No, you're asking something completely unrelated to my question.
Look at these quotes and tell me if they make any sense whatsoever:
oh, but it is related. look hard and sift through all the quotes and you will see.
Note how you're obviously using that information to make your location seem less offensive.
I am? I wasn't aware of that. How so?
I asked how that first piece of information made your location less offensive, and you answered asking if it would be less offensive if you had said all that. Not a proper answer.
really? Seemed like a wonderfully proper answer to myself.
But that wasn't my question. And answering that - no, I wouldn't. There you are pointing a historical fact, in the other you were simply saying that christians are evil.
Now you are simply changing my words. unpleasant and evil are hardly interchangable.
now according to
dictionary.com, you could replace unpleasant with any of the following
abhorrent, bad news, bad scene, disagreeable, displeasing, displeasing, distasteful, fierce, grody, gross, hard time, icky, irksome, lousy, nasty, objectionable, obnoxious, poison, repulsive, rotten, sour, troublesome, unacceptable, unattractive, uncool, undesirable, unhappy, unlikable, unlovely, unpalatable, unpalatable, yucky
note that making any replacement is still changing the original quote. Also note that Evil is not among those words.
Actually, I'm defending their religious freedom.

Oh the irony...
As I said, there's a reason why they're disliked - they've killed a bunch of people. Now there's an opportunity for you to say "But Christians also killed a lot of people in the Crusdaes! Hah!". Remember, though, that those Christians are not the same christians you're talking to today - these ones can't be blamed for and don't agree with what the Crusaders did.
Note my examples were there as ones that you may recognize and be able to see a relation. Rightly so, the people that still beleive in the Nazi party today, are not the same nazi's as a generation ago. The same would be with those that agree with slavery (i.e. confederates) they have not commited the same atrocities, but they beleive in the same ideals.
That's irrelevant for the discussion. People who like those groups might as well be considered part of them in this case.
Oh but it is ever so relevant. And if they are part of those same groups, then that would also meant that 12th century christians are apart of the same christians today, which cleary is not true as you stated. Don't contractadict yourself kiddo.
EDIT: and concerning your "un replied" statesments or whatever, I feel i annswered your question sufficently and yes you did read it right