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-   -   An interesting view on the Muslims (http://cellar.org/showthread.php?t=17017)

TheMercenary 04-12-2008 05:37 PM

An interesting view on the Muslims
 
This lady lays into a cleric.

http://switch3.castup.net/cunet/gm.a...1050wmv&ak=nul

Sundae 04-12-2008 05:57 PM

Interesting, certainly.
Opinionated - definitely.

You could say similar things to a Christian fundie - they wouldn't accept the logic either.

You could have told a member of the IRA just 10 years ago (Omagh - 29 High Street shoppers dead, over 200 injured) that God didn't condone killing in His name - they wouldn't have listened.

Not all Muslims are fundamentalists. Not all people from the Middle East are Muslims. The poorer the people, the fewer their options, the easier they are to provoke into hate.

jinx 04-12-2008 06:05 PM

"Brother you can believe in stones as long as you don't throw them at me."

I like it. And yes, that goes to any religion.

Sundae 04-12-2008 06:08 PM

Oops, I should have added:
To me, any group of people (religious or otherwise) that resort to terrorism are morally bankrupt.

I jut try not to tar too many people with the same brush.

TheMercenary 04-12-2008 06:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sundae Girl (Post 445372)
Interesting, certainly.
Opinionated - definitely.

You could say similar things to a Christian fundie - they wouldn't accept the logic either.

Sure, but like she said I don't see who groups of Christian Fundies blowing things and themselves up because they have disagreements.

Sundae 04-12-2008 06:20 PM

Ref Omagh

TheMercenary 04-12-2008 06:53 PM

I guess I never considered the IRA to be Christian Fundies like we consider a CF to be a CF in the US. I guess you could make a case for people who bombed abortion clinics, but that is no where near the number of people currently motivated by radical Isalm.

richlevy 04-12-2008 06:58 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by TheMercenary (Post 445377)
Sure, but like she said I don't see who groups of Christian Fundies blowing things and themselves up because they have disagreements.

No, but you do get the occasional one blowing other people up because of disagreements.

Christian Fundies are not feeling too disenfranchised right now because everyone is telling them that they are the 'base' of the Republican party and every politician has been paying them lip service (applied to ass cheek). They are just beginning to wake up to the fact that:

a) GWB has weakened their credibility by crediting them with his success in being the worst President in 100 years and

b) Using them twice to get to the White House and basically ignoring the key points of their agenda, even when his party controlled 2 branches of government.

They now have a reputation as wing nut suckers who seem willing to transfer blind faith in G-d to blind faith in anyone who claims to carpool with G-d. In the latest primary, this 'base' went for Huckabee and noone followed.

Let's see what a few years in the wilderness does to their demeanor.

Don't get me wrong. Faith is necessary for human existence. But faith tied to rigid dogma and intolerance has no place. At some point, religious faith has been used to:

Justify slavery, segregation, and ban interracial marriage.
Discredit environmentalism.

Most people of faith are good and decent. Unfortunately, the mixture of faith and politics leads to the decay of both. Just as religion and commercialism have led to Santa Clause replacing Jesus, religion and politics have led to to an intolerance in both areas. When no substantive results are possible, playing to the 'base' by disenfranchising gays is an easy win in politics.

This is not new to politics. Racial, ethnic, and other forms of 'outsider' baiting have been used throughout the world in any system where the ruling class needs to placate the lower classes. Religion just becomes another convenient hook for exploitable fear and a desire for easy solutions.

Whether Shiite/Sunni or Protestant/Catholic, power struggles have always led to destruction. The only difference between the Shiite/Sunni violence in the Middle East and the Protestant/Catholic violence in Middle Europe is about 400 years worth of technology.

If Guy Fawkes had access to 30 pounds of modern explosives instead of 1800 pounds of gunpowder, you might have had the world's first Christian suicide bomber 400 years before Iraq.


BTW, Fawkes did have some real cojones.

Quote:

Fawkes, however, managed to avoid the worst of this execution by jumping from the scaffold where he was supposed to be hanged, breaking his neck before he could be drawn and quartered

smoothmoniker 04-12-2008 07:02 PM

Violence against abortion providers is heinous and inexcusable.

Violence against abortion providers in the US has resulted in 7 deaths, total. Every one of those was a tragedy, but this is just not the same thing as an entire culture that glorifies the violent death of their enemies, with particular emphasis on non-military targets.

Sundae 04-12-2008 07:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by TheMercenary (Post 445391)
I guess I never considered the IRA to be Christian Fundies like we consider a CF to be a CF in the US... Sure, but like she said I don't see who groups of Christian Fundies blowing things and themselves up because they have disagreements.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sundae Girl (Post 445372)
You could have told a member of the IRA just 10 years ago (Omagh - 29 High Street shoppers dead, over 200 injured)...

Quote:

Originally Posted by smoothmoniker (Post 445397)
against abortion providers in the US has resulted in 7 deaths, total.

I wasn't trying to align Christian fundamentalists with the IRA. All I wanted to point out was that Christians are quite willing to kill eachother, and non-combatants, when it suits them.

The Peace Talks helped enormously, but the main reason that paramilitary bombings stopped in Northern Ireland/ on the mainland was 9/11. American sympathy for anyone bombing civilians was suddenly too close to home to be accepted as "glory".

richlevy 04-12-2008 07:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by smoothmoniker (Post 445397)
Violence against abortion providers is heinous and inexcusable.

