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The Real Muslim Problem


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Wish all the politically correct people would open there eyes and stop trying to be cool or summit. The prophet Muhammed (was a real person) he married a 6 year old girl called Aisha, he had sex with

if their culture means so much why come here in the first place? Or do they just want the free healthcare,education benefits etc and to hell with the country that has gave them more freedoms and a bet

You should stick to glue sniffing   'Stick'...., 'glue'..., see what I did there

Guest ragumup

AXUM

Wanting sharia law is pretty much the same as preaching hatred for the west.

What Muslim lands ? most Muslim countries in the past were acquired through rape and murdering conquests .

Christians, Jews, Buddhists ,atheists or any minority's in Muslim majority countries today are routinely vilified and often raped robbed and generally persecuted .

A British geneticist professor Steve Jones says Muslims should stop inbreeding as it so prevalent that its causing terrible genetic faults.

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This is how the majority of moderate Muslims think;

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2905075/Hate-preacher-backs-massacres-says-Britain-enemy-Islam.html

It's Just the majority only speak like this to each other ;)

you don't know, you never were part of Muslim community, so your assumption is baseless, but I'm sure that you and many others would like for that to be true, so you can justify your hate. Sadly for you, the majority are against the killing.
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That's where you are wrong tit I have experienced hatred against me and others in my own town over 20 years ago so don't tell me what I have seen with my own eyes in my own town!!! Divided no white no go areas, mussies calling for Brits to be murdered etc. You know fuuck all pal. My daughter had to put up with these cnuts everyday at school in bradford, is she a liar too?? ;)

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this one is for mush, he enjoys me quoting snp members :thumbs:

 

hits the nail on the head

by Humza Yousaf Minister for external affairs and international development

Since expressing my condolences and solidarity with the people of France after the cowardly ­terrorist attack in Paris I received this response from a social media user:

"The killing of those journalists was dreadful, but those cartoons were deliberately provocative."
No buts. There can be no "buts" when men and women are barbarically slaughtered in the way the 12 innocent people at Charlie Hebdo, the police on the Paris streets or the shoppers in the supermarket were.
There can be no "buts" when any innocent life is lost, regardless of where it happens or by whom it is perpetrated. It is as simple as that.
In the aftermath of the attack in Paris there have been discussions in many communities about how we react. Perhaps, unsurprisingly, I have been interested in the reaction from within the Muslim community.
The Muslim community - in ­Scotland or across the world - is not a homogenous block; there are as many opinions as there are members. However, the collective defiance I felt from the Muslim community when I attended Friday prayers this week in Glasgow was palpable. That defiance was primarily aimed at those who choose to distort Islam for their own unedifying ends. How dare they? How dare they use my faith, which commands me to show compassion even to the one who abuses me? How dare they use my faith, which teaches me that killing one innocent life is like killing the whole of humanity?
Extremists who kill in the name of Islam are the ones who insult the name of the Prophet Mohammad more than anyone wielding a pen ever will or ever can. That same defiance was also aimed towards the far-right and even towards some elements of the press who have used the attacks in Paris for their own political ends.
The demand from some quarters for Muslims to apologise for the behaviour of a twisted minority is as illogical as asking every young white Christian male to apologise for the actions of Anders Breivik, who in 2011 committed Western Europe's worst terrorist attack since the Second World War, killing 77 in a bomb attack and a shooting. The sight of Ukip's Nigel Farage attempt to sow disharmony and discord by blaming multiculturalism and immigration, and suggesting Muslims in Europe were a "fifth column", was as unwelcome as it was unhelpful. Such language is both divisive and counter-productive because it is what those who commit such atrocities desire - they want us to be divided, to be blaming the other in the hope of inciting a backlash against Muslims and pushing more towards their cause.
That is not to say there isn't a need for a debate within the Muslim community about this internal subversion which is threatening the very tenets of the Islamic faith, there is. There is little doubt that disastrous foreign policy interventions can be manipulated by extremists to cause division. However, as a Muslim community, we must not shy away from the realisation that the biggest threat to our faith comes from those within, not outwith.
Al-Qaeda and Islamic State-inspired terrorists do not fear Western interventions and ­bombing campaigns in Muslim countries; they fear a direct challenge to their polarising, conservative, illiberal perversion of Islam. The more their extreme beliefs are challenged by those from within the Muslim community, the more of a difficulty this presents them. If we reject them, their corrupt ideology and those who sympathise with them, they will have no followers or henchmen. No man is an island and no community lives in isolation, particularly in today's world - and the Muslim community cannot do this without the help of our friends, from other faiths and none.
In Scotland we have a good story to tell. After the attack on Glasgow Airport in 2007, Scotland stood at a pivotal moment - how we reacted then has helped embed cohesion among our communities. We did so by realising that this brand of terrorism is a common enemy, one that will happily kill Muslim and non-Muslim alike, just as it has done in Paris. So the way to deal with a common enemy is by showing a united front, reaching out to those who are fearful and standing with them in their hour of need.
The attack on Charlie Hebdo was a deliberate assault on free speech. Cartoons do not insult my faith or the beliefs I hold dear; those who brutally gun down innocent men and women do. I am hopeful those in France and across Europe will stand together in solidarity and demonstrate that an assault on one of us is an assault on us all. #JeSuisCharlie


many are plain and simple racist, use the minority as an excuse to for the crap thats spouted on here

