Wednesday, 7 July 2010

Five years on

The fruits of barbarism

It's the fifth anniversary of the 7/7 atrocity.

Given the number of attacks and near misses since then, that we have Jihadists that we can't deport living on benefits, an Afghanistan campaign in disarray, anti-terrorism laws still in place that inconvenience everyone except the Jihadists, a de facto and de juri invasion of Britain that continues unabated, another government that is reluctant to even name the enemy, and a general attitude of grovelling in front of the Faithful instead of standing up for moderate Muslims* and demanding concrete proof from the rest of why they should be trusted an inch, I'd say that we have a very long, hard road still ahead of us.

Meanwhile, to the victims of 7/7, our continued prayers.

*And by moderate I don't mean desiring a new caliphate in Britain, but are circumspect about it. I mean those who reject the goals as well as the methods of the Jihadists, swear allegiance to the Crown, recognise Britain as a Christian/secular state in which Sharia has no place, and intend to assimilate to British society rather than for that society to accommodate them.

3 comments:

Alejandro said...

Ephemeral. Wouldn't Christendom, Islam or any other system of belief, be, in a given scale of time, ephemeral?

David said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
David said...

Good question and certainly one of great theological importance. As a Christian I would say that since the Church embodied in our Lord Jesus Christ extends through all eternity, no

I leave the adherents of other faiths to defend themselves.

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