang=E&#038;id=57887 </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>Islam Attracts Top Britons in a Growing Trend  Over 14&#44;000 Britons have embraced Islam&#44; according to the UK&#8217;s Sunday  Times. Citing the first authoritative study of the phenomenon&#44; the  paper said that they had done so because of disillusionment with  Western values. Some of Britain&#8217;s top landowners&#44; celebrities and the  offspring of senior Establishment figures have embraced Islam.  The trend is being encouraged by Muslim leaders who are convinced that  the conversion of prominent figures will help protect a community  stigmatized by terrorism and fundamentalism.  Zaki Badawi&#44; chairman of the Imams and Mosques Council&#44; said: &quot;The  community has been unfairly targeted and these developments encourage  it in a time of difficulty.&quot;  Meanwhile&#44; the Muslim Council of Britain has co-opted Joe Ahmed-Dobson&#44;  son of Frank Dobson&#44; the former Labor health secretary&#44; to chair its  regeneration committee.  The study by Yahya (formerly Jonathan) Birt&#44; son of Lord Birt&#44; former  director-general of the BBC&#44; provides the first reliable data on the  sensitive subject of the movement of Christians into Islam. He uses a  breakdown of the latest census figures to conclude that there are now  14&#44;200 white converts in Britain.  Speaking publicly for the first time about his faith&#44; Birt&#44; whose  doctorate at Oxford University is on young British Muslims&#44; argued that  an inspirational figure&#44; similar to the American convert Malcolm X for  Afro-Caribbeans&#44; would first have to emerge if the next stage&#44; a mass  conversion among white Britons&#44; were to happen.  &quot;You need great transitional figures to translate something alien (like  Islam) into the vernacular&#44;&quot; he said. &quot;The image of Islam projected by  political Islamic movements is not very attractive.&quot;  Initially&#44; Birt said&#44; he had no coherent reasons for converting&#44; but:  &quot;In the longer term&#44; I think it was the overall profundity&#44; balance&#44;  coherence and spirituality of the Muslim way of life which convinced  me.&quot;  The faith has made inroads into the Establishment. It emerged this  weekend that the great-granddaughter of a British prime minister has  converted. Emma Clark&#44; whose ancestor&#44; the Liberal Prime Minister  Herbert Asquith&#44; took Britain into the First World War&#44; said: &quot;We&#8217;re  all the rage; I hope it&#8217;s not a passing fashion.&quot;  Clark&#44; who helped design an Islamic garden for the Prince of Wales at  Highgrove&#44; his Gloucestershire home&#44; is now helping create a similar  garden for a mosque in Woking&#44; Surrey&#44; on the site of a car park.  Many converts have been inspired by the writings of Charles Le Gai  Eaton&#44; a former Foreign Office diplomat. Eaton&#44; author of &#8216;Islam and  the Destiny of Man&#44;&#8217; said: &quot;I have received letters from people who are  put off by the wishy-washy standards of contemporary Christianity and  they are looking for a religion which does not compromise too much with  the modern world.&quot;  Others have come to Islam through love or marriage. Kristiane Backer&#44; a  former friend of the cricketer Imran Khan&#44; said she was introduced to  the religion by him. She had shrunk from speaking publicly about Islam  before because of fears it might affect her work prospects.  Some prominent converts are even more wary. The Earl of Yarborough&#44; 40&#44;  who owns a 28&#44;000-acre estate in Lincolnshire&#44; declined to discuss  anything about his faith. &quot;I have nothing to say to you&#44;&quot; said  Yarborough&#44; who has apparently taken the name Abdul Mateen.  Muslim leaders are harnessing modern campaigning methods to promote  their faith. Groups have sprung up on the Internet publishing &quot;trophy  lists&quot; of white converts. The state-funded school in London established  by Yusuf Islam&#44; formerly the singer Cat Stevens&#44; has turned to  Premiership footballers to provide role models. Sources close to the  school say converts including Nicolas Anelka&#44; the Manchester City  striker&#44; and Omer &quot;Freddie&quot; Kanoute&#44; of Tottenham Hotspur&#44; have made  visits.  Fresh evidence came this weekend that Islam has received formal  acceptance at the heart of the Establishment. The Queen has approved  arrangements to allow Muslim staff at Buckingham Palace time off to  attend Friday prayers at a mosque: a member of staff in the finance  department is the first to take advantage of it.  http://www.islamweb.net/ver2/archive/article.php?lang=E&#038;id=57887 </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4></p>
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		<title>UK Mosque Goers to Double Church Attendance: Study</title>
		<link>http://christianityqa.com/islam-christianity/uk-mosque-goers-to-double-church-attendance-study-850376.html</link>
		<comments>http://christianityqa.com/islam-christianity/uk-mosque-goers-to-double-church-attendance-study-850376.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 04 Sep 2005 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Islam Christianity]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Question:
&#34;Faris Jawad&#34; wrote   CAIRO &#44; September 4&#44; 2005 (IslamOnline.net) &#8211; The number of Muslims   praying at British mosques will be double the number of church goers by   2040&#44; according to a study by the British-based association Christian   Research. 
As a civilisation progresses&#44; it rejects superstition and embraces [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h4><strong>Question:</strong></h4>
<p>&quot;Faris Jawad&quot; wrote   CAIRO &#44; September 4&#44; 2005 (IslamOnline.net) &#8211; The number of Muslims   praying at British mosques will be double the number of church goers by   2040&#44; according to a study by the British-based association Christian   Research. </p>
<p>As a civilisation progresses&#44; it rejects superstition and embraces learning&#44;  rational though and science.  The west is becoming more and more secular&#44; the middle east remains gripped  in some dark age religious mode&#44; based on faith instead of rational thought  and truth.  In the west about 7 centuries ago we embraced faith and the result was the  crusades.  Now 7 centuries on&#44; we are becoming decent rational human beings&#44; interested  in rational thought and truth.  Petty the Islamic world is still 7 centuries behind us in culture. </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>  &#8211; Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text &#8211;  UK Mosque Goers to Double Church Attendance: Study   CAIRO &#44; September 4&#44; 2005 (IslamOnline.net) &#8211; The number of Muslims   praying at British mosques will be double the number of church goers   by   2040&#44; according to a study by the British-based association   Christian   Research.   Its more fun to learn about Bomb making.   The study&#44; The Future of The Church&#44; said that there will be nearly   twice as many Muslims at prayer in mosques on Friday as Christians   attending Sunday services&#44; reported the Telegraph on Sunday&#44;   September   4. </p>
<p>&lt;snip  Anyone got a link to the original study that IslamOnline.net is  quoting bits from&#44; please?  Ta.  Alan </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p> &#8211; Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text &#8211;  The study&#44; The Future of The Church&#44; said that there will be   nearly   twice as many Muslims at prayer in mosques on Friday as Christians   attending Sunday services&#44; reported the Telegraph on Sunday&#44;   September 4.  Anyone got a link to the original study that IslamOnline.net is  quoting bits from&#44; please?   UK Mosque Goers to Double Church Attendance: Study   http://www.islam-online.net/English/News/2005-09/04/article06.shtml   I find it harder to find out what &#8216;Christian Research&#8217; did publish   this rapport.   Religious belief &#8216;falling faster than church attendance&#8217;   http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml;jsessionid=CBCWNFDRXNMYZQF&#8230;   By Matt Barnwell and Amy Iggulden &#8211; (Filed: 17/08/2005)   Churches &#8216;on road to doom if trends continue&#8217;   http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2005/09/03/nchur&#8230;   By Jonathan Petre&#44; Religion Correspondent &#8211; (Filed: 03/09/2005)   It&#8217;s probably The Future of the Church&#44; Relgious trends # 5&#44;   2005/2006&#44; edited by Peter Brierly&#44; &nbsp;20 pounds&#44; to order at :   http://www.christian-research.org.uk/shop/html/shopindex.htm </p>
