‘Queers 4 Palestine’ Should Know: Hamas Routinely Tortures and Executes Homosexual

Guno צְבִי

We fight, We win
Last November, when the group “Queers 4 Palestine” started demonstrating in London and North American cities in support the Hamas and PA terrorists, British pundit Brendan O’Neill wrote in The Telegraph (‘Queers for Palestine’ must have a death wish): “For all their zaniness, surely not even purple-haired, post-gender activists would take to the streets, Pride flag in hand, to champion a country that would jail them, if they’re lucky, and bump them off if they’re not.”


On Wednesday, Haaretz published a lengthy report titled, “Documents from Gaza reveal details of the execution of a Hamas commander because he was gay.” The report is based on a recent IDF discovery of located the Ishtiwi file in a tunnel, during an operation in Khan Younis. Mahmoud Ishtiwi, a senior Hamas official, was executed in February 2016, after being accused of being gay.


https://www.jewishpress.com/news/le...s-and-executes-homosexual-members/2024/04/03/
 
The Middle East was the most advanced society on the planet for 5 centuries. They were way ahead of the West in science, mathematics, medicine, and language and had huge trading empires. What happened to them was religion. It is what is happening in America right now.
Evangelicals are OK with brutal treatment of the "wrong" people including gays and Trans.
Religion takes countries back in time and it wants to control every facet of society. It makes us dumber.
Islam did to the Middle East, what Evangelical Christianity wants to do here. Hate and fear are among their weapons.
 
The Middle East was the most advanced society on the planet for 5 centuries. They were way ahead of the West in science, mathematics, medicine, and language and had huge trading empires. What happened to them was religion. It is what is happening in America right now.
Evangelicals are OK with brutal treatment of the "wrong" people including gays and Trans.
Religion takes countries back in time and it wants to control every facet of society. It makes us dumber.
Islam did to the Middle East, what Evangelical Christianity wants to do here. Hate and fear are among their weapons.

They were more advanced but that was a hell of a long time ago skippy. They still live in the 5th century.
 
Guno צְבִי;5949989 said:
Last November, when the group “Queers 4 Palestine” started demonstrating in London and North American cities in support the Hamas and PA terrorists, British pundit Brendan O’Neill wrote in The Telegraph (‘Queers for Palestine’ must have a death wish): “For all their zaniness, surely not even purple-haired, post-gender activists would take to the streets, Pride flag in hand, to champion a country that would jail them, if they’re lucky, and bump them off if they’re not.”


On Wednesday, Haaretz published a lengthy report titled, “Documents from Gaza reveal details of the execution of a Hamas commander because he was gay.” The report is based on a recent IDF discovery of located the Ishtiwi file in a tunnel, during an operation in Khan Younis. Mahmoud Ishtiwi, a senior Hamas official, was executed in February 2016, after being accused of being gay.


https://www.jewishpress.com/news/le...s-and-executes-homosexual-members/2024/04/03/

The funny part is all the white libs who support the Palestinians would be imprisoned or killed by those same Palestinians for their views yet they remain useful idiots to the Palestinians. Just like American Jews being in the same party as omar and talib.
 
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The Middle East was the most advanced society on the planet for 5 centuries. They were way ahead of the West in science, mathematics, medicine, and language and had huge trading empires. What happened to them was religion. It is what is happening in America right now.
Evangelicals are OK with brutal treatment of the "wrong" people including gays and Trans.
Religion takes countries back in time and it wants to control every facet of society. It makes us dumber.
Islam did to the Middle East, what Evangelical Christianity wants to do here. Hate and fear are among their weapons.

Really? Which 500 years was that?
 

Arguably many of the achievements of the Islamic-Arabic Golden Age were based on previous initiatives taken by the ancient Egyptians, Hebrews, Persians, Greeks, and Romans
https://faseb.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1096/fj.06-0803ufm

That pretty much sums things up. The Arabic golden age was simply a period where Arabic culture caught up with much of the rest of the world for a period of time, offering a few advancements in science and technology that were incremental and evolutionary, not revolutionary.

For instance, the article mentions the astrolabe. This navigation / stellar cartography instrument had been around for as much as a millennia in one form or another dating back as far as Ptolemy in Egypt and at least to around 200 BC or possibly further. It is likely some form of it was used to create the Antikythera device which can easily be seen as a derivative of the astrolabe. All that Arabic inventors in the so-called golden age did was make some incremental improvements in this technology.

Of course, all of that is occurring in the Ancient period of technological and scientific invention. It wasn't uncommon for almost any advancement to be incremental and slow to occur, often taking centuries of development and reinvention as there was no codified or methodological system in place to document and move such advancements forward.

For example, even though movable type had been invented in China as early as 600 - 800 AD, it took the combination of that with the European printing press in 1450 to turn it into a world changing invention. Even that was predated by things like the cylinder seal and mud brick stamp that goes back to possibly even 1500 BC or more with peoples like the Hittites and Babylonians.

That isn't to credit Europeans with some magical level of inventiveness, but to point out that truly revolutionary inventions and advancements were slow and rare in the Ancient period. Then you have to add in the invention of relatively cheap paper making to make it possible to print large numbers of texts or books.

Note: The modern concept of paper originated in China and spread. In the Arabic-Islamic golden age they made some incremental improvements to the process (like adding rag content).
 
Arguably many of the achievements of the Islamic-Arabic Golden Age were based on previous initiatives taken by the ancient Egyptians, Hebrews, Persians, Greeks, and Romans
https://faseb.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1096/fj.06-0803ufm

That pretty much sums things up. The Arabic golden age was simply a period where Arabic culture caught up with much of the rest of the world for a period of time, offering a few advancements in science and technology that were incremental and evolutionary, not revolutionary.

For instance, the article mentions the astrolabe. This navigation / stellar cartography instrument had been around for as much as a millennia in one form or another dating back as far as Ptolemy in Egypt and at least to around 200 BC or possibly further. It is likely some form of it was used to create the Antikythera device which can easily be seen as a derivative of the astrolabe. All that Arabic inventors in the so-called golden age did was make some incremental improvements in this technology.

Of course, all of that is occurring in the Ancient period of technological and scientific invention. It wasn't uncommon for almost any advancement to be incremental and slow to occur, often taking centuries of development and reinvention as there was no codified or methodological system in place to document and move such advancements forward.

For example, even though movable type had been invented in China as early as 600 - 800 AD, it took the combination of that with the European printing press in 1450 to turn it into a world changing invention. Even that was predated by things like the cylinder seal and mud brick stamp that goes back to possibly even 1500 BC or more with peoples like the Hittites and Babylonians.

That isn't to credit Europeans with some magical level of inventiveness, but to point out that truly revolutionary inventions and advancements were slow and rare in the Ancient period. Then you have to add in the invention of relatively cheap paper making to make it possible to print large numbers of texts or books.

Note: The modern concept of paper originated in China and spread. In the Arabic-Islamic golden age they made some incremental improvements to the process (like adding rag content).

during the engineered "dark ages" in europe, society fell under the sway of the leftover vestigial imperial cock of the roman empire, the roman catholic church, which was actively suppressing the west big time, not letting them even talk about the basic astronomy or other sciency stuff. considering this, the byzantines leaped past europe, for a time.

:truestory:
 
Arguably many of the achievements of the Islamic-Arabic Golden Age were based on previous initiatives taken by the ancient Egyptians, Hebrews, Persians, Greeks, and Romans
https://faseb.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1096/fj.06-0803ufm

That pretty much sums things up. The Arabic golden age was simply a period where Arabic culture caught up with much of the rest of the world for a period of time, offering a few advancements in science and technology that were incremental and evolutionary, not revolutionary.

