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	€uromeinke, FEJ. and Ghoulish Delight RULE!!! NA abides.  | 
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			 Beelzeboobs, Esq. 
			
		
			
				
			
			
								
		
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		 I think there might be a slight apples and oranges here.  My perception is that the types of violence are different.  My impression is that much of the violence linked to the Muslim faith is reactionary - and to very specific triggers.  Certainly some Christian violence is reactionary, but not to the same degree.  For example, some Christians might choose to protest a local action (judicial ruling, political speech, funeral, etc...) but it tends to stay localized to the action.   
		
	
		
		
		
		
			I could be totally wrong. Maybe when the Supremes handed down Lawrence v. Texas Christian groups across the globe bombed bath houses. I don't know. I didn't hear about it, but it's not something I would have been listening for. On the other hand, the Pope says something (in Germany?) that Muslims don't like and someone kills a nun in Somalia. There's also a sense of tacit approval. Again, this is perception, but it seems like when a wacky Christian group blows up something many people nutter about how wrong-minded those people are, how they don't represent the right way to go about things, and there seems to be a sense of indignation. On the other hand, the impression the Muslim world gives off is more of a "well, *I* wouldn't have done it, but they had it coming." And maybe it's a cultural variation. Maybe within the culture they're having the same response we're used to seeing in our culture, but it doesn't translate. I was going somewhere with this but I lost the train of thought. 
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	traguna macoities tracorum satis de  | 
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