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Just a little observation on terrorists (2 Viewers)

soha

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sometimes after reading bos
i feel like a terrorist
or that i should be one
or that deep down i am one
because thats what i am perceived as
my religon etc..for fucks sake
its annoying
but i will play along
and put a jihad on you all..and terrorise you through bos
thats the least i can do
 

Lozacious

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supercharged said:
Just a comment, Hitler retard got his race theories all wrong, germans are NOT aryans.
No you are misunderstanding it. Aryan means the traditional inhabitants (yeh i don't know how the Iranians are called Aryans or what ever.. but i meant it in the western connotation of Aryan obviously).
supercharged said:
edit: I would also like to see what so called 'aryan inventions' are claimed by asians? I seriously can't think of a single one.
he was saying that Asians can only take Aryan inventions. Ie, Cars, Videos, internet.. what ever. Which is basically true.
 

supercharged

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jihad on you all!?!

There's a black van waiting for you outside your house......
 

hiphophooray123

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soha said:
sometimes after reading bos
i feel like a terrorist
or that i should be one
or that deep down i am one
because thats what i am perceived as
my religon etc..for fucks sake
its annoying
but i will play along
and put a jihad on you all..and terrorise you through bos
thats the least i can do

awwwwwwwwwww look wat u big mean ppl have done to little soha :(

dont worry soha, you'll always be a good muslim to me
 

Lozacious

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soha said:
sometimes after reading bos
i feel like a terrorist
or that i should be one
or that deep down i am one
because thats what i am perceived as
my religon etc..for fucks sake
its annoying
but i will play along
and put a jihad on you all..and terrorise you through bos
thats the least i can do
That's funny, because if BoS was as intolerant as you are making out, perhaps i wouldn't feel so out of place here. If you can't even stand this little bit of intolerence in a time when Australians are scared... pfft. I won't even bother.
 

soha

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Lozacious said:
That's funny, because if BoS was as intolerant as you are making out, perhaps i wouldn't feel so out of place here. If you can't even stand this little bit of intolerence in a time when Australians are scared... pfft. I won't even bother.
good. then dont
 

supercharged

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Lozacious said:
No you are misunderstanding it. Aryan means the traditional inhabitants (yeh i don't know how the Iranians are called Aryans or what ever.. but i meant it in the western connotation of Aryan obviously).
Nah Aryans aren't even European. Iranians (persians) are the aryan racial group. 'Iran' means 'aryan' in the local farsi language, hence the name of the country.

Lozacious said:
he was saying that Asians can only take Aryan inventions. Ie, Cars, Videos, internet.. what ever. Which is basically true.
LOL none of that was invented by the Iranians for god's sake! Those western inventions only apply to the past 100 years or so. I dunno about other asian countries but China invented the following:

1. The Horse Collar: China. Third Century BC. About the fourth century BC the Chinese devised a harness with a breast strap known as the trace harness, modified approximately one hundred later into the collar harness. Unlike the throat-and-girth harness used in the West, which choked a horse and reduced its efficiency (it took two horses to haul a half a ton), the collar harness allowed a single horse to haul a ton and a half. The trace harness arrived in Europe in the sixth century and made its way across Europe by the eighth century.

2. The Wheelbarrow: China, First Century BC. Wheelbarrows did not exist in Europe before the eleventh or twelfth century (the earliest known Western depiction is in a window at Chartres Cathedral, dated around 1220 AD). Descriptions of the wheelbarrow in China refer to first century BC, and the oldest surviving picture, a frieze relief from a tomb-shrine in Szechuan province, dates from about 118 AD.

3. The Moldboard Plow: China, Third Centrury BC. Called kuan, these ploughshares were made of malleable cast iron. They had an advanced design, with a central ridge ending in a sharp point to cut the soil and wings which sloped gently up towards the center to throw the soil off the plow and reduce friction. When brought to Holland in the 17th Century, these plows began the Agricultural Revolution.

4. Paper Money: China, Ninth Century AD. Its original name was 'flying money' because it was so light it could blow out of one's hand. As 'exchange certificates' used by merchants, paper money was quickly adopted by the government for forwarding tax payments. Real paper money, used as a medium of exchange and backed by deposited cash (a Chinese term for metal coins), apparently came into use in the tenth century. The first Western money was issued in Sweden in 1661. America followed in 1690, France in 1720, England in 1797, and Germany not until 1806.

5. Cast Iron: China, Forth Century BC. By having good refractory clays for the construction of blast furnace walls, and the discovery of how to reduce the temperature at which iron melts by using phosphorus, the Chinese were able cast iron into ornamental and functional shapes. Coal, used as a fuel, was placed around elongated crucibles containing iron ore. This expertise allowed the production of pots and pans with thin walls. With the development of annealing in the third century, ploughshares, longer swords, and even buildings were eventually made of iron. In the West, blast furnaces are known to have existed in Scandinavia by the late eighth century AD, but cast iron was not widely available in Europe before 1380.