<p>Thanks for those links&#44; Alfred. It would still be good to see the  actual report itself rather than just some people&#8217;s interpretations of  it or bits they have extracted. However&#44; the overall impression seems  pretty clear.  I don&#8217;t think many people would argue that Britain is becoming a less  overtly Christian country. By that I mean that it is becoming less  based on Christian ethics than it used to be and people in general  know far less than they used to do about Christianity&#44; even if they  only knew it in the past in some sort of &quot;intellectual sense&quot; rather  than being practising Christians themselves.  While not wanting at all to play down the seriousness of the  situation&#44; which would be plain daft&#44; I would just like to point out  one or two good things that are happening:  1) As one of the comments quoted says&#44; the Church of England (my lot)  reckoned its congregations had increased by 1% in 2003. It is also  pertinent to point out that non-Sunday worship and fellowship is  becoming more important&#44; e.g. home groups meeting during the week show  a trend away from the more formalised approach to worship and  something of a move back to how the New Testament churches worked.  This is happening even in the C of E. (OK&#44; you can pick yourself up  off the floor).  2) Ten years ago the British churches employed about 500 paid youth  workers. Now it is around 7000 and rising. Perhaps we are getting real  about our faith at last.  Alan </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>  UK Mosque Goers to Double Church Attendance: Study  CAIRO &#44; September 4&#44; 2005 (IslamOnline.net) &#8211; The number of Muslims  praying at British mosques will be double the number of church goers by  2040&#44; according to a study by the British-based association Christian  Research.  Its more fun to learn about Bomb making.  The study&#44; The Future of The Church&#44; said that there will be nearly  twice as many Muslims at prayer in mosques on Friday as Christians  attending Sunday services&#44; reported the Telegraph on Sunday&#44; September  4.  British government and academic sources said in 2004 that some 930&#44;000  Muslims go to the mosque at least once a week against 916&#44;000 regular  worshipers in the Church of England&#44; the mother church of the Anglican  communion.  Mosques in Britain range from the splendor of Regents Park Mosque&#44; and  the big central mosques in Birmingham and Manchester &#44; to more modest  structures&#44; often converted from other buildings&#44; according to the BBC.  The first mosque in Britain is likely to have been one recorded in 1860  in Cardiff .  Another early British mosque was established in 1887 in Mount Vernon  Street in Liverpool &#44; and moved to Brougham Terrace in 1889&#44; where the  building&#44; which is now a Registry Office&#44; continued to be used as a  mosque until 1908.  Britain &#8217;s first purpose-built mosque was built at Woking in Surrey in  1894 with money from the ruler of Bhopal &#44; Shah Jehan.  In 1940 the British government allocated a sum of up to </p>
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		<title>Dishonest Conclusions</title>
		<link>http://christianityqa.com/islam-christianity/dishonest-conclusions-854506.html</link>
		<comments>http://christianityqa.com/islam-christianity/dishonest-conclusions-854506.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 04 Sep 2005 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Islam Christianity]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Question:
   However&#44; history shows that the Muslim world was   at its social&#44; economic and intellectual summit when it was ruled by   Islamic law.   But how high was that summit?   Perhaps it was comparable to that of The Holy Roman Empire&#44; but did   either [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h4><strong>Question:</strong></h4>
<p>   However&#44; history shows that the Muslim world was   at its social&#44; economic and intellectual summit when it was ruled by   Islamic law.   But how high was that summit?   Perhaps it was comparable to that of The Holy Roman Empire&#44; but did   either entity approach the social&#44; economic and intellectual level of   modern countries of today? </p>
<p>&nbsp; Most western industrial provincial (state) capitals have more industry&#44;  human and military capital than the whole Roman Empire. Most of  their citizens live a life beyond the dreams of any ancient king.  Intellectually&#44; well&#44; I leave that debate to the intellectuals. <img src='http://christianityqa.com/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif' alt=':-)' class='wp-smiley' />  </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p> However&#44; history shows that the Muslim world was  at its social&#44; economic and intellectual summit when it was ruled by  Islamic law. </p>
<p>But how high was that summit?  Perhaps it was comparable to that of The Holy Roman Empire&#44; but did  either entity approach the social&#44; economic and intellectual level of  modern countries of today?  It was only when the newly created nation-states began pursuing other  ideologies that the Islamic world fell into decline. </p>
<p>My impression is that the west gained an advantage as a result of  reducing reliance on religious dogma as a source of truth and placing  greater reliance on science and philosophy.  As a result Western countries were able to leap ahead in science&#44; and  consequently in medicine&#44; economics&#44; politics&#44; technology and so on.  Then competition between Western countries for resources drove them  into a competition for colonies&#8211;from which no weaker country was  safe. &nbsp;  How could Muslim countries effectively resist?  A number of non-Western countries resisted colonisation by introducing  the scientific and philosophical ideas that had allowed Western  countries to become powerful. These included Japan&#44; Thailand and  Turkey among others.  The example of Turkey is relevant to this discussion&#44; because Kemal  Atat</p>
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		<title>Islam Beheaded</title>
		<link>http://christianityqa.com/islam-christianity/islam-beheaded-855526.html</link>
		<comments>http://christianityqa.com/islam-christianity/islam-beheaded-855526.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 03 Sep 2005 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Islam Christianity]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Question:
  The Information Superhighway and the Death of Mohammedanism   &#34;Muhammad&#8217;s empire of faith has managed to thrive in the modern world for   one simple reason: Muslims have kept Muhammad&#8217;s dark past a secret. Indeed&#44;   they have gone beyond keeping it a secret; they have somehow convinced   [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h4><strong>Question:</strong></h4>
<p>  The Information Superhighway and the Death of Mohammedanism   &quot;Muhammad&#8217;s empire of faith has managed to thrive in the modern world for   one simple reason: Muslims have kept Muhammad&#8217;s dark past a secret. Indeed&#44;   they have gone beyond keeping it a secret; they have somehow convinced   themselves (and many others) that Muhammad was an outstanding moral   example&#44; perhaps even the greatest moral example of all time. Perpetuating   this fraud has been&#44; in my opinion&#44; the most stupendous deception in world   history.&quot;   http://answering-islam.org/Authors/Wood/islam_beheaded.htm </p>
<p>Answering-Islam is a Christian web site and their criticism has been  adequately answered on various Muslim web sites. Those who run the web  site have even acknowledged some of those rebuttals but after a while  end up repeating the same old false accusations. Some of their negative  comments can apply to Christianity as well and their usual insistence  that Prophet Muhammad should have played by the rules of the 21st  century&#44; as they understand them&#44; while ignoring Islam&#8217;s general  guidelines is only meant to deceive people who are interested in Islam  and would like to consider it as an alternative to Christianity. </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>The Information Superhighway and the Death of Mohammedanism  &quot;Muhammad</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>How Aisha Bhutta Converted her Parents, Family and 30 Friends to Islam</title>
		<link>http://christianityqa.com/islam-christianity/how-aisha-bhutta-converted-her-parents.html</link>
		<comments>http://christianityqa.com/islam-christianity/how-aisha-bhutta-converted-her-parents.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 24 Aug 2005 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Islam Christianity]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Question:
There are plenty of dumb people in Scotland. 

