The Middle East and war.

iraq_isis_in_mosul_460 iraqfaluja3 iraqlead islam

I was positive that dropping bombs on people in the Middle East was going to recruit people who wanted to do the same to us.

Not that I condone those actions.

I never thought going to war, legal or otherwise, was a good idea.

They’ve come over here with their bombs and they’re trying to bend our will and make us believe their beliefs. We’ve got our own and we’re not interested in their beliefs. We’re going to fight for our beliefs and our way of life. Whatever they do or however they try to impose their will on us we’ll never give in and we’ll fight to the last man.

That’s what they’ll be saying in Baghdad about us.

Nick Harper 2005

What we need is peace, love, tolerance and happiness. Help build a new zeitgeist!

So what is attracting all the young Jihadists to the sadism & intolerance of ISIS?

 

Is it:

A hatred of music?

A love of people being burnt in metal cages?

A hatred of Britain?

A love of being able to slowly saw the head off an aid worker who has gone out to altruistically help people?

A hatred of America?

A love of watching someone being crucified in agony?

A hatred of fun, pleasure, alcohol, pork, freedom, or democracy?

A love of seeing harmless gay people being callously thrown off tall buildings?

A hatred of peace, love and harmony?

A wish to see people being slowly stoned to death, buried alive or tortured?

A love of fascism?

Or is it a religious indoctrination? A fanatical intolerance? A hatred for anybody who doesn’t adhere to their narrow view of religion?

Not since the holocaust have we seen such barbaric evil. Yet just as it was then, the gullible are attracted to the superficial image and the devils are attracted to the agony. The indoctrinated are just brainwashed!

There’s a better way – a positive zeitgeist – Peace, Love and tolerance!!!

Jordanian Pilot burnt alive in cage by depraved religious fanatics.

Moaz al-Kasasbeh

Islam means peace.

IS means callous, fanatic, heartless, evil.

It seems incredible to civilised people in the West that anyone could be so cruel. But seemingly their cruelty is an attempt to both terrorise and attract in young disillusioned Muslims who are turned on by the very things that make sane, rational people sick.

My thoughts go out to the brave pilot Moaz al-Kasasbeh who was treated so inhumanly and his family.

Sometimes you wish there was a god so that these monsters would get their just desserts. Even so – there is only one outcome to all this. There will come a point when the world will turn and crush them.

For myself I would rather they were educated to see the evil they are doing. This satanic practice does not come from the Koran directly; it comes, as always, from the monsters who distort religion and twist it into evil. Religion is always good for slaughter, torture and inhumanity. It is, as usual, the people who instigate it who stay safely out of the action.

There can be no excuse for barbarity.

This is what the BBC had to say about it:

Islamic State: Can its savagery be explained?

Islamic State fighters surround captured Iraqi soldiers (14/06/14)

Since the sudden appearance of the extremist Sunni Islamic State (IS), the group has seized headlines with a shocking level of blood-letting and cruelty – but can its savagery be explained, asks Fawaz A Gerges.

Islamic State has become synonymous with viciousness – beheadings, crucifixions, stonings, massacres, burying victims alive and religious and ethnic cleansing.

While such savagery might seem senseless to the vast majority of civilised human beings, for IS it is a rational choice. It is a conscious decision to terrorise enemies and impress and co-opt new recruits.

IS adheres to a doctrine of total war without limits and constraints – no such thing, for instance, as arbitration or compromise when it comes to settling disputes with even Sunni Islamist rivals. Unlike its parent organisation, al-Qaeda, IS pays no lip service to theology to justify its crimes.

The violence has its roots in what can be identified as two earlier waves, though the scale and intensity of IS’ brutality far exceeds either.

The first wave, led by disciples of Sayyid Qutb – a radical Egyptian Islamist regarded as the master theoretician of modern jihadism – targeted pro-Western secular Arab regimes or what they called the “near enemy”, and, on balance, showed restraint in the use of political violence.

