Marc39
Rookie
- Jun 19, 2009
- 10,018
- 204
- 0
- Banned
- #41
Lebanon is a good example of Christians and Muslims having a shared government.No, I don't want them killed Daveman
But they need to share the land of Palestine with the Arabs.
And form a government that gives equal power to everyone; not just the zionists.
if arabs wanted to share, they'd have shared in 1948. now that they got their butts kicked over and over again, they want to share?
arabs have never shared a government with anyone. they killed and subjugated everyone they 'shared' with.
Same with Iran; which has the largest Jewish population in the ME outside of Israel.
LOL, Abu, you're clueless.
Lebanon used to be 80% Maronite Christian until the Muzzies persecuted and murdered the Christians. Today, Lebanon is just 20% Christian.
Muzzies, especially Muzzie Hezballah, have destroyed Lebanon, Abu.
Read, learn, Abu...
Israeli Arab Muslim Journalist Khaled Abu Toameh: Muslim Genocide of Christians In The Middle East.
The West, Islam and Sharia: Muslim Genocide of Christians Throughout Middle EastIt is obvious by now that the Christians in the Middle East are an "endangered species." Christians in Arab countries are no longer being persecuted; they are now being slaughtered and driven out of their homes and lands. Those who for many years turned a blind eye to complaints about the persecution of Christians in the Middle East now owe the victims an apology. Now it is clear to all that these complaints were not "Jewish propaganda." The war of genocide against Christians in the Middle East can no longer be treated as an "internal affair" of Iraq or Egypt or the Palestinians. What the West needs to understand is that radical Islam has declared jihad not only against Jews, but also against Christians. In Iraq, Egypt and the Palestinian territories, Christians are being targeted almost on a daily basis by Muslim fundamentalists and secular dictators.
Dozens of Arab Christians in Iraq have been killed in recent months in what seems to be well-planned campaign to drive them out of the country. Many Christian families have already begun fleeing Iraq out of fear for their lives. Some have chosen to start new lives in Jordan, while many others are expressing hope that they could be resettled in North America or Europe. In Egypt, the plight of the Coptic Christian minority appears to be worsening. Just this week, the Egyptian security forces killed a Coptic Christian man and wounded scores of others who were protesting against the government's intention to demolish a Christian-owned structure. Hardly a day passes without reports of violence against members of the Coptic Christian community in various parts of Egypt. Most of the attacks are carried out by Muslim fundamentalists.
Last week, the Western-funded Palestinian Authority in the West Bank arrested a Christian journalist who reported about differences between Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and senior Fatah operative Mohammed Dahlan. The journalist, George Qanawati, manager of Radio Bethlehem 2000, was freed five days later. In the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip, the tiny Christian community is also living in fear following a spate of attacks by radical Islamic groups. The failure of the international community to pay enough attention to the dangers facing the Christians encouraged radical Muslims and corrupt dictatorships to step up their assaults on Christian individuals and institutions. When Muslim fanatics cannot kill Christian soldiers or civilians in the mountains of Afghanistan or on the streets of New York, they choose an easy prey: their Arab Christian neighbors.
Last edited: