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Posted
Lakše malo - ne vjernika. Ze(i)lota, ovih koji bi druge da spasu. Po svaku cijenu. To su popovi (po samom pozivu) i pop-wannabes, kao ova sestra gore.
upravo. kljucan je pokusaj da se prosiri Bozja rec i da se nevernici prijateljskim metodama ubede da slede pravi put...mada, ne vidim da su konvencionalne monoteisticke religije u tom pogledu ista gore od ne-teistickih religija. naprotiv, u 20-tom veku vise ljudi je stradalo od abozjih spasitelja.
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Posted (edited)
Pri tom pravi vernici imaju ne samo pravo nego i obavezu da se pridrzavaju bozje reci i ako je ona protivna zakonima ili opstim moralnim normama. A zna se ko ima tapiju na tumacenje bozjih primisli.
toga ima kod katolika i pravoslavaca. dok kod protestanata, muslimana, budista... niko nema tapiju na tumacenje - ili, ljudi mogu da biraju kojeg tumaca da prate i slusaju. (pre neki dan je postar pokusao da me ubedi da "gates of Hell" treba tumaciti kao "Gates of Hell", i da je jasno ko je u ovom slucaju antihrist Gates. uzalud pokusao da mu objasnim da Novi Zavet nije pisan na engleskom.tako se primio da nisam imao srca da mu kazem da sam nevernik. :D ) Edited by Gandalf
Posted
pa guverner tokija se u načelu složio s gospođicom iz spota.
Guverner Tokija: Cunami je "božija kazna"I. Funduk | 15. 03. 2011. - 19:03h | Foto: Beta | Komentara: 0Guverner Tokija, Šintaro Išihara, uputio je izvinjenje zbog svoje izjave da je cunami, koji je do trenutka njegove izjave odneo tri hiljade života, zapravo, božija kazna za egoizam japanskog naroda, prenosi "Gardijan".

Išihara, konzervativac koji će se četvrti uzastopni put kandidovati za mesto guvernera idućeg meseca, duboko se izvinio naciji zbog svoje izjave.Inače, 78-godišnji guverner, koji je i ranije umeo da uputi poneku uvredljivu opasku, izvinio se nakon što je guverner prefekture Mijagi, u kome je stradalo najmanje 10.000 ljudi, izrazio svoju zapanjenost zbog Išiharinih reči."Japanska politika obojena je egoizmom i populizmom. Moramo da upotrebimo cunami da bismo se rešili egoizma, koji se uhvatio kao rđa za mentalitet japanskog naroda već dugo vremena", rekao je Išihara u ponedeljak.On je katastrofu u Japanu opisao kao "tembacu" - božiju kaznu i dodao: "Zaista mi je žao žrtava".Išihara nije jedina javna ličnost koja je davala neuravnotežene izjave. Televizijski i radio voditelj Glen Bek sa "Foks njuza", rekao je da bi se zemljotres mogao shvatiti kao poruka od Boga."Ne kažem da je Bog izazvao zemljotres. Ali i ne poričem tu mogućnost", rekao je on.

ali i dalje ne vidim čemu tvoj pokušaj puča ovim primerom, pošto je kuffar samo aploudovala kućni video u kom tumači kako je bog, zaveden njenim dodolama, išutirao japan. čak je i neki štreber na ovoj temi dao za pravo takvima kao ona da mašu pesnicom ispred nečijeg nosa dok ga ne razbiju. međutim, to bulažnjenje u svoja četiri zida nema veze sa sprovođenjem reči:
Tabari 7:97 The morning after the murder of Ashraf, the Prophet declared, "Kill any Jew who falls under your power."
u dela.
JERUSALEM – Two members of Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas' official security forces were arrested in conjunction with this past weekend's bloody massacre in which five family members were brutally stabbed to death inside their home in the Jewish village of Itamar, WND has learned.
Posted (edited)
pokušaj puča
laugh.gif pazi coveka! pa ja samo sledim tvoj primer, nista vise. i malo mi je bizarno da najobicniji rat za teritoriju dovodis u neposrednu vezu sa arhaicnim kur'anskim stihovima. takvu neistoricnost bih ocekivao od zadriglog americkog evangeliste, i sa time svakako necu polemisati.nego, Samuel, 15, 3:Zato idi i pobij Amalika, i zatri kao prokleto sve što god ima; ne žali ga, nego pobij i ljude i žene i decu i šta je na sisi i volove i ovce i kamile i magarce. Edited by Marko M. Dabovic
  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

