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Ricky, you speak me in all points out of my soul! Might even be, that
fundamentalist USA has that big issue with Al Qaeda because both are the
same fundamentalistic. Religious persons, the fundamentalist ones, are very
often extremely intolerant, and consider themselve of course as more human
than anyone else not like them, so those others of course shouldn't live
with the same human rights...
What you write about the education in the USA, shocks me. At the end, they
destroy their own future. Without enough scientifical new generations, they
soon will technnologically be behind other nations. And then, you will see,
they will cry out and consider those advanced other nations as dangerous for
the USA, even their previous friend nations.
And then, attempts of political and (decreasing) economical influence, and
then military powers, will be used to keep the other nations down as well.
"Missionars" will be sent out, to influence the societies othe those other
nations from within. Like in all times since ancient times (Rome sent
missionaries into Germania to break their resistance from within), they are
used to break the backbone of the other nations.
I am a so-called "white" man (actually: kind of peach), but I feel big shame
about the last centuries. Imagine, those slave society considered themselve
as a Christian society. And churches also devided between black (actually:
many shades of brown) and white. Christianity supported churches for the
black people, and churches for the white people. Watta shame. But also what
a truth about the phenomena called "religion" (mind control).
The entire slave phenomenum shows what happens if some nations have an
advanced technical knowledge but not yet the matching wisdom (philosophical)
level required to handle their technical abilities. But to be honest, even
today, I believe, we are still the same. The entire mankind. We can build
interesting things, but so much of our possibilities and resources we put in
things which can kill us humans. They support oil but ignore sunlight, wind
and renewable energy resources. Uhh! Yeah, it is so easy for some, to keep
the focus of so many away from the real things. Yeah, we humans are truly
"intelligent"...
Seems we are really of one opinion. am happy to know that I am not the only
person on this planet who feels not very good with so many things my eyes
and ears tell me.
If you give me the e-mail address of that Pentacostalist sister of yours, I
would love a lot to write her a letter asking for support, to vote for a
constitutional amendment to preserve Buddhists, Hindis, Sikhs, Moslems, Jews
(etc.) "right" to defend other religions persons to deny their rights. Of
course, I would not mention you at all. And that letter would have a formal
attitude like it would be a letter meant like that. I sometimes don't know
how those persons can be teached with their own words and behaviours. Maybe
the way to just replace the name of the religion (Christian becomes Hindu),
and you will see how LOUD these Christians suddenly will cry out on their
own words now used against them... ;-)
To state it clearly: I would do that with every intolerant person, of each
religion.
Best greetings,
Sven
"Cousin Ricky" <ric### [at] yahoocom> schrieb im Newsbeitrag
news:web.4489bec1df8d5bed43a5e2560@news.povray.org...
> "Sven Littkowski" <sve### [at] jamaica-focuscom> wrote:
>> And many
>> politicians even declare loudly that Germany has no fascists (upfront to
>> the
>> football worldmastership).
>
> Very dangerous attitude. Indonesia once declared that they had no Al
> Qaeda
> cells. Then one of their non-existent Al Qaeda cells blew up a nightclub
> in Bali.
>
>> But many islanders are also very religious. And I really mean: very,
>> very,
>> very religious. Some of those religious families even take their children
>> out of school just because they don't want their children to learn about
>> science and evolution, can someone imagine that...
>
> Excessive religious devotion is common to most of the western hemisphere.
> There's even a home schooling industry in the states specifically for
> parents who would rather their children learn fairy tales instead of
> science. The irony is that evolution isn't really taught in most school
> districts; political pressure from Christian fundamentalists has been so
> heavy that biology curricula have been gutted of real substance. What
> most
> people "know" about evolution is not at all what science claims.
>
> And it doesn't stop there. There's a very strong movement to force
> _taxpayer supported_ public schools to teach their religion (disguised as
> "creation science" or "intelligent design") to all schoolchildren.
>
>> I am a fighter against religious intolerance. I am also an atheist who
>> can
>> be, therefore, tolerant to each person, independent by religion
>> (Buddhism,
>> Sikh, Jews, Moslems, Hindus, Christians, Shintoism, and all the other
>> ones).
>
> I'm also an athiest, and i'm tolerant of anyone who's tolerant of me. But
> contrary to their own delusions (and their own constitution), religious
> intolerance is rampant in the USA. I just got an e-mail from my
> Pentacostalist sister, urging me to write my senator to vote for a
> constitutional amendment to preserve Christians' "right" to deny other
> people their rights. (They didn't phrase it that way, of course.) Mind
> you, _nobody_ is denying Christians their right to practice their
> religion,
> but a very vocal minority of Christians feels threatened by people who
> don't
> follow their rules. The courts have been steadily hacking away at
> Christians' special privileges, and the fundamentalists interpret that as
> "persecution."
>
> I don't know how science education and religious tolerance are in Latin
> America and most of the Caribbean, but i know that religion is ubiquitous
> in this part of the world.
>
>> Of which descendence are you? When I was still living in Berlin, i was a
>> part of "Savannah United e.V.", an African cultural organization group.
>> Organizing African festivals, and so. I am a native German (but one of
>> the
>> good ones, I hope). ;-)
>
> My ancestors were brought here chained in the cargo holds of slave ships.
> I
> don't know which parts of Africa they were from. This is true of most
> blacks in the Americas.
>
>
>
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