Sharia Law or Canadian Law.....

SLM

The Velvet Hammer
Mar 5, 2011
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We are a ways off from ruble training, but you don't really have loved ones calling you, it's usually relief organizations calling the team you're in to do mass searches in assigned quadrants.

Well I know that, lol. But you were talking about going into a community where interaction with dogs might be an issue, a Muslim community. But if you're going into that community, that means the community has a member who is in jeopardy.

Plus I'm sure whatever authority is in charge will be relaying the information that they'll be bringing in the dogs.

We monitor their internet use, especially after I checked Mukua's history.

Keep them away from the kitty porn. Those cross species sites are the worst.....I've heard. :D
 

CDNBear

Custom Troll
Sep 24, 2006
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Well I know that, lol. But you were talking about going into a community where interaction with dogs might be an issue, a Muslim community. But if you're going into that community, that means the community has a member who is in jeopardy.

Plus I'm sure whatever authority is in charge will be relaying the information that they'll be bringing in the dogs.
Oh, no doubt about that.

I was just curious about what the Usual Suspects had to say.

Keep them away from the kitty porn. Those cross species sites are the worst.....I've heard. :D
No doubt. next thing you know, they're bringing home strange *****.
 

MHz

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Mar 16, 2007
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Tell the local cops your problem, also tell them you are going to print up your own NAS badge that will be slightly larger or smaller than the real one and tell them it is a spot inspection or on the trail of a hot tip.

A big dog without a wire screen could put the passengers (two) at risk if the driver is under stress, be it from teeth, drool or the remnants of an atom bomb from his last fare a deadly crash doesn't help anybody. Personally I wouldn't hesitate calling 'Flying Carpet Cab Co.' especiallit if the trip was put onscreen so the fare can see the best route is being taken. Russia tapes everything, why not cabs as it is considered to be a dangerous. A Shepherd and a white cane makes me a car-jacker or robber or muderer or both. if I was a Cabbie. That being said swerving towards them makes you a ****, no trial needed. Most service dogs mean other health/mobility issues so fill out a form that explains the needs of both parties and make it a standard. contract and a driver can opt out, a company cannot even if they have to make special arrangements like the handi-bus that sits most of the day.
 

MHz

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An unexpected bonus is the wording that describes the government before that as being anything brutal. They were a mirror of Iran's Shaw era. A classic example of history being rewritten to show the US backed rulers were not as barbaric as rumored. lol.

(in part)
Afghanistan - Disenchantment with the Reforms Afghanistan Toward the end of the constitutional period, the Wolesi Jirgah became increasingly critical of the government. In May 1972 the incoming cabinet was subjected to nineteen days of denunciation of the previous cabinet before it was given grudging approval. Despite a heavy backlog of bills, foreign loan agreements, budgets and treaties, it found a quorum only once in two months in the autumn session of 1972. In its final session (Spring 1973), it reached a quorum once in eighty-two days.
Such legislative failures were crucial to the demise of the constitutional effort. The Jirgah's recalcitrance seriously affected the morale and discipline of the bureaucracy. In an atmosphere of contention both sides became increasingly frustrated and corrupt.
Government performance was unpromising in other areas. Economic development was moving from construction projects to more advanced operational phases. Afghan government departments and industrial units found the transition difficult. Productivity failed to keep up with the infusion of foreign money, bringing serious inflation to Kabul in the early 1970s.
As the rural population became increasingly aware of the concentration of modern facilities and industry in Kabul and a few other cities, signs of resentment assumed political importance. This mood changed to widespread anger when the government failed to respond promptly and adequately to a drought which ravaged the Hazarajat and much of northern Afghanistan in 1970-72. The experiment in democracy had brought few benefits to the most Afghans while economic opportunities and profits from corruption appeared to be monopolized by the elite.
Discontent was especially intense among the rapidly growing numbers of secondary and university students. Between 1967 and 1972 the number of secondary schools increased from forty to approximately 200. A much wider segment of rural and small town youth was graduating from the middle schools beneath them. By 1973 the number of secondary school graduates far exceeded the openings to higher education available at the university, the teacher training colleges, or the various technical institutions.
Previously, the rural population had been content with informal, largely religious, instruction offered by resident mullahs,which produced rudimentary literacy at best. By the late 1960s,villages throughout Afghanistan were volunteering materials and labor to construct school buildings and were clamoring for the government to send teachers. Education had become identified with upward social mobility.
In the early 1970s,the products of this burgeoning system were mostly converging on Kabul. The revolution in expectations had suddenly created a marginalized class which was unemployed or forced to accept work far beneath its expectations. Embitterment changed many students and graduates into recruits for radical and protest movements.
Marxist critiques of the constitutional experiment quickly appeared. In 1966 a newspaper published by the newly formed communist party branded the reforms an attempt to co-opt the expanding educated elite so that the monarchy could to retain power. Activist students on the Kabul University campus organized informal political and study groups that ran the spectrum from Maoism to the Islamist views of the Muslim Brotherhood. By 1970 the strongest of these had become well organized. The Marxists were foreign funded and advised. Led by a medical student, Najibullah (later to be president of the Marxist government), they took control of the student government. In the early 1970s, they lost it to their militant Muslim rivals.
Both sides opposed the government, and both movements flourished on the anxieties of students for whom jobs were suddenly scarce. Both also saw the political establishment as a corrupt impediment to their own opportunities, and both demanded radical changes in the structure of political power.
These problems and growing resentments gave Zahir Shah ample reason to doubt the viability of the constitutional experiment. His attempt to broaden and liberalize government had created growing opposition. It had not brought about a visible improvement in government performance, especially in planning and implementing development. Foreign assistance was declining--the Arab oil boom that brought new funding was still in the future. Sooner or later the survival of the government would again depend upon effective coercion. Zahir Shah had never directly associated himself with that side of statecraft.

