prince
310 posts

prince
@_aryaguma
muslim | football fan | thinker mechanical engineering student ⚙️
Katılım Haziran 2022
383 Takip Edilen147 Takipçiler

@EAdesawe73935 @Jimohrrr @ohgunwalehadeni @YusufAsunmogejo We all know why Islam is unpopular to many non muslims ,the problem is those people who read and act on verses out of context which doesn't happen with Christianity
But today the issue was you understanding these verses in context and know that Islam doesn't teach terrorism
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@Jimohrrr @ohgunwalehadeni @YusufAsunmogejo Your problem is refusing to accept that islamic jihadist use those verse to perpetuate wars and killings. You don't see Christians using the Bible as a basis to kill.
That's the difference! Why is it difficult for you to see?
Oh, you are a muslim
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I laugh in Chinese 😂
Should I burst your bubble? Let me burst it because I see that you don’t want to learn. You have been fed with lies and it has compounded your ignorance.
You are confusing the first three hundred years of early Christianity with the last 1700 years of Christendom. Yes, the early followers of Jesus were persecuted. However, the moment the Roman Empire adopted Christianity under Constantine and later made it the only legal religion with the Edict of Thessalonica in 380 AD, the persecuted became the violent persecutors. Pagans were slaughtered and their temples destroyed.
Have you read about Charlemagne? During the Saxon Wars in the 8th century, he issued a law called the “Capitulatio de partibus Saxoniae.” His official state policy was baptism or death. I know you don’t know this Barbie 😂. He beheaded thousands of Saxons in a single day at the Massacre of Verden for refusing to convert.
When the Conquistadors arrived in the Americas, they read a document called the “Requerimiento” to the native populations. It demanded they submit to the Church and the Spanish Crown, or face war, enslavement, and death. Was that people repenting and turning to Jesus? State violence played a huge role in Christianizing Europe and the Americas.
Now let me turn to Islam. I see that you are ignorant, and this has made you conflate political expansion with religious conversion.
When Muslim armies defeated the Byzantine and Persian empires, they conquered land and established political authority. They did not put swords to the necks of civilians to change their faith. If they did, places like Egypt, Syria, and Persia would have become Muslim overnight.
However, historical records show these regions remained majority Christian and Zoroastrian for almost 300 years after the initial Islamic conquest. They converted gradually over centuries under the Dhimmi system because they were protected and allowed to keep their faith.
Take a look at the largest Muslim populations today. Indonesia, Malaysia, and massive regions of East and West Africa. No Muslim army ever marched there. Islam spread entirely through trade routes, scholars, and the moral character of Muslim merchants.
Do not take my word for it. Sir Thomas Arnold, a non-Muslim historian in his book “The Preaching of Islam” thoroughly dismantled this sword myth. In fact, the famous British historian De Lacy O'Leary wrote in his book “Islam at the Crossroads” and stated expressly that: the myth of the legend of fanatical Muslims sweeping through the world and forcing Islam at the point of the sword is one of the most fantastically absurd myths that historians have ever repeated.
Will I open your head and speak truth to it if you can’t be open minded to learn? This subject matter is well above your pay grade. Maybe your boss Dachomo will do better. And I promise, I will school him.
Thank you for your attention.
Barbir@Alex_Barbir
@YusufAsunmogejo Why is it that there is one religion in the world founded on conquest, war, and violence? While Christianity spread through persecution, through people repenting and turning to Jesus, Islam spread by force.
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@Timelessthemes I admire and respect you for that man, thanks for your services
On the other hand you make me want to quit that uni
