"Ones person terrorist, is another's freedom fighter. Depending on where you stand and support, faction A is a freedom fighter that fights hard for their beliefs, but faction B is a terrorist to your ideals. Same the other way around. The word terrorist is so wrong in many ways its not funny."
I see your point, but I'm sorry, somebody who straps explosives to women and children is a terrorist. Did you realize that there was a child with Downs Syndrome that was made into a suicide bomber on the day of the Iraqi Elections? (I don't know if that was reported back through some of the biased media sources.) You can't tell me that's the action of a "freedom fighter". In a way, I do see your point, but there's a big difference between somebody who is fighting against somebody else because they're standing up for their ideals, and somebody who commits terrorist acts, for whatever reason. It could be argued that most North Vietnamese soldiers could be considered "freedom fighters" because they saw the U.S. as somebody encroaching on their territory and forcing their ideals on them, and they stood up for them. But somebody who makes themself, or another person, especially a person who doesn't have the power or freedom to refuse, into a walking bomb is not a "freedom fighter", they're a terrorist.
"They also bulldozed the homes of Palestinians who were living where Israel wanted to build new settlements."
When was the last time this happened?
"Well then, I guess plenty of US Christian churches should be bulldozed for supporting the Bush administration's extremist policies, and for supporting terrorist groups like the CIA."
Though I see your (poorly made) point, and I realize you're being sarcastic, I'd still have to argue. For one thing, you would have to consider the Bush adminstration's policies to be "extremist", and for another, you would have to consider the CIA to be a "terrorist group", and both ideas are ridiculous. However, since I see the point you're trying to make, I will say this. Churches and religious organizations have tax-exempt status, meaning, obviously, they aren't taxed. People who work for the church don't have to pay income tax, people who donate to the church can claim tithes and such as exemptions on their taxes, no property tax is paid for church-owned land, etc. And if churches support the policies of one political party or another, they can lose that tax-exempt status. So churches can support the soldiers, but they can't say "Bush is doing a good thing". They could say that we need to pray for our president, but they can't say that we need to pray for one candidate's victory over another candidate in an election.