Collarchat.com

Join Our Community
Collarchat.com

Home  Login  Search 

RE: UKistan.


View related threads: (in this forum | in all forums)

Logged in as: Guest
 
All Forums >> [Community Discussions] >> Dungeon of Political and Religious Discussion >> RE: UKistan. Page: <<   < prev  1 2 [3]
Login
Message << Older Topic   Newer Topic >>
RE: UKistan. - 5/19/2013 4:05:42 AM   
Moonhead


Posts: 16520
Joined: 9/21/2009
Status: offline
There's some very odd coves down in Cornwall: the Cornish separatists can't even decide on what the Cornish language is meant to be, for heavens sake.

_____________________________

I like to think he was eaten by rats, in the dark, during a fog. It's what he would have wanted...
(Simon R Green on the late James Herbert)

(in reply to Lucylastic)
Profile   Post #: 41
RE: UKistan. - 5/19/2013 4:14:50 AM   
Lucylastic


Posts: 40310
Status: offline
must admit , I havent been keeping up since my dad died

_____________________________

(•_•)
<) )╯SUCH
/ \

\(•_•)
( (> A NASTY
/ \

(•_•)
<) )> WOMAN
/ \

Duchess Of Dissent
Dont Hate Love

(in reply to Moonhead)
Profile   Post #: 42
RE: UKistan. - 5/19/2013 5:06:27 AM   
Politesub53


Posts: 14862
Joined: 5/7/2007
Status: offline
The languge on the British Isles as a whole is based on Brythonic. The Cornish, Welsh and Bretons use languages heavily based on Brythonic roots. The Scots used Pictish North of the Forth. The Irish and a few western isles used Gaelic. The point of all this is not much has changed for the last 6,000 years, nor is it likely to in the future.

(in reply to Lucylastic)
Profile   Post #: 43
RE: UKistan. - 5/19/2013 7:58:47 AM   
njlauren


Posts: 1577
Joined: 10/1/2011
Status: offline
I don't know about the UK, but the fastest growing religious group in the US is none of the above, people still feel spiritual, but they don't think any church/faith has all the answers. The problem with Christianity , at least the organized form, is it stopped meaning anything to people, primarily because they seemed to get caught in the past. Especially mainstream protestant and catholic churches, have gotten so caught up in dogmatic beliefs that they forget what it is all about. The conservative churches are so caught up with issues around gays and other doctrinal issues they forget about the people; the Catholic church is losing people in droves (used to be Catholics in the US went to mass more regularly than anyone, roughly 90%, today it is less than 50%, despite what the church claims), and among younger catholics it is even less. I live in an area where a lot of the people are nominally Catholic, and if they belong to church it is for the culture and community of what they knew as kids and wanting to pass it down, but the younger generations are not going, on top of being pissed off at the Catholic hierarchies abuses and sweeping abuse under the rug (I just read something about Ireland, other than the old people, few young people go to church, and the church is literally dying off there; 30 years ago the church had a 'special' relationship with the government, now, after finding out that the government colluded with the church in the horrific abuses done there, people don't trust either, and Ireland may be one of the next countries to pass same sex marriage, goodbye, Vatican).

In the US, the evangelicals, who were supposed to be 'taking over', have failed, their own membership is starting to decline (the Southern Baptists are seeing declining baptisms), and politically, the religious right is becoming a burden on the GOP,polls of people less than 50 show they are really, really unhappy about the unholy alliance.......so the evangelicals are not doing well either. I find it ironic that people are worried about Sharia law, when many of the same people are anti same sex marriage, anti gay rights and supported banning same sex marriage in the constitution, or believe religious law should be the basis for civic law...like, what is the difference?

The UK has a problem that so far the US hasn't for the most part, with some exceptions. I work with more then a few Muslims, people from Pakistan and India and the middle east, and one of the reasons the US hasn't had quite the problem is that other then some exceptions, like the two scumbags up in Boston, most Muslims come to the US to get away from the kind of crap they had in their own countries, they don't want Sharia law, they want what the US has, and they certainly don't want the Mullah's ruling anything. In England as in large parts of Europe, they have had large migrations of Muslims, but they haven't integrated into society, they are in the margins, and that is a problem, a big one. If you don't feel part of society, then you get angry, and this is when the fanatics get to you. Take a look at evangelicals/fundamentalists in the US, and what do you see? Mostly less well off, rural, and white, people feeling as they say time and again, like they are being ignored, their 'values' ignored, 'their jobs taken away', and blaming government and liberal society for them being marginalized (last I checked, 60% of Evangelicals had a high school degree, very few higher education). The problem isn't Islam or Sharia law, it is a society where those people feel outside of it, alienated, etc.

