>
>
> America, you can't wordship the devil and God at the same time, it is
> written in the bible.
>
> Jesus's claim: if you support evil-doers, you are evil-doer yourself.
>
> Example:
>
> Invading IRAQ killing million innocents there, you are part of it. They
> didn't invade America bastard. No you didn't fight for our freedom, you
> decreased our freedom, now it's harder and unsafer to move around, the
> world hate us.
"Killing millions of innocents"....cite your source.
"They"...who? We aren't fighting Iraqi's. We're killing foreign fighters
to include those from Iran.
Really? Review the list of post 911 terror attacks world wide. If they
hated us, why did they attack everybody but us?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_terrorist_incidents
No war has ever been prevented by one side showing overwhelming signs of
weakness.
2005, for example....
The following is a timeline of acts and failed attempts that can be
considered non-state terrorism in 2005.
Iraq, Suicide attacks in Iraq in 2005.
Thailand, January 7: Explosion at a railroad crossing - no casualties. One
Buddhist shot dead in southern Thailand.[1]
Indonesia, January 9: Blast in Sulawesi inside a church. Four killed and
injuring over 30.
Thailand, January 16: One person dead, over 50 others injured in an
explosion in a commercial area in southern Thailand.[1]
Lebanon, February 14: A car bomb kills former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafiq
Hariri and 20 others in Beirut. See also: 2005 Lebanon bombings.
Thailand, February 17: Seven people dead, 40 injured by a car bomb outside
a hotel in southern Thailand.[1]
Colombia, February 22: A car bomb explodes in front of the offices of RCN
TV, injuring two.[2]
Israel, February 25: A suicide bomber in Tel Aviv kills five Israelis and
undermines a weeks-old truce between the two sides.
Thailand March 6: A Buddhist monk was killed by gunmen in southern
Thailand.[1]
Thailand, March 7: Two policemen and three unknown attackers were killed in
a shootout with five gunmen disguised as veiled Muslim women at a police
station in southern Thailand.[1]
Thailand, March 15: One policeman was killed, three injured by bomb in
southern Thailand.[1]
Qatar, March 19: Car bomb attack on theatre in Doha kills one Briton and
wounds twelve others.
Thailand, March 19: 15 people, ten of them policemen, injured in two
explosions. One of the bombs was detonated via a cellphone.[1]
Thailand, March 26: One Buddhist dead, two injured, in two attacks by
gunmen in southern Thailand.[1]
Thailand, March 27: Two bombs used to stop an armoured train patrolling in
southern Thailand, terrorists then fired on the policemen on the train.
Approximately 20 policemen and some other passengers were wounded.[1]
Thailand, April 3: 2005 Songkhla bombings: Two people killed (possibly
five), 54 injured, by three explosions in Hat Yai -one at the airport, one
at a hotel, and another at a department store.[1]
Egypt, April: April 2005 terrorist attacks in Cairo - On April 7 a suicide
bomber blows himself up in Cairo's Khan al Khalili market, killing three
foreign tourists and wounding 17 others. In two further attacks on April 30,
suspected accomplices detonate a bomb and spray a tourist coach with
gunfire.
Myanmar, May 7: Multiple bomb explosions across Myanmar's former capital
Yangon kill 19 and injures 160.
Afghanistan, June 1: A suicide bomber blows up in a mosque in Kandahar,
killing 20 people.
Iran, June 12: Bombs explode in the cities of Ahvaz and Tehran, leaving ten
dead and 80 wounded days before the Iranian presidential election.
India, July 5: 2005 Terrorist attack on Ayodhya - Six terrorists belonging
to Lashkar-e-Toiba storm the Ayodhya Ram Janmbhomi complex. Before the
terrorists could reach the main disputed site, they were shot down by Indian
security forces. One devotee and two policemen were injured.
United Kingdom, July 7: London bombings - Bombs explode on one
double-decker bus and three London Underground trains, killing 56 people and
injuring over 700, occurring on the first day of the 31st G8 Conference. The
attacks are the first suicide bombings in Western Europe.
Israel, July 12: Islamic Jihad takes responsibility for a suicide bombing
in Netanya, which kills five people at a shopping mall.
United Kingdom, July 21: Attempted London bombings - Small explosions in
three London Underground stations and one double-decker bus. This was
pronounced as a "major incident" rather than an attack, and only minor
injuries were reported. These four bombs were designed to cause as much
damage as the 7 July 2005 London bombings, but the explosives had
deteriorated and failed to detonate.
Egypt, July 23: Sharm el-Sheikh bombings - Car bombs explode at tourist
sites in Sharm el-Sheikh, killing at least 88 and wounding more than 100.
India, July 28: Jaunpur train bombing: 13 are killed when militants
detonate a bomb on a commuter train.
Israel, August 4: Jewish settler in an IDF uniform opens fire on a bus in
Shfaram, killing four Israeli Arabs and wounding five.
Bangladesh, August 17: 17 August 2005 Bangladesh bombings: Total 493
homemade bombs exploded in 288 different locations in all districts of the
country except Munshiganj; 2 were killed instantly with above 100 more
wounded.
Indonesia, October 1: A series of explosions occurs in resort areas of
Jimabaran Beach and Kuta in Bali.
Colombia, October 10: A car bomb injures nine people in Bogotá.
Iran, October 15: Two bombs exploded at a shopping mall in Ahvaz,
Khuzestan. Six people died and over 100 were injured.
Iraq, October 24: Multiple car bombs explode outside the Green Zone in
Baghdad, killing at least 20. It is thought that the attacks were targeting
journalists inside the Palestine Hotel and the Sheraton Ishtar.[3]
Israel, October 26: A Palestinian suicide bomber detonates a bomb near a
falafel stand in Hadera that kills himself and six others. Twenty-six people
were also wounded.[4]
India, October 29: Multiple bomb blasts hit markets in Delhi, India,
leaving at least 61 dead and more than 200 injured.
Indonesia, October 29: In Poso, Central Sulawesi, four Christian
schoolgirls aged 15 to 17 years on their way home from school wereaulted
by six masked Muslim men who beheaded three of them, Theresia Morangke,
Alfita Poliwo, and Yarni Sambue, with machetes and placed their severed
heads in front of a church and a police station. The fourth girl, Noviana
Malewa, survived but suffered serious machete wounds. The terrorists belong
to the group Tanah Runtuh whose leader Hasanuddin confessed at his trial
that the well-plannedault was inspired and financed by Guru Sanusi, a
former Muslim rebel (Moro Islamic Liberation Front) from Mindanao.[5][6]
Central Jakarta District Court sentenced two of the killers to 14 years in
prison and mastermind Hasanuddin to 20 years.[7] See: 2005 Indonesian
beheadings of Christian girls
Australia, November 8: Several suspected terrorist were arrested in Sydney
and Melbourne after police say they foiled an attack on the country.
Jordan, November 9: Three explosions at hotels in Amman, leave at least 60
dead and 120 wounded.
Israel, December 5: A suicide bomb attack kills at least five people in
Netanya in north-western Israel.
India, December 28: Two or more unidentified gunmen open fire at the Indian
Institute of Science, Bangalore, killing a retired professor of mathematics
and wounding four others.
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