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Theme Changer

 Topic: A reply to DisscussIslam's false Claims

 (Read 4895 times)
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  • A reply to DisscussIslam's false Claims
     OP - January 27, 2010, 04:34 PM

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xk8yaDLvW8A
  • Re: A reply to DisscussIslam's false Claims
     Reply #1 - January 27, 2010, 04:36 PM

    For those who may not know, that video above, is a reply to this video of mine:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9-AZ6if0Qlw
  • Re: A reply to DisscussIslam's false Claims
     Reply #2 - January 27, 2010, 04:51 PM

    Quote
    Discover Islam - The Fastest Growing Religion in the World !
    http://www.sultan.org/


    Learn about The Real Islam Peace be on you


    well if only he'd change the link from sultan.org to http://sites.google.com/site/islamicscripturesunveiled/ <- to that, people would have a chance to know the real truth  Tongue
  • Re: A reply to DisscussIslam's false Claims
     Reply #3 - January 27, 2010, 05:56 PM

    I find that reply quite funny. Zakir claims that because Arabic grammary is based on Quran then Quran can never have grammatical errors. So if the grammary found in one verse differs from all others then it's not an error??? Or is there just something special in arabic language that I don't know Huh?
  • Re: A reply to DisscussIslam's false Claims
     Reply #4 - January 27, 2010, 06:39 PM

    It ought to be clear to anyone who watched my video that the point of it was not to prove the Qur'an has grammatical mistakes - but that how perfect the style & grammar of the Qur'an is or is not - is subjective.

    I even said in the video: "Arabic Grammar was built on the Qur'an and every anomaly has been explained away in one way or another."

    The Qur'an made it's own rules and the Arab grammarians set out to explain and codify the grammar based on it.

    The claim that the Qur'an is perfect cannot be tested in an objective way and cannot be used as proof of anything.

    That was the point of my video.  This chap's video is replying to a strawman.
  • Re: A reply to DisscussIslam's false Claims
     Reply #5 - January 27, 2010, 07:13 PM

    My dear Hassan,

    Sorry I missed this one somehow. Very nice points regarding grammar, and the rebuttal was typically embarrassing. Any muslim who clings to Zakir Naik is very near the fires of apostasy, while your reading will lead you to the gates of jannah.

    Of course, the Qur'an does now form a kind of foundation for Arabic -- presumably with a comparable impact on Arabic as the KJ translation and Shakespeare had on the evolution of English.

    Nevertheless, it is important for me that God breaks the rules of grammar at various points, particular as channeled into the head of this particular man. The explanation should be on a case-by-case basis. But basically, the same reason that modern art often breaks the norms of previous styles (e.g., mimetic tradition in visual art of fixed meters/grammatical sentence structure in poetry), because the visible transcendence of such shariahs has an effect on us (it makes us aware that we are situated within a shariah of language/perception that can be unlocked -- not by escape -- but through recitation).

    Of course, you are right, it comes down to personal taste. I am a great fan of classical poetry (particularly the metaphysical poets and Blake, but all the rest of it). But for me, modern poetry really kicks off with Whitman's stream of consciousness rants:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GvB2s5h5FGM&feature=related
    At the time, this was completely transgressive with respect to the rules of poetry (which should have a contained theme, rather than application to the entire cosmos, as in this case).

    But a generation later, the idiom established by Whitman takes full flight in Eliot:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KM-_yzuh8lo&feature=PlayList&p=6FCA19C6A05B4E3A&playnext=1&playnext_from=PL&index=12

    After that, we see the rules of grammar themselves open to rupture, so to speak, to really bring home the same point (that we can escape of language/rules/shariah through reflecting on our use of language/rules/shariah). I could mention the Beats, Ginsberg and Burroughs in particular. But I guess the greatest example would be this:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bBRss3HUipw

    Of course God does not flip out as much as Lennon did here. But for many of us hyper-Salafis, the state of mind of God's transcriber was not too far removed from those poets (though an infinite order of magnitude more permanent and perfect), astaghfirullah.

    I have a kind of long term project of translating the Qur'an -- AND its grammatical "errors" and strange omissions, stream of consciousness patterns etc -- into contemporary English, drawing on various 20th poetic idioms that set out consciously to achieve a similar effect. A long term project, but one that would produce a translation that more authentic than anything currently available (often attempting some kind of tafsir, or at least producing coherent English). The effect would be rather like Bloom's version of the Book of J, which is an amazing translation of fragments of Torah ...