6. The Helicopter Rotor and the Propeller: China, Forth Century AD. By fourth century AD a common toy in China was the helicopter top, called the 'bamboo dragonfly'. The top was an axis with a cord wound round it, and with blades sticking out from the axis and set at an angle. One pulled the cord, and the top went climbing in the air. Sir George Cayley, the father of modern aeronautics, studied the Chinese helicopter top in 1809. The helicopter top in China led to nothing but amusement and pleasure, but fourteen hundred years later it was to be one of the key elements in the birth of modern aeronautics in the West.

7. The Decimal System: China, Fourteenth Century BC. An example of how the Chinese used the decimal system may be seen in an inscription from the thirteenth century BC, in which '547 days' is written 'Five hundred plus four decades plus seven of days'. The Chinese wrote with characters instead of an alphabet. When writing with a Western alphabet of more than nine letters, there is a temptation to go on with words like eleven. With Chinese characters, ten is ten-blank and eleven is ten-one (zero was left as a blank space: 405 is 'four blank five'), This was much easier than inventing a new character for each number (imagine having to memorize an enormous number of characters just to read the date!). Having a decimal system from the beginning was a big advantage in making mathematical advances. The first evidence of decimals in Europe is in a Spanish manuscript of 976 AD.

8. The Seismograph: China, Second Century AD. China has always been plagued with earthquakes and the government wanted to know where the economy would be interrupted. A seismograph was developed by the brilliant scientist, mathematician, and inventor Chang Heng (whose works also show he envisaged the earth as a sphere with nine continents and introduced the crisscrossing grid of latitude and longitude). His invention was noted in court records of the later Han Dynasty in 132 AD (the fascinating description is too long to reproduce here. It can be found on pgs. 162-166 of Temple's book). Modern seismographs only began development in 1848.

9. Matches: China, Sixth Century AD. The first version of the match was invented in 577 AD by impoverished court ladies during a military siege. Hard pressed for tinder during the siege, they could otherwise not start fires for cooking, heating, etc. The matches consisted of little sticks of pinewood impregnated with sulfur. There is no evidence of matches in Europe before 1530.

10. Circulation of the Blood: China, Second Century BC. Most people believe blood circulation was discovered by William Harvey in 1628, but there are other recorded notations dating back to the writings of an Arab of Damascus, al-Nafis (died 1288). However, circulation appears discussed in full and complex form in The Yellow Emperor's Manual of Corporeal Medicine in China by the second century BC.

11. Paper: China, Second Century BC. Papyrus, the inner bark of the papyrus plant, is not true paper. Paper is a sheet of sediment which results from the settling of a layer of disintegrated fibers from a watery solution onto a flat mold. Once the water is drained away, the deposited layer is removed and dried. The oldest surviving piece of paper in the world is made of hemp fibers, discovered in 1957 in a tomb near Xian, China, and dates from between the years 140 and 87 BC. The oldest paper with writing on it, also from China, is dated to 110 AD and contains about two dozen characters. Paper reached India in the seventh century and West Asia in the eighth. The Arabs sold paper to Europeans until manufacture in the West in the twelfth century.

12. Brandy and Whiskey: China, Seventh Century AD. The tribal people of Central Asia discovered 'frozen- out wine' in their frigid climate in the third century AD. In wine that had frozen was a remaining liquid (pure alcohol). Freezing became a test for alcohol content. Distilled wine was known in China by the seventh century. The distillation of alcohol in the West was discovered in Italy in the twelfth century.

13. The Kite: China, Fifth/Fourth Century BC. Two kitemakers, Kungshu P'an who made kites shaped like birds which could fly for up to three days, and Mo Ti (who is said to have spent three years building a special kite) were famous in Chinese traditional stories from as early as the fifth century BC. Kites were used in wartime as early as 1232 when kites with messages were flown over Mongol lines by the Chinese. The strings were cut and the kites landed among the Chinese prisoners, inciting them to revolt and escape. Kites fitted with hooks and bait were used for fishing, and kites were fitted with strings and whistles to make musical sounds while flying. The kite was first mentioned in Europe in a popular book of marvels and tricks in 1589.

14. The rocket and multistaged rockets: China, Eleventh and Twelfth Centuries AD. Around 1150 it crossed someone's mind to attach a comet-like fireworks to a four foot bamboo stick with an arrowhead and a balancing weight behind the feathers. To make the rockets multi-staged, a secondary set of rockets was attached to the shaft, their fuses lighted as the first rockets burned out. Rockets are first mentioned in the West in connection with a battle in Italy in 1380, arriving in the wake of Marco Polo.
 

leetom

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15. The Chinese Communist Party (CCP): China, 1924. Responsible for the deaths and murder of millions of Chinese, including its own members. Oversaw largescale famine and economic ruin under the tenure of its much vaunted hero, Mao Zedong. Systematically incarcerates opposition, political and spiritual. An interesting application of communism, making full use of Leninism's permission of authoritarianism while discarding any sense of socialist ideology economically. Silently regarded by democratic leaders around the world as a joke.
 

supercharged

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leetom said:
15. The Chinese Communist Party (CCP): China, 1924. Responsible for the deaths and murder of millions of Chinese, including its own members. Oversaw largescale famine and economic ruin under the tenure of its much vaunted hero, Mao Zedong. Systematically incarcerates opposition, political and spiritual. An interesting application of communism, making full use of Leninism's permission of authoritarianism while discarding any sense of socialist ideology economically. Silently regarded by democratic leaders around the world as a joke.
Haha Wrong, Communism is NOT a chinese invention, it was first founded by Karl Marx who was a Jewish German. Also there is no comparison between the current CCP and inept rule of chairman Mao who was the man responsible for the above disasters.
 