For instance, the article mentions the astrolabe. This navigation / stellar cartography instrument had been around for as much as a millennia in one form or another dating back as far as Ptolemy in Egypt and at least to around 200 BC or possibly further. It is likely some form of it was used to create the Antikythera device which can easily be seen as a derivative of the astrolabe. All that Arabic inventors in the so-called golden age did was make some incremental improvements in this technology.

Of course, all of that is occurring in the Ancient period of technological and scientific invention. It wasn't uncommon for almost any advancement to be incremental and slow to occur, often taking centuries of development and reinvention as there was no codified or methodological system in place to document and move such advancements forward.

For example, even though movable type had been invented in China as early as 600 - 800 AD, it took the combination of that with the European printing press in 1450 to turn it into a world changing invention. Even that was predated by things like the cylinder seal and mud brick stamp that goes back to possibly even 1500 BC or more with peoples like the Hittites and Babylonians.

That isn't to credit Europeans with some magical level of inventiveness, but to point out that truly revolutionary inventions and advancements were slow and rare in the Ancient period. Then you have to add in the invention of relatively cheap paper making to make it possible to print large numbers of texts or books.

Note: The modern concept of paper originated in China and spread. In the Arabic-Islamic golden age they made some incremental improvements to the process (like adding rag content).[/QUOTETh
You do not know what the rest of the world was like. What are you using to discuss this, your feelings? The Babylonians were in power in 2000 BC. The Assyrians were in power in 2100 BC. https://news.yale.edu/2023/05/26/as...ity-state,and established the first universal
 
Arguably many of the achievements of the Islamic-Arabic Golden Age were based on previous initiatives taken by the ancient Egyptians, Hebrews, Persians, Greeks, and Romans
https://faseb.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1096/fj.06-0803ufm

That pretty much sums things up. The Arabic golden age was simply a period where Arabic culture caught up with much of the rest of the world for a period of time, offering a few advancements in science and technology that were incremental and evolutionary, not revolutionary.

For instance, the article mentions the astrolabe. This navigation / stellar cartography instrument had been around for as much as a millennia in one form or another dating back as far as Ptolemy in Egypt and at least to around 200 BC or possibly further. It is likely some form of it was used to create the Antikythera device which can easily be seen as a derivative of the astrolabe. All that Arabic inventors in the so-called golden age did was make some incremental improvements in this technology.

Of course, all of that is occurring in the Ancient period of technological and scientific invention. It wasn't uncommon for almost any advancement to be incremental and slow to occur, often taking centuries of development and reinvention as there was no codified or methodological system in place to document and move such advancements forward.

For example, even though movable type had been invented in China as early as 600 - 800 AD, it took the combination of that with the European printing press in 1450 to turn it into a world changing invention. Even that was predated by things like the cylinder seal and mud brick stamp that goes back to possibly even 1500 BC or more with peoples like the Hittites and Babylonians.

That isn't to credit Europeans with some magical level of inventiveness, but to point out that truly revolutionary inventions and advancements were slow and rare in the Ancient period. Then you have to add in the invention of relatively cheap paper making to make it possible to print large numbers of texts or books.

Note: The modern concept of paper originated in China and spread. In the Arabic-Islamic golden age they made some incremental improvements to the process (like adding rag content).[/QUOTETh
You do not know what the rest of the world was like. What are you using to discuss this, your feelings? The Babylonians were in power in 2000 BC. The Assyrians were in power in 2100 BC. https://news.yale.edu/2023/05/26/as...ity-state,and established the first universal

the rag content was added from the tops of their rag-heads.

:truestory:
 
The Golden Age in the Middle East spearheaded much of today's science, philosophy and mathematics among other disciplines. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Science_in_the_medieval_Islamic_world Algebra, algorithms. azimuth and many other terms rose from them. They were producing while Christianity turned Europe into the Dark Ages. Fortunately, they could recover. When Islam took over the Middle East, religion won and the people have suffered since.
 
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