ANSWERS: 5
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Personally, I am not particularly worried about this. What with the Jews, Bildiburgers, CFR, Masons, Skull and Bones Society, Illuminati, and all of the other organization that are alleged to be trying to control the government I figure that they all cancel each other out. *************** "sunblynd: Yes, but all the organizations you have listed have Sayanim Jews within their ranks." Do you really think that THEY don't know this? Do you really think that THEY don't have their own operatives inside of the Sayanim and the Mossad? I mean, wake up and smell the conspiracies, man. All of the other groups have been at this much longer than the Mossad has. Somehow I don't think that they are going to let the upstart Mossad get the better of them.
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Why are 15,000,000 Jews more of a threat than 1,200,000,000 Muslims, one to ten per cent of which would like to see America destroyed?
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AB wouldn't accept this as a comment--Well, Sunblynd, I have noticed your intelligence over the past year, so I'm going to suggest the book (your library probably has it) Under the Influence by historian Alvin Schmidt, or How Christianity Changed the World. And then decide whether the problem is religion in general or whether some haven't had markedly better influences than others. I mean, it's obvious that some religions are no damn good. The Thugs of India had to be hunted down and exterminated by the British and there are equally murderous sects in the world today, though I would hope those sects would be neutralized by worshippers of the same god that the murderous ones worship. There are other religions whose influence is far more neutral and one or more that you might consider, on balance, to have a positive influence. Or which you might consider to have a positive influence today even though at certain places and periods they were guilty of outrageous abuses. All atheists aren't the same, either.
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BUG IN THE ANSWERBAG! answerbag refused to post this as a comment to Sunblynd, above, as it does most of the time when it alerts me of a comment to something I wrote. Here's my comment: Sunblynd, Dennis Prager, who is a very wise man, pointed out that people seem to have an inborn need to believe in something irrational, which can't be proven, and resist any attempt by facts and logic to make them change their minds. The religious acknowledge that. There is no way I can prove to you or even to me that Moses and Jesus went up on a mountaintop and talked to God; nobody else saw it. But the religious acknowledge taking a leap of faith. It seems to be worth it. The irreligious seem to devote their lives to equally unprovable irrationalities, such as the belief in the deadliness of secondhand smoke or MMCCC (man-made catastrophic climate change) or that "violence never solved anything" which is perhaps the most irrational assertion ever made, or that Colonel Sanders sells a "holocaust on your plate". We're all going to be a little irrational. We should pick one that's positive.
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Its not bloodly-likely that you CAN find out - religion, regardless of how political, is not tracked in normal HR documents - in fact, I believe it is not allowed... first amendment and all that. If it is tracked by some intelligence agency, it would definitely be covert and not available to the public.
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