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Interpretation of In the Light's posts: You bad people quit picking on the poor innocent Muslim Brotherhood. They are a peace loving organization, loving of all non-Muslims, and only want the best for Egypt, Israel, and the United States.
Okay; you've been given examples of associations with violent groups. Please continue with the point you wanted to make.I never said anything remotely like that. I asked for examples of the MB using violence. I sure hope your Bible interpretation is more disciplined.
Be patient.Well, that still isn't showing evidence of their violence in Egypt in the last two weeks...![]()
Don said:Okay; you've been given examples of associations with violent groups. Please continue with the point you wanted to make.
And, please do show us evidence that the Muslim Brotherhood is innocent if you are so concerned about us tarnishing their reputation to the point of questioning my ability to interpret the Bible (which, by the way, is a cheap shot).
There seems to be a school of thought that Egypt is going to be the next Iran in that after the revolution a hard-core radical Islamic faction will take over the country. Right wing radio talk show hosts and Newt Gingrich are espousing this view. Most conservatives are buying it. I'm not so sure. Neither is the Israeli defense minister:
Wrong and right wing radio is not espousing this view. What some on this board and conservative radio is actually espousing is that there is the potential for it to become the next Iran.
Targus said:(responding to this posted by KenH:
I don't see this being a late 1970's Iranian style religious based uprising.) What the people in the streets want and what they get will no doubt be two different things.
Do you think that the "students" in Iran in the 70's wanted what they ended up getting?
RighteousDude said:It is possible that the entire mid-East will soon be under some form of radical Muslim government.
Any one who does not think the mid-East will eventually be under Muslim rule has their head in the sand.
Sorry, but, I don't see a democracy coming forth in Eygpt.
Yes, well you must realize that Limbaugh is the master on innuendo. He rarely says anything straight up. Usually it is in the form of leading questions, like this:
Rush Limbaugh
We have said from the get-go that if you wanted the second term of Jimmy Carter, elect Barack Obama, and here we are, and what happened in the first term of Jimmy Carter? We lost Iran to a bunch of radical Islamist extremists. Are we looking at the second term of Jimmy Carter here, losing Egypt to a bunch of radicalized Islamist extremists?
http://nation.foxnews.com/rush-limbaugh/2011/01/31/limbaugh-pharaoh-obama-has-his-egypt-moment
Talking about the increasingly volatile developments in Egypt last night, Newt Gingrich communicated what he thought so far of the Obama Administration’s handling of the crisis. And he had only disparagements to hand out in his description of Obama and company’s series of blunders. Citing the very real potential for great harm and risk to emerge in Egypt if the Muslim Brotherhood takes power (as many expect it to), Gingrich declared that Obama’s performance has been as bad as Jimmy Carter’s performance in the late 1970s regarding Iran, which saw the American alliance there collapse in the face of a hostile, Islamic takeover.
http://www.examiner.com/american-po...-handling-of-egypt-to-carter-handling-of-iran
Hugh Hewitt
A much, much worse Egyptian dictatorship could be around the corner. Would any of the talking heads care to argue the world is better off for the shah having fallen in 1979 as opposed to a quieter exit a year or two down the road with anyone except the fanatical mullah as supreme leader?
http://www.sfexaminer.com/opinion/op-eds/2011/02/will-mubarak-s-fall-egypt-resemble-shah-s-iran
Bill Bennett
Right now, however, the choice seems to once again be between a tough autocracy that is embarrassing to any rational notion of human rights and a Muslim Brotherhood that respects little outside its own definition of Islam and is even less tolerable to the stability of the region and our relations in the Middle East.
http://articles.cnn.com/2011-01-31/...ans-egypt-al-azhar-university/2?_s=PM:OPINION
Posters only talking about it being a potential outcome? I think not.
http://www.baptistboard.com/showthread.php?t=70027
One can debate endlessly the violent aspects of the muslim brotherhood. It does exist, covert though it is.
