<<So you think Christians are just murderers by nature?>>
No, I made it very clear in one of my recent posts that, given the lie at the very centre of their religion, they really have no option but to kill those who will not be convinced by their lies. I guess I should have been a little clearer in ascribing the policy to the leaders only, since the rank and file really don't give a shit and may in fact be taken in by all the "peace and love" that the killingest religion in history loves to bedeck itself in.
<<I don't think your game of "they started it" is a very well respected analytical view of history. The original Crusade was in fact called because the leader of the Byzantine Empire asked for help from Latin Christendom, to help fight the invading Muslims. >>
That's exactly what I mean. As the successors to the Roman Empire in the East, the Byzantine Emperor had a lot of land to defend, none of it his by any right except that of conquest. The actual target of the First Crusade, for example, was the Jewish Homeland, which neither the Byzantines nor the Muslims had any God-damn right to. The Crusaders jumped into this on behalf of their fellow Christians, and along the way tortured, raped and slaughtered thousands of defenceless Jews. But I suppose that was OK because the Byzantine Emperor must have signed off on that too.
<<Before you jump down my throat again . . . >>
Sorry if I seemed to be jumping down your throat, I detected or thought I detected a patronizing note in your post and reacted accordingly. Next time I'll just turn the other cheek.
<<I'm not saying that justifies anything, but the Byzantine Empire was being invaded and did ask for aid.>>
We should get back to the original point at issue here. It was whether the Christian religion (as opposed to the Fountain of Evil Muslim religion) is or is not the "Religion of Peace." I'm sure that ANY belligerent can justify its belligerence one way or another - - my friend was being attacked, they were hiding weapons of mass destruction, we had to bring them democracy, etc., etc., etc. Rarely if ever has a belligerent justified its actions with morally disreputable reasons: We wanted their oil, God told us to kill them, etc. In other words, I don't think we were discussing whether Christianity was a peaceful religion with some really nifty reasons for making war, just simply was it peaceful or not. They can find as many good reasons for going to war as there are hairs in the beards of all their saints. They are true geniuses at finding a cause for war in any situation. But surely none of that is relevant to the point.
<< It was not as simple as you make it out to be, where a bunch of Christians with blood dripping from their teeth dragged their knuckles down to Jerusalem out of sheer hatred mixed with greed and envy.>>
Well, let's say they went to Jerusalem with motives so lofty and noble that even Jane Fonda and Noam Chomsky would have given their seal of approval. The fact remains that in fulfilling all this noble and lofty dream, they stacked up a whole lot of dead bodies of Jews and other infidels, as they have done in over 2,000 years of unrelieved slaughter, and at the end of the day, the Religion of Peace through some strange irony of history has managed to stack up the biggest death toll of any of the world religions. Am I allowed to at least comment on the
irony of the situation?
<<In fact, many of the cases you discuss are rather complex, such as the Spanish Inquisition. Saying they are complex, does not justify what happened . . . >>
So why mention it?
<< . . . but it does acknowledge that the Church wasn't simply impaling everyone with a cross because they were different.>>
Got it. Their
motives could have been worse. And the body count is: ________