Global Warming: Fact or Fiction?

Discussion in 'Global Surf Talk' started by sisurfdogg, Jun 3, 2017.

  1. nynj

    nynj Well-Known Member

    Jul 27, 2012
    I'm all for getting rid of anyone that wants to kill innocent people? But who do you send back? Just muslims?
    Or do we send puerto ricans back since the are responsible for Fort Lauderdale and NYC.
    White teens since they shoot up schools?
    South Koreans since they shoot up colleges?
    White dudes since they blow up buildings?

    And Tokyo has terrorism, it's just domestic terrorism.
     
  2. DawnPatrol321

    DawnPatrol321 Well-Known Member

    Mar 6, 2012
    Right on. Barry has good points, it's just his delivery you have to get past. Much like Trump. Don't pay attention to the personality, pay attention to the policy.
     

  3. Barry Cuda

    Barry Cuda Guest

    All those you mention are NOT religious based.
    The white dude that blew up Oklahoma--we killed him. That ids exactly what they do in Japan. Guilty? You are dead; no further trials required.
    Works for me.
     
  4. nynj

    nynj Well-Known Member

    Jul 27, 2012
    So we are cool with random mass murders as long as they are not based on religion?

    I have no problem with killing them
     
  5. Kyle

    Kyle Well-Known Member

    Sep 9, 2011
    I cannot speak for Japan as I have never been. I do notice that Japan is 98.5% Japanese, 0.5% Korean, 0.4% Chinese and 0.6% other. Not a very diverse country. I would not ever want to see American demographics look like this; however, I do think it is a factor in the lack of terrorism there.

    How would you explain it Barry, I am curious...it can't just be cause they kill them. I thought the whole point of their suicide attacks is to die anyways. To get the virgins and what not.
     
  6. nynj

    nynj Well-Known Member

    Jul 27, 2012
    Terrorism in Japan is carried out by Christians.
     
  7. DawnPatrol321

    DawnPatrol321 Well-Known Member

    Mar 6, 2012
    The only ones on that list that I'm aware of that has come right out and declared war on us is the Muslim Extremists. They declared war on 9/11 and it's been on ever since. They are now in the process of a major push to take over. Bin Ladin's son vowed revenge, it's only going to get worse if people all over the world don't wake up and band together on this. This is our Natzi era. Bad things happen to good people when they sit back and let evil run rampant. Stomp them b*tches out, they are the #1 threat to the human race aside from disease. The frequency of attacks has gotten more and more frequent. Thank the weak European leaders and Obama for this.
     
  8. Kyle

    Kyle Well-Known Member

    Sep 9, 2011

    I am not trying to minimize the risk of radical islam; however, I think it is a bit of aggrandizing to compare them to the Nazi's.

    I would ask how do you propose we stomp them out? And I ask this in all seriousness, as they are not the type of army we are used to destroying. I have my own idea for destroying them, but Barry and Archy aren't gonna like it lol.
     
  9. HelpHelpLetMeOut

    HelpHelpLetMeOut Well-Known Member

    Mar 2, 2017
    whats wrong with a monoculture? like minded people tend to get ish done faster than a clusterfckk of retards from stone-age peasant cultures

    for the record, I am ok with immigration so long as you assimilate to the culture
    dont bring your goat herder child raping philosophy here

    also, everyone should dip their ammo in bacon grease, and advertise as such
     
    Last edited: Jun 5, 2017
  10. yankee

    yankee Well-Known Member

    Sep 26, 2008
    +1 ^^

    pay attention here, Kylie
     
  11. Barry Cuda

    Barry Cuda Guest

    We are not cool with them--they too are domestic terrorist. But that does not mean we allow, encourage international religious terrorist to take root here. That is a mistake. Send them back.. The silence of the USA muslim communities is tacit approval on their part of what the terrorists are doing.
     
  12. yankee

    yankee Well-Known Member

    Sep 26, 2008
    Or, you (Kylie) could always ask your resident genius Elon 'Hustler' Musk for the solution.

    In the meantime, importing a group of people who live by the ideology of hate & who have a thousand yrs under their belt of dedicating themselves to wiping out any other ideology, regardless of any factors, is, uh, not bright.

    Does Islam tell Muslims to love or hate those outside the faith?

    There is no place in the Quran where Muhammad tells Muslims to love people of other religions. By contrast there are at least three dozen verses that tell believers to fight against non-Muslims, and about 500 that speak of their place in Hell. They are from each period in Muhammad's life, scattered across 87 of the Quran's 114 chapters.

    To put this in perspective, nearly one out of twelve verses in the Quran implies that Allah hates non-Muslims to the extent that he will torment them for eternity in horrible ways. The Suras that make reference to this comprise about 95% of the Quran's total volume. If Allah creates infidels merely to fuel the fires of Hell, then there is little reason for Muslims to believe that such lives are of any worth in this world either.
     
  13. Barry Cuda

    Barry Cuda Guest

    They do not allow muslims in--japs do not abide by "freedom of religion". It is their way and their way only. Japan does NOT welcome strangers other than for short stays. They try very hard and very successfully to remain purists in terms of their race. It works for them. Girls marry an American?? Go to America with hubby. Cannot stay--children are considered mutts.
    Years ago a Japanese domestic terrorist let out a poison gas/substance in their trains, if I recall correctly. They found the guy; he is now dead. Officially or otherwise. Works for me. We did the same with McVeigh. He was a political domestic terrorist. Some of the others have been schizophrenics, mental health issues.
     
