Hastings gull
Well-known member
- Nov 23, 2013
- 4,652
We need to be asking ourselves - why is this even news?
It's almost as if they want us to be scared.
Who is "they"?
We need to be asking ourselves - why is this even news?
It's almost as if they want us to be scared.
Take your pick - there are plenty of organisations who have lots to gain from the public being scared. Whether it's the government, the media establishments, or the terrorists themselves.
We have reached the point now where we are on the verge of a mass hysteria.
Take your pick - there are plenty of organisations who have lots to gain from the public being scared. Whether it's the government, the media establishments, or the terrorists themselves.
We have reached the point now where we are on the verge of a mass hysteria.
You do realise that the "they want to cause hysteria and scare us" rhetoric is just people who cannot face the scary truth trying to comfort themselves by pretending it's all just hype? You do realise that's what you are doing right? Well, it is.
The world should be aware of IS and it's movements. They are very scary people.
Take your pick - there are plenty of organisations who have lots to gain from the public being scared. Whether it's the government, the media establishments, or the terrorists themselves.
We have reached the point now where we are on the verge of a mass hysteria.
The IS are very real, but the perceived threat is greatly exaggerated as we are constantly bombarded with stories of their atrocities 3,000 miles away. The reality is that they are not a threat to anyone apart from the poor souls living in the Middle East.
Their ideology is completely unsustainable and they have far too many enemies. While they will not last, nor do they pose a physical threat to Europeans, the most damaging thing they are doing to us is creating an antipathy towards European Muslims and causing a very harmful social divide - but this is intentional.
but it is hyped. what Boko Haram is doing here is raising their profile - you'll note its a one way declaration of alliance. both groups are intent on establishing islamic states, and right now are restricting activity to their local areas. IS isnt a threat to the west as they are busy trying to build a state. Boko is the same as far as i can tell. they are scary people, and they are over there. in a post iraq world where we've decided we dont want to get involved in conflicts elsewhere, we should leave well alone, except to support affected neighbours when they ask for assistance (Turkey, Jordan). if they start exporting terrorism to us, then we must address that, but right now there is far more fear of that than evidnce of any planning on their behalf.
The IS are very real, but the perceived threat is greatly exaggerated as we are constantly bombarded with stories of their atrocities 3,000 miles away. The reality is that they are not a threat to anyone apart from the poor souls living in the Middle East.
The IS are very real, but the perceived threat is greatly exaggerated as we are constantly bombarded with stories of their atrocities 3,000 miles away. The reality is that they are not a threat to anyone apart from the poor souls living in the Middle East.
Their ideology is completely unsustainable and they have far too many enemies. While they will not last, nor do they pose a physical threat to Europeans, the most damaging thing they are doing to us is creating an antipathy towards European Muslims and causing a very harmful social divide - but this is intentional.
The IS are very real, but the perceived threat is greatly exaggerated as we are constantly bombarded with stories of their atrocities 3,000 miles away. The reality is that they are not a threat to anyone apart from the poor souls living in the Middle East.
Their ideology is completely unsustainable and they have far too many enemies. While they will not last, nor do they pose a physical threat to Europeans, the most damaging thing they are doing to us is creating an antipathy towards European Muslims and causing a very harmful social divide - but this is intentional.
but it is hyped. what Boko Haram is doing here is raising their profile - you'll note its a one way declaration of alliance. both groups are intent on establishing islamic states, and right now are restricting activity to their local areas. IS isnt a threat to the west as they are busy trying to build a state. Boko is the same as far as i can tell. they are scary people, and they are over there. in a post iraq world where we've decided we dont want to get involved in conflicts elsewhere, we should leave well alone, except to support affected neighbours when they ask for assistance (Turkey, Jordan). if they start exporting terrorism to us, then we must address that, but right now there is far more fear of that than evidnce of any planning on their behalf.
... we may have lost the military upper hand and it might be too late to do anything, other than, god forbid, use battlefield tactical nuclear weapons. I am not suggesting we invade Syria etc, but a bombing effort to degrade their capabilities, whilst inevitably not totally effective, might at least stave off their advances. It would seem that the recent reverses they have suffered came as a result of militias getting much American air support. Very sad that such issues need to be debated.
The IS are very real, but the perceived threat is greatly exaggerated as we are constantly bombarded with stories of their atrocities 3,000 miles away. The reality is that they are not a threat to anyone apart from the poor souls living in the Middle East.
Their ideology is completely unsustainable and they have far too many enemies. While they will not last, nor do they pose a physical threat to Europeans, the most damaging thing they are doing to us is creating an antipathy towards European Muslims and causing a very harmful social divide - but this is intentional.
Just plain inaccurate and plain wrong.
The IS are very real, but the perceived threat is greatly exaggerated as we are constantly bombarded with stories of their atrocities 3,000 miles away. The reality is that they are not a threat to anyone apart from the poor souls living in the Middle East.
Their ideology is completely unsustainable and they have far too many enemies. While they will not last, nor do they pose a physical threat to Europeans, the most damaging thing they are doing to us is creating an antipathy towards European Muslims and causing a very harmful social divide - but this is intentional.
I think the relatives of these people might have something to say about your ridiculous blatherings. Because it sure as hell affected them.
PARIS: Below is a list of executions of westerners this year by militants or movements linked to the jihadist Islamic State group.
* August 19, 2014: ISIS posts a video of the decapitation of US freelance photojournalist James Foley, who was seized in northern Syria in November 2012.
The video of Foley's killing, which provokes worldwide revulsion, also shows a second US reporter, Steven Sotloff, being paraded by a black-clad IS militant who warns that he too will be killed if US President Barack Obama does not stop air strikes on IS positions in Iraq.
* September 2, 2014: IS says it has beheaded Sotloff, in another propaganda video showing the ghastly killing.
The freelance reporter was kidnapped August 4, 2013, in Aleppo near Syria's border with Turkey. His abduction was kept secret under a news blackout.
* September 13, 2014: IS claims to have beheaded British aid worker David Haines, as the US launches a vast diplomatic offensive to build an international coalition against the jihadists.
Haines was seized by militants in March 2013, while working for a Paris-based non-governmental organisation.
* September 24, 2014: IS-linked Jund al-Khilifa, or "Soldiers of the Caliphate," claim to have beheaded French tourist Herve Gourdel following his abduction in Algeria, in a video posted online after Paris rejected their demand to halt air strikes in Iraq.
* November 16, 2014: The Islamic State group claims to have executed Peter Kassig, a US aid worker kidnapped in Syria, as a warning to the United States.
The same video showed the gruesome simultaneous beheadings of at least 18 men described as Syrian military personnel, the latest in a series of mass executions and other atrocities carried out by ISIS.
You can't say "i'm out" and then come back in the door again with an even longer reply, bet your mrs wins all the arguments in your house.
You can't say "i'm out" and then come back in the door again with an even longer reply, bet your mrs wins all the arguments in your house.
Do you walk about with your eyes closed. Pick up a paper man.
but it is hyped. what Boko Haram is doing here is raising their profile - you'll note its a one way declaration of alliance. both groups are intent on establishing islamic states, and right now are restricting activity to their local areas. IS isnt a threat to the west as they are busy trying to build a state. Boko is the same as far as i can tell. they are scary people, and they are over there. in a post iraq world where we've decided we dont want to get involved in conflicts elsewhere, we should leave well alone, except to support affected neighbours when they ask for assistance (Turkey, Jordan). if they start exporting terrorism to us, then we must address that, but right now there is far more fear of that than evidnce of any planning on their behalf.