If the UK is worried about "sharia law" (and that fucking moron, Rowan Williams, who I have nothing but contempt for, ex Archbishop of Canturbury, and a gutless coward, didn't help, when he suggested UK law should adopt certain elements of "Sharia Law" to make Muslims feel comfortable..blah), then they should get around to amending their constitution and making it more formal, and incorporating things like freedom of speech and separation of church and state (which would finally, finally, get the COE out as the 'official church' and cut it off from influence in the government and with funding, too; you can't cry about "sharia law" and have an official church, of any kind), and oh, yeah, their stupid libel laws, the joke of the western countries.....

I actually think it is good young people are turning away from churches, going to church as a duty, as something you do, listening to sermons on Sunday you don't believe, hearing some celibate in robes telling you using birth control is a sin, you shouldn't look at your partner in lust, shouldn't have oral sex, shouldn't have anal sex, and if you are gay you are condemned to hell, just doesn't work, and quite frankly in past generations how many people really believed the crap they were being told? How many went to church because it wouldn't appear right to others if you didn't go?
I think the fact that more and more declare themselves as atheist or agnostic, or as "I believe, but no specific church" is the antidote to what you fear, because those people would fight tooth and nail against anyone trying to establish religious law; the biggest haters of the evangelicals in the US are the young, the very same people who are likely to be atheist, agnostic or "none of the above". One of the ironies is that so called 'people of faith', who go to church, are more likely to sit back and say about the extremists "you have to respect their beliefs"..I belonged to a very liberal episcopal church (that was as clueless as the conservatives ones are), and they spent a lot of time explainging the evangelicals, about why they are as they are, that you have to respect their beliefs, and so forth (it was basically the same crap we were fed about the Anglican Communion and not getting angry at the assholes in Africa all upset about a gay bishop and such, there we got the white guilt crap, how they were converted by Evangelical missionaries, they don't understand, etc...bullshit, it wasn't white colonialism, it was they are stupid bastards, to say the least).


(in reply to Politesub53)
Profile   Post #: 44
RE: UKistan. - 5/19/2013 4:46:47 PM   
Politesub53


Posts: 14862
Joined: 5/7/2007
Status: offline
quote:

In England as in large parts of Europe, they have had large migrations of Muslims, but they haven't integrated into society, they are in the margins,


Laughable stuff...... I doubt you have ever lived in England for any length of time, if at all. It may be true to say immigrants tend to flock to the same areas as their compatriots but to suggest they dont integrate, especially the second generation onwards, is nonsense.

(in reply to njlauren)
Profile   Post #: 45
RE: UKistan. - 5/19/2013 4:48:55 PM   
Politesub53


Posts: 14862
Joined: 5/7/2007
Status: offline
quote:

If the UK is worried about "sharia law" (and that fucking moron, Rowan Williams, who I have nothing but contempt for, ex Archbishop of Canturbury, and a gutless coward, didn't help, when he suggested UK law should adopt certain elements of "Sharia Law" to make Muslims feel comfortable..blah), then they should get around to amending their constitution and making it more formal, and incorporating things like freedom of speech and separation of church and state (which would finally, finally, get the COE out as the 'official church' and cut it off from influence in the government and with funding, too; you can't cry about "sharia law" and have an official church, of any kind), and oh, yeah, their stupid libel laws, the joke of the western countries.....


Im not even touching this drivel.

(in reply to Politesub53)
Profile   Post #: 46
RE: UKistan. - 5/19/2013 5:38:50 PM   
Real0ne


Posts: 21189
Joined: 10/25/2004
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: njlauren

Especially mainstream protestant and catholic churches, have gotten so caught up in dogmatic beliefs that they forget what it is all about.
yeh its about killing coveting and respect and being true to one god
Catholic hierarchies abuses and sweeping abuse under the rug
well they make a nice target, you also have the sex slave industry, dyncorp of the corporate god, and as if we were to think the other religions at large are guiltless
30 years ago the church had a 'special' relationship with the government, now, after finding out that the government colluded with the church in the horrific abuses done there, people don't trust either, and Ireland may be one of the next countries to pass same sex marriage, goodbye, Vatican).
well the problem you have is that once church and state were in fact one, church was the conscience of the harshness of state, its nice to know we have the secular humanist state which is also a religion at the helm.

