Posts Tagged ‘Khalid Ibn al Walid’
Religious practices and myths are Not meant to sustain your handicapped mental comfort
Posted by: adonis49 on: May 6, 2021
Religious practices: Not meant for your state comfort
Posted on: May 3, 2020
- In: Essays | Events/Cultural/Educational/Arts | Islam/Moslem/Islamic world | Jews/Israel/Palestine | religion/history | social articles
In No period of worshipping history, religion was Not associated with killing one another, creating the notion of the sacrificial lamb, the collateral damages of the destitute, the downtrodden, the ignored, the unknown.
Worshipping is the pure definition of believing in a set of illusions and myths.
We believe in a God, a cultist system, the Nation, the Money, the Army, the Banks, artificial wealth that Not backed by readily exchangeable goods and services…
Mankind will keep worshipping any one of these fiction realities, even if half of mankind is slaughtered or trampled.
Religious freedom should Not be about “religious comfort.” In the way you want to practice your world view.
If government should protect my right to practice my religion, it does Not follow it is society’s obligation to make that practice easy or carefree.
If your faith prevents you from sitting on an airplane next to a woman who isn’t your wife, then move to another seat.
If your faith tells you you can’t go to the same bathroom with some people, then figure out how to order your life so that you use the bathroom in a place that seems appropriate for you.
If your faith tells you that you can’t sell wedding cakes to certain people, don’t go into the business of selling wedding cakes.
If you are Not a physically handicapped person, understand that we are Not obligated to satisfy your mental handicaps.
Here is story:
“Let me guess: the passengers were Not Muslims, and I leave you to guess of what religion and sects they were.
As I found my seat in the plane going from Germany to New-York, I began to notice that almost all my fellow passengers were men, all dressed alike, obviously part of a very observant religious group.
The man sitting next to me was a member of the group. I said hello and began settling in for the flight.
But just as I’d begun buckling my seat belt, my seat partner signaled for the flight attendant and explained to him that I would need to be moved to another seat: his religious freedom, he said, was violated by my presence, as his religion does not allow him to sit next to a woman who is not his wife”.
Sans la laïcité des lois au monde occidental qui permet aux Islamist fanatiques et autre religions de vivre en leur milieux, peut être que Daesh n’aurait aucune raison de se fourvoyer la bas?
A Muslim war leader, at the sold of the Caliph in Damascus, was the first to catapult Al Kaaba in order to destroy it, to kill a muslim who took refuge in Kaaba, who killed the grandson of The Prophet, who killed a Muslim while praying, and about 40,000 Muslims reneged as soon as the prophet died.
The first designated Calif Abu Baker spent his 2 years fighting these renegades with savage retribution, and led by the bloodthirsty and extremist Khalid Ibn al Walid. This same war leader who massacred thousands of civilians when he entered Damascus.
Folly of follies: Worshipping illusions
Mankind learned to fear and abhor death when he invented the notion of liquid currencies or money.
Mankind began to worship killing other humans when he realized that it generated quick money.
Only taking care of our daily tasks keeps us sane for the duration.
The folly of follies is when we indulge in maniacal routine daily tasks to avert the imminence of folly.
Task like constant dusting, frequent re-arranging furniture, cataloguing and ordering what we possess…
Religious practices, Not for your state of comfort
In no period of history worship was Not associated with killing one another, creating the notion of the sacrificial lamb, the collateral damages of the destitute, the downtrodden, the ignored, the unknown.
Worshipping is the pure definition of believing in a set of illusions and myths.
We believe in a God, a cultist system, the Nation, the Money, the Army, the Banks, artificial wealth not backed by readily exchangeable goods and services…
Mankind will keep worshipping any one of these fiction realities, even if half of mankind is slaughtered or trampled.
Religious freedom is Not about “religious comfort.”
In the way you want to practice your world view.
If government should protect my right to practice my religion, it does Not follow it is society’s obligation to make that practice easy or carefree.
If your faith prevents you from sitting on an airplane next to a woman who isn’t your wife, then move to another seat.
If your faith tells you you can’t go to the same bathroom with some people, then figure out how to order your life so that you use the bathroom in a place that seems appropriate for you.
If your faith tells you that you can’t sell wedding cakes to certain people, don’t go into the business of selling wedding cakes.
You are Not a physically handicapped person and we are Not obligated to satisfy your mental handicaps.
Here is story:
“Let me guess: the passengers were Not Muslims, and I leave you to guess of what religion and sects they were.
As I found my seat in the plane going from Germany to New-York, I began to notice that almost all my fellow passengers were men, all dressed alike, obviously part of a very observant religious group.
The man sitting next to me was a member of the group. I said hello and began settling in for the flight.
But just as I’d begun buckling my seat belt, my seat partner signaled for the flight attendant and explained to him that I would need to be moved to another seat: his religious freedom, he said, was violated by my presence, as his religion does not allow him to sit next to a woman who is not his wife”.
Sans la laïcité des lois au monde occidental qui permet aux Islamist fanatiques et autre religions de vivre en leur milieux, peut être que Daesh n’aurait aucune raison de se fourvoyer la bas?
A Muslim leader was the first to catapult Al Kaaba, to kill a muslim who took refuge in Kaaba, who killed the grandson of The Prophet, who killed a Muslim while praying, and about 40,000 Muslims reneged as soon as the prophet died. The first designated Calif Abu Baker spent his 2 years fighting these renegades with savage retribution, and led by the bloodthirsty and extremist Khalid Ibn al Walid. This same war leader who massacred thousands of civilians when he entered Damascus.
Folly of follies: Worshipping illusions
Mankind learned to fear and abhor death when he invented the notion of liquid currencies or money.
Mankind began to worship killing other humans when he realized that it generated quick money.
Only taking care of our daily tasks keeps us sane for the duration.
The folly of follies is when we indulge in maniacal routine daily tasks to avert the imminence of folly.
Task like constant dusting, frequent re-arranging furniture, cataloguing and ordering what we possess…