Response:
- Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text &#8211;  How Aisha Bhutta Converted her Parents&#44; Family and 30 Friends to Islam   Aisha Bhutta&#44; also known as Debbie Rogers&#44; is serene. She sits on the   sofa in big front room of her tenement [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h4><strong>Question:</strong></h4>
<p>There are plenty of dumb people in Scotland. </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>- Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text &#8211;  How Aisha Bhutta Converted her Parents&#44; Family and 30 Friends to Islam   Aisha Bhutta&#44; also known as Debbie Rogers&#44; is serene. She sits on the   sofa in big front room of her tenement flat in Cowcaddens&#44; Glasgow. The   walls are hung with quotations from the Koran&#44; a special clock to   remind the family of prayer times and posters of the Holy City of   Mecca. Aisha&#8217;s piercing blue eyes sparkle with evangelical zeal&#44; she   smiles with radiance only true believers possess. Her face is that of a   strong Scots lass &#8211; no nonsense&#44; good-humoured &#8211; but it is carefully   covered with a hijab.   For a good Christian girl to convert to Islam and marry a Muslim is   extraordinary enough. But more than that&#44; she has also converted her   parents&#44; most of the rest of her family and at least 30 friends and   neighbours.   Her family were austere Christians with whom Rogers regularly attended   Salvation Army meetings. When all the other teenagers in Britain were   kissing their George Michael posters goodnight&#44; Rogers had pictures of   Jesus up on her wall. And yet she found that Christianity was not   enough; there were too many unanswered questions and she felt   dissatisfied with the lack of disciplined structure for her beliefs.   &quot;There had to be more for me to obey than just doing prayers when I   felt like it.&quot;   Aisha had first seen her future husband&#44; Mohammad Bhutta&#44; when she was   10 and regular customer at the shop&#44; run by his family. She would see   him in the back&#44; praying. &quot;There was contentment and peace in what he   was doing. He said he was a Muslim. I said: What&#8217;s a Muslim?&quot;.   Later with his help she began looking deeper into Islam. By the age of   17&#44; she had read the entire Koran in Arabic. &quot;Everything I read&quot;&#44; she   says&#44; &quot;Was making sense.&quot;   She made the decision to convert at16. &quot;When I said the words&#44; it was   like a big burden I had been carrying on my shoulders had been thrown   off. I felt like a new-born baby.&quot;   Despite her conversion however&#44; Mohammed&#8217;s parents were against their   marrying. They saw her as a Western woman who would lead their eldest   son astray and give the family a bad name; she was&#44; Mohammed&#8217;s father   believed&#44; &quot;the biggest enemy.&quot;   Nevertheless&#44; the couple married in the local mosque. Aisha wore a   dress hand-sewn by Mohammed&#8217;s mother and sisters who sneaked into the   ceremony against the wishes of his father who refused to attend.   It was his elderly grandmother who paved the way for a bond between the   women. She arrived from Pakistan where mixed-race marriages were even   more taboo&#44; and insisted on meeting Aisha. She was so impressed by the   fact that she had learned the Koran and Punjabi that she convinced the   others; slowly&#44; Aisha&#44; now 32&#44; became one of the family.   Aisha&#8217;s parents&#44; Michael and Marjory Rogers&#44; though did attend the   wedding&#44; were more concerned with the clothes their daughter was now   wearing (the traditional shalwaar kameez) and what the neighbours would   think. Six years later&#44; Aisha embarked on a mission to convert them and   the rest of her family&#44; bar her sister (&quot;I&#8217;m still working on her). &quot;My   husband and I worked on my mum and dad&#44; telling them about Islam and   they saw the changes in me&#44; like I stopped answering back!&quot;   Her mother soon followed in her footsteps. Marjory Rogers changed her   name to Sumayyah and became a devout Muslim. &quot;She wore the hijab and   did her prayers on time and nothing ever mattered to her except her   connections with God.&quot;   Aisha&#8217;s father proved a more difficult recruit&#44; so she enlisted the   help of her newly converted mother (who has since died of cancer). &quot;My   mum and I used to talk to my father about Islam and we were sitting in   the sofa in the kitchen one day and he said: &quot;What are the words you   say when you become a Muslim?&quot; &quot;Me and my mum just jumped on top of   him.&quot; Three years later&#44; Aisha&#8217;s brother converted &quot;over the telephone   &#8211; thanks to BT&quot;&#44; then his wife and children followed&#44; followed by her   sister&#8217;s son.   It didn&#8217;t stop there. Her family converted&#44; Aisha turned her attention   to Cowcaddens&#44; with its tightly packed rows of crumbling&#44; gray tenement   flats. Every Monday for the past 13 years&#44; Aisha has held classes in   Islam for Scottish women. So far she has helped to convert over 30. The   women come from a bewildering array of backgrounds. Trudy&#44; a lecturer   at the University of Glasgow and a former Catholic&#44; attended Aisha&#8217;s   classes purely because she was commissioned to carry out some research.   But after six months of classes she converted&#44; deciding that   Christianity was riddled with &quot;logical inconsistencies&quot;. &quot;I could tell   she was beginning to be affected by the talks&quot;&#44; Aisha says. How could   she tell? &quot;I don&#8217;t know&#44; it was just a feeling.&quot;   The classes include Muslim girls tempted by Western ideals and needing   salvation&#44; practicing Muslim women who want an open forum for   discussion denied them at the local male-dominated mosque&#44; and those   simply interested in Islam. Aisha welcomes questions. &quot;We cannot expect   people blindly to believe.&quot;   Her husband&#44; Mohammad Bhutta&#44; now 41&#44; does not seem so driven to   convert Scottish lads to Muslim brothers. He occasionally helps out in   the family restaurant&#44; but his main aim in life is to ensure the   couple&#8217;s five children grow up as Muslims. The eldest&#44; Safia&#44; &quot;nearly   14&#44; Al-Hamdulillah (Praise be to God!)&quot;&#44; is not averse to a spot of   recruiting herself. One day she met a woman in the street and carried   her shopping&#44; the woman attended Aisha&#8217;s classes and is now a Muslim.   &quot;I can honestly say I have never regretted it&quot;&#44; Aisha says of her   conversion to Islam. &quot;Every marriage has its ups and downs and   sometimes you need something to pull you out of any hardship. But the   Prophet Peace be upon him&#44; said: &#8216;Every hardship has an ease.&#8217; So when   you&#8217;re going through a difficult stage&#44; you work for that ease to   come.&quot;   Mohammed is more romantic: &quot;I feel we have known each other for   centuries and must never part from one another. According to Islam&#44; you   are not just partners for life&#44; you can be partners in heaven as well&#44;   for ever. Its a beautiful thing&#44; you know.&quot;   http://www.islamweb.net/ver2/archive/article.php?lang=E&#038;id=36252 </p>
<p>If this doesn&#8217;t say it all..nothing does  Islam will replace collapsing Amerikan empire  Warning there are anti-Islam forgers and trolls amongst us&#44;  proceed with caution </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>WHAT ABOUT THOSE THAT CONVERT TO FALUN GANG IF THEY GET THIRTY LIKE THIS  WHORE SHOULD WE JOIN THEM.  DID ALL YOU ISLAMIC WHORES OF SATAN BECOME CHRISTIANS WHEN CHRISTIANITY WAS  THE FASTEST GROWING RELIGION  PETER </p>
<p> &#8211; Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text &#8211; How Aisha Bhutta Converted her Parents&#44; Family and 30 Friends to Islam   Aisha Bhutta&#44; also known as Debbie Rogers&#44; is serene. She sits on the   sofa in big front room of her tenement flat in Cowcaddens&#44; Glasgow. The   walls are hung with quotations from the Koran&#44; a special clock to   remind the family of prayer times and posters of the Holy City of   Mecca. Aisha&#8217;s piercing blue eyes sparkle with evangelical zeal&#44; she   smiles with radiance only true believers possess. Her face is that of a   strong Scots lass &#8211; no nonsense&#44; good-humoured &#8211; but it is carefully   covered with a hijab.   For a good Christian girl to convert to Islam and marry a Muslim is   extraordinary enough. But more than that&#44; she has also converted her   parents&#44; most of the rest of her family and at least 30 friends and   neighbours.   Her family were austere Christians with whom Rogers regularly attended   Salvation Army meetings. When all the other teenagers in Britain were   kissing their George Michael posters goodnight&#44; Rogers had pictures of   Jesus up on her wall. And yet she found that Christianity was not   enough; there were too many unanswered questions and she felt   dissatisfied with the lack of disciplined structure for her beliefs.   &quot;There had to be more for me to obey than just doing prayers when I   felt like it.&quot;   Aisha had first seen her future husband&#44; Mohammad Bhutta&#44; when she was   10 and regular customer at the shop&#44; run by his family. She would see   him in the back&#44; praying. &quot;There was contentment and peace in what he   was doing. He said he was a Muslim. I said: What&#8217;s a Muslim?&quot;.   Later with his help she began looking deeper into Islam. By the age of   17&#44; she had read the entire Koran in Arabic. &quot;Everything I read&quot;&#44; she   says&#44; &quot;Was making sense.&quot;   She made the decision to convert at16. &quot;When I said the words&#44; it was   like a big burden I had been carrying on my shoulders had been thrown   off. I felt like a new-born baby.&quot;   Despite her conversion however&#44; Mohammed&#8217;s parents were against their   marrying. They saw her as a Western woman who would lead their eldest   son astray and give the family a bad name; she was&#44; Mohammed&#8217;s father   believed&#44; &quot;the biggest enemy.&quot;   Nevertheless&#44; the couple married in the local mosque. Aisha wore a   dress hand-sewn by Mohammed&#8217;s mother and sisters who sneaked into the   ceremony against the wishes of his father who refused to attend.   It was his elderly grandmother who paved the way for a bond between the   women. She arrived from Pakistan where mixed-race marriages were even   more taboo&#44; and insisted on meeting Aisha. She was so impressed by the   fact that she had learned the Koran and Punjabi that she convinced the   others; slowly&#44; Aisha&#44; now 32&#44; became one of the family.   Aisha&#8217;s parents&#44; Michael and Marjory Rogers&#44; though did attend the   wedding&#44; were more concerned with the clothes their daughter was now   wearing (the traditional shalwaar kameez) and what the neighbours would   think. Six years later&#44; Aisha embarked on a mission to convert them and   the rest of her family&#44; bar her sister (&quot;I&#8217;m still working on her). &quot;My   husband and I worked on my mum and dad&#44; telling them about Islam and   they saw the changes in me&#44; like I stopped answering back!&quot;   Her mother soon followed in her footsteps. Marjory Rogers changed her   name to Sumayyah and became a devout Muslim. &quot;She wore the hijab and   did her prayers on time and nothing ever mattered to her except her   connections with God.&quot;   Aisha&#8217;s father proved a more difficult recruit&#44; so she enlisted the   help of her newly converted mother (who has since died of cancer). &quot;My   mum and I used to talk to my father about Islam and we were sitting in   the sofa in the kitchen one day and he said: &quot;What are the words you   say when you become a Muslim?&quot; &quot;Me and my mum just jumped on top of   him.&quot; Three years later&#44; Aisha&#8217;s brother converted &quot;over the telephone   &#8211; thanks to BT&quot;&#44; then his wife and children followed&#44; followed by her   sister&#8217;s son.   It didn&#8217;t stop there. Her family converted&#44; Aisha turned her attention   to Cowcaddens&#44; with its tightly packed rows of crumbling&#44; gray tenement   flats. Every Monday for the past 13 years&#44; Aisha has held classes in   Islam for Scottish women. So far she has helped to convert over 30. The   women come from a bewildering array of backgrounds. Trudy&#44; a lecturer   at the University of Glasgow and a former Catholic&#44; attended Aisha&#8217;s   classes purely because she was commissioned to carry out some research.   But after six months of classes she converted&#44; deciding that   Christianity was riddled with &quot;logical inconsistencies&quot;. &quot;I could tell   she was beginning to be affected by the talks&quot;&#44; Aisha says. How could   she tell? &quot;I don&#8217;t know&#44; it was just a feeling.&quot;   The classes include Muslim girls tempted by Western ideals and needing   salvation&#44; practicing Muslim women who want an open forum for   discussion denied them at the local male-dominated mosque&#44; and those   simply interested in Islam. Aisha welcomes questions. &quot;We cannot expect   people blindly to believe.&quot;   Her husband&#44; Mohammad Bhutta&#44; now 41&#44; does not seem so driven to   convert Scottish lads to Muslim brothers. He occasionally helps out in   the family restaurant&#44; but his main aim in life is to ensure the   couple&#8217;s five children grow up as Muslims. The eldest&#44; Safia&#44; &quot;nearly   14&#44; Al-Hamdulillah (Praise be to God!)&quot;&#44; is not averse to a spot of   recruiting herself. One day she met a woman in the street and carried   her shopping&#44; the woman attended Aisha&#8217;s classes and is now a Muslim.   &quot;I can honestly say I have never regretted it&quot;&#44; Aisha says of her   conversion to Islam. &quot;Every marriage has its ups and downs and   sometimes you need something to pull you out of any hardship. But the   Prophet Peace be upon him&#44; said: &#8216;Every hardship has an ease.&#8217; So when   you&#8217;re going through a difficult stage&#44; you work for that ease to   come.&quot;   Mohammed is more romantic: &quot;I feel we have known each other for   centuries and must never part from one another. According to Islam&#44; you   are not just partners for life&#44; you can be partners in heaven as well&#44;   for ever. Its a beautiful thing&#44; you know.&quot;   http://www.islamweb.net/ver2/archive/article.php?lang=E&#038;id=36252  </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>&#8230;some more ignorate people have converted to islam.  http://www.truthandgrace.com/muslimlegacy.htm  allah u fubar </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>- Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text &#8211;  How Aisha Bhutta Converted her Parents&#44; Family and 30 Friends to Islam   Aisha Bhutta&#44; also known as Debbie Rogers&#44; is serene. She sits on the   sofa in big front room of her tenement flat in Cowcaddens&#44; Glasgow. The   walls are hung with quotations from the Koran&#44; a special clock to   remind the family of prayer times and posters of the Holy City of   Mecca. Aisha&#8217;s piercing blue eyes sparkle with evangelical zeal&#44; she   smiles with radiance only true believers possess. Her face is that of a   strong Scots lass &#8211; no nonsense&#44; good-humoured &#8211; but it is carefully   covered with a hijab.   For a good Christian girl to convert to Islam and marry a Muslim is   extraordinary enough. But more than that&#44; she has also converted her   parents&#44; most of the rest of her family and at least 30 friends and   neighbours.   Her family were austere Christians with whom Rogers regularly attended   Salvation Army meetings. When all the other teenagers in Britain were   kissing their George Michael posters goodnight&#44; Rogers had pictures of   Jesus up on her wall. And yet she found that Christianity was not   enough; there were too many unanswered questions and she felt   dissatisfied with the lack of disciplined structure for her beliefs.   &quot;There had to be more for me to obey than just doing prayers when I   felt like it.&quot;   Aisha had first seen her future husband&#44; Mohammad Bhutta&#44; when she was   10 and regular customer at the shop&#44; run by his family. She would see   him in the back&#44; praying. &quot;There was contentment and peace in what he   was doing. He said he was a Muslim. I said: What&#8217;s a Muslim?