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#49
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05-28-2016, 12:14 AM
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Re: Dead ISIS
Thank, you for the share. Here is my opinion on the behavior showed in the pictures, to both who are dead and alive. I am faint of heart and get ill when seeing gory wounds and pain, but this has been a good site for me since I'd like to go into the medical field and as such must become desensitized to painful wounds, both mental and physical. Physical tends to evoke more physical reaction for me...in this case, nausea. Heh... But back to my main point. The emotion I have analyzed in the pictures. It is barbaric in the fact that what is shown here gives us examples of something you would see in the middle ages, a time that should have been left in the past. These types of mentalities of prevalent Isis and poor Islamic societies would never be able to translate into modern times. Something will have to change, just as Christianity is willing to change and bend, a trait that can withstand time regardless of how and what people adopt as a religion or lifestyle in the long run. Seeing this refusal of sophistication and reckless barbarism will just cause more harm to what they are fighting for--a powerful rebel society, fighting for a "heroic" cause, showing no mercy, kind of like what you'd see in a space opera. I don't even think it's about religion anymore, it's just a network machine, similar to something of a hive-mind. Just as ants would react to their environment in a singular sense, or even plants, who have no nervous system of their own but can effectively make 'decisions' that benefit their survival. Saying that, I must be real here. Of course, herding is natural for humans. We do it all the time. But this is an especially worse case, when right now people in sophisticated cultures like to express individuality. That isn't to say, sophistication will always win over barbarism, because reality and history can and will always argue that point. But it won't last long, if what we can apply from nature gives us any guidance, like a fire spreading across woodlands. But without any other things igniting its process, it will extinguish and die, and underneath that saplings will grow from the ashes. Kind of like the atomic bomb. After Japan surrendered, and the bombs were dropped, Japan was able to then move from its ultra-nationalist, imperialistic roots and bring forth a modern society appreciated by many, from all over the world. Whilst still maintaining its traditions. Why? Well, because their traditions could still carry on, but they left behind some past traditions that would no longer be viable in the time period. But it's still there. What we see here is an example of an aging society that's trying to cling too much to tradition. But it will have to change soon, or be forced to change. Either way, something good will come out of it, hopefully, as we've learned from history. Just my opinion on the matter.
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