Iz reci

Zato idi i pobij Amalika, i zatri kao prokleto sve što god ima; ne žali ga, nego pobij i ljude i žene i decu i šta je na sisi i volove i ovce i kamile i magarce.
u dela...By 18 January 2009, when unilateral ceasefires were announced by both Israel and Hamas, some 1,400 Palestinians had been killed, including some 300 children and hundreds of other unarmed civilians, and large areas of Gaza had been razed to the ground,leaving many thousands homeless and the already dire economy in ruins. [...] In some areas entire neighbourhoods were flattened and livestock killed. Much of the destruction was wanton and deliberate, and was carried out in a manner and circumstances which indicated that it could not be justified on grounds of military necessity. Rather, it was often the result of reckless and indiscriminate attacks, which were seemingly tolerated or even directly sanctioned up the chain of command, and which at times appeared intended to collectively punish local residents for the actions of armed groups.AmnestyDisclaimer: Komentar je ironican. Naravno da ne mislim da su Jevreji genetski programirani da izvrsavaju naredjenja iz Biblije.
  • 3 weeks later...
Posted (edited)
ahem.
Beltrami described the letter as 'the words of a person who no longer believes in anything, full of sentences that made no sense and references to Islamic fundamentalism.'...'He had no friends, and he spent all his time on the Internet,' she said. In recent months, she said, he appeared to have got closer to Islam.
ipak, nema mesta brizi, sve je u najboljem redu.
Police stressed, however, that there was no concrete evidence that the attack had either a religious or a political motive.

Edited by Hella
  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

ma daj, ko si ti da sudis, ne razumes kulturne razlikeeto i njeni roditelji su se slozili sa kaznom i gledali, odakle tebi pravo da se bunis, rasisto

Posted

braco, a jesi video u nedelju sto su blokirali vozove iz italije zbog imigranata?

Posted

video, cirkus za novinareprepucavaju se Sarközy i Berlusconi

Posted
Human rights groups have expressed outrage after most of those accused of the gang rape of Mukhtaran Mai, who was assaulted on the orders of a village council, were freed by Pakistan's supreme court.Nine years after the gang rape, Mai's struggle for justice ended with the court ordering five of the six accused to be freed. A distraught Mai, who has won international acclaim for her bravery in a deeply chauvinistic society, said that the release of the men had put her life in danger.Originally 14 had been accused of taking part in the rape, which was ordered in 2002 by village elders sitting as a traditional tribal court after Mai's brother was accused of having illicit relations with a woman from a rival clan.The court judgment acknowledged that Mai had been raped, by upholding the sentence against one of the accused, Abdul Khaliq, but the outcome means that just one of the 14 men she believes were involved has been found guilty. Khaliq's original death sentence had already been commuted to life in prison by a lower court."I am scared these 13 people will come back to my village and harm me and my family," Mai said, in her remote home in the south of Punjab province. "I have lost faith in the courts and now I am leaving my case to the court of God. I am sure God will punish those who molested me."Mai has started a school for girls and a non-governmental organisation that promotes women's education. She vowed that she would not flee her village, and would continue with her work.The supreme court was heavily criticised by human rights groups for the verdict, which they said put the safety of all Pakistani women at risk. Rape, "honour killings" and other crimes against women in Pakistan are routinely poorly investigated by police and go unpunished by the courts."Mukhtaran Mai has had the courage to fight for so many years. This [verdict] shows that you can commit any crime, even in front of 100 people, and get away with it," said Fouzia Saeed, a women's rights activist, speaking outside the supreme court in Islamabad. "Every day something like this is happening in Pakistan. Jirgas [village courts] are still doing this. The jirgas will be encouraged by this verdict."The court, under activist chief justice Iftikhar Chaudhry, has taken on authority relentlessly, ordering high officials to answer before it and the re-investigation of cases where the police and prosecution fail to present a competent case. But the court is accused of pandering to the country's Islamist right wing, especially when it comes to cases involving women and religious minorities, and also of failing to convict virtually anyone of terrorist offences in recent years despite raging jihadist violence across the country."The court is proactive when it appears to have a political axe to grind, where it is in direct confrontation with the government," said Ali Dayan Hasan, a Pakistan-based senior researcher at Human Rights Watch. "But it appears that when there are vulnerable groups involved and questions of fundamental rights, the court is playing to the rightwing gallery."Mai's ordeal began after her 13-year-old brother was accused by a more powerful clan of having sex with one of their young women. He was then sodomised in a sugar cane field by the woman's brother, Abdul Khaliq, and two other men. There appears to be no basis for the original accusation.A tribal council was assembled from Khaliq's clan, which ordered that Mai be punished for her brother's illicit sex by being raped, on the basis of eye-for-an-eye justice. Mai was forced at gunpoint by Khaliq into a stable, where he and other clan members raped her. She was then paraded naked around the village. Tradition dictated that Mai commit suicide, as the shame supposedly fell on her, but she decided to fight her tormentors.A district court in 2002 found six men guilty of rape and sentenced them to death but freed the other eight accused. Then in 2005, the Lahore high court, the top provincial court, ruled that there was insufficient evidence against five of the men. The case then went to the supreme court, which on Thursday upheld the 2005 judgment.The cruelty of Mai's case is repeated in the treatment of women across the country, with tribal councils regularly ordering young girls to be handed over in compensation for crimes committed by other family members, and women to be killed for "honour".The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, an independent organisation, recorded 791 honour killings of women in 2010; at least 26 of the women were raped or gang raped before being killed. Rape is rarely reported but at least 2,903 women did come forward with rape complaints last year, according to the commission.

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