    Love and Light,

    The Tailor


    The Divisions of Love, second album by my Cabbalacore band, the Friends of Design, out now:

    https://vimeo.com/110528857
  • Re: A reply to DisscussIslam's false Claims
     Reply #6 - January 27, 2010, 07:47 PM

    Hiya Tailor,

    Good to see you again my friend Smiley I hope you are keeping well. Loved the Walt Whitman poem  Afro

    I wish my reading did lead to the gates of jannah, but sometimes I just feel I'm taking candy away from babies and making them cry for no reason. Maybe happy ignorance is better than realising that one knows nothing. Even those of us who think we know better are only fooling ourselves. We are all little kids lost in a world we don't understand.

  • Re: A reply to DisscussIslam's false Claims
     Reply #7 - January 27, 2010, 08:28 PM

    Nice to be back, albeit briefly Smiley

    Ignorance is a kind of bliss -- but I believe (maybe you also believe) that the general ummah knows all the stuff you are talking about in your videos -- they just repress it. This is why their reactions to your points are often over the top: because it touches a raw nerve. If they didn't have these thoughts in the backs of their minds, they would be fine and candy would be taken. I mean, I guess your videos aren't intended for a village grandma in Uzbekistan who completes her salat and keeps her religion to herself, probably doesn't consider the Qur'an much at all (leaving that to the experts), would readily admit that she "knows nothing" (but Allah knows all), and is basically happy with her relationship to God. I presume you've never picked on anyone's grandma Smiley

    Your stuff is intended for those who have read Quran carefully, tried to follow its shariah to the letter, and then get drawn into Harun Yahya, Zakir Naik and Deedat mentality when they start doubting internally, allowing them repress their materialist concerns away by repeating a mantra that Islam is all about science, socialism and rationality.

    But (even the most basic pop psychology) says it is unhealthy -- potentially permanently damaging -- to bottle things up. More people doing the stuff you are doing is simply serving a community need: in fact, the NHS should fund you!

    Love and Light,

    The Tailor

    The Divisions of Love, second album by my Cabbalacore band, the Friends of Design, out now:

    https://vimeo.com/110528857
  • Re: A reply to DisscussIslam's false Claims
     Reply #8 - January 27, 2010, 08:44 PM

    Great post, how can you say all that and still believe in Islam  Huh?  I dont think I will ever understand you.  I wonder if I am even supposed to be able to?

    My Book     news002       
    My Blog  pccoffee
  • Re: A reply to DisscussIslam's false Claims
     Reply #9 - January 27, 2010, 08:47 PM

    I love you Tailor!
  • Re: A reply to DisscussIslam's false Claims
     Reply #10 - January 27, 2010, 09:09 PM

    Great post, how can you say all that and still believe in Islam  Huh?  I dont think I will ever understand you.  I wonder if I am even supposed to be able to?


    You should at least know by now that Tailor sees the Qur'an and islam in a symbolic, esoteric way. He knows as well as us that the literalists are on a sinking ship. Abandoned by all but the most infantile.
  • Re: A reply to DisscussIslam's false Claims
     Reply #11 - January 27, 2010, 09:10 PM

    Islame

    Great post, how can you say all that and still believe in Islam  Huh?  I dont think I will ever understand you.  I wonder if I am even supposed to be able to?


    +1
  • Re: A reply to DisscussIslam's false Claims
     Reply #12 - January 27, 2010, 09:27 PM

    Peace Blackdog,

    I pop in here every so often, but I don't believe we've met before. Perhaps you joined during my occultation. If it's not a private matter (it rarely is here), what is your background? A link to your first post would probably do the trick, I suppose Smiley

    L&L,

    TT

    The Divisions of Love, second album by my Cabbalacore band, the Friends of Design, out now:

    https://vimeo.com/110528857
  • Re: A reply to DisscussIslam's false Claims
     Reply #13 - January 27, 2010, 09:29 PM

    You should at least know by now that Tailor sees the Qur'an and islam in a symbolic, esoteric way.

