Baz Ares
Gold Member
- Feb 2, 2017
- 10,970
- 1,091
- 260
- Banned
- #401
Exactly, but these retard leftists on our board, are incapable of understanding the difference between say the Vegas shooter, and this guy today.
I agree!
But these tragedies are complicated..... we've heard , in the beginning (and I trust early reports on a tragedy)there were ISIS and Antifa aka Deep State connection s in Vegas.
Who are we to say there are not the same sort of co
nnections here in Lower Manhattan?
So I take it we have ruled out the Amish this time?
Who is left?
Mickey Mouse.
I didn't know he was Jihadist?
Mickey Mouse converted to Islam to stop Jihadi John beheading him
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Mickey now has a beard and wears a towel on his head, Minnie Mouse also converted to Islam and now wears a Burkha.
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DANG! What other religions would make you do that?
During the middle ages Europeans who were not Christian were under constant threat of being enslaved and castrated(if they were male).[5][6][7][8][9]
During the Saxon Wars, Charlemagne, King of the Franks, forcibly Roman Catholicized the Saxons from their native Germanic paganism by way of warfare, and law upon conquest. Examples are the Massacre of Verden in 782, when Charlemagne reportedly had 4,500 captive Saxons massacred upon rebelling against conversion, and the Capitulatio de partibus Saxoniae, a law imposed on conquered Saxons in 785 that prescribed death to those who refused to convert to Christianity.[10]
Forced conversion that occurred after the seventh century generally took place during riots and massacres carried out by mobs and clergy without support of the rulers. In contrast, royal persecutions of Jews from the late eleventh century onward generally took form of expulsions, with some exceptions, such as conversions of Jews in southern Italy of the 13th century, which were carried out by Dominican Inquisitors but instigated by King Charles II of Naples.[4]
Jews were forced to convert to Christianity by the Crusaders in Lorraine, on the Lower Rhine, in Bavaria and Bohemia, in Mainz and in Worms.[11] (see Rhineland massacres, Worms massacre (1096))
Pope Innocent III pronounced in 1201 that if one agreed to be baptized to avoid torture and intimidation, one nevertheless could be compelled to outwardly observe Christianity:
Forced conversion - Wikipedia