Since you persist in this nonsense I will grant you one more reply, but I was short on patience the first time around and I'm not any better now.
Most of the world's great powers have a Christian heritage. None have a Muslim one.
Are you kidding? There are lots of people with a Muslim heritage that occupy positions around the world in politics, entertainment, business, etc. Check it out.
"Great power" refers to a country, not a person. The most powerful Islamic or Islamic-heritage country in the world would probably be Pakistan or Indonesia. Either would fall well below such countries as US, China, Russia, the UK, Japan, India, Brazil, Germany, France, and more.
Most of the world's richest people are Christian, or at least come from countries with a Christian background. Very few, in comparison, are Muslim or come from a Muslim background.
Names would be nice to have to back up your assertion. This is not to say that "invalidation by numbers" is a valid argument. Example: I'm more likely to die from getting hit by a falling coconut than by getting attacked by a shark, but that doesn't mean that shark attacks don't happen.
The lower part of that comment is irrelevant nonsense. Don't waste my time. We're talking about relative power differences; if more Christians are rich than Muslims (and this is true), and more rich Christians are richer than rich Muslims (also true), and if wealth is an important measure of power--and it is, in fact, a key measure of power, through the markets, government, and enterprise--then it follows ineluctably that Christians are more powerful. Now add the "fundamentalist" qualifier, and the statement remains true. I leave it to you to inspect a list of the world's richest people and note the ratio of Christians to Muslims.
More importantly, I wasn't talking just about the rich. Implicit somewhere between the line about great powers and rich individuals is the power of the wider populace of the great powers. Far more Christians than Muslims have access to ways and means of every configuration.
Christian ideas and attitudes and credit and troops are exported fluidly throughout the entire world; Islamic ones are not.
Now this is just flat-out lying. Do you honestly expect me to believe that there is absolutely no Islamic influence being exported around the world in science, literature, the arts, et. al? Read this.
Lying, no. You failed to understand what I said. Never assume that Lord J is lying when your own ignorance remains an unchecked possibility. I leave it to you to make the raw comparisons of the Christian-background versus Muslim-background flow of ideas, attitudes, credit, and troops. What you'll see is that, while Islamic influences certainly are visible all over the world, Islamic dominance is confined to a narrow band of the center of the world. In contrast, Christian dominance is global and is intertwined with the operating bases of everything from our economic systems to our morality codes to our national constitutions. This is a part of why it has been such labor for secularists to extricate the states and the people from the church and the institutions of religious dominance generally. When Christians make that beloved claim of theirs that ours is a "Christian nation," they're not right in the sense they mean (in that the country was founded with the intent that it be a bastion for religious conservatism), but, technically, they're not wrong either, because our nation has a Christian heritage. It is not
not a Christian nation, culturally speaking.
Christian fundamentalism, by existing in large part within the developed world, has an inherent power advantage. Power is dangerous, and thus more of it makes a person more dangerous.
Let's break down your argument:
1. Christian fundamentalism, by existing in large part within the developed world, has an inherent power advantage.
2. Power is dangerous.
3. Therefore, Christian fundamentalists are dangerous.
This would be an association fallacy. In this case, the fallacy implies that the power that people associate with Christians comes from them being fundamentalist in their beliefs. While this may, in part, be true, it is fallacious to state that all fundamentalists in power are dangerous, or that someone becoming a fundamentalist in power is dangerous.
You're right. If taken at face value, my argument commits the fallacy you mention. I could have been more exhaustive in explaining the
relative difference between the Christian and Muslim sides. If we take it that power is dangerous and Christians are more powerful, then Christians will sometimes be dangerous. If we take it that power is dangerous and Muslims are less powerful, then Muslims will sometimes be dangerous. And, between the two, Christians will be dangerous more so (either in frequency or severity) than Muslims.
That you would make such a quibble, however, when you almost certainly could have deduced the full form, smacks of the diversions of desperation.
Your decision to judge power on the absurdly narrow variable of terrorism--nay, the even more absurdly narrow case of a single specific terrorist act--is completely negligent and foolish.
Is it any more negligent and foolish than what you've asserted with basis? We both have room for improvement, in that case.
The fact that you are contesting this point is an absurdity and I find myself disgusted that your critical faculties are poor enough that you actually think you have a point. I only wish my time were not so severely constrained. Maybe somebody else can explain it more simply and in greater detail that Christianity is based in the developed world and Islam is based in the developing world, and thus Christianity (and Christian fundamentalists) are the more powerful of the two religions. The wars launched by Christians have been broader in scope and more numerous. The laws passed by Christians have been greater in reach and encompass more people. The politics of Christians have shaped most of the world's present-day national boundaries. The companies founded by Christians are at the center of finance and the globalization process. The exports and imports of Christian-heritage nations are more numerous and valuable than those of Muslim-heritage ones. Etc., etc., etc.