Originally posted by lord of the mark
Hating the members of a particular religious community, doesnt imply that YOUR motivation is religious, especially not where religion is functioning as a marker for ethnicity.
Hating the members of a particular religious community, doesnt imply that YOUR motivation is religious, especially not where religion is functioning as a marker for ethnicity.
Right. The 'Revd.' Ian Paisley's dislike of the Pope and labelling him the Antichrist is based on sound secular principles.
Personal testimony from the North (which applied to the South too, for a long time):
But giving up one's religion can- especially in the North- involve rejecting so much else that is important to life- the sense of being accepted by one's community, family circle and indeed, entire culture.
Where we find also the quotes following:
[QUOTE] The U.F.F. are the Ulster Freedom Fighters. In his book 'Northern Ireland: The Orange State' Michael Farrell describes them as an 'extreme Loyalist murder squad who announced their intention of killingCatholics in 1973. They claimed responsibility for themurder of an S.D.L.P. senator in June 1973, and subsequently many other Catholics. It is generally assumed that U.F.F. is a pseudonym for U.D.A. murder gangs.
[QUOTE]
In the Republic government social policy is openly based on the Vatican's. (You know, where Antichrist is meant to be) Divorce, for example, is completely illegal, as are abortion and homosexuality. Until 1979, Southern Irishwomen could not even obtain contraception, and in practice many are still unable to. Under the censorship of Information Act, even books and pamphlets about birth control are, in theory, still banned.
...Woman lured man into sin....The sexual values of Irish Catholic society rigidly reflect this one-sideed view of human nature.
Mary Nelis: " Here, after all these years of struggle and war, I think that the only thing you could really say unites the Catholic people IS their Catholicsm. We haven't developed politically. What havewe learned in 12 years, what have we achieved? Nothing. Our Catholicism is what appears to make us oppressed, and our Catholicism is what helps to keep us that way..."
In a similar vein the Kilkeel Democratic Unionist Party attacked the local school for showing 'The Sound of Music' because of its 'distinctive Romanist trend' .
From 'On The Blanket: The H-Block Story' by Tim Pat Coogan, Ward River Press, Dublin:
The best description overall for the differing categories of prisoners, like their counterparts outside the jail, is probably 'Protestant' and 'Catholic'. [...] At his school the Protestant learned English history. The Catholic by contrast learned Irish history and also the Irish language. [...] The differences are as much cultural as religious.
Interesting is it not, that you feel free to engage in this kind of reply to my assertion about the culture and government policy of Eire:
An inbuilt Catholic bias???? Geez louise.
I freely admit to not having read anything on 20th century Ireland, and I should .
And then have the chutzpah to presume that I have not:
... ever read a book on Al Qaeda, or related groups? It doesn't sound like you have.
engaging in absurd sophistry.
He was soundly mocked by members of the audience who Muslims and science students, who told him to his face that his sort of science was bringing both science and Islam into disrepute.
Let's also imagine that I have never read 'Militant Islam' by G.H. Jansen, or 'The Society of the Muslim Brothers' by R.P. Mitchell, or indeed any other book pertaining to the rise of Muslim fundamentalist organisations around the world, because that's an easy assumption to make when I draw comparisons about a society and history and religious divide you freely claim to know little or nothing about and one you infer that you do, and I do not.
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