Friday, September 2, 2016

Christians Buck Up To ISIS

    Being weak is provoking violence. It's not fair, it's just reality. Turning the other cheek when the other one is slapped is not of loving thing to do. How does it express love? It doesn't. It only expresses weakness, and it's almost guaranteed to get you another slap.
    The Islamic State, that cancer of hate and death, killed Christians across Iraq and Syria after President Obama and Secretary of State Clinton pulled American troops out, knowing full well that they had created the opportunity for the colonization of the unguarded area for the Sharia fighters. In northern Iraq, these Sharia terrorists pushed thirty thousand Christians out of the Nineveh Plain where Christians had lived since about the time of Christ according to Robert Spencer's The Complete Infidel's Guide to ISIS, pp. 126-27.
    In the early part of 2015, the Christians of Iraq stopped turning the other cheek and did the most loving thing: they started fighting back, making it more difficult for the Islamists to sin by murdering people. They received no support from any of the employees of any of the Western governments, but eventually elements of America's true government, the people, began to respond to the Christians' plight. For instance, an Army veteran, Sean Rowe, started the Veterans Against ISIS trying to get American veterans to go fight the cowardly, insane ISIS terrorists in Iraq. A Marine veteran joined an Iraqi militia to fight. Others followed. These were heroic men.
    By "heroic" I do not mean that everything these men did in life was heroic. I mean that they were heroic to go to Iraq and fight the crazed and torturing ISIS
whimps who blow up innocents and rape eight year-olders of both sexes.
Peter Nickerson, Philosophy Major, Class of '68, William and Mary.
"The measure of a man,
  Is not what he says,
  But what he does,
  And what he allows others,
  To do in his presence."
   - Navy Seal Instructor
"Free Will is your ability to be rational in spite of the irrational urges of your genes and your experiences." Peter Nickerson, Philosophy Major, fighting with the troops the best way I can.

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