How many of you support the apartheid state of Israel? How many of you support torture, extraordinary rendition? How many of you read "collateral damage" and move on in the article without a second glance?
Terror can come from a state government just as easily as it can from a small group of dissidents. In fact, it is much easier for a government they have the tools, resources, and democratic governments come with built-in international deference.
People who roll all Muslims into one group and blame Islam as the culprit for all terrorism are bigots.
The various militant groups that fight across the world are not representative of all Muslims or of Islam itself. The Israeli Government is not representative of all Jews, not even of all Israelis.
Does the IRA, PIRA, or RIRA represent all Catholics? Does the UVF, Orange Order, and the others represent all Protestants?
Does the Lord's Resistance Army represent you, they are Christians? (Just because you don't know about it, doesn't mean it does not exist)
Uganda rebels 'kidnapping' in CARMore than 100 people are being held in Central African Republic, by armed men who local officials say are rebels from Uganda's Lord's Resistance Army (LRA).
Most of the villagers abducted were women and girls, and some have been gang-raped, a UN official told the BBC.
The Ugandan government and the LRA are due to sign a peace deal on 5 April.
Earlier this month, the Ugandan authorities said LRA leader Joseph Kony had moved to CAR from his base in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
This move violated the terms of a ceasefire agreement.
Humanitarian sources have confirmed that 150 people have been abducted in south-eastern CAR in recent days, the BBC's Arnaud Zajtman reports.
Reports say about 30 elders, who were used to carry looted goods for their abductors, have now been set free.
About half of those were taken are reported to be girls, some as young as six.
Some of those freed said they heard the girls screaming during the night.
Night-time attacksThe newly released elders say they were taken to a camp where the girls were offered to armed men by the rebel commander.
Mboli Nani, MP for Obo in south-eastern CAR, said that some of those who had escaped from the rebels testified they had been beaten by their abductors.
He said the armed men spoke English, Arabic and Lingala.
"The style they used is the style of the LRA," Mr Nani told the BBC.
"They attack in the night slowly and quietly - they take people and they steal goods."
The head of Ocha, the UN's humanitarian affairs agency in CAR, Jean-Sebastien Munier, told the BBC that the area where the kidnappings occurred was extremely remote and difficult to access.
"We cannot confirm it is official LRA - it could be a dissident branch," he said, after the return of UN fact-finding team from the region.
The 22-year conflict between the LRA and the Ugandan government in northern Uganda has left thousands dead and nearly two million displaced.
The LRA insists that the war crimes indictments placed on its leaders at the International Criminal Court are lifted before they sign the deal.
Uganda's government says the LRA leaders should face justice locally, not in The Hague but it does not have the power to get the arrest warrants cancelled.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7318093.stm