Well, aside from the laughter that there would be anyone bigot enough to register a domain of: godhatesfags.com ....
The real debate isn't whether such mindsets exist, but it's each other's perceptions of what is 'mainstream' or majority versus underground and limited to extremists.
Some people feel only a rare few Christian extremists are the one's that want to smite down all gays and that the Swede's should all be drowned/killed... other's feel these are the words of the extremist few and not symptomatic of the mainstream Christian faith.
By the same coin, the voice of 'mainstream' Muslims is often keyed on these blood thirsty, vengeance bearing words of jihad and uprising, as given here in the original post- whereas others feel these are not symptomatic of the mainstream Muslim faith.
People tend to be hypocritical since they will sit on one side of the fence for one, and the other side of the fence for the other. It's a combined defensive + offensive stance with little balance or tolerance the opposite way.
Lastly, if there is one thing common amongst Christians and Muslims- it's the human nature to vent or express words that don't have the actions to back them up in moments of trauma and loss. Christians without the ability to hurt a fly were chanting, "Nuke those towel heads until they glow in the dark!" immediately following 9/11. At the same moment, if you rounded up a bunch of Muslim terrorists handcuffed and handed these same people an M16, very few of them could pull the trigger. It's just venting. Muslims do it also- when feelings are extreme from loss and trauma, people always say things they don't necessarily mean. Good natured Muslims might be chanting to kill all Jews when a particularly nasty event occurs in the Gaza strip when Palestinian children or women are caught in the crossfire.
It's the contagious disease of violence, hatred and bloodshed and people have to exhale this coldness somehow when it enters their lives. Words are much more healthy than actions.






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