Beginning with the assassination of Egyptian President Anwar Sadat in 1980, this Islamist insurgency dissipated by the end of the 1990s. It had cost some 2,000 lives and saw a large number of militants head to Afghanistan to battle a new global enemy – the Soviet Union.

‘Killing machine’

The Afghan jihad against the Soviets gave birth to a second wave, with a specific target – the “far enemy”, or the United States and, to a lesser extent, Europe.

It was spearheaded by a wealthy Saudi turned revolutionary, Osama Bin Laden.

Bin Laden went to great lengths to rationalise al-Qaeda’s attack on the US on 11 September 2001, calling it “defensive jihad”, or retaliation against perceived US domination of Muslim societies.

Islamic State fighters parade in Raqqa (image by Islamic State's Raqqa Media Group) Hundreds of jihadists are reported to have swelled IS’ ranks in recent weeks

Conscious of the importance of winning hearts and minds, Bin Laden sold his message to Muslims and even Americans as self-defence, not aggression.

This kind of justification, however, carries no weight with IS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, who cannot care less what the world thinks of his blood-letting.

In fact, he and his cohorts revel in displaying barbarity and coming across as savage.

In contrast to the first two waves, IS actually stresses violent action over theology and theory, and has produced no repertoire of ideas to sustain and nourish its social base. It is a killing machine powered by blood and iron.

Going beyond Bin Laden’s doctrine that “when people see a strong horse and a weak horse, by nature they will like the strong horse”, al-Baghdadi’s “victory through terrorism” signals to friends and foes that IS is a winning horse. Get out of the way or you will be crushed; join our caravan and make history.

Increasing evidence shows that over the past few months, hundreds, if not thousands, of diehard former Islamist enemies of IS, such as the al-Nusra Front and the Islamic Front, answered al-Baghdadi’s call.

‘Shock-and-awe’

IS’ sophisticated outreach campaign appeals to disaffected and deluded young Sunnis worldwide because it is seen as a powerful vanguard that delivers victory and salvation.

Far from abhorring the group’s brutality, young recruits are attracted by its shock-and-awe tactics against the enemies of Islam.

Map showing areas of IS control

Its exploits on the battlefield – especially capturing huge swathes of territory in Syria and Iraq, and establishing a caliphate – resonate near and far. Nothing succeeds like success, and IS’ recent military gains have brought it a recruitment bonanza.

Muslim men living in Western countries join IS and other extremist groups because they feel part of a greater mission – to resurrect a lost idealised type of caliphate and be part of a tight-knit community with a potent identity.

Initially, many young men from London, Berlin and Paris and elsewhere migrate to the lands of jihad to defend persecuted co-religionists, but they end up in the clutches of IS, doing its evil deeds, such as beheading innocent civilians.

The drivers behind IS’ unrestrained extremism can be traced to its origins with al-Qaeda in Iraq, led by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, who was killed by the Americans in 2006.

Not unlike its predecessor, IS is nourished on an anti-Shia diet and visceral hatred of minorities in general, portraying itself as the spearhead of Sunni Arabs in the fight against sectarian-based regimes in Baghdad and Damascus.

Al-Zarqawi and al-Baghdadi view Shias as infidels, a fifth column in the heart of Islam that must be wiped out – a genocidal worldview.

Following in the footsteps of al-Zarqawi, al-Baghdadi ignored repeated pleas by his mentor Ayman al-Zawahiri, head of al-Qaeda, and other top militants to avoid indiscriminate killing of Shia and, instead, to attack the Shia-dominated and Alawite regimes in Iraq and Syria.

Sights on US?

By exploiting the deepening Sunni-Shia rift in Iraq and the sectarian civil war in Syria, al-Baghdadi has built a powerful base of support among rebellious Sunnis and has blended his group into local communities.

He also restructured his military network and co-opted experienced officers of Saddam Hussein’s disbanded army who turned IS into a professional sectarian fighting force.

Abu Bakr al-BaghdadiIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi has threatened to kill US troops if they come to Iraq

IS has so far consistently focused on the Shia and not the “far enemy”. The struggle against the US and Europe is distant, not a priority; it has to await liberation at home.