Afghanistan - DAUD'S REPUBLIC: 1973-78

Afghanistan The July 1973 coup d'etat ended 226 years of royal rule controlled by the Durrani tribal confederacy. The coup was uncontested, apparently popular, and almost benignly bloodless. Popular acceptance was partially tied to the continuity which Daud's leadership appeared to offer even though he had become politically associated with Marxists. He was seen by many as a forceful leader and a known factor after a decade of dashed hopes for a viable constitutional monarchy.
Daud was compelled to concentrate much of his energy on getting rid of his Marxist allies who had made the coup possible by penetrating the military officer corps. These erstwhile allies were members of the Parcham faction of the Peoples Democratic Party of Afghanistan (PDPA). They had expected to share power and then get rid of Daud. They also had scores to settle with the Islamic militants they had fought against at the national university and the politicians who had served in Zahir Shah's constitutional government. Hundreds of members of the Ikwani Musalamin (Muslim Brotherhood, also known in Afghanistan as the Muslim Youth), were arrested--many were later executed. Former Prime Minister Muhammad Hashim Maiwandwal was murdered by Parchami henchmen while in police custody for alleged involvement in a coup attempt.
By 1975 Daud had moved carefully to purge the Marxists from his cabinet. In 1977 he attempted to consolidate his position by promulgating a new constitution which concentrated power in his presidency and channeled popular support through a single party system. Under some Soviet and Indian communist pressure, the Afghan Marxists interrupted their factional feuding long enough to unite in an attempt to overthrow Daud's government. Incensed by Daud's foreign policy shift away from them, the Soviets made clear to the Afghan Marxists their willingness to see Daud removed. He had moved close to Iran, Pakistan and Egypt (after Sadat had reconciled with Israel).
Having isolated himself from the liberals who had served the king and the Islamic militants he had persecuted, Daud had to rely heavily on his security and military forces to stay in power. The Marxists effectively penetrated them. As a result his efforts to prevent a coup were bungled. While most of the armed forces stood aside, Marxist collaborators in the army and the air force launched an assault on Daud's palace that overwhelmed his Republican Guards.
http://www.mongabay.com/reference/country_studies/afghanistan/GOVERNMENT.html
 

MHz

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What part of the reform in the bolded part is escaping you as being positive?
A revolt by educated young people that is not resisted is a power that should be encouraged to grow, it wasn't it was snuffed out us, the moral modern Christians.
If this escapes you the double-speak won't even be noticed. Sheep come in all flavors. lol


BTW when looking at Canadian Law it would be more appropriate if the terms that are in place when martial Law is in full force were the ones that 'define' our present freedoms.
 
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MHz

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The thread title is about two types of law, the cabbie is one instance, is that supposed to be the limit of what the laws cover?
 

MHz

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It was only a matter of time.
For what?

If they want Sharia Law so badly, go back to where it's LAW. That ain't here....

If they want to be taxi drivers in Canada they must follow Canadian law. If they are not willing to do this they can either find different jobs or a different country.
So they can do what Joe is telling the Chinese to re-volt. When they did the us (and Canada by extension) did everything in their power to stop the progress they were making. Maybe it is us who should stay in our country, we certainly are asshats in other nations

http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/20...ls-china-kids-to-buck-authority/#.Up_e3uJc7Tq

BEIJING – U.S. Vice President Joe Biden opened a two-day visit to China Wednesday by urging young Chinese students to challenge their government, teachers and religious leaders.
 
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B00Mer

Keep Calm and Carry On
Sep 6, 2008
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Rent Free in Your Head
www.getafteritmedia.com
www.youtube.com/watch?v=fOABjtNMYXQ

This may very well come to Canada under Justin Trudeau!!!



www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ik7v14kI-hM

Surah 4: 88-89
Surat An-Nisa' [4:88] - The Noble Qur'an - ?????? ??????
Surat An-Nisa' [4:89] - The Noble Qur'an - ?????? ??????


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MHz

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Mar 16, 2007
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GITMO Orange??? Box just happen to fall out of a plane and how come there have been no previous wearers. Sterile smock to your own beheading.
You fully investigated how this stuff 'goes missing' in your travels?

No no! Truedough is a school teacher.........
You suggesting we should be on Residential School time?
 

B00Mer

Keep Calm and Carry On
Sep 6, 2008
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OK lets get the straight dope here...

How many Muslims are radicalized in the world??

www.youtube.com/watch?v=g7TAAw3oQvg

Mohammed was a pedophile and homosexual, we should lock up all Muslims and feed them pork and porn. :)
 
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gopher

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 26, 2005
21,513
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Minnesota: Gopher State
This is a matter of settled law as we have discussed on the earlier threads in which the subject came up - in a sectarian society such as Canada or the USA, sectarian law takes precedent. This because the greater public good is involved. In Minneapolis, Muzzie cabbies who refuse to take passengers with seeing eye dogs or who are carrying liquor have to go to the back of the waiting line and they lose customers that way. They always have the option of finding other means of employment so nothing is lost under these circumstances.