Little-Acorn
01-13-2015, 12:39 PM
Yes?
Well, SO WHAT???
Let me get this straight.
Muslim fanatics murder twelve people in cold blood because they didn't like some jokes they published in a minor magazine.
And you get upset because the MAGAZINE is "offending" people???
Strangely, I didn't notice any concern in your speech, that murdering 12 people is maybe a THOUSAND TIMES more "offensive". At least to normal, civilized people.
The problem is not the magazine.
The problem is your insane, fanatic followers who feel it's OK to commit mass murder in response to a satire in a magazine.
And as long as YOU, the Muslim leaders, keep letting them do it, the problem will not go away.
In 1941, Japan "offended" us by bombing one of our naval bases in response to ordinary protests over their aggressive warmaking elsewhere.
You should keep in mind how that little issue was finally resolved.
And get your own act together, while you still have an act available to you.
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http://news.yahoo.com/egypt-muslim-authority-slams-charlie-hebdo-mohammed-cartoon-131813581.html
Egypt Muslim authority slams new Charlie Hebdo Mohammed cartoon
AFP - 3 hours ago
Cairo (AFP) - Egypt's state sponsored Islamic authority on Tuesday denounced as a provocation the planned publication of another cartoon of the Prophet Mohammed in the new issue of French magazine Charlie Hebdo.
"This action is an unjustified provocation against the feelings of 1.5 billion Muslims," the Dar al-Ifta said in a statement.
"This (magazine) edition will result in a new wave of hatred in French and Western society. What the magazine is doing does not serve co-existence and the cultural dialogue Muslims aspire to," the statement added.
Dar al-Ifta is headed by the mufti, the government's official interpreter of Islamic law.
His adviser, Ibrahim Negm, told AFP the institution condemned the bloody attack on the magazine's offices last week by jihadists, after it published satirical depictions of the Muslim prophet.
"We call on all Muslims not to participate in violence," he said.
"We denounce violence and respect freedom of opinion. But the other side has to understand that we love the Prophet Mohammed."
Well, SO WHAT???
Let me get this straight.
Muslim fanatics murder twelve people in cold blood because they didn't like some jokes they published in a minor magazine.
And you get upset because the MAGAZINE is "offending" people???
Strangely, I didn't notice any concern in your speech, that murdering 12 people is maybe a THOUSAND TIMES more "offensive". At least to normal, civilized people.
The problem is not the magazine.
The problem is your insane, fanatic followers who feel it's OK to commit mass murder in response to a satire in a magazine.
And as long as YOU, the Muslim leaders, keep letting them do it, the problem will not go away.
In 1941, Japan "offended" us by bombing one of our naval bases in response to ordinary protests over their aggressive warmaking elsewhere.
You should keep in mind how that little issue was finally resolved.
And get your own act together, while you still have an act available to you.
----------------------------------------------
http://news.yahoo.com/egypt-muslim-authority-slams-charlie-hebdo-mohammed-cartoon-131813581.html
Egypt Muslim authority slams new Charlie Hebdo Mohammed cartoon
AFP - 3 hours ago
Cairo (AFP) - Egypt's state sponsored Islamic authority on Tuesday denounced as a provocation the planned publication of another cartoon of the Prophet Mohammed in the new issue of French magazine Charlie Hebdo.
"This action is an unjustified provocation against the feelings of 1.5 billion Muslims," the Dar al-Ifta said in a statement.
"This (magazine) edition will result in a new wave of hatred in French and Western society. What the magazine is doing does not serve co-existence and the cultural dialogue Muslims aspire to," the statement added.
Dar al-Ifta is headed by the mufti, the government's official interpreter of Islamic law.
His adviser, Ibrahim Negm, told AFP the institution condemned the bloody attack on the magazine's offices last week by jihadists, after it published satirical depictions of the Muslim prophet.
"We call on all Muslims not to participate in violence," he said.
"We denounce violence and respect freedom of opinion. But the other side has to understand that we love the Prophet Mohammed."