On 04/13/2017 08:11 PM, \0xDynamite wrote: > It's a fine point, but this problem is far more subtle than oppressive > forces. In the issue of Iraqis, for example, there is an issue of > ignorance. If someone in the West would have taken the time to teach > them and cross-ferilize cultures, these things wouldn't happen. But > no one did that. There are serious scriptural holes, between the > Christian and Islam, that can be united if someone were to take the > effort. Strangely, no one did. So they were discarded by the West. > But that event isn't just an issue of guns, it's an issue of everyday > people not giving a damn about anyone outside our culture. > > The problem is always in the mirror. > > Marxos > > On 4/13/17, Razer <[email protected]> wrote: >> >> On 04/13/2017 07:11 PM, \0xDynamite wrote: >>> The people activists paint as "evil empire" are comical, as in >>> literally something mythological and from a comic book. >> >> A million and a half... perhaps twice that number, of dead Iraqis, would >> debate that point. >> >> Rr >>
So... You're saying if they culturally assimilated (cf. self-inflicted cultural genocide <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultural_genocide>) to that 'evil empire' that you consider so 'comical' and 'mythological', everything would be hunky dory because they assimilated to a funny myth. Do you actually read what you write? Rr