Lozacious

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Aryan means Germanic.

And don't forget China's most important invention..... Gunpowder!
 

hiphophooray123

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i don't think he implied that the chinese created communism....

but tah almighty red guards, the mindless little teens, were the result of mao's manipulation, not a creation of china.
 

SashatheMan

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soha said:
sometimes after reading bos
i feel like a terrorist
or that i should be one
or that deep down i am one
because thats what i am perceived as
my religon etc..for fucks sake
its annoying
but i will play along
and put a jihad on you all..and terrorise you through bos
thats the least i can do
cool you can join r3v3ng3 at the terrorist camps.
 

supercharged

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Lozacious said:
Aryan means Germanic.

And don't forget China's most important invention..... Gunpowder!
shit yeah, gunpowder is one of the most important military inventions to mankind.

This should explain the word 'aryan' a bit more. Hitler was an idiot, if he wanted to stereotype blond hair and blue eyes as being the ideal, he should of said 'nordic' rather than 'aryan', cos I've never seen a blond haired, blue eyed Iranian! :p

Ary·an adj.
Word History: It is one of the ironies of history that Aryan, a word nowadays referring to the blond-haired, blue-eyed physical ideal of Nazi Germany, originally referred to a people who looked vastly different. Its history starts with the ancient Indo-Iranians, Indo-European peoples who inhabited parts of what are now Iran, Afghanistan, and India. Their tribal self-designation was a word reconstructed as *arya- or *rya-. The first of these is the form found in Iranian, as ultimately in the name of Iran itself (from Middle Persian rn (ahr), "(Land) of the Iranians," from the genitive plural of r, "Iranian").
The variant *rya- is found unchanged in Sanskrit, where it referred to the upper crust of ancient Indian society. These words became known to European scholars in the 18th century.

The shifting of meaning that eventually led to the present-day sense started in the 1830s, when Friedrich Schlegel, a German scholar who was an important early Indo-Europeanist, came up with a theory that linked the Indo-Iranian words with the German word Ehre, "honor," and older Germanic names containing the element ario-, such as the Swiss warrior Ariovistus who was written about by Julius Caesar. Schlegel theorized that far from being just a designation of the Indo-Iranians, the word *arya- had in fact been what the Indo-Europeans called themselves, meaning something like "the honorable people." (This theory has since been called into question.) Thus "Aryan" came to be synonymous with "Indo-European," and in this sense entered the general scholarly consciousness of the day. Not much later, it was proposed that the original homeland of the Indo-Europeans had been in northern Europe. From this theory, it was but a small leap to think of the Aryans as having had a northern European physiotype.

While these theories were playing themselves out, certain anti-Semitic scholars in Germany took to viewing the Jews in Germany as the main non-Aryan people because of their Semitic roots; a distinction thus arose in their minds between Jews and the "true Aryan" Germans, a distinction that later furnished unfortunate fodder for the racial theories of the Nazis.
 

SashatheMan

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soha said:
lead me the way
I cant lead you cause i dont want to be involved in terrorist activity. However the friend of yours i mentioned before is eager to learn the tricks of the al qaeda trade, let him lead your way.
 

arooshika...

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tommy, go fuck yourself, not only you are giving melbourne a bad name but also australia, i got a few muslim friends, and they can go a bit overboard at times but that doesnt mean they are terrorists
look at mcquarie field riots? a bunch of auzzies
 

Not-That-Bright

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Soha, why is it... that you don't just take the first step... and tell us all that if these people were planning to purposefully kill innocents, they are extremists and do not belong in our society?
 

SashatheMan

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arooshika... said:
tommy, go fuck yourself, not only you are giving melbourne a bad name but also australia, i got a few muslim friends, and they can go a bit overboard at times but that doesnt mean they are terrorists
look at mcquarie field riots? a bunch of auzzies
allah has brainwashed u . you morphed into one of them.













hahaha joking.
 

soha

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Not-That-Bright said:
Soha, why is it... that you don't just take the first step... and tell us all that if these people were planning to purposefully kill innocents, they are extremists and do not belong in our society?
how many times have i said that on bored of studies?
how many times have i condemned terrorism as a whole?
yeah these people do not belong in society if they truely are terrorist or if the want to harm anyone ...
...why do i have to constantly say it?
im a muslim terrorist /extremist reguardless what i say...arent i?
 

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