Kevin....."Where did you get the 'millions upon millions' slaughtered? You're obviously mixing that up with the history of Christianity, which has given us the Crusades, the Inquisition, and the 100 Years War. These conflicts and genocides have had no rival in middle age times as far as death, torture, and slaughter in the name of religion."......
You need to do some history searching about muslim atrocities some very recent in world history terms.
You have your own reasons I'm sure for your apparent appeasement of the enemy...radical islam in all of its forms. But at least try and inject some truth or accuracy in your statements.
Oh and I am non religious and do not favour or like any of them.
hindunet.org
....."On March 25, 1971 Pakistani army on President Yahya Khan's orders initiated a campaign of terror which was to last till its final surrender to the Indian army on December 17, 1971. This terror campaign by Pak army resulted in 10 million Bangla Deshi refugees crossing over to India (per Senator Edward Kennedy's report to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee (3)) and 3 million killed (4,5) based on reports from most relief agencies and official Bangla Desh government estimate.".....
....." This was a month after the war's end (i.e. January 1972), ... human bones were still scattered along many roadsides. Blood stained clothing and tufts of human hair clung to the brush at these killing grounds. Children too young to understand were playing grotesque games with skulls. OTHER REMINDERS WERE THE YELLOW "H"s THE PAKISTANIS HAD PAINTED ON THE HOMES OF HINDUS, PARTICULAR TARGETS OF THE MUSLIM ARMY." (7) (emphasis added by the author of this article).
Thus two independent observations one dated prior to November 1, 1971 and other in January 1972 confirm that Hindu houses in East Pakistan were marked with yellow "H"s and that Hindus were particular targets of the Pakistani army. The situation thus bears an uncanny resemblance to the predicament of Jews targeted by Nazis from 1939 to 1944, with similar out come"..... |