so what is gained by getting rid of churches and accepting stistism as its own brand $$$ of religion in its place?

really unhappy about the unholy alliance.......so the evangelicals are not doing well either. I find it ironic that people are worried about Sharia law, when many of the same people are anti same sex marriage, anti gay rights and supported banning same sex marriage in the constitution, or believe religious law should be the basis for civic law...like, what is the difference?
though its not always the basis most law derives from understood beliefs, and beliefs that are acted upon is the expression of your religion, regardless of what it is, philosophy get people all tangled up in the undies going full circle and no one is the wiser

and that is a problem, a big one. If you don't feel part of society, then you get angry, and this is when the fanatics get to you. Take a look at evangelicals/fundamentalists in the US, and what do you see? Mostly less well off, rural, and white, people feeling as they say time and again, like they are being ignored, their 'values' ignored, 'their jobs taken away', and blaming government and liberal society for them being marginalized (last I checked, 60% of Evangelicals had a high school degree, very few higher education). The problem isn't Islam or Sharia law, it is a society where those people feel outside of it, alienated, etc.
well that is a product of a democracy, 51% can vote to shit on 49% and the 49% should feel all cozy with that? Especially when they dont even run referendums and they never got a chance to vote on anything in the first place its all done without their voice by mind reading attorneys who use a crystal ball and consult their guru for the path that is always the same..... $$$$$
then they should get around to amending their constitution and making it more formal, and incorporating things like freedom of speech and separation of church and state (which would finally, finally, get the COE out as the 'official church' and cut it off from influence in the government and with funding, too; you can't cry about "sharia law" and have an official church, of any kind), and oh, yeah, their stupid libel laws, the joke of the western countries.....
hahaha good luck with that one! That would wipe out so many aristocratic prerogatives I would fucking love it! Then again it would be like our constitution pretty much doesnt even make for good toilet paper.
I think the fact that more and more declare themselves as atheist or agnostic, or as "I believe, but no specific church" is the antidote to what you fear, because those people would fight tooth and nail against anyone trying to establish religious law; the biggest haters of the evangelicals in the US are the young, the very same people who are likely to be atheist, agnostic or "none of the above".
churches like states are political organizations of varying colors. the only way you will get results is when democracies have literally no power to operate except in a very narrow public "absolute necesity" areas, sewer, water and even that would need to be limited, and everything runs to individualism with states abolished or powerless or put on an equal basis with the people, in other words sovereignless.
it wasn't white colonialism, it was they are stupid bastards, to say the least).


it still is stoopid bastards.

< Message edited by Real0ne -- 5/19/2013 5:43:51 PM >


_____________________________

"We the Borg" of the us imperialists....resistance is futile

Democracy; The 'People' voted on 'which' amendment?

Yesterdays tinfoil is today's reality!

"No man's life, liberty, or property is safe while the legislature is in session

(in reply to njlauren)
Profile   Post #: 47
RE: UKistan. - 5/19/2013 11:13:45 PM   
Phoenixpower


Posts: 8098
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Politesub53

quote:

In England as in large parts of Europe, they have had large migrations of Muslims, but they haven't integrated into society, they are in the margins,


Laughable stuff...... I doubt you have ever lived in England for any length of time, if at all. It may be true to say immigrants tend to flock to the same areas as their compatriots but to suggest they dont integrate, especially the second generation onwards, is nonsense.


Well said Politesub53,

I worked with countless Muslims in the UK and they were very well integrated...



_____________________________

RIP 08-09-07

The PAST is history, the FUTURE a mystery, NOW is a gift - that's why it's called the PRESENT

www.butyoudontlooksick.com/navigation/BYDLS-TheSpoonTheory.pdf

(in reply to Politesub53)
Profile   Post #: 48
Page:   <<   < prev  1 2 [3]
All Forums >> [Community Discussions] >> Dungeon of Political and Religious Discussion >> RE: UKistan. Page: <<   < prev  1 2 [3]
Jump to:





New Messages No New Messages
Hot Topic w/ New Messages Hot Topic w/o New Messages
Locked w/ New Messages Locked w/o New Messages
 Post New Thread
 Reply to Message
 Post New Poll
 Submit Vote
 Delete My Own Post
 Delete My Own Thread
 Rate Posts




Collarchat.com © 2024
Terms of Service Privacy Policy Spam Policy

0.111