What one cannot debate is the idiotic statement by Obama's Clapper that it is a "secular" organization.
An Egyptian Islamist terrorist organization founded by the Muslim Brotherhood is re-establishing itself amid the political upheaval in Cairo, WND has learned.
Read more: Muslim Brotherhood awakens terrorist wing http://www.wnd.com/?pageId=261069#ixzz1DymlwvmS
I can agree with these statements.
"An unnamed source has told WND...." Sorry but I don't put much credence in that article.
Of course! It's from WND and many believe that conveniently relieves them of the obligation to acknowledge the truth when it's inconvenient. Followed by absolutely no attempt to disprove the report.
I understand perfectly.:smilewinkgrin:
The WND conveniently believes they are not obligated to naming sources thus making it impossible to verify their stories. They also imply they have some sort of extensive intelligence network.
The Muslim Brotherhood seeks to spread Islam around the world. Hamas and al-Qaida are violent Brotherhood offshoots.
While the Brotherhood claimed it abandoned violence to push for a peaceful takeover of Egypt, the group's new spiritual leader, Muhammad Badi, recently has publicly called for violent jihad, including against the U.S.
Al-Gama'a al-Islamiyya was founded by the Muslim Brotherhood, and is classified as a terrorist group by the U.S., European Union and Egypt. Like the Muslim Brotherhood, the group is dedicated to the overthrow of Mubarak, seeking to replace his regime with an Islamic state.
The group has carried out numerous deadly attacks.
Al-Gama'a al-Islamiyya may have been involved indirectly in Sadat's assassination. The group's leader has talked publicly about collaborating in planning the murder with the Egyptian Islamic Jihad, which was blamed for the killing.
In the late 1980s and 1990s, Al-Gama'a al-Islamiyya carried out scores of terrorist acts in Egypt, including the murders and attempted murders of prominent Egyptian writers and intellectuals. The group also targeted tourists and foreigners.
In 1997, it carried out the notorious Luxor massacre in Luxor, Egypt, killing 58 foreign tourists and four Egyptians. Al-Gama'a al-Islamiyya went on a shooting rampage in that attack, even reportedly mutilating the bodies of victims. A note praising Islam was found inside one disemboweled body.
One year earlier, in 1996, Al-Gama'a al-Islamiyya carried out a shooting rampage at the Europa Hotel in Cairo, killing 18 Greek tourists.
In 1995, the group took responsibility for a car bomb attack on the Egyptian embassy in Islamabad, Pakistan, murdering 16 people.
After a massive Egyptian crackdown on the group in 1997 following the Luxor attack, Al-Gama'a al-Islamiyya brokered a deal with the Egyptian government that is known as the Nonviolence Initiative, in which some leaders of the movement said they renounced violence.
Still, exiled leaders of Al-Gama'a al-Islamiyya maintained the group would not give up its violence.
Care to take on the facts?
I'm not disagreeing with you, really. I'm merely stating that the MB in Egypt did not resort to violence during the revolution and may be seeking a new strategy to gain power there. Also, I don't necessarily think that Egypt is the next Iran.
I'm not disagreeing with you, really. I'm merely stating that the MB in Egypt did not resort to violence during the revolution and may be seeking a new strategy to gain power there. Also, I don't necessarily think that Egypt is the next Iran.
Finally...folks tend to respond in these situations in reactionary ways. Mubarak will likely be followed (if the people have their way) by an anti-Mubarak. There could be a swing away from secularization (as Mubarak was fairly secular for a muslim country leader). Also, since Mubarak was not so hostile to Israel, a pendulum swing could bring in an incindiery figure. Are the MB that way?
I read in today Wall Street Journal (a reputable news source for In the Light) that the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt seems to be two sided. One side is very conservative in nature and would take on the entire world in the name of Jihad. The other is not so violent and seems to be more open. Which one will win out? Based on what we've witnessed so far from the Muslim world I wouldn't be placing bets for the more liberal minded within the Muslim Brotherhood. I sincerely hope that I'm wrong.