Edited by Joe1888
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Anders Breivik didnt do it because he was a Christian or in the name of Christianity and what does his skin colour have to do with it

 

Thats just typical politician shit play the old Racist card

 

 

The SNP Muslim member even says that the biggest threat to the Muslim faith comes from those within the Muslim community..............What does the Muslim community do about it nothing

 

Sorry they blame America and Isreal

Edited by jacknife
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this one is for mush, he enjoys me quoting snp members :thumbs:

 

 

hits the nail on the head

by Humza Yousaf Minister for external affairs and international development

 

Since expressing my condolences and solidarity with the people of France after the cowardly ­terrorist attack in Paris I received this response from a social media user:

 

"The killing of those journalists was dreadful, but those cartoons were deliberately provocative."

No buts. There can be no "buts" when men and women are barbarically slaughtered in the way the 12 innocent people at Charlie Hebdo, the police on the Paris streets or the shoppers in the supermarket were.

There can be no "buts" when any innocent life is lost, regardless of where it happens or by whom it is perpetrated. It is as simple as that.

In the aftermath of the attack in Paris there have been discussions in many communities about how we react. Perhaps, unsurprisingly, I have been interested in the reaction from within the Muslim community.

The Muslim community - in ­Scotland or across the world - is not a homogenous block; there are as many opinions as there are members. However, the collective defiance I felt from the Muslim community when I attended Friday prayers this week in Glasgow was palpable. That defiance was primarily aimed at those who choose to distort Islam for their own unedifying ends. How dare they? How dare they use my faith, which commands me to show compassion even to the one who abuses me? How dare they use my faith, which teaches me that killing one innocent life is like killing the whole of humanity?

Extremists who kill in the name of Islam are the ones who insult the name of the Prophet Mohammad more than anyone wielding a pen ever will or ever can. That same defiance was also aimed towards the far-right and even towards some elements of the press who have used the attacks in Paris for their own political ends.

The demand from some quarters for Muslims to apologise for the behaviour of a twisted minority is as illogical as asking every young white Christian male to apologise for the actions of Anders Breivik, who in 2011 committed Western Europe's worst terrorist attack since the Second World War, killing 77 in a bomb attack and a shooting. The sight of Ukip's Nigel Farage attempt to sow disharmony and discord by blaming multiculturalism and immigration, and suggesting Muslims in Europe were a "fifth column", was as unwelcome as it was unhelpful. Such language is both divisive and counter-productive because it is what those who commit such atrocities desire - they want us to be divided, to be blaming the other in the hope of inciting a backlash against Muslims and pushing more towards their cause.

That is not to say there isn't a need for a debate within the Muslim community about this internal subversion which is threatening the very tenets of the Islamic faith, there is. There is little doubt that disastrous foreign policy interventions can be manipulated by extremists to cause division. However, as a Muslim community, we must not shy away from the realisation that the biggest threat to our faith comes from those within, not outwith.

Al-Qaeda and Islamic State-inspired terrorists do not fear Western interventions and ­bombing campaigns in Muslim countries; they fear a direct challenge to their polarising, conservative, illiberal perversion of Islam. The more their extreme beliefs are challenged by those from within the Muslim community, the more of a difficulty this presents them. If we reject them, their corrupt ideology and those who sympathise with them, they will have no followers or henchmen. No man is an island and no community lives in isolation, particularly in today's world - and the Muslim community cannot do this without the help of our friends, from other faiths and none.

In Scotland we have a good story to tell. After the attack on Glasgow Airport in 2007, Scotland stood at a pivotal moment - how we reacted then has helped embed cohesion among our communities. We did so by realising that this brand of terrorism is a common enemy, one that will happily kill Muslim and non-Muslim alike, just as it has done in Paris. So the way to deal with a common enemy is by showing a united front, reaching out to those who are fearful and standing with them in their hour of need.

The attack on Charlie Hebdo was a deliberate assault on free speech. Cartoons do not insult my faith or the beliefs I hold dear; those who brutally gun down innocent men and women do. I am hopeful those in France and across Europe will stand together in solidarity and demonstrate that an assault on one of us is an assault on us all. #JeSuisCharlie

many are plain and simple racist, use the minority as an excuse to for the crap thats spouted on here

Ok, fair enough, let's see what the muslim community do about this

 

 

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2905075/Hate-preacher-backs-massacres-says-Britain-enemy-Islam.html#top

 

let's see if they hand him in to the police for inciting hatred and demand he's deported shall we ?

 

Don't hold your breath !!!

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