A senior cleric in Iran has issued a fatwa declaring that anyone who threatens Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei is “an enemy of God,” state media has reported.

Grand Ayatollah Naser Makarem Shirazi was responding to a question about any threats made by U.S. President Donald Trump and the leaders of Israel, including prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

A fatwa is a ruling on how to interpret Islamic law issued by a clerical authority.

  • D_C@sh.itjust.works
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    23 hours ago

    Here’s a comprehensive list why killing the orange Shitgibbon is a bad idea:
    1.
    *
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    *

  • Deflated0ne@lemmy.world
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    Hey. If it happens you won’t hear me complain.

    He needs to go. The who how and why doesn’t matter so long as he’s gone. That’s a win for the entire human race.

    • Darleys_Brew@lemmy.ml
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      17 minutes ago

      The problem is the movement he has created. The same is true of many other politicians in other countries.

    • Sarmyth@lemmy.world
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      I was gonna say that it would only be unfortunate due to giving them a reason to attack Iran, but history has shown us that doesn’t matter. We’ll do that regardless. If we dont have a reason we’ve been happy to just make one up.

      At this point its really just a matter of not wanting to actually fight America on the battlefield.

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        not that I wouldn’t love this win for religious fundamentalist posturing, it’s not going to play out like that for Fruity Tootsie the Orange Teletubby. he’s not the same.

        • HugeNerd@lemmy.ca
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          I know. But it’s a religious thing, so any random dude with a mental illness, other than religion itself, can take Holy Action ™.

          • sad_detective_man@leminal.space
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            perhaps you’re right. I’m struggling with the mental justification of allowing myself to think that anyone but Americans can rid ourselves of him. but who knows. maybe it’s okay to think that someone else will do it. here’s hoping allah’s greatest defender is out there somewhere, may he have the most violent brainworms that he needs for the Holy Justice 🙏 or whatever

  • korsystems@lemmy.ml
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    1 day ago

    Well, Trump is an insult to anyone with more than one functioning brain cell

  • mazzilius_marsti@lemmy.world
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    Feels like deja vu to when Bin Laden issues a jihad against the US, but this time it is much more personal - Trump got called out.

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    Got too many ‘leaders’ in this globe with a Jesus Christ/God Complex. That’s what is wrong with this world.

      • harrys_balzac@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        2 days ago

        Most organized religions don’t cultivate empathy, especially the ones considered Abrahamic. It probably inhibits it.

        It’s all about their gods saying “do these things and you won’t suffer at my hands.” Followers don’t get to think about whether something is correct or the right thing to do. They’re too busy thinking about if it’s going to count as a sin.

        Having lived in Utah for way too long, I have seen this among the Mor[m]ons. They’ll do “good works” but it’s very impersonal most of the time.

        It’s about grinding the maximum blessings with the least amount of effort. That doesn’t lend itself to empathy.

        Especially with the whole temple thing. Spend a couple of hours cosplaying as an avatar for a dead person and still get all the blessings as if you helped a living person in a tight spot.

        • olympicyes@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          It’s bizarre given how explicit the teachings of Jesus are. It’s very clear that many churches are cults following the teachings of man, only nominally accepting the word of God

        • Saleh@feddit.org
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          Most organized religions don’t cultivate empathy, especially the ones considered Abrahamic. It probably inhibits it.

          This is simply false.

          https://theconversation.com/us-muslims-gave-more-to-charity-than-other-americans-in-2020-170689

          We found that Muslim Americans gave more to charity, donating an average of $3,200, in 2020, versus $1,905 for other respondents. They also differed from non-Muslims in many ways. For example, nearly 8.5% of their contributions supported civil rights causes, compared with 5.3% of the general public.

          All observant Muslim adults with the means to do so are expected to give to charity in adherence to faith-based traditions. One, known as Zakat, is more formal and among the five pillars of Islam that Muslims are expected to adhere to. Another, sadaqah, happens voluntarily.

          That made us want to see if religiosity played a role with the charitable patterns of U.S. Muslims. It turns out that Muslims who displayed higher levels of religiosity, such as by praying more often, were also more likely to give to charity than those who prayed less frequently. We found similar trends among non-Muslims.

          https://www.civilsociety.co.uk/news/british-muslims-give-four-times-the-average-uk-donor-report-says.html

          British Muslims are the most generous group in the UK, giving more than four times as much money to charity each year than the average Brit, according to new research.

          The researchers saw this across all income brackets and it rose to its highest amongst those earning between £75,000-£100,000.

