How should Gentile subscribers interpret this quirky "It's not that I hate
islam, it's rather islam that hates me." assertion, recently posted by
"Jews
are good folks too" elsewhere in this peaceful Islamic forum?
Islam means submission (to God), so can we then sensible translate this
phrase into "It's not that I hate submission, it's rather submission that
hates me."? "Jews are good folks too" has already claimed that "if God
exists" so is he, in reality, afraid of a doubtful, imaginary or
non-existent bogeyman that's out to get him personally? What should
readers
call this morbid anxiety? Do they have any suggestions?
According to Professor Charles A. W. Manning :-
<Quote> ...
While the nation as composed of flesh and blood is in reality a reality,
the
state, as distinct from its machinery, from its citizenry, and from its
territory, is in reality only an idea." [Charles A. W. Manning - "The
Nature
of International Society" (1962) p. 22]
<Unquote> ...
Do readers see the cognitive parallel that :- "States are an abstraction.
They only exist in the world of ideas." - in the context of this Islam
scenario painted by "Jews are good folks too"?
--
Peace
--
What appears to be a sloppy or meaningless use of words may well be a
completely correct use of words to express sloppy or meaningless ideas.
[Anonymous Diplomat]
Zuiko Azumazi
zuiko.azumazi@[EMAIL PROTECTED]


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