English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

for the past week, people were going on and on displaying fears of whats going to happen on August 22nd by the muslim "terrorists"...
finally here we are... ???

this is just to show how pathetic and naive most people are around here..

2006-08-22 12:52:22 · 27 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

27 answers

people believe anything they want to believe

2006-08-22 12:57:08 · answer #1 · answered by johnavaro 3 · 1 0

The World Spun One More Time, Wendell Rodrigues 8/22/58,Gone 11 Years....

2006-08-22 13:00:11 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

it somewhat is what I even have been listening to.....Is Iran making plans an apocalyptic strike against Israel and/ or america for August 22? yet I dont think of something will ensue.....August 22. that happens to be an quite substantial date for Muslims: this is the anniversary of the meant "nighttime flight" by skill of Mohammed from Saudi Arabia to the Temple Mount in Jerusalem to heaven and returned returned. there's a concern that Ahmadinejad is making plans some form of apocalyptic attack as his '"reaction" on August 22. if so, time is short and the clock is ticking.

2016-10-02 10:22:58 · answer #3 · answered by hewlin 3 · 0 0

August 22nd was my first day off from work in 2 weeks. Other than that...nothing.

2006-08-22 12:57:27 · answer #4 · answered by yaybrittany 3 · 0 0

Note how she types "Muslim 'terrorists'" as if there were no such things, then adds a comment about "naive" people.

Are you telling us, Sara, that there is no such things as Muslim terror? Can you say that when from the Middle east to South-east Asia. through Africa and Europe that most of the conflicts on the globe involve Islam unable to live peacefully with its neighbors?

Whatever happens on one day or another doesn't change the general trend: Islam inspires violent groups to commit terror against people who disagree with them, just as Mohammad did to the Jews of Medina at the beginning.

Stop the Taqiyya.

2006-08-22 15:59:55 · answer #5 · answered by wehwalt 3 · 0 2

Iran's Day of Terror?
By Robert Spencer
FrontPageMagazine.com | July 27, 2006
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has frustrated
Western officials by refusing to reply to their offer of various
incentives in exchange for Iran’s discarding its nuclear program
until August 22. The Western governments had asked
Ahmadinejad to reply by June 29; why would Tehran need two
extra months?
Farid Ghadry, the president of the Reform Party of Syria, has
offered a provocative explanation for this delay. He asserts that
the Supreme National Security Council of Iran chose the
August 22 date “for a very precise reason. August 21, 2006
(Rajab 27, 1427) is known in the Islamic calendar as the Night
of the Sira’a and Miira’aj, the night Prophet Mohammed (saas)
ascended to heaven from the Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem on a
Bourak (Half animal, half man), while a great light lit-up the
night sky, and visited Heaven and Hell also Beit al-Saada and
Beit al-Shaqaa (House of Happiness and House of Misery) and
then descended back to Mecca.…”
The Night Journey, or Miraj, is central to Islam’s claim to
Jerusalem as an Islamic holy city. According to Islamic
tradition, Muhammad was carried on a Buraq, a miraculous
horse with a human head, from Mecca to Jerusalem, where he
ascended into heaven and met the other prophets. The only
thing the Qur’an has to say about it is this: “Glory to (Allah)
Who did take His servant for a Journey by night from the
Sacred Mosque to the farthest Mosque, whose precincts We did
bless, in order that We might show him some of Our Signs: for
He is the One Who heareth and seeth (all things)” (17:1). There
is no identification of the “farthest Mosque” with any mosque
in Jerusalem in this, but the Hadith is very clear on the
identification of its location with Jerusalem.
The traditions say that Muhammad and the Buraq, along with
the angel Gabriel, went to the Temple Mount, and from there to
heaven itself, where Muhammad encountered various prophets.
In the sixth heaven was Moses, occasioning a dig at the Jews.
“When I left him,” Muhammad says, “he wept. Someone asked
him, ‘What makes you weep?’ Moses said, ‘I weep because
after me there has been sent (Muhammad as a Prophet) a young
man, whose followers will enter Paradise in greater numbers
than my followers.’”
Evidently, however, Muhammad’s stories of his journey were
not altogether convincing: even some of the Muslims
abandoned their faith and challenged Muhammad’s most
faithful follower, Abu Bakr, to do the same. Abu Bakr was
contemptuous: “If he says so then it is true. And what is so
surprising in that? He tells me that communications from God
from heaven to earth come to him in an hour of a day or night
and I believe him, and that is more extraordinary than that at
which you boggle!” The world has continued to witness such
unshakeable devotion from Muslims to this day.
Did Muhammad really go anywhere? According to his favorite
wife, Aisha, he did not: “The apostle’s body remained where it
was but God removed his spirit by night.” Nevertheless, the
Night Journey has become firmly embedded in the Islamic
consciousness, such that Muslims today celebrate it as one of
the central events of Muhammad’s life. And now, according to
Ghadry, Ahmadinejad is planning an illumination of the night
sky over Jerusalem to rival the one that greeted the Prophet of
Islam on his journey. What the Iranian President, he says, is
“promising the world by August 22 is the light in the sky over
the Aqsa Mosque that took place the night before. That is his
answer to the package of incentives the international
community offered Iran on June 6.”
Certainly a nuclear attack on Jerusalem or even an all-out
conventional assault against Israel by Iran would be consistent
with Ahmadinejad’s oft-repeated denials of Israel’s right to
exist and recent predictions that its demise was at hand. He
hinted at the use of nuclear weapons in his phrasing when he
said that Israel “pushed the button of its own destruction” by
finally retaliating against Hizballah’s relentless rocket barrage
from south Lebanon.
“Arrogant powers,” Ahmadinejad said, “have set up a base for
themselves to threaten and plunder nations in the region. But
today, the occupier regime” – that is, Israel – “whose
philosophy is based on threats, massacre and invasion, has
reached its finishing line.”
Will he attempt to make good on these threats this year on the
anniversary of the Miraj, illuminating the night sky over
Jerusalem? Will Western powers heed Farid Ghadry’s words
and move to stop Iran before it is too late?

2006-08-22 12:58:34 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

To me August 22 is just another day.
Just like every other day!

2006-08-22 12:55:55 · answer #7 · answered by jrealitytv 6 · 0 0

lol agree.. also.. I have noticed Christians have been saying Jesus is coming because of all this stuff in Lebanon etc..
Where is he? cause I havent seen Jesus yet.. Or is it when the fighting is over he will show himself lol aaaahahahaha

For as long as the bible has been around religious ppl have been trying to prove the existance by tying EVERY POSSIBLE world event to JESUS IS COMING aaaaaaaaaahahaha PATHETIC!!!

2006-08-22 12:54:17 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

August 22? My car insurance is due!
Its Tuesday, Garbage has to go out!
Thats about it for today!!!!

2006-08-22 12:55:52 · answer #9 · answered by KIM A 3 · 0 0

It means only 3 more days until pay day. I haven"t got time to be paranoid. To busy having a life (of sorts) LOL

2006-08-22 12:55:42 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

Thank you. So many of these dolts believe anything. Hey, I got a bridge for sale. Anybody interested?

2006-08-22 12:57:39 · answer #11 · answered by Richie D 3 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers