What does the idiot riot in BC have to do with it??? BTW, I am definitely NOT a sports fan, so don't blame me.
Like I said .... "nothing like violent protesting against something that wants to remove aspects of a way of life that's centuries old. Unlike something (the reason for violence) really important like this: http://www.tbnewswatch.com/news/150786/Nine-police-officers-injured-in-hockey-riot-police-chief".
It's a matter of perspective. I'm sure that those Muslims that fought for the right to wear a veil in public think that people fighting in Canada over a hockey game is pretty freaking stupid, too. Basically my point is that it's violence supporting simply a way of life vs. violence over a game.
While I would not approve of a law banning the veil, it is obvious that the police need to be able to demand its removal for ID purposes in any number of instances.....to check licenses etc being one example.
Yep. Me, too. So those people were protesting against a dumb law. I wonder how newly married wives feel about not being able to wear a veil in public.
That said, if you wear the full veil, you simply don't belong in this country, and I suggest you return to whichever Islamic hellhole you crawled out of.....
Spoken like a true bigot. My wife could say anyone not wearing skins and hides should go back to the countries of their families' origins, too. But she accepts that people are different.
Yep, a few people do get violent over some things. 4 terrorists represent the entire population of Islam. Just like the Christians mentioned below represent the entire Christian community:
"During the twentieth century, members of extremist groups such as the Army of God began executing attacks against abortion clinics and doctors across the United States.[64][65][66] A number of terrorist attacks were attributed to individuals and groups with ties to the Christian Identity and Christian Patriot movements, including the Lambs of Christ.[67] A group called Concerned Christians were deported from Israel on suspicion of planning to attack holy sites in Jerusalem at the end of 1999, believing that their deaths would "lead them to heaven."[68][69] The motive for anti-abortionist Scott Roeder murdering Wichita doctor George Tiller on May 31, 2009 was a belief that abortion is criminal and immoral, and that this belief went "hand in hand" with his religious beliefs.[70][71] The Centennial Olympic Park bombing in 1996, as well as subsequent attacks on an abortion clinic and a lesbian nightclub, were made by Eric Robert Rudolph; Michael Barkun, a professor at Syracuse University, considers Rudolph to likely fit the definition of a Christian terrorist, whereas James A. Aho, a professor at Idaho State University, argues instead that Rudolph was inspired only in part by religious considerations.[72]
Hutaree was a Christian militia group based in Adrian, Michigan. In 2010, after an FBI agent infiltrated the group, nine of its members were indicted by a federal grand jury in Detroit on charges of seditious conspiracy to use of improvised explosive devices, teaching the use of explosive materials, and possessing a firearm during a crime of violence.[73] On March 28, 2012, the conspiracy charges were dismissed.[74] Terrorism scholar Aref M. Al-Khattar has listed The Covenant, The Sword, and the Arm of the Lord, Defensive Action, The Freemen Community, and some "Christian militia" as groups that "can be placed under the category of far-right-wing terrorism" that "has a religious (Christian) component" - Wikipedia