          Muslims in the UK are also twice as likely as the British average to raise money via community events and via personal challenges such as running marathons, the report says.

          • NoneOfUrBusiness@fedia.io
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            1 day ago

            Keep fighting the good fight, man. I’ve given up on getting Lemmy atheists to abandon any but the most insane of positions (and even then they dig in their heels half the time).

          • YappyMonotheist@lemmy.world
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            Or any sort of American-based religion tbh. Christianity (the rites and added Roman things, not the supposed core of Jesus’ teachings) is a mess in itself, but then you have Evangelicals and megachurches and whatever other crazy and distinctively American branches they have over there that I’m not surprised that’s their only understanding of religion. Religion is about self-control, everything else is wind.

          • discosnails@lemmy.wtf
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            At least the Mormons are basically communists. Insular, tribe-only, intolerant communists but communists none the less.

        • TexasDrunk@lemmy.world
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          The thing I found out when I was a manager is you will get exactly what you measure. If you measure how long it takes to close tickets your customer service will suffer (that’s a stupid thing to measure anyway, but we had a stupid director). If you measure the number of tickets closed then you’ll get each step of a process as a ticket. If you measure billable hours you’ll get a bunch of time padding.

          So since the religion is measuring the amount of sin and (in some denominations cases) good works performed, that’s what you’ll get. How many of the big 10 did you stay on the right side of? Did you put in 2 hours at the soup kitchen? Cool, here’s your ticket to heaven. It’s not measuring how good you are to your fellow humans. And they’re pissed if you don’t have to follow the same rules they do because you don’t believe in the same sins. So they try to force others to live by their dumb ass rules instead of trying to get others to be good people.

          • MonkeMischief@lemmy.today
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            I like your example about foolish management, and you’re right in that’s what you’ll get when you “measure for holiness.” Hypocrites and holier-than-thous galore.

            However, and I can only speak from a Christian experience, this is why “works based salvation” is not what is taught by Jesus Himself.

            What you speak of with “How many of these laws did you follow enough to get a ticket to heaven?” is Hollywood theology at best, and not at all Biblical.

            Numerous times He stresses doing good works in secret, and not to show off to others. (If you get attention for it, that’s your petty little reward, basically.)

            A righteous life inspires good works naturally, and the Law makes sure we should never forget that none of us are perfect, therefore we are called to forgive others the way we’d wish to be forgiven.

            We are not called to judge others. If you judge others, you’d best be ready to submit to being judged by the same metric. (And will likely be found wanting.)

            I too, am I weary and sick of these religious cults, who want to wear the funniest big hats and stand on the highest podiums to look down their nose at all the lesser-thans. Surely, they’ve “already gotten their reward”, and those who use faith to mislead and abuse others do not know their God, and He will not remember them.

          • Saleh@feddit.org
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            I cannot speak for other religions but for Islam that is completely false.

            Intention is crucial to the evaluation of an action. An outwardly good deed with bad intention is worth nothing, and a bad deed done out of good intention will see forgiveness in its punishment.

            See for instance: https://islamweb.net/en/article/156996/the-intention-is-the-foundation-of-every-action

            A famous hadith (saying by the Prophet, blessings and peace be upon him) goes as follows (translation of the meaning):

            The first of men (whose case) will be decided on the Day of Judgment will be a man who died as a martyr. He shall be brought (before the Judgment Seat). Allah will make him recount His blessings (i. e. the blessings which He had bestowed upon him) and he will recount them (and admit having enjoyed them in his life).
            (Then) will Allah say: What did you do (to requite these blessings)?
            He will say: I fought for Thee until I died as a martyr.
            Allah will say: You have told a lie. You fought that you might be called a" brave warrior". And you were called so.
            (Then) orders will be passed against him and he will be dragged with his face downward and cast into Hell.

            Then will be brought forward a man who acquired knowledge and imparted it (to others) and recited the Qur’an. He will be brought And Allah will make him recount His blessings and he will recount them (and admit having enjoyed them in his lifetime). Then will Allah ask: What did you do (to requite these blessings)?
            He will say: I acquired knowledge and disseminated it and recited the Qur’an seeking Thy pleasure. Allah will say: You have told a lie. You acquired knowledge so that you might be called" a scholar," and you recited the Qur’an so that it might be said:" He is a Qari" and such has been said.
            Then orders will be passed against him and he shall be dragged with his face downward and cast into the Fire.

