by Raynote » Thu Feb 13, 2014 4:05 am
"If you look at the last century, you can easily find genocidal wars that were Muslim versus Muslim (e.g., Iran/Iraq war), Christian versus Christian (e.g., World War II), and Buddhist versus Buddhist (e.g., Cambodia's "killing fields" civil war)."
In the case of Cambodia's civil war, what were "the different identity groups"? Was it ethnic differences that made them kill each other, since obviously it wasn't religious differences as they were all buddhists? Or a kind of class warfare?
"If you look at the last century, you can easily find genocidal wars that were Muslim versus Muslim (e.g., Iran/Iraq war), Christian versus Christian (e.g., World War II), and [b]Buddhist versus Buddhist (e.g., Cambodia's "killing fields" civil war)[/b]."
In the case of Cambodia's civil war, what were "[b]the different identity groups[/b]"? Was it ethnic differences that made them kill each other, since obviously it wasn't religious differences as they were all buddhists? Or a kind of class warfare?