102 lines
3.9 KiB
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102 lines
3.9 KiB
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From fork-admin@xent.com Tue Sep 17 11:29:54 2002
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From: "John Hall" <johnhall@evergo.net>
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To: <sdw@lig.net>
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Cc: <fork@spamassassin.taint.org>, <lea@lig.net>
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Subject: RE: Slaughter in the Name of God
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Date: Mon, 16 Sep 2002 14:38:32 -0700
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> From: Stephen D. Williams [mailto:swilliams@hpti.com]
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>
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> Just to further weaken the food transaction argument, I'll note that
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in
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> my neighborhood, the local McDonalds won't even hand you your drink in
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> the drive through until you fork over the cash.
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Maybe you never bought a hot dog from a street vendor.
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> And why is it that the margin of survival is so thin? Could it be
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that
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> all of these tribal rivalries are part of what's holding back
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wholesale
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> movement to the modern, first world patterns of constructive thinking?
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Well, yes. But it doesn't change the idea that the margin of survival
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probably IS that thin in this region.
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> I'm sure that both sides were ready to be the agressor.
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I'm not. I'm sure both sides were equally ready to be the aggressor
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provided they were in a predominant position of power.
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> Bush's reluctance to blast blind obeyance of religion as taught by
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your
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> local madrassa or KKK leader, apparently because he is fully involved
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> with the general effort to expand unfettered religiosity as the
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solution
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> to the world's ills, is disappointing. He has spoke against madrassa,
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> but what I heard sounded lame and carefully crafted to shield religion
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> in general from scrutiny.
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1. Which religion and how it is currently being expressed matters.
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2. The US is trying to avoid making war on the Muslim religion.
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3. US Leadership remains reflexively multi-cultural.
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> We all have
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> disagreements, but at some point it becomes a crime against humanity.
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I didn't say burning the train was a good thing. I said I understood it
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wasn't a spontaneous attack on people who had done no wrong.
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