Friday, December 21, 2007

Jeff Hardy New Hair Cut

Secularism in danger

links of the Head of State with the highest religious authorities become difficult to hide! After have advanced on tiptoe, he now acts openly and affirms its willingness to challenge secularism by highlighting the "religious roots" of the country. "Secularism has no authority to cut the country of her roots, she tried it, it should not have" dare he say!

"The secular republic has long underestimated the importance of spiritual aspiration"

"What I have most at heart to tell you is that in this world obsessed with material comfort, the country needs to believe that believers are not afraid to say what they are and what they believe. "


We must give thanks to Abdullah Gul: at least he would not permit himself to utter such nonsense, shamelessly flouting the law its citizens to atheism the most uninhibited.

You may recognize these statements abjectly bigoted speech given by Canon Sarkozy in Rom e. .. Not that secularism in Turkey is threatened, and displaying so ostentatious religious beliefs, Nicolas Sarkozy (twice divorced, living in concubinage libidinous with a man-eating creature, God have mercy on his soul) made note of separatism.


An atheist, a Muslim, a Jew, a Buddhist, he must still identify with the fact that France, through the voice of the Head of State, its Christian roots unsurpassable horizon? Personally, when I see the president to swear allegiance to the Pope, I see 20 generations of kings of France Gallicans be turning in their graves ... we are far from time or emissary of Philip the Fair returned a good Mandale a recalcitrant pope.

Soon, restoring education relgieux in public schools, and the mention of religion on identity cards. All French will be considered automatically as Catholic. And Sarkozy has increasingly hard to justify its rejection of Turkey, a secular state false and true Jacobin, so like his sister country of France ...

And if that was a joke? In the delegation accompanying Sarkozy on the tomb of John Paul II, was Jean-Marie Bigard. The real question is: Has he put his balls on the marble?


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