    "Baudrillard claims that modern society has replaced all reality and meaning with symbols and signs, and that the human experience is of a simulation of reality rather than reality itself. The simulacra that
     Baudrillard refers to are signs of culture  and media that create the perceived reality; Baudrillard believed that society has become so reliant on simulacra that it has lost contact with the real world on which
     the simulacra are based."

    I do not want to come across as an ignorant simpleton but is the above excerpt something you can relate to, Tailor?

    That was the point in my video.  This chap's video is replying to a strawman.

    Problem is he doesn't (want?) to understand that. Why don't you point this out to him?

    We are all little kids lost in a world we don't understand.

    Imho realization of that is a first step on the road to The Truth.

  • Re: A reply to DisscussIslam's false Claims
     Reply #14 - January 27, 2010, 09:35 PM

    yep, sounds like one of Tailors post to me  Afro

    My Book     news002       
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  • Re: A reply to DisscussIslam's false Claims
     Reply #15 - January 27, 2010, 10:18 PM

    Problem is he doesn't (want?) to understand that. Why don't you point this out to him?


    The video I made is pretty clear. The fact that he has shown he has selective vision about it makes me suspect there is no point in responding as he will just continue seeing only what he wants to see since he has already invested a video in it.

    I think it best to leave him and perhaps he will reflect and figure things out for himself.
  • Re: A reply to DisscussIslam's false Claims
     Reply #16 - January 27, 2010, 10:25 PM

    Peace Kenan,

    You are reading some pretty heavy stuff there!

    "Baudrillard claims that modern society has replaced all reality and meaning with symbols and signs, and that the human experience is of a simulation of reality rather than reality itself. The simulacra that
     Baudrillard refers to are signs of culture  and media that create the perceived reality; Baudrillard believed that society has become so reliant on simulacra that it has lost contact with the real world on which
     the simulacra are based."

    I do not want to come across as an ignorant simpleton but is the above excerpt something you can relate to, Tailor?


    Yes, I do relate to this Baudrillard observation. But, to be honest, I never understood the morality of the guy: it seemed to me (and I might well be misreading, and haven't read him in over 15 years), that he makes a value judgement about society being all signs, and our life being one simulacra. In other words, society IS media/information. I remember there was a great Baudrillardian reading of the Blade Runner film (and original book) -- this anxiety that we also might be a simulacra ourselves, a replicant, a pre-programmed android. Anyhow -- I would agree with Baudrillard that is a bad thing in many cases: we saw the last 8 years in the USA, an entire country was being run as a Rupert Murdoch programmed hyper-reality. What a nightmare!

    But I could never work out if Baudrillard proposed something else -- and, if so, what that was. For me, all life is signs, and all realities are simulacra. There is no "reality" outside of our lives that we can live. We are living media, whether we like it or not. The religious question is -- how should we relate to the world, if this is true or not.

    I got the impression that Baudrillard has an idea of an more authentic, "actual" reality (some kind of place unaffected by media) which seems overly nostalgic for me. I think we've always been living in  virtual worlds -- but, as a Muslim, there is a Lord of these worlds Tongue

    L&L,
    TT

    The Divisions of Love, second album by my Cabbalacore band, the Friends of Design, out now:

    https://vimeo.com/110528857
  • Re: A reply to DisscussIslam's false Claims
     Reply #17 - January 28, 2010, 01:53 AM

    Hello Hassan,

    I took a look at your video and I would like to make two comments:

    First, regarding the grammatical errors. Let's assume that Muhammed was the author of the Quran. Now, allow me to ask these questions:

    1- Do you think Muhammed did NOT speak his own language perfectly? (By perfectly, I mean he spoke his own language spontaneously without making any grammatical errors)

    2- If the answer to #1 is yes, then do you think that his followers also did NOT speak their own language perfectly as to realize the grammatical errors in Muhammed's Quran?

    3- If the answer to #2 is yes, then how would anyone claim that there are grammatical errors in the Quran that just so happened to escape the attention of native speakers at the time?

    4- If the answer to #2 is no, then how could they, the followers, not recognize the obvious falsehood of his claims to prophethood? If they were aware of such errors then it must have sounded to them like: 1+1=32.

    5- When did Arab grammarians appear (when was Arabic grammar standardized?).

    6- Is it possible, at all, that some grammatical uses of the language was local or temporal (and later became archaic)?

