If you pay attention to liberals in America, one of the things you will notice is that they almost never actually say what they mean unless they’re celebrating the death of a conservative.
Gad Saad has a habit of saying deliberately provocative things in a serious way, then being outraged when people don't realize he's kidding because they don't know who he is. He did that to me many years ago and has done the same thing to many people since. So, maybe it's not fair, but I don't read his stuff or promote him because I think he's a jerk and I genuinely don't like him as a human being.
I agree with you, Kathy. Gad Saad has very important things to say. Sometimes he can get nasty and call names to people he disagrees with, but in the main they are creeps who generally are used to getting away with saying whatever they want without pushback. His academic and intellectual powers seem pretty formidable, and his interview with Raymond Ibrahim should be a must listen to anyone who wants to understand the threat of radical Islam. I do plan to buy this book.
Brilliant! This is a great list because it concisely cuts through the BS that the liberals use when deliberately mangling the language! Just like a lot of uneducated people sound like fools when they try to throw in big words, the Left only reveals their fundamental dishonesty and patent disregard for the truth. Thanks for posting this list; I can't wait to use it with my friends who suffer the same as we do. Um, I must say that I am surprised to hear what you said in your reply to Kathy about Gad Saad. I only started listening to him last year, and while he does insult people he disagrees with, I find his ability to use personal examples, similes and metaphors to be very illuminating. And it surprises me to hear your experience with his interview. I've seen him deftly try to bring people to understand his positions by patiently explaining what he's written or said. He's a professor in America now, but he often lectures about things that happened to him when he grew up in Lebanon. I think the importance of his current message- that the explosive growth of radical Islam is a threat to Western civilization- so important that he is a must read for me; and perhaps for you, too. Maybe check it out from the library, and if you don't like it, it cost you nothing?
Hey John, have you followed Gad Saad? He has a new book called Suicidal Empathy. He was recently on Rogan. It supports so much of what you’ve said.
Gad Saad has a habit of saying deliberately provocative things in a serious way, then being outraged when people don't realize he's kidding because they don't know who he is. He did that to me many years ago and has done the same thing to many people since. So, maybe it's not fair, but I don't read his stuff or promote him because I think he's a jerk and I genuinely don't like him as a human being.
I agree with you, Kathy. Gad Saad has very important things to say. Sometimes he can get nasty and call names to people he disagrees with, but in the main they are creeps who generally are used to getting away with saying whatever they want without pushback. His academic and intellectual powers seem pretty formidable, and his interview with Raymond Ibrahim should be a must listen to anyone who wants to understand the threat of radical Islam. I do plan to buy this book.
Brilliant! This is a great list because it concisely cuts through the BS that the liberals use when deliberately mangling the language! Just like a lot of uneducated people sound like fools when they try to throw in big words, the Left only reveals their fundamental dishonesty and patent disregard for the truth. Thanks for posting this list; I can't wait to use it with my friends who suffer the same as we do. Um, I must say that I am surprised to hear what you said in your reply to Kathy about Gad Saad. I only started listening to him last year, and while he does insult people he disagrees with, I find his ability to use personal examples, similes and metaphors to be very illuminating. And it surprises me to hear your experience with his interview. I've seen him deftly try to bring people to understand his positions by patiently explaining what he's written or said. He's a professor in America now, but he often lectures about things that happened to him when he grew up in Lebanon. I think the importance of his current message- that the explosive growth of radical Islam is a threat to Western civilization- so important that he is a must read for me; and perhaps for you, too. Maybe check it out from the library, and if you don't like it, it cost you nothing?