&quot;.   Later with his help she began looking deeper into Islam. By the age of   17&#44; she had read the entire Koran in Arabic. &quot;Everything I read&quot;&#44; she   says&#44; &quot;Was making sense.&quot;   She made the decision to convert at16. &quot;When I said the words&#44; it was   like a big burden I had been carrying on my shoulders had been thrown   off. I felt like a new-born baby.&quot;   Despite her conversion however&#44; Mohammed&#8217;s parents were against their   marrying. They saw her as a Western woman who would lead their eldest   son astray and give the family a bad name; she was&#44; Mohammed&#8217;s father   believed&#44; &quot;the biggest enemy.&quot;   Nevertheless&#44; the couple married in the local mosque. Aisha wore a   dress hand-sewn by Mohammed&#8217;s mother and sisters who sneaked into the   ceremony against the wishes of his father who refused to attend.   It was his elderly grandmother who paved the way for a bond between the   women. She arrived from Pakistan where mixed-race marriages were even   more taboo&#44; and insisted on meeting Aisha. She was so impressed by the   fact that she had learned the Koran and Punjabi that she convinced the   others; slowly&#44; Aisha&#44; now 32&#44; became one of the family.   Aisha&#8217;s parents&#44; Michael and Marjory Rogers&#44; though did attend the   wedding&#44; were more concerned with the clothes their daughter was now   wearing (the traditional shalwaar kameez) and what the neighbours would   think. Six years later&#44; Aisha embarked on a mission to convert them and   the rest of her family&#44; bar her sister (&quot;I&#8217;m still working on her). &quot;My   husband and I worked on my mum and dad&#44; telling them about Islam and   they saw the changes in me&#44; like I stopped answering back!&quot;   Her mother soon followed in her footsteps. Marjory Rogers changed her   name to Sumayyah and became a devout Muslim. &quot;She wore the hijab and   did her prayers on time and nothing ever mattered to her except her   connections with God.&quot;   Aisha&#8217;s father proved a more difficult recruit&#44; so she enlisted the   help of her newly converted mother (who has since died of cancer). &quot;My   mum and I used to talk to my father about Islam and we were sitting in   the sofa in the kitchen one day and he said: &quot;What are the words you   say when you become a Muslim?&quot; &quot;Me and my mum just jumped on top of   him.&quot; Three years later&#44; Aisha&#8217;s brother converted &quot;over the telephone   &#8211; thanks to BT&quot;&#44; then his wife and children followed&#44; followed by her   sister&#8217;s son.   It didn&#8217;t stop there. Her family converted&#44; Aisha turned her attention   to Cowcaddens&#44; with its tightly packed rows of crumbling&#44; gray tenement   flats. Every Monday for the past 13 years&#44; Aisha has held classes in   Islam for Scottish women. So far she has helped to convert over 30. The   women come from a bewildering array of backgrounds. Trudy&#44; a lecturer   at the University of Glasgow and a former Catholic&#44; attended Aisha&#8217;s   classes purely because she was commissioned to carry out some research.   But after six months of classes she converted&#44; deciding that   Christianity was riddled with &quot;logical inconsistencies&quot;. &quot;I could tell   she was beginning to be affected by the talks&quot;&#44; Aisha says. How could   she tell? &quot;I don&#8217;t know&#44; it was just a feeling.&quot;   The classes include Muslim girls tempted by Western ideals and needing   salvation&#44; practicing Muslim women who want an open forum for   discussion denied them at the local male-dominated mosque&#44; and those   simply interested in Islam. Aisha welcomes questions. &quot;We cannot expect   people blindly to believe.&quot;   Her husband&#44; Mohammad Bhutta&#44; now 41&#44; does not seem so driven to   convert Scottish lads to Muslim brothers. He occasionally helps out in   the family restaurant&#44; but his main aim in life is to ensure the   couple&#8217;s five children grow up as Muslims. The eldest&#44; Safia&#44; &quot;nearly   14&#44; Al-Hamdulillah (Praise be to God!)&quot;&#44; is not averse to a spot of   recruiting herself. One day she met a woman in the street and carried   her shopping&#44; the woman attended Aisha&#8217;s classes and is now a Muslim.   &quot;I can honestly say I have never regretted it&quot;&#44; Aisha says of her   conversion to Islam. &quot;Every marriage has its ups and downs and   sometimes you need something to pull you out of any hardship. But the   Prophet Peace be upon him&#44; said: &#8216;Every hardship has an ease.&#8217; So when   you&#8217;re going through a difficult stage&#44; you work for that ease to   come.&quot;   Mohammed is more romantic: &quot;I feel we have known each other for   centuries and must never part from one another. According to Islam&#44; you   are not just partners for life&#44; you can be partners in heaven as well&#44;   for ever. Its a beautiful thing&#44; you know.&quot;   http://www.islamweb.net/ver2/archive/article.php?lang=E&#038;id=36252 </p>
<p>She sure sounds like one ignorant BITCH&#44; doesn&#8217;t she? </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>- Hide quoted text &#8212; Show quoted text &#8211;  How Aisha Bhutta Converted her Parents&#44; Family and 30 Friends to Islam   Aisha Bhutta&#44; also known as Debbie Rogers&#44; is serene. She sits on the   sofa in big front room of her tenement flat in Cowcaddens&#44; Glasgow. The   walls are hung with quotations from the Koran&#44; a special clock to   remind the family of prayer times and posters of the Holy City of   Mecca. Aisha&#8217;s piercing blue eyes sparkle with evangelical zeal&#44; she   smiles with radiance only true believers possess. Her face is that of a   strong Scots lass &#8211; no nonsense&#44; good-humoured &#8211; but it is carefully   covered with a hijab.   For a good Christian girl to convert to Islam and marry a Muslim is   extraordinary enough. But more than that&#44; she has also converted her   parents&#44; most of the rest of her family and at least 30 friends and   neighbours.   Her family were austere Christians with whom Rogers regularly attended   Salvation Army meetings. When all the other teenagers in Britain were   kissing their George Michael posters goodnight&#44; Rogers had pictures of   Jesus up on her wall. And yet she found that Christianity was not   enough; there were too many unanswered questions and she felt   dissatisfied with the lack of disciplined structure for her beliefs.   &quot;There had to be more for me to obey than just doing prayers when I   felt like it.&quot;   Aisha had first seen her future husband&#44; Mohammad Bhutta&#44; when she was   10 and regular customer at the shop&#44; run by his family. She would see   him in the back&#44; praying. &quot;There was contentment and peace in what he   was doing. He said he was a Muslim. I said: What&#8217;s a Muslim?&quot;.   Later with his help she began looking deeper into Islam. By the age of   17&#44; she had read the entire Koran in Arabic. &quot;Everything I read&quot;&#44; she   says&#44; &quot;Was making sense.&quot;   She made the decision to convert at16. &quot;When I said the words&#44; it was   like a big burden I had been carrying on my shoulders had been thrown   off. I felt like a new-born baby.&quot;   Despite her conversion however&#44; Mohammed&#8217;s parents were against their   marrying. They saw her as a Western woman who would lead their eldest   son astray and give the family a bad name; she was&#44; Mohammed&#8217;s father   believed&#44; &quot;the biggest enemy.&quot;   Nevertheless&#44; the couple married in the local mosque. Aisha wore a   dress hand-sewn by Mohammed&#8217;s mother and sisters who sneaked into the   ceremony against the wishes of his father who refused to attend.   It was his elderly grandmother who paved the way for a bond between the   women. She arrived from Pakistan where mixed-race marriages were even   more taboo&#44; and insisted on meeting Aisha. She was so impressed by the   fact that she had learned the Koran and Punjabi that she convinced the   others; slowly&#44; Aisha&#44; now 32&#44; became one of the family.   