    Finally, I don't claim I'm an expert on Arabic grammar, but I do know that using different grammatical formations can convey (subtle) different meanings (except perhaps such uses were archaic -- temporal/local --  by the time the grammar was standarized.)



    Second, regarding verse 16:106, I don't know why do you read it without reading 16:105, verse 106 is a continuation to 105.

    إِنَّمَا يَفْتَرِي الْكَذِبَ الَّذِينَ لاَ يُؤْمِنُونَ بِآيَاتِ اللّهِ وَأُوْلـئِكَ هُمُ الْكَاذِبُونَ ?105? مَن كَفَرَ بِاللّهِ مِن بَعْدِ إيمَانِهِ إِلاَّ مَنْ أُكْرِهَ وَقَلْبُهُ مُطْمَئِنٌّ بِالإِيمَانِ وَلَـكِن مَّن شَرَحَ بِالْكُفْرِ صَدْرًا فَعَلَيْهِمْ غَضَبٌ مِّنَ اللّهِ وَلَهُمْ عَذَابٌ عَظِيمٌ ?106?


    This can be translated as:

    [105] Those who forge falsehood are the ones who don't believe in God's signs, those are the liars [106] who disbelieved in God after belief, except he who is forced (to lie) while his heart is content with faith, but those who are content with disbelief, the wrath of God is upon them and theirs is a great punishment.

    This is how I always read these verses.. anyway, I checked Tafsir, and surprisingly it does include your understanding of the verse as well as mine.

    http://quran.al-islam.com/Tafseer/DispTafsser.asp?l=arb&taf=KORTOBY&nType=1&nSora=16&nAya=106    

    regards.

    A googolplex is *precisely* as far from infinity as is the number 1.--Carl Sagan
  • Re: A reply to DisscussIslam's false Claims
     Reply #18 - January 28, 2010, 07:02 AM

    Peace Kenan,

    You are reading some pretty heavy stuff there!

    Yes, I do relate to this Baudrillard observation. But, to be honest, I never understood the morality of the guy: it seemed to me (and I might well be misreading, and haven't read him in over 15 years), that he makes a value judgement about society being all signs, and our life being one simulacra. In other words, society IS media/information. I remember there was a great Baudrillardian reading of the Blade Runner film (and original book) -- this anxiety that we also might be a simulacra ourselves, a replicant, a pre-programmed android. Anyhow -- I would agree with Baudrillard that is a bad thing in many cases: we saw the last 8 years in the USA, an entire country was being run as a Rupert Murdoch programmed hyper-reality. What a nightmare!

    But I could never work out if Baudrillard proposed something else -- and, if so, what that was. For me, all life is signs, and all realities are simulacra. There is no "reality" outside of our lives that we can live. We are living media, whether we like it or not. The religious question is -- how should we relate to the world, if this is true or not.

    I got the impression that Baudrillard has an idea of an more authentic, "actual" reality (some kind of place unaffected by media) which seems overly nostalgic for me. I think we've always been living in  virtual worlds -- but, as a Muslim, there is a Lord of these worlds Tongue

    L&L,
    TT



    Ahh, lovely.  Smiley

    I think that, to Baudrillard, hyperrealisation is an entire social/cultural process, extending from commodity fetishism, essentially (at least his theory does). He wasn't so naive to think that there was ever an untinged reality - he acknowledged there's always been this play of 'reality and illusion'. He even saw it as intrinsic to the universe. But something is qualitatively distinct in our epoch, or mode of cultural production. No symbolic order can be constructed (he was very much a post-modernist in this dismissal), as we've passed beyond the symbolic - far beyond.

    It was about, as you say, post-modern indeterminability. The disappearance of the subject (be-it matter in physics, primitive man in anthropology, 'the revolutionary subject' etc.). 'The real' in the other sense too, as in social experience. All of which has implications for everything, including politics and religion. If he's right it *is* a bad thing, to him approaching the end of the world itself.

    Also I think he made the best observation about the WTC attacks - that the towers collapsed under their own weight.

    "...every imperfection in man is a bond with heaven..." - Karl Marx
  • Re: A reply to DisscussIslam's false Claims
     Reply #19 - January 28, 2010, 09:46 AM

    Hi Debunker,

    1- Do you think Muhammed did NOT speak his own language perfectly? (By perfectly, I mean he spoke his own language spontaneously without making any grammatical errors)


    I have no reason do doubt he spoke Arabic very well, but no-one's perfect. Even the best authors need to have their manuscripts proof-read, (even then mistakes slip through.)