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I thought about kyeeyo many times, especially when the walls were closing in. But I looked at my students and realized that young people are the heart and soul of this nation. If we all run away from the systemic rot in our own house, who will be left to clean it? I chose to stay and fight for a future where no child has to flee their own country just to find justice.
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This is how I survived all these harrowing years.
I survived by stripping my life down to its barest essentials. To stay in a system that was designed to bleed me dry, I had to be more than a student. I had to be a survivalist.
I could not afford to live alone, so I rented a tiny single room and brought in two roommates. We were a survival unit. We pooled every small coin we had to buy food in bulk and cooked together. It was the only way to avoid starving. There were nights when the pool was empty. On those nights, we simply slept to forget the hunger.
I had friends who were better off, like Nicholas. I will be honest: sometimes I visited them not just for the company, but because I knew there might be a meal. Every shilling I received from home was a choice between a plate of food and a university penalty. Usually, the penalty won.
I tried everything to bridge the gap. I took on small side hustles, working whenever and wherever I could. But I quickly learned the cruelty of late payment charges. The small money I made would disappear into the university’s accounts like a drop of water in the ocean. No matter how hard I worked, the debt grew faster than my income. It felt like running up a descending escalator.
By the time I finished in 2016, with no retakes and a clean academic record, I was a ghost of the man who had entered. Emaciated and my spirit torn to shreds I left carrying a debt in millions.
I briefly worked at Everlight College in Kansanga, but I soon realized that city life would never let me clear that debt. I could not risk going back home to Western Uganda empty handed. The shame was too much to carry. I wanted to get as far from home as possible, to a place where no one knew my name or my expectations. I moved to the Eastern region, specifically to Mbale district, because I had heard from friends that there were many schools there.
Considering my academic record, I hoped to find a school that would employ me using my provisional results and a recommendation letter.
I left Kampala in December 2016. Early in 2017, I found a school willing to pay me 250,000 UGX. My net pay was 200,000 UGX. I had to balance this to pay rent and somehow pay the university. I rented a room near the school, but I hardly lived in it. My entire existence was anchored at the school because that was my only source of food. People at home never wanted anything to do with me. I was a disappointment to everyone.
I would go to school for morning preps and stay there for every single meal. Breakfast, lunch, and supper were all provided by the school. This was the only way I could survive. With my meals sorted at the workplace, I could divide my 200,000 UGX strictly between my rent and the university fees. I would only return to my room late at night, after prep and supper, just to sleep and wait for another haunting day to begin.
You can imagine how hard life was. I taught in that school until 2022.
Shortly before COVID-19, I was lucky to find three more schools, making a total of four. I was working around the clock, exhausted but hopeful. I had barely earned my first salaries from the additional schools when the pandemic struck. I had wanted to clear the debt in 2020, but with the lockdowns and the schools closed, my source of food and income vanished. I was once again barely surviving.
When schools finally resumed after COVID-19, I worked with a desperation I cannot describe. I quickly made the remaining amount and paid. Only then did I peacefully return from my self-imposed exile back to Buhweju district.
The darkest moment of that exile happened in 2017. My mother, my stepmother who had raised me since I was four years old, died. I almost missed burying her for the fear of going to the village. I was the university star of the family; how would I explain to my relatives what had actually happened? Who would understand me? I was a man with a clean academic record, yet I was a fugitive from my own success, hiding in Mbale...

