Otak "alifuru99"  ini jelas sudah rusak dan sudah busuk: dia pakai
kesempatan dia baca  berita itu untuk menyebar fitnah tentang diri
saya yang dikatakannnya menerima jatah dari gereja.


--- In [email protected], "alifuru99" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> wah .. ini betul-betul kegagalan total dari angku suruhan setan
(sutan) marajolelo setelah berbelas tahun memaki-maki oang islam bodoh
dan berusaha membuat mereka menjadi lebih jauh dari islam malah
setelah 5 tahun lebih setuju dengan aturan islam sementara angku
suruhan setan makin kuat maki-makiannya meskipun sebentar lagi mau
masuk lubang kubur...
> 
> jadi nggak salah komentar sutan... makin mengerikan... karena jatah
dari gereja bakalan kena potong nih... makin lapar aja apalagi
sebentar lagi mau musim dingin... onde mande......takana kampung nan
jauah di mato...
> 
> 
> tabik
> 
> 
>   ----- Original Message ----- 
>   From: Jusfiq Hadjar 
>   To: [email protected] 
>   Sent: Tuesday, October 14, 2008 7:29 PM
>   Subject: [proletar] (unknown)
> 
> 
>   Mengerikan: 
> 
>   "Indonesian survey and election results led R. William Liddle and
Saiful
>   Mujani in 2003 to conclude that the number of Islamists "is no more
>   than 15 per cent of the total Indonesian Muslim population". In
>   contrast, a 2008 survey of 8000 Indonesian Muslims by Roy Morgan
>   Research found 40 per cent of Indonesians favouring hadd criminal
>   punishments (such as cutting off the hands of thieves) and 52 per cent
>   favouring some form of Islamic legal code."
> 
>   40 persen orang Islam Indonesia setuju dengan hukuman biadab
potong tangan pencuri.....
> 
>   Size of Islamist menace
> 
>   Daniel Pipes | October 09, 2008
> 
>   THE recent distribution in the US of about 28 million copies of
the 2005 documentary Obsession: Radical Islam's War Against the West
has stirred heated debate about its contents. One lightning rod for
criticism concerns my on-screen statement that "10 to 15 per cent of
Muslims worldwide support militant Islam".
> 
>   The Muslim Public Affairs Council declared this estimate "utterly
unsubstantiated" and "completely without evidence". Masoud Kheirabadi,
a professor at Portland State University and the author of children's
books about Islam, informed The Oregonian newspaper that there's no
basis for my estimate. Daniel Ruth, writing in The Tampa Tribune,
asked dubiously how I arrived at this number. "Did he take a poll?
That would be enlightening! What does support for radical Islam mean?
Pipes provides no answers."
> 
>   Actually, Pipes did provide answers. He collected and published
many numbers at How Many Islamists?, a weblog entry initiated in May 2005.
> 
>   First, though, an explanation of what I meant by Muslims who
"support militant Islam": these are Islamists, individuals who seek a
totalistic, worldwide application of Islamic law, the sharia. In
particular, they seek to build an Islamic state in Turkey, replace
Israel with an Islamic state and the US constitution with the Koran.
> 
>   But, as with any attitudinal estimate, several factors impede
approximating the percentage of Islamists.
> 
>   How much fervour: Gallup polled more than 50,000 Muslims across 10
countries and found that, if one defines radicals as those who deemed
the 9/11 attacks "completely justified", their number constitutes
about 7 per cent of the total population. But if one includes Muslims
who considered the attacks "largely justified", their ranks jump to
13.5 per cent. Adding those who deemed the attacks "somewhat
justified" boosts the number of radicals to 36.6 per cent. Which
figure should one adopt?
> 
>   Gauge voter intentions: Elections measure Islamist sentiment
untidily, for Islamist parties erratically win support from
non-Islamists. Thus, Turkey's Justice and Development Party won 47 per
cent of the vote in the 2007 elections and 34 per cent in the 2002
elections, and its precursor, the Virtue Party, won just 15 per cent
in 1999. The Islamic Movement's northern faction won 75 per cent of
the vote in the Israeli Arab city of Umm al-Fahm in the 2003
elections, while Hamas, the Palestinian terrorist organisation, won 44
per cent of the vote in the Palestinian Authority elections in 2006.
Which number does one select?
> 
>   What to measure: Many polls measure attitudes other than
application of Islamic law. Gallup looks at support for 9/11. The Pew
Global Attitudes Project assesses support for suicide bombing. Nawaf
Obaid, a Saudi security specialist, focuses on pro-Osama bin Laden
views. Germany's domestic security agency, Bundesamt fur
Verfassungsschutz, counts membership in Islamist organisations.
Margaret Nydell of Georgetown University calculates "Islamists who
resort to violence".
> 
>   Inexplicably varying results: A University of Jordan survey
revealed that large majorities of Jordanians, Palestinians and
Egyptians wish the sharia to be the only source of Islamic law, but
only one-third of Syrians do.
> 
>   Indonesian survey and election results led R. William Liddle and
Saiful Mujani in 2003 to conclude that the number of Islamists "is no
more than 15 per cent of the total Indonesian Muslim population". In
contrast, a 2008 survey of 8000 Indonesian Muslims by Roy Morgan
Research found 40 per cent of Indonesians favouring hadd criminal
punishments (such as cutting off the hands of thieves) and 52 per cent
favouring some form of Islamic legal code.
> 
>   Given these complications, it is not surprising that estimates
vary considerably. On the one hand, the Islamic Supreme Council of
America's Hisham Kabbani says 5 per cent to 10per cent of American
Muslims are extremists and pollster Daniel Yankelovich finds that "the
hate-America Islamist fundamentalists average about 10 per cent of all
Muslims". On the other, reviewing 10 surveys of British Muslim
opinion, I concluded that "more than half of British Muslims want
Islamic law and 5 per cent endorse violence to achieve that end".
> 
>   These ambiguous and contradictory percentages lead to no clear,
specific count of Islamists. Out of a quantitative mishmash, I
suggested just three days after 9/11 that about 10 per cent to 15 per
cent of Muslims are determined Islamists. Subsequent evidence
generally confirmed that estimate and suggested, if anything, that the
actual numbers might be higher.
> 
>   Negatively, 10 per cent to 15 per cent suggests that Islamists
number about 150 million out of a billion-plus Muslims, more than all
the fascists and communists who ever lived.
> 
>   Positively, it implies that most Muslims can be swayed against
Islamist totalitarianism.
> 
>   Daniel Pipes is director of the Middle East Forum.
> 
>   ---------------
>   Jusfiq Hadjar gelar Sutan Maradjo Lelo
> 
>   Allah yang disembah orang Islam tipikal dan yang digambarkan oleh
al-Mushaf itu dungu, buas, kejam, keji, ganas, zalim lagi biadab
hanyalah Allah fiktif.
> 
>   [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
> 
> 
> 
>    
> 
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>



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