• We are a multilingual website again. Read the notice about this.
  • Understand AI use at MyPTSD: all AI use is explained in our AI help page. AI use is by choice here. It exists if you want it, but does nothing unless you choose to use it.

Heritage Foundation On Radical Islam

Status
Not open for further replies.
Wow, that is hitting the nail on the head. Radical ideology (religious, political, social, etc.) is the true danger and it is the silent majority that facilitates the radical minority. Wrong is just plain wrong no matter how you wrap it and it is time that people stop be so concerned of about offending that we ignore what it obviously offensive.
 
Wow. She said it all.

I think people forget that there has been, there is and will always be radicals in all faiths, religions and social sectors of society, this , no matter what colour, race political agenda or any other walk of life they are in fact the minorities.

The majority of people are humanitarian and peaceful in nature. Most of all we just want to get on with our life, earn a living, be healthy and happy. We want to share with other people. These radicals are out to destroy mankind and the planet.

We are born and we die. What we do with the middle bit counts as every one of us makes our choices making pockets of like minded people. Fight or flight as it were ? As a child we were taught to ` Speak up or forever hold your piece `.

I think that whenever and wherever the opportunity arises if the mind and body is willing, to be able to stand up, be counted and speak out against abusive inhumane acts, this is a blessing. Not all of us is allowed or capable or for reasons that they have not learned how or are in abusive environments to say much at all. We group and regroup all the way through or lives learning to grow, changing our values with some faster and some slower paced. Still there is no excuse for the cruelty of some of these radical atrocities.

It is good to share and thank you for sharing this clip. I learned a lot. Wow. She speaks up and everyone listened.
 
It's not just the radical minority that are the danger though...it's also the ignorance of everyone else, who then turn around and generalize "all muslims" or "all germans" or "all jews" as being the enemy. Paranoia makes the brain not work and as we know the mind loves to make assumptions, and many people aren't aware enough of their own minds or the need for disciplining them, so that is a perfect breeding ground for Divide and Conquer to set in.

And yes, Political correctness is proving to be an extremely dangerous socially installed way of life in the U.K and parts of europe, where the radical faction of Islam are using the race card to their total advantage.
 
Maybe we can add up all the women killed by domestic violence in United States and compare death rates? Why is that type of terrorism never lampooned with this type of vitriolic? I am so sorry that those four people died but many more died than that that day from domestic violence. But that is okay, institutionalised violence in the family is fine, it's not done by terrorists, our own people do that.

And the minority is dangerous? No shit sherlock! I don't know any adult person who is not aware of that. That video is not full of any surprises.

I agree with what she says to a certain extent, and she has a right to say it, but that young woman also had a right to have that question answered a bit more sensitively. It seemed pretty staged as well. So I wonder if it was a set up.

With the way the speaker tore strips of that young Muslim woman, is it any wonder that the other "10 moderate Muslims" didn't bother to turn up? Let us unpack that discourse shall we?

And it is not the Western world or Western culture that the Islamists are after, it is everyone who is not their brand of Islam, including other Muslims and people in the East.

[DLMURL]http://www.globalresearch.ca/non-muslims-carried-out-more-than-90-of-all-terrorist-attacks-in-america/5333619[/DLMURL]
 
Last edited:
We don`t get people speaking up like that in the UK , I for one liked it.

It is lucky for us, so very rare for the UK to be in the midst of a terrorist attack. I can`t even imagine what it is like to be even a few miles away from something that has happened. And it happens to other people in places where they thought they were safe too.

I remember working in a company that had departments in Debenhams Stores in Bedfordshire in England years ago. Working as a temporary manager in two of them I had to implement some of the security measures that Debenhams employed. One of which was a full search of the area we used looking for hidden items. One of the items I prayed not to find was an IRA bomb and thank Christ I never did.

I was aware that there was a possible situation that could occur where I was and if not there somewhere else, to someone else. That situation was not me being paranoid but a reality that could happen any day. Like other situations in life the fear that precedes anything whether it happens or not is very real.

I was not all that young but I was quite naïve in part. I knew what things looked like, I knew what they did and who would have done it had anyone found anything of that kind. That was all my experience then.

From then until now the world had changed quite drastically. My view of the world change too with the added bonus of being diagnosed with PTSD on top of it all. The only reading material that seemed to help me was about people who were in the armed services, the emergency services, people who had been kidnapped, all who had been in terrible situations, somehow survived and got PTSD. It helped me see how others got through the day.

As time went by there were more traumatic incidents for me to over come and in the world things seemed to worsen considerably. Also as all these things in my world and the world in total were unfolding the more tolerant of people in general I became, even people around me doing things that I once I found annoying. I became more at peace in that sense of toleration and acceptance. But I began to anger easier in situations where people and animals were abused, terrorised, where ever they were, where ever they came from.

I once shouted at a man in the town centre during a market day which included stalls from around the world. The previous one had included a Native American clothing stall. The owners had put up a Tepee, they blessed everything that was sold also gave some of their money to a charity. This man ridiculed these peoples traditions and their beliefs. I lost my temper instantly and let rip at this person. No one intervened. No one called the police.

I don`t usually start yelling at someone and humiliating them so they walk away I felt he deserved it. Maybe he learned a lesson, maybe he didn`t but I know what it is like to feel so strongly that you let go and verbally rip in to someone for their disregard of humanity. Isn`t that freedom of speech after all ? Isn`t that standing up for what is right ?
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Donation drives

2026 Donation Goal

Goal
$1,800.00
Earned
$910.00
This donation drive ends in
0 hours, 0 minutes, 0 seconds
  50.6%

Trending content

Featured content

Back
Top Bottom