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Could you imagine being cooked alive inside of a steel container in the middle of the desert for your faith?
Yohannes Weldegebriel from Eritrea East Africa
They took him for one reason—he would not deny Christ.
No trial.
No crime proven.
They locked him inside a metal shipping container under the Eritrean sun—
a box that turned into an oven by day,
and a freezing cage by night.
Days passed.
Air thinned.
Heat pressed in.
He was given a choice:
Recant… and walk free.
He did not.
No crowd watched.
No voice recorded his final words.
But in that silent furnace—
hidden from the world—
he held his confession to the end.
And there, alone,
he died.
-Jeff Rose

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@MaduKing9999 @JKyalo37828 @MakaiNDL @sebatamathibela @AfricanHub_ I think it's the other way round, God is all that is left for Africans cause we are not progressing whatsoever, we are so dump that whoever assumes power thinks about staying there not developing his country, imagine we have been reduced to work so hard to be servants abroad
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@_aryaguma @JKyalo37828 @MakaiNDL @sebatamathibela @AfricanHub_ Of course it does, not because the government refuse to create job but because they are comfortable in poverty and shouting on top their voice in churches, they believe is best to die poor then to work out better future for their families, heaven is the goal
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@MaduKing9999 @MakaiNDL @sebatamathibela @AfricanHub_ @JKyalo37828 We have inferiority complex and for whatever reason,it was there even when the whites first came, maybe cause they were better than us so we just blindly follow whatever they say
I believe even if whites didn't come with religion we would still follow them maybe cause of science
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@_aryaguma @MakaiNDL @sebatamathibela @AfricanHub_ @JKyalo37828 Colonial are not gone yet if the people don't know who they are, religious faith made Africans weaker and that madness still run in their blood and it's shameful, I'm not blaming anyone anymore I want Africans to wake up and build Africa for their children
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@MaduKing9999 @JKyalo37828 @MakaiNDL @sebatamathibela @AfricanHub_ I respect what you believe in but believing in afterlife wouldn't hinder economic development
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@_aryaguma @JKyalo37828 @MakaiNDL @sebatamathibela @AfricanHub_ No you are scared of the truth and reality of life, I believe in reborn not hell or heaven

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@MaduKing9999 @JKyalo37828 @MakaiNDL @sebatamathibela @AfricanHub_ Extremism blud and it's everywhere, we have a problem with our leaders
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@_aryaguma @JKyalo37828 @MakaiNDL @sebatamathibela @AfricanHub_ People who are killed by other religious fools and below God will come and safe them, let me not talk about Islam yet because that is the worst
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@MaduKing9999 @JKyalo37828 @MakaiNDL @sebatamathibela @AfricanHub_ That's really sad manh, those are people who blindly follow religion
But there's a reason why these people are so down that the only hope they have is prayers
I think that reason is our leadership and I don't really know why African leadership is consistently rotten
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@_aryaguma @JKyalo37828 @MakaiNDL @sebatamathibela @AfricanHub_ x.com/i/status/20385…
Imagine this insane number of brainwashed people across many cities in Africa, people who pray for fire to go off instead of doing the needful, people who doesn't care about hospital because they believe church will heal them
Instablog9ja@instablog9ja
Members of Resurrection Power New Generation Church pray fervently as fire guts parts of the church.
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@_aryaguma @WonderWomaNinja He will be made to bow down and worship Allah before they kill him.
It is his soul they are after bro.
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@MaduKing9999 @JKyalo37828 @MakaiNDL @sebatamathibela @AfricanHub_ It's not only Africans that believe in afterlife
Our problems are so many but we just blame the religious among us
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@_aryaguma @JKyalo37828 @MakaiNDL @sebatamathibela @AfricanHub_ 🤣😂 you expect them to fight with what, there is this narrative that Africans sold Africans that a lie, slaves sold slaves in Africa not Africans, till this day you are still acting weak mentally, believing someone is making a better place for you after life, acting all scared
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@MaduKing9999 @MakaiNDL @sebatamathibela @AfricanHub_ @JKyalo37828 The miracles you mention are believed by other races too not a only Africans
We are just blaming our religious brothers for keeping us behind which I don't think is the reason Africa is behind
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@_aryaguma @MakaiNDL @sebatamathibela @AfricanHub_ @JKyalo37828 I'm wasting my time with you, as long you believe a man spent 3 day in fish belly and some guy walk on water, how will you understand simple reality.
I swear if Africans start thinking of building a better future for their kids here on earth that day Africa start progress
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@_aryaguma @MaduKing9999 @MakaiNDL @sebatamathibela @AfricanHub_ Africans Kindness Welcomed Europeans
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@JKyalo37828 @MaduKing9999 @MakaiNDL @sebatamathibela @AfricanHub_ Of course it did but we were weak to allow a foreign man come in our homes lecture about how to live, sleep with our daughters, take ours sons as slaves while we were looking on
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@_aryaguma @MaduKing9999 @MakaiNDL @sebatamathibela @AfricanHub_ No body wa Weaker. Religion played a bigger role in enslaving Africans
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@MaduKing9999 @MakaiNDL @sebatamathibela @AfricanHub_ @JKyalo37828 It's alot that makes Africa lag behind, religion is not only here
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@_aryaguma @MakaiNDL @sebatamathibela @AfricanHub_ @JKyalo37828 You have no point you are what you think (happy slave)
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