Aisha&#8217;s parents&#44; Michael and Marjory Rogers&#44; though did attend the   wedding&#44; were more concerned with the clothes their daughter was now   wearing (the traditional shalwaar kameez) and what the neighbours would   think. Six years later&#44; Aisha embarked on a mission to convert them and   the rest of her family&#44; bar her sister (&quot;I&#8217;m still working on her). &quot;My   husband and I worked on my mum and dad&#44; telling them about Islam and   they saw the changes in me&#44; like I stopped answering back!&quot;   Her mother soon followed in her footsteps. Marjory Rogers changed her   name to Sumayyah and became a devout Muslim. &quot;She wore the hijab and   did her prayers on time and nothing ever mattered to her except her   connections with God.&quot;   Aisha&#8217;s father proved a more difficult recruit&#44; so she enlisted the   help of her newly converted mother (who has since died of cancer). &quot;My   mum and I used to talk to my father about Islam and we were sitting in   the sofa in the kitchen one day and he said: &quot;What are the words you   say when you become a Muslim?&quot; &quot;Me and my mum just jumped on top of   him.&quot; Three years later&#44; Aisha&#8217;s brother converted &quot;over the telephone   &#8211; thanks to BT&quot;&#44; then his wife and children followed&#44; followed by her   sister&#8217;s son.   It didn&#8217;t stop there. Her family converted&#44; Aisha turned her attention   to Cowcaddens&#44; with its tightly packed rows of crumbling&#44; gray tenement   flats. Every Monday for the past 13 years&#44; Aisha has held classes in   Islam for Scottish women. So far she has helped to convert over 30. The   women come from a bewildering array of backgrounds. Trudy&#44; a lecturer   at the University of Glasgow and a former Catholic&#44; attended Aisha&#8217;s   classes purely because she was commissioned to carry out some research.   But after six months of classes she converted&#44; deciding that   Christianity was riddled with &quot;logical inconsistencies&quot;. &quot;I could tell   she was beginning to be affected by the talks&quot;&#44; Aisha says. How could   she tell? &quot;I don&#8217;t know&#44; it was just a feeling.&quot;   The classes include Muslim girls tempted by Western ideals and needing   salvation&#44; practicing Muslim women who want an open forum for   discussion denied them at the local male-dominated mosque&#44; and those   simply interested in Islam. Aisha welcomes questions. &quot;We cannot expect   people blindly to believe.&quot;   Her husband&#44; Mohammad Bhutta&#44; now 41&#44; does not seem so driven to   convert Scottish lads to Muslim brothers. He occasionally helps out in   the family restaurant&#44; but his main aim in life is to ensure the   couple&#8217;s five children grow up as Muslims. The eldest&#44; Safia&#44; &quot;nearly   14&#44; Al-Hamdulillah (Praise be to God!)&quot;&#44; is not averse to a spot of   recruiting herself. One day she met a woman in the street and carried   her shopping&#44; the woman attended Aisha&#8217;s classes and is now a Muslim.   &quot;I can honestly say I have never regretted it&quot;&#44; Aisha says of her   conversion to Islam. &quot;Every marriage has its ups and downs and   sometimes you need something to pull you out of any hardship. But the   Prophet Peace be upon him&#44; said: &#8216;Every hardship has an ease.&#8217; So when   you&#8217;re going through a difficult stage&#44; you work for that ease to   come.&quot;   Mohammed is more romantic: &quot;I feel we have known each other for   centuries and must never part from one another. According to Islam&#44; you   are not just partners for life&#44; you can be partners in heaven as well&#44;   for ever. Its a beautiful thing&#44; you know.&quot;   http://www.islamweb.net/ver2/archive/article.php?lang=E&#038;id=36252 </p>
<p>If this doesn&#8217;t say it all..nothing does  Islam will replace collapsing Amerikan empire  Warning there are anti-Islam forgers and trolls amongst us&#44; proceed  with caution </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>How Aisha Bhutta Converted her Parents&#44; Family and 30 Friends to Islam  Aisha Bhutta&#44; also known as Debbie Rogers&#44; is serene. She sits on the  sofa in big front room of her tenement flat in Cowcaddens&#44; Glasgow. The  walls are hung with quotations from the Koran&#44; a special clock to  remind the family of prayer times and posters of the Holy City of  Mecca. Aisha&#8217;s piercing blue eyes sparkle with evangelical zeal&#44; she  smiles with radiance only true believers possess. Her face is that of a  strong Scots lass &#8211; no nonsense&#44; good-humoured &#8211; but it is carefully  covered with a hijab.  For a good Christian girl to convert to Islam and marry a Muslim is  extraordinary enough. But more than that&#44; she has also converted her  parents&#44; most of the rest of her family and at least 30 friends and  neighbours.  Her family were austere Christians with whom Rogers regularly attended  Salvation Army meetings. When all the other teenagers in Britain were  kissing their George Michael posters goodnight&#44; Rogers had pictures of  Jesus up on her wall. And yet she found that Christianity was not  enough; there were too many unanswered questions and she felt  dissatisfied with the lack of disciplined structure for her beliefs.  &quot;There had to be more for me to obey than just doing prayers when I  felt like it.&quot;  Aisha had first seen her future husband&#44; Mohammad Bhutta&#44; when she was  10 and regular customer at the shop&#44; run by his family. She would see  him in the back&#44; praying. &quot;There was contentment and peace in what he  was doing. He said he was a Muslim. I said: What&#8217;s a Muslim?&quot;.  Later with his help she began looking deeper into Islam. By the age of  17&#44; she had read the entire Koran in Arabic. &quot;Everything I read&quot;&#44; she  says&#44; &quot;Was making sense.&quot;  She made the decision to convert at16. &quot;When I said the words&#44; it was  like a big burden I had been carrying on my shoulders had been thrown  off. I felt like a new-born baby.&quot;  Despite her conversion however&#44; Mohammed&#8217;s parents were against their  marrying. They saw her as a Western woman who would lead their eldest  son astray and give the family a bad name; she was&#44; Mohammed&#8217;s father  believed&#44; &quot;the biggest enemy.&quot;  Nevertheless&#44; the couple married in the local mosque. Aisha wore a  dress hand-sewn by Mohammed&#8217;s mother and sisters who sneaked into the  ceremony against the wishes of his father who refused to attend.  It was his elderly grandmother who paved the way for a bond between the  women. She arrived from Pakistan where mixed-race marriages were even  more taboo&#44; and insisted on meeting Aisha. She was so impressed by the  fact that she had learned the Koran and Punjabi that she convinced the  others; slowly&#44; Aisha&#44; now 32&#44; became one of the family.  Aisha&#8217;s parents&#44; Michael and Marjory Rogers&#44; though did attend the  wedding&#44; were more concerned with the clothes their daughter was now  wearing (the traditional shalwaar kameez) and what the neighbours would  think. Six years later&#44; Aisha embarked on a mission to convert them and  the rest of her family&#44; bar her sister (&quot;I&#8217;m still working on her). &quot;My  husband and I worked on my mum and dad&#44; telling them about Islam and  they saw the changes in me&#44; like I stopped answering back!&quot;  Her mother soon followed in her footsteps. Marjory Rogers changed her  name to Sumayyah and became a devout Muslim. &quot;She wore the hijab and  did her prayers on time and nothing ever mattered to her except her  connections with God.&quot;  Aisha&#8217;s father proved a more difficult recruit&#44; so she enlisted the  help of her newly converted mother (who has since died of cancer). &quot;My  mum and I used to talk to my father about Islam and we were sitting in  the sofa in the kitchen one day and he said: &quot;What are the words you  say when you become a Muslim?&quot; &quot;Me and my mum just jumped on top of  him.