How civilizations rise and fall

What could be a better single example of a developing civilization than a road. The British built roads and railways in India (where Tamerlan’s muslim army slaiughered millions of Hindus) and that was all they needed to become one of the fastest developing industrial nations in the world sustaining a population of 1 billion. Same with China. In fact the worlds largest employer at last check was the Chinese military followed by the Indian Railway and third, the British health care service. OK number three didn’t work out so well but one and two are profound signs of civilization.

And what could be a better sign than a civilization in decline but mosques growing out of the landscape like a skin fungus. Where Islam grows civilizations fail without exception. Granted where a civilization is sufficiently robust it can play host to a large number of parasites but eventually the edicts of Islam, the way it treats women and non-Muslims, the limits placed on those who employ reason over islamic supremacy in the form of sharia and deference to the irrational will take down any civilization and it has from the Romans to parts of the Balkans and the UK.

So have a look at the contrast between Canada and Cambodia. Which one would you bet on for the medium term.

Cambodian mosque gives way to a road

Canadian road used to service a mosque

About Eeyore

Canadian artist and counter-jihad and freedom of speech activist as well as devout Schrödinger's catholic

6 Replies to “How civilizations rise and fall”

  1. Hello there……its me again, Don Laird

    Muslim mosques, recognizable with the crescent atop a dome or tower of a building, are not places of worship. Mosques are not places where herb tea is served and to the quiet strains of “Kumbaya My Lord”, occupants engage in quiet reflection on world peace and draw up blueprints for the betterment of Mankind.

    Quite simply, mosques are political gathering centers. Mosques are a political beachhead, a proverbial foot in the door. Mosques are centers where meetings are held and money is raised for the express purpose of funding terrorist activities here in North America and around the world. Mosques are places that harbour and provide safe haven to Muslim criminals and terrorists that are actively being pursued by law enforcement.

    Still further mockery made of the concept of “sanctuary” given by a “church” can be found in the role of a Mosque acting as an armory and ordnance cache. Mosques are centers where children are fed Muslim propaganda and a murderous hatred of Westerners is instilled. Mosques are not places of worship but rather centers where literature is circulated calling for the death of all Westerners and non-Muslims in a global jihad.

    A prime example of this type of literature can be found in Saudi Arabian publications given to muslim children which describe Jews as “apes and pigs” and calls for their extermination. This alone proves the murderous and genocidal nature of Muslims.

    For all of this and so very very much more……….the building of Mosques must be banned with a retroactive program of mosque removal across North America.

    Regards, Don Laird
    Dogtown, Crankville County

  2. Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad Welcomed to Canada by Jason Kenney

    Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad arrived in Canada on 15 May 2013

    His Holiness landed at Vancouver International Airport at 5.30pm local time and was greeted by Canada’s Minister for Citizenship, Immigration and Multiculturalism, Jason Kenney.

    To mark the opening of the Mosque, His Holiness will deliver the keynote address at a special reception on Saturday in front of a range of Government officials, Federal and Provincial Members of Parliament, Community Leaders and various other dignitaries.

    Mr Kenney praised the Ahmadiyya Muslim Jamaat for its commitment to peace, tolerance and equality for all. In response, Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad said that “this is the true picture of Islam.”

  3. World Muslim Leader arrived in Vancouver, Canada to advocate Peace, Love, Unity and Human Rights