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Politics : Support the French! Viva Democracy! -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Tom Clarke who wrote (7626)6/22/2024 9:13:40 AM
From: Maple MAGA 2 Recommendations

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Mick Mørmøny
Tom Clarke

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Catholics, Protestants Can't Wait Til The Left Is Defeated So They Can Get Back To Fighting Each Other

THEOLOGY·Jun 21, 2024



STEUBENVILLE, OH — Roman Catholics and Protestants across America released a joint statement that reveals how much they look forward to defeating the Left so that they can get back to more entertaining engagements like fighting each other on issues of doctrine and church practices.

The statement, which was simultaneously published on Catholic and Protestant websites, showed that both Catholics and Protestants are itching to finish up dealing with wokeness and secularism so they can get back to more important business like spewing rage at each other.

"Facing the pressing issues of the day is nice and all," commented Bishop Robert Barron, founder of the Catholic ministry Word on Fire. "But it would be really nice to get back to refuting the issues of our dear Protestant brethren who are separated from the safe haven of the Catholic Church — the true Church. I long for a good old-fashioned argument on justification, purgatory, or the rosary, instead of having to define what a woman is."

Protestant leaders as diverse as Lutheran Jordan Cooper, Reformed Baptists John Piper and John MacArthur, Presbyterian Peter Leithart, and apologist James K. A. Smith expressed agreement with Bishop Barron's statements as well.

"Oooh, we'd just love to get back to correcting the abuses of the Catholic Church and preaching the Gospel," Cooper agreed. "But we've got to keep explaining to people that adults shouldn't be changing their kids' genders. If only we could all just return to the days of arguing over Sola Scriptura and Sola Fide with the Catholics. Someday..."

At publishing time, the Orthodox had politely asked the Catholics and Protestants if they could join the argument afterward as long as they helped in the fight against the Left.



To: Tom Clarke who wrote (7626)6/23/2024 2:34:31 AM
From: Maple MAGA 1 Recommendation

Recommended By
Mick Mørmøny

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 7833
 
France ‘so afraid of being accused of Islamophobia, it refuses to name the ideology that motivates these attacks’

JUN 22, 2024 3:00 PM

BY ROBERT SPENCER

11 COMMENTS

Carine Azzopardi is right: the West is so afraid of charges of “racism” and “Islamophobia” that it is neither comprehending nor mounting any effective resistance to the global jihad. Yet she is also wrong, and is engaging in exactly the same denial and willful ignorance that she is criticizing. Her careful language in this piece makes it abundantly clear that she would explain, if asked, that the ideology of “Islamism” and “Islamist terrorism” was something quite different from the benign and cuddly religion of Islam itself. But if you asked her to provide specifics about the differences between the two, neither she nor anyone else who speaks about “Islamism” would be able to do so convincingly.

In reality, “Islamism” is a Western construct with no basis in Islamic tradition, theology or law. It is designed solely to separate Islam from its political, supremacist, aggressive, and violent aspects. Azzopardi is right: the West is cowed and cowardly, and has staked its future on fantasies. But she, too, and others like her, are going to have to be attentive and studious, and awaken to some harsh realities about Islam, before any effective defense can be mounted.



“Islamism Killed My Partner. Why Won’t the West Fight It?,” by Carine Azzopardi, The Free Press, June 18, 2024:

On the evening of November 13, 2015, I recorded a video of my partner, Guillaume, laughing and dancing round the living room with our two daughters, aged four and seven. Just a few minutes later, he left our apartment in eastern Paris to go to the Bataclan concert hall.

A rock critic who wrote under the name Guillaume B. Decherf, he loved nothing more than good music, and was excited about seeing Eagles of Death Metal that night. In his review for Les Inrockuptibles, he had praised the band’s latest album. Its “sole aim,” he wrote, was “to give pleasure,” before signing off with a flourish: “Plaisir partagé!” A pleasure shared….

Shortly before noon the next day, a journalist friend of mine called from the morgue, with the terrible news I’d been waiting for: Guillaume, 43, was one of the 130 people murdered by Islamists in a series of coordinated attacks that day.

After Guillaume’s death, I needed to know exactly why he was taken from us. So I dedicated my journalism career to trying to understand the ideology of the people who killed him. Between 2015 and 2017, I covered attack after attack: a Catholic church in Normandy, a supermarket in Trèbes, a Bastille Day celebration in Nice. I was still grieving when, in September 2021, I started reporting on the trial of the twenty men accused of orchestrating the Bataclan attacks. The biggest trial in French history, it lasted ten months and heard from over 2,500 plaintiffs. For some reason, I assumed the court would examine how the ideology of Islamism had contributed to the deaths of so many innocent people. But day after day, as expert after expert took the stand, this important factor almost never came up.

I couldn’t stay silent. A couple of months into the trial, I wrote a column. “Ideology has an essential place in a terrorist trial,” I argued, “because terrorism is the choice to use violence in pursuit of a political cause, in this case Islamism.” I explained that the terrorists believed Islamic law should govern all public life, including in France. I said they directly opposed our country’s constitutional secularism, its laïcité.

The column resulted in an invitation to testify at France’s parliament. In a room full of experts, I gave the facts: over the last 40 years Islamist terrorism has caused the deaths of over 210,000 people, and France is the European country most often targeted: we have experienced 82 attacks since 1979. And yet, I said, “our country is so afraid of being accused of xenophobia or Islamophobia, it refuses to accurately name the insidious ideology that motivates these attacks.” The following year, nineteen of the 20 men were found guilty of involvement in the Bataclan massacre, which was named for what it was: a terrorist enterprise.

What I said in the French parliament shouldn’t be controversial. But it was only in private that people dared thank me. Shortly after the trial, I was contacted by a man who taught at a school in a Paris suburb, whose colleague had been beheaded in October 2020 on his way home from work. The murder of Samuel Paty made headlines around the world and should have been a cautionary tale—but since then, French public schools have continued to incubate Islamist ideology. So many of Samuel’s students were vulnerable to indoctrination, growing up in communities of poor Muslim immigrants where Islamist views had gained a foothold. A parent had once told him: “The laws of my religion supersede those of your Republic.”…



To: Tom Clarke who wrote (7626)6/25/2024 1:02:41 AM
From: Maple MAGA 1 Recommendation

Recommended By
Mick Mørmøny

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There are signs the True Church is returning... Praise God!