  14. yankee

    yankee Well-Known Member

    Sep 26, 2008
    The Tokyo subway sarin attack, usually referred to in the Japanese media as the Subway Sarin Incident (地下鉄サリン事件? Chikatetsu Sarin Jiken), was an act of domestic terrorism perpetrated on March 20, 1995, in Tokyo, Japan, by members of the cult movement Aum Shinrikyo.

    In five coordinated attacks, the perpetrators released sarin on three lines of the present-day Tokyo Metro (then part of the Tokyo subway) during rush hour, killing 12 people, severely injuring 50 and causing temporary vision problems for nearly 5,000 others. The attack was directed against trains passing through Kasumigaseki and Nagatachō, home to the Japanese government. Until the Myojo 56 building fire on September 1, 2001, it was the deadliest incident to occur in Japan since the end of World War II.
     
  15. DawnPatrol321

    DawnPatrol321 Well-Known Member

    Mar 6, 2012
    I don't think it's aggrandizing. Think about it. Both want / wanted to take over the world. Both aspire(d) to kill anybody that doesn't fit into their belief system or supreme race. Both attempted to take over Europe. ISIS is making a strong push and if they don't put a stop to it now, they will succeed. Then what?

    How do we stomp them out? As a civilian living in Florida your best bet is to vote for people who will go after them with our military that we pay for with our tax dollars, they represent you and I.

    Vote for people who aren't afraid to call it what it is. Radical Islamic Terrorism. Our power is in our vote. Get enough people in positions of power who aren't going to sit on their hands and maybe possibly things can change.

    Don't vote for wimpy PC politicians, and try to support those who you didn't necessarily vote for as long as they are doing something about the issue.

    And lastly, denounce this type of thinking and spread the word that this is the wrong thought process. This thinking is what enables them and will get people killed...

    [video=youtube;_T6h4FZUvJI]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_T6h4FZUvJI[/video]
     
  16. Barry Cuda

    Barry Cuda Guest

    Thanks. I should have googled it. Could barely recall the incident. But that shows that in Japan, terrorism is rare, or at least unusual.
     
  17. yankee

    yankee Well-Known Member

    Sep 26, 2008
    The sarin attack was the most serious attack upon Japan since the United States' bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945. It caused massive disruption and widespread fear in a society that had previously been perceived as virtually free of crime.

    Shortly after the attack, Aum lost its status as a religious organization, and many of its assets were seized. The Diet (Japanese parliament) rejected a request from government officials to outlaw the group.

    The National Public Safety Commission received increased funding to monitor the group. In 1999, the Diet gave the commission broad powers to monitor and curtail the activities of groups that have been involved in "indiscriminate mass murder" and whose leaders are "holding strong sway over their members", a bill custom-tailored to Aum Shinrikyo.

    Asahara was sentenced to death by hanging on 27 February 2004, but lawyers immediately appealed the ruling. The Tokyo High Court postponed its decision on the appeal until results were obtained from a court-ordered psychiatric evaluation, which was issued to determine whether Asahara was fit to stand trial. In February 2006, the court ruled that Asahara was indeed fit to stand trial, and on 27 March 2006, rejected the appeal against his death sentence. Japan's Supreme Court upheld this decision on 15 September 2006.

    Two re-trial appeals were declined by the appellate court. In June 2012, Asahara's execution was postponed due to the further arrests of the two remaining Aum Shinrikyo members wanted in connection with the attack. Asahara is currently awaiting his death sentence. Japan does not announce dates of executions, which are by hanging, in advance of them being carried out.

    On 27 November 2004, all the Aum trials concluded, excluding Asahara's, as the death sentence of Seiichi Endo was upheld by Japan's Supreme Court. As a result, among a total of 189 members indicted, 13 were sentenced to death, five were sentenced to life in prison, 80 were given prison sentences of various lengths, 87 received suspended sentences, two were fined, and one was found not guilty.

    In May and June 2012, the last two of the fugitives wanted in connection with the attack were arrested in the Tokyo and Kanagawa area. Of them, Katsuya Takahashi was taken into custody by police near a comic book cafe in Tokyo.

    The group reportedly still has about 2,100 members, and continues to recruit new members under the name "Aleph" as well as other names. Though the group has renounced its violent past, it still continues to follow Asahara's spiritual teachings. Members operate several businesses, though boycotts of known Aleph-related businesses, in addition to searches, confiscations of possible evidence and picketing by protest groups, have resulted in closures.
     
  18. cepriano

    cepriano Well-Known Member

    Apr 20, 2012
    don't really know where this threade is at the moment,but id just like to say

    isis will never be defeated.isis is only a name.its an idealogy that these vermin live by.u can kill all the men u want,but u can never kill an idea,which is what they are.

    my proposed plan would be to evacuate all troops and bases from those lands,stop giving them financial aid,and just let them kill each other like they been doing for the past 2000 years.we stepped into this fight,if we never did theyd still be over there killing each other and it wouldn't even make the news.i learned about the muslim sunni-shiite war years before 911 even happened,it is nothing new.

    terrorism was just the greatest excuse to get into a war that will never stop,like the war on drugs.u cant win a war if u don't even know who the enemy is,and the enemy is an idea
     
  19. archy 2.0

    archy 2.0 Well-Known Member

    Jul 5, 2012
    WTF does Michael Meyers know about immigration?
     
  20. cepriano

    cepriano Well-Known Member

    Apr 20, 2012
    people will always want to kill other people and control them.its human nature,we love to fight,we love to compete,at the end of the day its all a game to them

    if we really wanted to stop terrorism and go after crimes against humanity we'd of been in Africa for the past half century,not an oil rich desert where the population lives in huts and caves