&quot; Three years later&#44; Aisha&#8217;s brother converted &quot;over the telephone  &#8211; thanks to BT&quot;&#44; then his wife and children followed&#44; followed by her  sister&#8217;s son.  It didn&#8217;t stop there. Her family converted&#44; Aisha turned her attention  to Cowcaddens&#44; with its tightly packed rows of crumbling&#44; gray tenement  flats. Every Monday for the past 13 years&#44; Aisha has held classes in  Islam for Scottish women. So far she has helped to convert over 30. The  women come from a bewildering array of backgrounds. Trudy&#44; a lecturer  at the University of Glasgow and a former Catholic&#44; attended Aisha&#8217;s  classes purely because she was commissioned to carry out some research.  But after six months of classes she converted&#44; deciding that  Christianity was riddled with &quot;logical inconsistencies&quot;. &quot;I could tell  she was beginning to be affected by the talks&quot;&#44; Aisha says. How could  she tell? &quot;I don&#8217;t know&#44; it was just a feeling.&quot;  The classes include Muslim girls tempted by Western ideals and needing  salvation&#44; practicing Muslim women who want an open forum for  discussion denied them at the local male-dominated mosque&#44; and those  simply interested in Islam. Aisha welcomes questions. &quot;We cannot expect  people blindly to believe.&quot;  Her husband&#44; Mohammad Bhutta&#44; now 41&#44; does not seem so driven to  convert Scottish lads to Muslim brothers. He occasionally helps out in  the family restaurant&#44; but his main aim in life is to ensure the  couple&#8217;s five children grow up as Muslims. The eldest&#44; Safia&#44; &quot;nearly  14&#44; Al-Hamdulillah (Praise be to God!)&quot;&#44; is not averse to a spot of  recruiting herself. One day she met a woman in the street and carried  her shopping&#44; the woman attended Aisha&#8217;s classes and is now a Muslim.  &quot;I can honestly say I have never regretted it&quot;&#44; Aisha says of her  conversion to Islam. &quot;Every marriage has its ups and downs and  sometimes you need something to pull you out of any hardship. But the  Prophet Peace be upon him&#44; said: &#8216;Every hardship has an ease.&#8217; So when  you&#8217;re going through a difficult stage&#44; you work for that ease to  come.&quot;  Mohammed is more romantic: &quot;I feel we have known each other for  centuries and must never part from one another. According to Islam&#44; you  are not just partners for life&#44; you can be partners in heaven as well&#44;  for ever. Its a beautiful thing&#44; you know.&quot;  http://www.islamweb.net/ver2/archive/article.php?lang=E&#038;id=36252 </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4></p>
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		<title>Pope &#8211; Roots of Terror, Islam</title>
		<link>http://christianityqa.com/islam-christianity/pope-roots-of-terror.html</link>
		<comments>http://christianityqa.com/islam-christianity/pope-roots-of-terror.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 24 Aug 2005 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Islam Christianity]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://christianityqa.com/uncategorized/pope-roots-of-terror.html</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Question:
Your message was cancelled by cretin Feris Jewwad  Pope Attacks Roots of Terror  # In pointed remarks&#44; the pontiff tells Muslim leaders in Germany that  &#8216;teaching is the vehicle&#8217; to promote peace or sow seeds of fanaticism.  By Tracy Wilkinson&#44; Times Staff Writer  August 21&#44; 2005 latimes.com  COLOGNE&#44; Germany [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h4><strong>Question:</strong></h4>
<p>Your message was cancelled by cretin Feris Jewwad  Pope Attacks Roots of Terror  # In pointed remarks&#44; the pontiff tells Muslim leaders in Germany that  &#8216;teaching is the vehicle&#8217; to promote peace or sow seeds of fanaticism.  By Tracy Wilkinson&#44; Times Staff Writer  August 21&#44; 2005 latimes.com  COLOGNE&#44; Germany &#8211; Pope Benedict XVI chose unusually tough language  Saturday to tell Muslim leaders they must work harder to combat  terrorism and steer youths away from &quot;the darkness of a new barbarism.&quot;  On the third day of his first foreign trip as pope&#44; Benedict met with  10 representatives of Germany&#8217;s growing Muslim community as part of his  effort to reach out to other faiths. But he quickly dispensed with the  diplomatic niceties and zeroed in on the &quot;cruel fanaticism&quot; of  terrorism and the responsibility of religious leaders and educators to  prevent it.  &quot;You guide Muslim believers and train them in the Islamic faith&#44;&quot; he  told his select audience at the archdiocese in Cologne. &quot;Teaching is  the vehicle through which ideas and convictions are transmitted&#8230;.  There is no room for apathy and disengagement&#44; and even less for  partiality and sectarianism.&quot;  Benedict condemned terrorism as a &quot;perverse and cruel decision&quot; that  &quot;shows contempt for the sacred right to life and undermines the very  foundations of all civil society.&quot; Terrorists&#44; he said&#44; falsely use  religion to poison relations among faiths.  Benedict&#8217;s meeting with the Muslims was not televised&#44; in contrast to  his high-profile visit to a synagogue the day before.  His pointed remarks were made to a community with whom his relations  were already strained&#44; and marked a departure from the papacy of John  Paul II&#44; who worked to promote interfaith dialogue. In his previous  post as enforcer of church doctrine&#44; the former Cardinal Joseph  Ratzinger had been quite critical of Islam in a number of his writings.  Before and after becoming pope in April&#44; he voiced alarm at the loss of  Christian identity. He was particularly concerned about Europe&#44; where  the rise of multiculturalism has included the accommodation of Islam.  Benedict has been careful&#44; however&#44; not to link terrorism and Islam&#44;  and did not go along with an aide&#8217;s attempt to condemn the July 7  bombings in London by suspected Islamic militants as an anti-Christian  act.  Several Muslim community leaders said they were disappointed that the  pope did not visit a mosque&#44; as he had the synagogue&#44; and said that had  he done so his message would have had more power.  Emerging from Saturday&#8217;s meeting&#44; Muslim leaders sought to find common  ground with the pontiff.  &quot;Terrorism is not only a problem that comes up in countries where there  are Christians&#44;&quot; said Ridvan Cakir&#44; president of the Turkish-Islamic  Union in Europe&#44; who led the delegation that met with the pope.  &quot;It&#8217;s a problem that we all share&#44;&quot; he told reporters. &quot;We all have to  be aware of that problem and fight against it.&quot;  Benedict&#8217;s relations with Islam were already much more complicated than  those of John Paul&#44; the first pope to visit a mosque. Muslim leaders  here said privately that they were very worried about the new pontiff  and what they considered to be his anti-Islamic views.  Most Muslims in Germany are of Turkish heritage. As cardinal&#44; Benedict  had spoken out against admitting predominantly Muslim Turkey to the  European Union&#44; saying such a move would dilute the continent&#8217;s  Christian character. Turks were outraged at what they saw as an ethnic  slur.  Mahmut Askar&#44; a prominent Muslim leader in Cologne&#44; said he was not  surprised at the pope&#8217;s stern lecture. Muslims&#44; he said&#44; are routinely  and unfairly blamed as a group for the terrorism committed by a handful  of extremists.  &quot;We are used to this&#44;&quot; Askar&#44; a Turkish-born engineer who has lived in  Germany for more than three decades&#44; said in an interview. He is the  secretary-general of a group that represents Turkish Muslims in  Germany.  &quot;No one would blame Christianity for terror acts committed by a  Christian. But Muslims are always blamed&#44;&quot; he said. &quot;What else can we  do to show the world that we are not born terrorists?&quot;  Still&#44; Askar chose his words carefully and chose to thank the pope  rather than criticize him.  &quot;With everyone referring these days to the &#8216;war of civilizations&#44;&#8217; it  is very important that we dialogue&#44;&quot; he said.  