SiculoArabi

SiculoArabi

33p

30 comments posted · 0 followers · following 0

15 years ago @ Islam in Europe - Quote: Islamophobia vs... · 1 reply · +1 points

Because I have approximately 50 computers at my offices, and many of them are identical except for the local user profiles.

There are probably other ways for me to remind myself which machine I am using, but this method has worked for the last 16 years.

15 years ago @ Islam in Europe - 'Eurabia Safaris&... · 0 replies · +1 points

BTW, Henry Makow, who is Jewish and somewhat conflicted, has been circulating a short piece about "Satanic" Jewish sexuality on the Internet.

You can read the article at Liberal Jews, Sex & The New Satanic Order. There is a brief introduction that attempts to put Makow's claims in an historical sociological context.

15 years ago @ Islam in Europe - 'Eurabia Safaris&... · 0 replies · +1 points

This racist screed is quite impressive for its duplication of early 20th century anti-Semitic screeds that complained of the Judaization of European cities and of the dangers for gentiles that wandered into the Jewish areas of major cities.

As for the imposition of religious law, one need only drive around large parts of Spring Valley, NY, on Shabbes or Jewish Holidays to feel the oppression of Jewish Sharia (Halakhah).

15 years ago @ Islam in Europe - Quote: Islamophobia vs... · 3 replies · +1 points

While German Christianity had some tendencies toward a sort of Marcionism, adherents of this form of Protestantism supported Nazi racism and the leader principle.

Catholicism never repudiated those sections of the Old Testament from which Cortez and modern Israeli Zionists have drawn inspiration.

15 years ago @ Islam in Europe - Quote: Islamophobia vs... · 3 replies · +1 points

Read up on German Christianity.

15 years ago @ Islam in Europe - Quote: Islamophobia vs... · 10 replies · +1 points

German Christians have a very clear recent history of following genocidal examples from the Bible.

15 years ago @ Islam in Europe - Rotterdam: City to fir... · 3 replies · +1 points

I have listened to Hitler's speeches of the 30s and gone through a large chunk of Nazi and fascist writings.

Generally, non-Jews throughout Europe were angry at Jewish economic, business, and financial misbehavior, but the main object of hatred and fear was the Soviet Union.

This hostility redounded upon the Jews because Jews were perceived not completely incorrectly as the force behind the Soviet Union.

The problem with this thinking was the belief in monolithic Jewish conspiratorial politics.

I attribute refusal to take Jewish politics seriously -- as one might look at Polish politics -- to prejudice.

Likewise the refusal to look at Soviet and fascist politics seriously -- they are very different -- also looks like prejudice.

Anyway, I also appear on Iranian PressTV. It does not take the position that the Holocaust did not happen. The issue even came up in an interview I did a few months ago.

My opinion about the USHMM is hardly unique. Yuri Slezkine has said as much as has the eminent Princeton scholar Arno Mayer. (Winston Churchill had a fairly similar opinion.)

European Muslims certainly are not treated like German Jews in the 30s or 40s. (Palestinians are.)

Yet I have listened to Geert Wilders' battle-for-civilization sthik. He does do a pretty good Hitler imitation, and I can understand why there is a superficial comparison with the 30s.

Ramadan simply does not have the skill set to look at the money trails and understand them, but I do.

Geert Wilders and friends are getting piles of money from the principals of the American Republican Jewish Coalition.

While the NSDAP did receive money in the 1920s from wealthy Jews like Arthur Trebitsch, we are seeing a completely different sort of Jewish politics in the pumping up of the new radical right.

You should know. I think I've seen your stuff on MEF.

15 years ago @ Islam in Europe - London: MP walks out o... · 0 replies · +2 points

Standard US interpretation of the 14th Amendment since 1886 holds that unequally enforced laws are unconstitutional even if written in apparently unbiased and non-discriminatory language.

The Nuremberg Laws are inherently discriminatory just like your racist and Islamophobic analysis and discourse.

15 years ago @ Islam in Europe - London: MP walks out o... · 0 replies · +2 points

Only if you believe that Christianity has the same goal as German Nazism.

Islam and Christianity are very similar proselytizing religions that offer salvation via conversion and service to God.

I am not sure what connection this idea has with the ethnic fundamentalism of German Nazism.

15 years ago @ Islam in Europe - London: MP walks out o... · 1 reply · +2 points

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Maybe because you babbled incoherently about Muhammad's conquest of Arabia.

Maybe because you postulate that tu quoque is a logical fallacy when the essence of your racist and bigoted analysis of Islam lies in applying to the study of Islam different standards from those you are willing to use when addressing Judaism or Christianity.

And BTW I made no argument that Islam, Judaism, or Christianity had a bad canon. I simply pointed out that the three Abrahamic religions are very similar.

This tu quoque stuff started appearing a few months ago in David Project literature when Muslims began to ask in interfaith discussions when the hijab is threatening but the stirntikhl or frumke is an admirable maintenance of Jewish tradition.