    2- If the answer to #1 is yes, then do you think that his followers also did NOT speak their own language perfectly as to realize the grammatical errors in Muhammed's Quran?


    Again I have no reason to doubt they spoke Arabic well and could spot errors, but again I also find it perfectly plausible that minor errors were not noticed - or not considered important. I remember studying the famous Qasida's of the pre-Islamic Arabs for example and they sometimes contained strange phrases and anomalies that one might consider to be mistakes. Yet they were still pinned to the Ka'ba and people prostrated when they were uttered.

    I should also point out that the particular anomaly that I highlighted would be extremely hard to regard as a local or dialectical difference due to it's nature - and I know of no scholar who has. The scholars who picked up on these things struggled to explain them. I quoted Zamkhshari - who was the greatest scholar of the Qur'an when it came to grammar - and he came up with something that makes little sense and appears very arbitrary.

    If we are to assume that God did indeed decide to include odd variations in dialects that made no sense and no-one seems to be aware of or for far-fetched purpose that seem totally irrational and arbitrary, one must ask, why? Since their only effect seems to be to confuse people and give the Qur'anic scholars a hard time explaining them.


    - If the answer to #2 is yes, then how would anyone claim that there are grammatical errors in the Quran that just so happened to escape the attention of native speakers at the time?


    See above.

    4- If the answer to #2 is no, then how could they, the followers, not recognize the obvious falsehood of his claims to prophethood? If they were aware of such errors then it must have sounded to them like: 1+1=32.


    See above.

    5- When did Arab grammarians appear (when was Arabic grammar standardized?).


    After the Qur'an was revealed. Arguably the most definitive book on grammar was compiled by  Sibawayh towards the end of the 8th century.

    - Is it possible, at all, that some grammatical uses of the language was local or temporal (and later became archaic)?


    Yes, that was indeed the case.

    Finally, I don't claim I'm an expert on Arabic grammar, but I do know that using different grammatical formations can convey (subtle) different meanings (except perhaps such uses were archaic -- temporal/local --  by the time the grammar was standarized.)


    Quite true.



    Re: all of the above. You do realise that my video was NOT claiming that there definitely are grammatical errors? I have been asked this question many times - ever since I used to post on FFI and I always insist that one simply cannot prove such a thing. My point is that one cannot prove the contrary either! The claim by Muslims that the Qur'an is perfect and that this proves it comes from God is not a claim that can be tested objectively. It is not a matter of ascertaining the facts and proving them beyond reasonable doubt. It is a matter of faith and not indisputable evidence.

    Was that not clear in my video?


    Second, regarding verse 16:106, I don't know why do you read it without reading 16:105, verse 106 is a continuation to 105.

    إِنَّمَا يَفْتَرِي الْكَذِبَ الَّذِينَ لاَ يُؤْمِنُونَ بِآيَاتِ اللّهِ وَأُوْلـئِكَ هُمُ الْكَاذِبُونَ ?105? مَن كَفَرَ بِاللّهِ مِن بَعْدِ إيمَانِهِ إِلاَّ مَنْ أُكْرِهَ وَقَلْبُهُ مُطْمَئِنٌّ بِالإِيمَانِ وَلَـكِن مَّن شَرَحَ بِالْكُفْرِ صَدْرًا فَعَلَيْهِمْ غَضَبٌ مِّنَ اللّهِ وَلَهُمْ عَذَابٌ عَظِيمٌ ?106?


    This can be translated as:

    [105] Those who forge falsehood are the ones who don't believe in God's signs, those are the liars [106] who disbelieved in God after belief, except he who is forced (to lie) while his heart is content with faith, but those who are content with disbelief, the wrath of God is upon them and theirs is a great punishment.

    This is how I always read these verses.. anyway, I checked Tafsir, and surprisingly it does include your understanding of the verse as well as mine.

    http://quran.al-islam.com/Tafseer/DispTafsser.asp?l=arb&taf=KORTOBY&nType=1&nSora=16&nAya=106    

    regards.