Germany has one of the oldest and largest Muslim populations in Western  Europe. The country is home to at least 3 million Muslims&#44; about 2.5  million of whom are Turks who for decades lived in a largely separate  culture that only now is integrating into the larger German society.  Seyda Can&#44; one of three women who attended the meeting with the pope  and one of two wearing a head scarf&#44; said she believed in the pope&#8217;s  call for a stronger dialogue between Christians and Muslims.  &quot;When we have this dialogue&#44; we will have trust and we won&#8217;t be  afraid&#44;&quot; Can&#44; 27&#44; told reporters after the meeting. &quot;With the dialogue&#44;  terrorism will be finished.&quot;  Benedict is in Cologne to preside over World Youth Day&#44; a raucous  festival that has brought an estimated 700&#44;000 young Catholics to this  city on the Rhine for a week of prayer&#44; music and celebration. The  young pilgrims&#44; from nearly 200 countries&#44; gathered in a massive field  outside the city for a three-hour prayer vigil with the pope Saturday  night and then camped out so they could attend Benedict&#8217;s concluding  Mass today.  In his remarks to the Muslim leaders&#44; almost all of whom were Turkish&#44;  Benedict acknowledged that Christians&#44; too&#44; had killed in the name of  religion.  &quot;How many pages of history record battles&#44; and even wars&#44; that have  been waged with both sides invoking the name of God&#44; as if fighting and  killing the enemy could be pleasing to him?&quot; he said.  &quot;The recollection of these sad events should fill us with shame&#44; for we  know only too well what atrocities have been committed in the name of  religion.&quot; </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4>
<p>Pope Attacks Roots of Terror  # In pointed remarks&#44; the pontiff tells Muslim leaders in Germany that  &#8216;teaching is the vehicle&#8217; to promote peace or sow seeds of fanaticism.  By Tracy Wilkinson&#44; Times Staff Writer  August 21&#44; 2005 latimes.com  COLOGNE&#44; Germany &#8211; Pope Benedict XVI chose unusually tough language  Saturday to tell Muslim leaders they must work harder to combat  terrorism and steer youths away from &quot;the darkness of a new barbarism.&quot;  On the third day of his first foreign trip as pope&#44; Benedict met with  10 representatives of Germany&#8217;s growing Muslim community as part of his  effort to reach out to other faiths. But he quickly dispensed with the  diplomatic niceties and zeroed in on the &quot;cruel fanaticism&quot; of  terrorism and the responsibility of religious leaders and educators to  prevent it.  &quot;You guide Muslim believers and train them in the Islamic faith&#44;&quot; he  told his select audience at the archdiocese in Cologne. &quot;Teaching is  the vehicle through which ideas and convictions are transmitted&#8230;.  There is no room for apathy and disengagement&#44; and even less for  partiality and sectarianism.&quot;  Benedict condemned terrorism as a &quot;perverse and cruel decision&quot; that  &quot;shows contempt for the sacred right to life and undermines the very  foundations of all civil society.&quot; Terrorists&#44; he said&#44; falsely use  religion to poison relations among faiths.  Benedict&#8217;s meeting with the Muslims was not televised&#44; in contrast to  his high-profile visit to a synagogue the day before.  His pointed remarks were made to a community with whom his relations  were already strained&#44; and marked a departure from the papacy of John  Paul II&#44; who worked to promote interfaith dialogue. In his previous  post as enforcer of church doctrine&#44; the former Cardinal Joseph  Ratzinger had been quite critical of Islam in a number of his writings.  Before and after becoming pope in April&#44; he voiced alarm at the loss of  Christian identity. He was particularly concerned about Europe&#44; where  the rise of multiculturalism has included the accommodation of Islam.  Benedict has been careful&#44; however&#44; not to link terrorism and Islam&#44;  and did not go along with an aide&#8217;s attempt to condemn the July 7  bombings in London by suspected Islamic militants as an anti-Christian  act.  Several Muslim community leaders said they were disappointed that the  pope did not visit a mosque&#44; as he had the synagogue&#44; and said that had  he done so his message would have had more power.  Emerging from Saturday&#8217;s meeting&#44; Muslim leaders sought to find common  ground with the pontiff.  &quot;Terrorism is not only a problem that comes up in countries where there  are Christians&#44;&quot; said Ridvan Cakir&#44; president of the Turkish-Islamic  Union in Europe&#44; who led the delegation that met with the pope.  &quot;It&#8217;s a problem that we all share&#44;&quot; he told reporters. &quot;We all have to  be aware of that problem and fight against it.&quot;  Benedict&#8217;s relations with Islam were already much more complicated than  those of John Paul&#44; the first pope to visit a mosque. Muslim leaders  here said privately that they were very worried about the new pontiff  and what they considered to be his anti-Islamic views.  Most Muslims in Germany are of Turkish heritage. As cardinal&#44; Benedict  had spoken out against admitting predominantly Muslim Turkey to the  European Union&#44; saying such a move would dilute the continent&#8217;s  Christian character. Turks were outraged at what they saw as an ethnic  slur.  Mahmut Askar&#44; a prominent Muslim leader in Cologne&#44; said he was not  surprised at the pope&#8217;s stern lecture. Muslims&#44; he said&#44; are routinely  and unfairly blamed as a group for the terrorism committed by a handful  of extremists.  &quot;We are used to this&#44;&quot; Askar&#44; a Turkish-born engineer who has lived in  Germany for more than three decades&#44; said in an interview. He is the  secretary-general of a group that represents Turkish Muslims in  Germany.  &quot;No one would blame Christianity for terror acts committed by a  Christian. But Muslims are always blamed&#44;&quot; he said. &quot;What else can we  do to show the world that we are not born terrorists?&quot;  Still&#44; Askar chose his words carefully and chose to thank the pope  rather than criticize him.  &quot;With everyone referring these days to the &#8216;war of civilizations&#44;&#8217; it  is very important that we dialogue&#44;&quot; he said.  Germany has one of the oldest and largest Muslim populations in Western  Europe. The country is home to at least 3 million Muslims&#44; about 2.5  million of whom are Turks who for decades lived in a largely separate  culture that only now is integrating into the larger German society.  Seyda Can&#44; one of three women who attended the meeting with the pope  and one of two wearing a head scarf&#44; said she believed in the pope&#8217;s  call for a stronger dialogue between Christians and Muslims.  &quot;When we have this dialogue&#44; we will have trust and we won&#8217;t be  afraid&#44;&quot; Can&#44; 27&#44; told reporters after the meeting. &quot;With the dialogue&#44;  terrorism will be finished.&quot;  Benedict is in Cologne to preside over World Youth Day&#44; a raucous  festival that has brought an estimated 700&#44;000 young Catholics to this  city on the Rhine for a week of prayer&#44; music and celebration. The  young pilgrims&#44; from nearly 200 countries&#44; gathered in a massive field  outside the city for a three-hour prayer vigil with the pope Saturday  night and then camped out so they could attend Benedict&#8217;s concluding  Mass today.  In his remarks to the Muslim leaders&#44; almost all of whom were Turkish&#44;  Benedict acknowledged that Christians&#44; too&#44; had killed in the name of  religion.  &quot;How many pages of history record battles&#44; and even wars&#44; that have  been waged with both sides invoking the name of God&#44; as if fighting and  killing the enemy could be pleasing to him?&quot; he said.  &quot;The recollection of these sad events should fill us with shame&#44; for we  know only too well what atrocities have been committed in the name of  religion.&quot; </p>
</p>
<h4><strong>Response:</strong></h4></p>
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