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Sorely Lacking, file with Mein Kampf Aug 15, 2008 The author presents his version of history, which is absent of context, or tribes and truth.
He fails to make his case.
Throughout almost all of the past fourteen hundred years the Muslims and Jews have been each other's most reliable friends, until after the arrival of Ashkenazi Jews to Palestine. There was quite a large population in Iraq as well. Ask the Neturei Karta [...]
He makes no differentiation between tribes, sunni, shia, whabbist, sufi, etc.. nationality, or heredity.. They're just despicable Arabs to him. Admittedly the Caliph in Palestine was a bad man, but this author is a purveyor of hate and assigns collective guilt to all people of Arabic descent, ignoring documented history.
There are extremists that have added to the haddith, and extremists that have added to the torah.
I am an atheist, and began with little knowledge of the real history and a preference skewed towards the Israeli side, but truth has turned me 180 degrees. - because that is the underlying issue here. Palestine.
Consider the Ashkenazi, descended from Khazars. If a mean gene is able to be carried down through DNA, you would find it here. Sephardim and Palestinians are sons of Abraham, not these people.
2 of 3 found the following review helpful:
A great read - pulls no punches Jul 27, 2006 The Muslim Scourge is persuasive and surprisingly detailed. It breaks down into 3 parts: An examination of Islamic history and Saudi Arabia in particular, then a refutation of the conventional view that Muslim terrorism is the result of U.S. policies (although there's an acknowledgment that they play a part) and a convincing explanation of the psychological underpinnings of the current problem, especially the tribal mentality. The last chapter is the best: The author compares the current surge of violence, and sympathy for terrorists, to the psychology of fascism in Germany, and shows compellingly how the two share the same roots. By the time the reader finishes this, there will be no doubt about of the nature of today's enemy. A great read. Pulls no punches.
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