At the height of Israeli bombings of Gaza in August, militants on social media criticised IS for killing Muslims while doing nothing to help the Palestinians.

IS retorted by saying the struggle against the Shia takes priority over everything else.

Now that the US and Europe have joined the conflict against IS, the group will use all its assets in retaliation, including further beheading of hostages. There is also a growing likelihood that it will attack soft diplomatic targets in the Middle East.

While it might want to stage a spectacular operation on the American or European homeland, it is doubtful that IS currently has the capabilities to carry out complex attacks like 9/11.

A few months ago, in response to chatter by his followers, al-Baghdadi acknowledged that his organisation was not equipped to attack the Americans at home.

He said though that he wished the US would deploy boots on the ground so that IS could directly engage the Americans – and kill them.

Fawaz A Gerges holds the Emirates Chair in Contemporary Middle Eastern Studies at the London School of Economics and Political Science. He is author of several books, including Journey of the Jihadist: Inside Muslim Militancy.

Je suis Charlie aussi!!! Opher’s World stands for freedom of speech, tolerance and the right to offend!!

I salute the brave journalists of Charlie Hebdo who were callously, cold-bloodedly murdered by fascist religious fanatics.

Once again we have an act of cowardly, barbaric fanaticism in the name of religion. There can be no blasphemy if there is no god.

Europe was also once gripped by intolerant religious tyrants who sought to impose their limited, ignorant view of religion on everybody. They too used callous, cruel and vicious forms of torture and murder to crush free spirits. Those evil misguided individuals were ousted by people who fought for freedom and justice. Europe was freed from tyranny by the enlightenment.

Where are the signs of any Muslim enlightenment? Why has the religion become so intolerant, cruel, vicious and heartless? Where are the moderate Muslims speaking out against these atrocities? Do they all Muslims seek to impose their primitive Sharia law on everyone and force them to follow the same superstition? Why have modern day Muslims allowed themselves to be taken over by fascists?

I stand for freedom to believe in what I want. I stand for everyone else to believe what they choose without hindrance. I am no fascist.

Freedom of speech was fought for. Many people gave their lives for it. I have no wish to live under a theocracy of any description. We have to constantly fight for freedom.

My thoughts go out to the friends and relatives of those coldly murdered by intolerant sub-humans.

We need to build a positive zeitgeist!!

One in twenty people hear voices!!

It seems that you do not have to be up the top of mountains, wandering through the wilderness or in a cave to hear voices.
One in twenty people hear voices in their heads. Most people who suffer this do not pay too much attention to it. They accept it and go on living their lives. Some people find it annoying.

The amazing thing is that some of these people seem to believe that it is some fictitious supernatural beings talking to them that they call god.

That’s fine with me except they feel the need to share it with everyone else, claim it is real and want to impose a whole series of rituals, dress-codes and rules on everyone. That I do not like.

More incredibly there are billions of gullible people who give credibility to these voices and adopt the rules as a life-style.

It just goes to show what an insecure and needy lot of people human beings are! They have to be told what to do!

Schizophrenia is not greatly understood. Hearing voices is a symptom. The mind is a delicate organ.

Hopefully we will have a good treatment for it soon. I know that because the voices told me!

Perhaps you would enjoy my irreverent whimsy on religion?:

It is beyond me why anyone would support such a barbarous religion – can someone explain?

Islam is the fastest growing religion.
How can that be?
There is no clearer example of misogyny, cruelty, barbarism, intolerance, indoctrination, primitive behaviour, mindlessness or lack of morality anywhere else.
Why is it such a draw to young people?
The end result of that fanaticism is a world without music, tolerance or love.
Do we really want our women in shackles, subservient and side-lined?
It looks like a mediaeval nightmare to me!

Why not build a fair, tolerant zeitgeist and a world of love, tolerance and equality?

Religion is an excuse for the powerful to control everyone else!

Can anyone explain?