    I'm well aware that it is important to see verses in their context. The verse still looks very badly structured to me.
  • Re: A reply to DisscussIslam's false Claims
     Reply #20 - January 28, 2010, 10:11 AM

    You do realise that my video was NOT claiming that there definitely are grammatical errors?

    One sees what one wants to see. This is exactly why to certain people certain things have to be spelled out.
    On top of that language itself is not intended for debates - nothing in the evolutionary development of the human race has made it crucial to be able to distinguish infallible knowledge from strong belief, or sense-data from sensations, so debates about terms like these are bound to be loaded with misunderstandings and misinterpretations.

    Imagine trying to describe the smell of Oranges to a Martian who has never ever smelled one. Impossible!

  • Re: A reply to DisscussIslam's false Claims
     Reply #21 - January 28, 2010, 11:06 AM

    It is funny how half the room applauds zakir and the other room turns to look at who are the idjits applauding. Half a room full of questioning people is good enough for me for the time being. Thank you Hassan for bringing this video up.

    "Ask the slave girl; she will tell you the truth.' So the Apostle called Burayra to ask her. Ali got up and gave her a violent beating first, saying, 'Tell the Apostle the truth.'"
  • Re: A reply to DisscussIslam's false Claims
     Reply #22 - January 28, 2010, 05:11 PM

    If we are to accept that it is mistaken to conclude that the Qur'an contains objectively low-quality grammar because the standards used to assess the quality of grammar is subjective (because the standards of Arabic grammar change with the culture, or that the Qur'an itself is the standard of Arabic grammar), then isn't the opposite judgment, that the Qur'an contains high-quality grammar, going to be equally subjective?

    The unlived life is not worth examining.
  • Re: A reply to DisscussIslam's false Claims
     Reply #23 - January 28, 2010, 05:15 PM

    James, you're back - where've you & ferrero been?

    My Book     news002       
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  • Re: A reply to DisscussIslam's false Claims
     Reply #24 - January 28, 2010, 06:01 PM

    Hey IsLame! Long time! Yeah, I think Ferrero has still been active on the forum hasn't she? I notice her on here on her laptop now and again. And me, well I felt I was wasting my time here so I left. I wanted to do something much more active (and I still do!) but this forum seems to be just a place to chill out, which isn't bad, it's just not what I'm looking for. Actually, I was going to do some poster-printing work with another member of the forum on here. That plan went straight out of the window, didn't it! Lol, would still be cool to do some kind of project though...

    So in the meantime Ferrero and I been concentrating on our degrees. We went to Belgium before Xmas for holiday, just the 2 of us ^.^ got a few extra nights there paid-for because of the Eurostar delays Smiley

    What you been up to since I last been on? Also, where has this forum got to?

    The unlived life is not worth examining.
  • Re: A reply to DisscussIslam's false Claims
     Reply #25 - January 28, 2010, 06:16 PM

    The usual - I find the forum is always evolving & changing, it always takes on the characteristics of its most active & flamboyant members.  I like that,  it makes it different.

    My Book     news002       
    My Blog  pccoffee
  • Re: A reply to DisscussIslam's false Claims
     Reply #26 - January 28, 2010, 06:21 PM

    Hi James,

    Let me introduce myself. I'm 26 year old, single, but looking. I like reading, staying fit and hiking. I'm an ethnic bengali, but only with a moderately sized penis and taller than 5ft. I have a great personality and I like good food. There is a pimple on left butt cheek from various unsanitary sexual activities that I very much regret. Welcome back to the forums. Smiley

    Sincerely,
    Iblis

    Iblis has mad debaterin' skillz. Best not step up unless you're prepared to recieve da pain.

  • Re: A reply to DisscussIslam's false Claims
     Reply #27 - January 28, 2010, 06:24 PM

    Thank you for your warm welcome. I feel I know you very well all of a sudden!

    The unlived life is not worth examining.
  • Re: A reply to DisscussIslam's false Claims
     Reply #28 - January 28, 2010, 07:14 PM

    Thank you for your warm welcome. I feel I know you very well all of a sudden!


    I deconverted from Islam by eating a cheese burger.

    I am BlackDog.

    Kafir for short.
  • Re: A reply to DisscussIslam's false Claims
     Reply #29 - January 28, 2010, 11:33 PM

    Interesting. What do you guys do?

    The unlived life is not worth examining.
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