Violence against abortion providers in the US has resulted in 7 deaths, total. Every one of those was a tragedy, but this is just not the same thing as an entire culture that glorifies the violent death of their enemies, with particular emphasis on non-military targets.

True, but the point to be made is whether it's religion driving the violence or culture using religion as an excuse. Terrorism and war are both solutions to a political problem. Where insurgency becomes terrorism is a matter of choosing targets. In Northern Island, the clash was also between cultural groups that identified themselves by religion.

I'm not saying that parts of the Middle East aren't stuck a few hundred years in the past. I am saying that saying that cultural/political violence has not completely disappeared from any major religion in the world.

Quote:

Civilians killed

Civilians account for the highest death toll at 53% or 1798 fatalities. Loyalist paramilitaries account for a higher proportion of civilian deaths (those with no military or paramilitary connection) according to figures published in Malcolm Sutton’s book, “Bear in Mind These Dead: An Index of Deaths from the Conflict in Ireland 1969 - 1993”. According to research undertaken by the CAIN organisation, based on Sutton's work, 85.6% (873) of Loyalist killings, 52.9% (190) by the security forces and 35.9% (738) of all killings by Republican paramilitaries took the lives of civilians between 1969 and 2001. The disparity of a relatively high civilian death toll yet low Republican percentage is explained by the fact that they also had a high combatants' death toll.

jinx 04-12-2008 07:23 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by richlevy (Post 445393)

Don't get me wrong. Faith is necessary for human existence.

I really don't think it is. In fact, I think faith is where all the big problems start... Anyway, I don't have faith and I exist.

Sundae 04-12-2008 07:28 PM

And bear in mind those killed and wounded in Enniskillen. 11 wounded and 63 injured.
At a Remembrance Day service (Europe wide on 11 November or closest Sunday to it) to remember those fallen in all wars but specifically the two World Wars.

Old men. War survivors. Medals polished and standing to attention.

It was the highest death toll for any attack at its time.
Very little to do with religion, as suicide bombings are very little to do with religion. Some people just don't care who they kill.

I cried. My Mum cried. She was and still is a practicing Catholic.
Jesus never told anyone to kill. I don't know about the big M, but he probably didn't either.
People were practiced in killing long before they came along.

Urbane Guerrilla 04-12-2008 11:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sundae Girl (Post 445372)
The poorer the people, the fewer their options, the easier they are to provoke into hate.

Poor -- disconnected from the flow of money; fewer options -- disconnected from the flow of ideas; not able to move to better territory where the economy actually works -- disconnected from mobility or migratory flow of people; in danger -- disconnected from what some call the flow of security.

The freedom of these "flows" to be exported from the places where there is a great sufficiency, or indeed a surplus, to places where there is a deficit, is a working indicator of how well a place or people is connected with the functional part of the world as a whole.

Establish this kind of connectedness in place of disconnectedness, and prosperity results. Prosperity balms the wounds resulting from being disconnected to the rest of the world.

The recent evacuations of children from the west Texas Fundamentalist Latter-Day Saints compound is a repair of a problem of acute disconnectedness. Those are some wounded people there. We'll have to show them where the balm is. Tw would no doubt remark that eighty-five percent of the FLDS's problems stemmed from its top management, which quite deliberately mandated complete disconnectedness from motivations that look baser by the day.

tw 04-13-2008 01:28 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Urbane Guerrilla (Post 445453)
Tw would no doubt remark that eighty-five percent of the FLDS's problems stemmed from its top management, which quite deliberately mandated complete disconnectedness from motivations that look baser by the day.

According to UG, these people were fully informed and chose to fear the world. They had information sources besides what they were told by church leaders? Yes, according to UG. Nonsense, according to reality.

Reality: top management kept them isolated from reality so that the victims did not understand and therefore feared reality. Being sex slave was acceptable. Such is the world that UG loves - a world promoted by fear - the myth of 'good verses evil' where outsiders or muslims or immigrants or non-hetrosexuals are evil. UG will even rewrite the Pentagon Papers - and nobody would notice? Perverting reality is so normal that UG would even claim to be a ... libertarian.

UG is classic of those who love the scumbag George Jr and Cheney. No way around reality. Why would UG not endorse, promote, and praise the west Texas Fundamentalist Latter-Day Saints? After all, they only advocate many principles that UG also advocates. But in doing so, UG would contradict well comprehended reality. UG also conceded to a principles called propaganda. One cannot be popular and support what the west Texas Fundamentalist Latter-Day Saints have done. So UG must separate himself from what he also defines as a ... 'libertarians'.

Even UG propaganda cannot 'subvert' reality - the details - screwing children to propagate an agenda. Hundreds of victims directly traceable to a world where top management kept their victims isolated and ignorant. UG fears a world where the little people learn - ask embarrassing questions such as 'why'. After all, Hitler also needed people to only believe what they were told. No wonder UG also so admires Cheney.

What makes it so amusing to pick apart UG logic? He has no idea of a world beyond his political agenda. His poltics are, for others, a lesson in what intolerance looks like. UG posts are devoid of reality - and so fully justified by political mantra. UG will never accept that 85% of all problems are directly traceable to top management. If he admitted to that reality, then a dictatorship that he advocates could not happen.

As Sundae Girl notes, the poorer those people, then the easier it is to provoke them into hate. UG fears to admit this because hate is part of his poltical mantra.


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