            Then will be brought a man whom Allah had made abundantly rich and had granted every kind of wealth. He will be brought and Allah will make him recount His blessings and he will recount them and (admit having enjoyed them in his lifetime).
            Allah will (then) ask: What have you done (to requite these blessings)?
            He will say: I spent money in every cause in which Thou wished that it should be spent.
            Allah will say: You are lying. You did (so) that it might be said about (You):" He is a generous fellow" and so it was said.
            Then will Allah pass orders and he will be dragged with his face downward and thrown into Hell.

    • MonkeMischief@lemmy.today
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      2 days ago

      A Jesus Christ complex would be refreshing. A leader who would deny earthly pleasures, command their followers to love thy neighbor, feed the hungry, uplift the sick and poor, give long sermons about mercy and forgiving your enemies, and would be seen personally breaking bread with the unhoused and lawyers alike?

      That’d freak everybody out for sure.

        • MonkeMischief@lemmy.today
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          and saying that rich people don’t go to Heaven.

          Indeed, this is the one the Americhristian cult of “supply-side Jesus” really doesn’t like. LOL

          Obtaining significant wealth seems to generally coincide in prioritizing it, at the expense of the love for one’s Creator or fellow human being, and ultimately one’s own soul.

          beating bankers and money-lenders,

          In the interest of accuracy: He “drove out” bankers and money lenders selling sacrificial animals and such, who turned His Father’s house into a disgraceful shrine to money, but He’s not recorded directly inflicting violence upon them.

          This is a crucially important detail given Christ’s Sermon on the Mount, among other examples, where He stresses forgiving one’s enemies:

          Matthew 5:38-43

          38 “You have heard that it was said, ‘An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth.’ 39 But I tell you not to resist an evil person. But whoever slaps you on your right cheek, turn the other to him also. 40 If anyone wants to sue you and take away your tunic, let him have your cloak also. 41 And whoever compels you to go one mile, go with him two. 42 Give to him who asks you, and from him who wants to borrow from you do not turn away. Love Your Enemies

          43 “You have heard that it was said, ‘You shall love your neighbor and hate your enemy.’ 44 [a]But I say to you, love your enemies, bless those who curse you, do good to those who hate you, and pray for those who spitefully use you and persecute you,

    • YappyMonotheist@lemmy.world
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      “Jesus complex” is being an imperialistic or violent and abusive pillaging freak? 😭🙃

      The Sermon on the Mount is like 4 pages long, come on…

      • ISOmorph@feddit.org
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        Thank you for being the voice of reason. I keep telling peole that without religion people would wage war about what the best color is. If you want to be a dick you’ll always find a reason

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    He is the enemy of literally everyone, so, I guess God is also on that list 😂

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    It’s weird when two horrible entities in the world hate each other.

    • 🦄🦄🦄@feddit.org
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      Only in the sense that all our heads will start to pop like popcorn when the nukes start flying.

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        Iran doesn’t have nukes and their strategy is quite defensive, rather than aggressive. If there is Nukes flying Israel would toss them first and the US would follow in, because they can’t be not throwing bigger bombs than Israel.

        • Saleh@feddit.org
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          If he would take the ten commandments serious, we would be in a very different place.

          The same applies to most of high ranking US politicians though. Imagine a world in which the US would not be constantly murdering and robbing people.

          • vga@sopuli.xyz
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            The Bible specifically allows killing as an act of war and considers it different from murder. The protagonists of the book also steal stuff all the time.

            These commandments are for controlling behavior inside a society, not outside of it.

            Trump is a senile and a deeply unserious person. His existence makes me believe that souls might exist because he very much seems like a person without one. He doesn’t think about his actions deeply which is why I believe that if he suddenly turned religious, I don’t think much would change.

            • YappyMonotheist@lemmy.world
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              When it comes to scripture, it’s important to learn to separate the wheat from the chaff. If suddenly tomorrow he truly believed that God will judge him and that God is wise and just (I feel like any monotheistic religion has at least these attributes), he would have a mental breakdown cause he’d know he’s almost certainly going to Hell, lol. He’s too far away from just basic decency and morality, too in love with money, power and underaged girls, to ever take one step in that direction though. 🤷

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      Given the backdoors in modern CPUs and routers, that’s not something you want in writing on the interweebs. Say, do you know what approaching re-education drones sound like?

      edit

      pfffffff ha ha ha and he deletes his post! Guess he heard an airplane and thought it was the Raytheon GBU-12 Camp Camp refugee tent buster bomb being sent his way!