tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18369530.post113093366869971829..comments2023-06-29T13:25:30.567+02:00Comments on The Editrix' Roncesvalles: Beeb the BoobThe_Editrixhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07529769143608862966noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18369530.post-1132640722865079502005-11-22T07:25:00.000+01:002005-11-22T07:25:00.000+01:00Great comment, Allen! LGF is the mother ot all blo...Great comment, Allen! <I>LGF</I> is the mother ot all blogs indeed! <BR/><BR/>If I really hate the German media I try to remember the British and suddenly feel better. The murderous scum would never have gotten that far without the complicity of politicians and the media who are even too afraid to call a spade a spade and a jihadist a jihadist. "Machete killings" indeed! Had the perpetrators been anybody else the headline wouldn't have spared us a single gory detail.The_Editrixhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07529769143608862966noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18369530.post-1132605502569360602005-11-21T21:38:00.000+01:002005-11-21T21:38:00.000+01:00Please nore these comments from the Little Green F...Please nore these comments from the Little Green Footballs blog regarding the Observer's headline of November 20th on the beheading of 2 innocent Christian schoolgirls by dare-we-say-it MUSLIMS in Indonesia:<BR/><BR/>The Observer’s headline is: <BR/><BR/>Machete killings fuel Indonesia’s religious hatred.<BR/><BR/>The “religious hatred” they’re talking about is all coming from one side—the Islamic jihad gangs who kidnap and decapitate helpless Christian schoolgirls.<BR/><BR/>For peaceful Christians many of them refugees from Poso, the existence of Ninja-clad attackers brings back memories of 2001 when hundreds of masked Muslim men stormed one Christian village after another, firing automatic weapons, tossing petrol bombs and home-made grenades into houses and ordering terrified residents to get out for good. They killed anyone who dared to resist.<BR/><BR/>‘The people of the world called the beheadings of these girls barbaric,’ says David, a lay preacher in the town. ‘Pope Benedict led prayers in Rome for the safety of Christians here, but few governments have expressed real concern. We are on the verge of another jihad.<BR/><BR/>‘Almost all the religiously motivated aggression this year has been directed against Christians: schoolgirls murdered as the army turns a blind eye. But the government would rather talk of gangsters, not jihadists, carrying out the attacks. I want to know why most of the weapons carried by these militants are army issue.’<BR/><BR/>To Christians such as David it is ‘unthinkable’ that the military could have failed to end the attacks. Similar failures can be discerned in other Indonesian hotspots, including Maluku, and the west Kalimantan town of Sambas, where Christians have also been targeted. Claims of army complicity are rife among Christians, who regularly accuse the military of turning a blind eye to the Islamic militia in the area and the smuggling of weapons from the mainland.<BR/><BR/>Others point to a lack of prosecutions for attacks on Christians and talk darkly of militant training camps in remote valleys, as if to say the next mass slaughter is just around the corner.<BR/><BR/>http://littlegreenfootballs.com/weblog/?entry=18301_Indonesias_Religious_Hatred#comments<BR/><BR/>Here is the link from the Observer in discussion:<BR/><BR/>http://observer.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,6903,1646661,00.html<BR/><BR/><BR/>Let me find a barf bag!Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com