Proof that stereotypes are often massively wrong

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MiTasol

Captain
8,800
16,230
Sep 19, 2012
Aw flaming stralia
I guess everyone has heard of the shooting in Sydney Australia and many have seen the video of the man who took down one of the shooters and ended up with bullet wounds for his actions.

Here is some more information on this man and some of those who support him. For those who missed the video it is included.

 
I guess everyone has heard of the shooting in Sydney Australia and many have seen the video of the man who took down one of the shooters and ended up with bullet wounds for his actions.

Here is some more information on this man and some of those who support him. For those who missed the video it is included.

I was wondering about that guy.

And this is a huge middle finger to all idiots who judge people for their religion or ethnicity.

I'm trying to avoid politics, but you only need half a word I guess.
 
Having lived in the Middle East for over five years, I can attest to the fact that like people everywhere, the communities there have heroes and villains, leaders and cowards, and like everywhere else most people of Arabic, Persian, or Muslim groups are basically good folks.

I reserve my ire for the assholes who use religion to justify barbarity.
 
I guess everyone has heard of the shooting in Sydney Australia and many have seen the video of the man who took down one of the shooters and ended up with bullet wounds for his actions.

Here is some more information on this man and some of those who support him. For those who missed the video it is included.

Exactly. I wish more people would highlight the fact that Ahmed El Ahmad, the 43-year-old father of two, who bravely risked his life, being shot twice, to save his neighbours celebrating Hanukkah is a Muslim. Yes, here we have a case of an average, every day Muslim stepping in to help save his Jewish neighbours. We should be celebrating this and not just going on claiming Australia is anti semitic and ramping up the hateful rhetoric.
 
Another of my fathers favourite sayings was If the older generation was half as good as they claimed they were there would not be a younger generation.
 
Having lived in the Middle East for over five years, I can attest to the fact that like people everywhere, the communities there have heroes and villains, leaders and cowards, and like everywhere else most people of Arabic, Persian, or Muslim groups are basically good folks.

I reserve my ire for the assholes who use religion to justify barbarity.

One of my favourite quotes, albeit fictional, is from Sgt Buster Kilrain in the film 'Gettysburg."The thing is, you cannot judge a race. Any man who judges by the group is a pea-wit."

The last part is particularly important for me. We like to label people by the colour of their skin, their socio-economic position, their age, and any number of other factors. I try really hard to avoid stereotyping people because, inevitably, it will be wrong.
 
I have served twice in the Middle East as both an Airman and Soldier. The picture of me here was taken at the Baghdad Airport in 2004. The problem isn't the average Muslim. The problem is the radicalized Muslims that believe they are predestined to rule the world. They are entitled to use any means to carry out that view. That all that oppose them must be killed. You are with them or dead. Being Jewish just makes you a first target. The rest of us are on their list.
The problem for the rest of us is how do we tell the difference until they act.
That leads to painting all with a broad brush. Yes, that is bigotry. It is a problem that only can be dispelled when the radicals are disowned, exposed by the other Muslims. Until that happens, the rest of us don't know the good from the bad until it is too late.
The vast majority of Australians are not carrying weapons by law. Anyone with basic marksmanship training willing to act is better than police that are responding, getting organized before acting. In this case Australia's weapon laws rendered the people at the beach as targets to be freely shot. If there were armed private citizens present, this would have ended much sooner.
The problem isn't guns. It is who has them. Law-abiding armed citizens are a solution not the problem. The problem has always been bad guys with guns. Politicians in Australia, I hope you wake up to reality and quit making your citizens defenseless targets for all bad guys not just the religion fanatics.
 
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The problem isn't guns. It is who has them. Law-abiding armed citizens are a solution not the problem. The problem has always been bad guys with guns. Politicians in Australia, I hope you wake up to reality and quit making your citizens defenseless targets for all bad guys not just the religion fanatics.

The event at Bondi Beach was a massive outlier for Australia.

Comparing gun-related violence in Australia with that in the US, the former has far less per 100,000 of population (several thousand percent less). The data suggests that less stringent gun laws result in streets that are more dangerous,
 

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