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I'm not for a bunch of men going as refugees either, it's all part of a liberal scheme anyways. I just hate it when people try to humanize Syrians by comparing them to Afghans and making them look like angels compared to Afghans when they're not and they're both going through the same thing. I also hate it when people try to attach me to a country that I have never been to in my life and a country that deattached itself from me. I have connections to it, but I'm different from Afghanistan and Afghans. I'm not even technically Afghan, (that's a nationality), but my ethnicity is Afghan-Pashtun. In America, the Afghan immigrants are vey hard working and established themselves:
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The Native Americans ''disbelief, ancestor worship and human sacrifice'' lasted for over 10,000 years, probably longer. It existed before the earliest days of Abrahamic religion. Not a good argument. Islam is a young religion.
The Native-Americans fault was that of having being isolated for too long, making them naive towards intruders.
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Learn some about Afghans here
http://www.theapricity.com/forum/sho...of-Afghanistan
Indian Genomics can be modeled by four-way populations, not two way populations. Read more in this thread:
https://www.theapricity.com/forum/sh...tion-structure
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They did, because humans care about themselves. Didn't end very well for the original population.
However if you want to take the latest world wars as an example. If you look at pictures of refugees, they were almost solely small children and women. The men fought. The opposite of the recent refugee crisis.
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Majority of contemporary thought in the humanities field are 19th century Theosophist forgeries; this from the history of Europe to how religions started. Every society on Earth had at one time believed in a monotheism brought about by Divine revelation via human arbitraries (prophets and messengers), that over the generations devolved into polytheism and ancestor worship.
Nothing the white man says about Native American religion or history is true as far as Im concerned.
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Theosophical influence in global religious history : http://jaar.oxfordjournals.org/conte...l.lft095.short
And my sources regarding Monotheism in the Americas are not in English. The belief in "One God" indeed existed in the Native American world prior to the introduction of Christianity by the Europeans and continues to exist among North American traditionalists today. North American aboriginal 'religion' is often misunderstood, largely as a result of a lack of structure and the unwillingness to share a belief system that most Native Americans consider to be universal, a "religion that all should know" at a subconscious level (ie: fitrah). The majority of Native American cultures and their religion can be characterized by a monotheistic belief in an all-powerful creator known as the "Great Spirit". But his power was administered in the material world through "messengers", or spiritual beings who served as intermediaries on behalf of the people.
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