JohnK
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Mar 22, 2005
- Posts
- 44,233
That's quite ok. I have seen enough to make an accurate judgement. It has taken a long time but the world is finally waking up.I believe you are sad.
That's quite ok. I have seen enough to make an accurate judgement. It has taken a long time but the world is finally waking up.I believe you are sad.
the world is finally waking up.
Not looking good.goodness the EU might just pack it all in? soon?
Personal experience is "this happened to me". It's not subject to argument.
However when you move to "this happened to me and it means something about this general issue" that goes beyond personal experience.
There is room for discussion and even argument about the wider meaning of anyone's personal experiences.
Problems with integration in France go back decades, to the aftermath of French colonialism in Africa and the Algerian war.
They are at least partly due to a failure of government policy.
I am less familiar with the history of immigration in other European countries.
I don't pretend to have all the answers but I do know the problem is complex and the answers aren't simple.
Blaming one group or another isn't helpful.
To generalise about any group on the basis of race or religion (etc) is quite simply bigotry.
Invoking personal experience doesn't change that.
The strength of Europe has always been its diversity.
And Islam has been a part of that diversity for centuries. It's not a new arrival.
Incidentally Moorish Andalusia was a tolerant, diverse multicultural society where Christians and Jews had religious freedom at a time when Christian Europe was persecuting Jews.
Sadly that came to an end with the unification of Spain under Catholic monarchs.
Only the wonderful Moorish architecture survives.
Islamic countries launched jihad on Christian countries before Christian countries launched any Crusades.
Some older people in Europe still have knowledge of what their grandparents told them, of what the Ottomans did to them when their respective countries were under occupation by the Ottoman Empire.
I'm sorry but the Crusades were launched initially by the advance of the Muslim armies on the Byzantine Empire-this was a Christian Empire.
The first large battle of the Crusades was the Siege of Antioch in 1097-Antioch was a Muslim held city.
And you are a little out in your descriptions of the Crusades as ethnic cleansing.It was the 4th Crusade which effectively sealed the fate of the Byzantine Empire.It was in fact Christian v Christian.
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Ah the Ottomans. That's a fine role for a civilisation.Islamic countries launched jihad on Christian countries before Christian countries launched any Crusades.
Some older people in Europe still have knowledge of what their grandparents told them, of what the Ottomans did to them when their respective countries were under occupation by the Ottoman Empire.
Ah the Ottomans. That's a fine role for a civilisation.
I lost family thanks to their genocide programs. I grew up in an area that was decimated by their long term occupation.
But you know what? Personal experience, personal suffering, personal loss means nothing to civil libertarians. Sorry you lose me everytime in your lack of understanding.
Apologies for the century difference, my error,
But as I said , not Islamic states, warlords. And yes they advanced on Byzantine territory, but not in a Jihad. As warlords, it was simply a territorial grab. The Byzantines were weak and fighting amongst themselves and with others.
But I stand by the definition of ethnic cleansing. From the 1st Crusade onwards.
The 4th Crusade as its called, I agree, was in reality mob warfare by then. Infighting, subterfuge, scorched earth were the themes of the era. Doomed from the start.
The nanny accused of beheading a four-year-old girl in Moscow and waving her severed head outside a Metro station told journalists before a court hearing that ‘Allah ordered’ her to murder the child.
That has no more to do with Islam than the Lindt Cafe disaster. Just crazy people.
You are actually out by 4 centuries.Muslim armies occupied the Iberian peninsula in 711-ie nearly 4 centuries before the Crusades.And it was called a Caliphate-ie not just a group of warlords.The Umayyad Caliphate commenced in 661.Even after losing their power base it continued with the Emirs of Cordoba then the Caliphs of Cordoba.
And as to ethnic cleansing it was the Jews who really suffered at the hands of the Crusaders often before they had left Europe.