Rogier van Bakel from the November 2007 issue
(Page 7 of 7)
Reason: He was?
Hirsi Ali: I think he was. He was a flamboyant hedonist. To be a prime minister, you sleep about four hours a night. So anyway, I wouldn’t have voted for him. I’ve always voted for the establishment.
Reason: You don’t sound like an establishment-supporting kind of person. You’re supposed to be a big rebel.
Hirsi Ali: Yeah, but there are rebels and rebels. There are rebels who are always against something, like the Socialist Party in the Netherlands. To them, rebelling itself is the aim. That’s where they get their thrill from. But I’m rebelling for something. I want something to be established.
Reason: Tolerance is probably the most powerful word there is in the Netherlands. No other word encapsulates better what the Dutch believe really defines them. That makes it very easy for people to say that when they’re being criticized, they’re not being tolerated—and from there it’s only a small step to saying they’re being discriminated against or they’re the victims of Islamophobia or racism or what have you.
Hirsi Ali: We have to revert to the original meaning of the term tolerance. It meant you agreed to disagree without violence. It meant critical self-reflection. It meant not tolerating the intolerant. It also came to mean a very high level of personal freedom.
Then the Muslims arrived, and they hadn’t grown up with that understanding of tolerance. In short order, tolerance was now defined by multiculturalism, the idea that all cultures and religions are equal. Expectations were created among the Muslim population. They were told they could preserve their own culture, their own religion. The vocabulary was quickly established that if you criticize someone of color, you’re a racist, and if you criticize Islam, you’re an Islamophobe.
Reason: The international corollary to the word tolerance is probably respect. The alleged lack of respect has become a perennial sore spot in relations between the West and Islam. Salman Rushdie receiving a British knighthood supposedly signified such a lack of respect, as did the Danish cartoons last year, and many other things. Do you believe this is what Muslims genuinely crave—respect?
Hirsi Ali: It’s not about respect. It’s about power, and Islam is a political movement.
Reason: Uniquely so?
Hirsi Ali: Well, it hasn’t been tamed like Christianity. See, the Christian powers have accepted the separation of the worldly and the divine. We don’t interfere with their religion, and they don’t interfere with the state. That hasn’t happened in Islam.
But I don’t even think that the trouble is Islam. The trouble is the West, because in the West there’s this notion that we are invincible and that everyone will modernize anyway, and that what we are seeing now in Muslim countries is a craving for respect. Or it’s poverty, or it’s caused by colonization.
The Western mind-set—that if we respect them, they’re going to respect us, that if we indulge and appease and condone and so on, the problem will go away—is delusional. The problem is not going to go away. Confront it, or it’s only going to get bigger.
Rogier van Bakel is a freelance journalist and runs the blog
Nobody's
Business.
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There is no moderate Islam. There are Muslims who are
passive, who don't all follow the rules of Islam, but there's
really only one Islam, defined as submission to the will of
God.
The problem with this argument is that it I think it assumes (and
correct me if I am wrong) what one might call "Platonic ideal" of
Islam. I agree with Heidegger that such ideals don't exist; "being"
is holistic and relational. So yeah, there are moderate forms of
Islam and their are radical forms of Islam.
The Chinese don't burn American flags.
Well, some folks in Taiwan do.
And so did some folks in China in 1999.
Finally, the article is now online. I think I have highlighted
pretty much why libertarians should have trouble with some
of what she says here.
Though the overall
discussion was quite interesting.
Syloson: I am a practicing Muslims, but OBL and the version of
Islam that he and his ilk preach truly disturbs. I think that the
majority of the 3,000,000+ American Muslims (not counting Canadian
Muslims as well) are overwhelmingly against Ali's view of Islam. So
they are all living proof that she is dead wrong.
My concern with Ali can be summarized as: She's a collectivist, and
because of her (horrible and terrible) personal experience, she has
decided to lash out at everything Islamic. Of course, her neocon
friends would not mind that.
iih,
I think statement encapsulated her views pretty well:
Of course, being assimilated doesn't necessarily mean that you
won't be a jihadist, but the likelihood of Muslims turning radical
here seems lower than in Europe.
Ayaan is a very smart woman. She is just cashing-in on the anti-islam hysteria in the west. If it was not for her extreme views and her anti-islam blather, she would have never been this popular.
Wow, I'm surprised there isn't more traffic - perhaps folks are still digesting the article.
Of course, being assimilated doesn't necessarily mean that
you won't be a jihadist, but the likelihood of Muslims turning
radical here seems lower than in Europe.
Of course, being born and raised here doesn't mean that you won't
adopt
psychpatic views either.
Very interesting interview. Ali has some very honestly acquired
opinions and some of them I really agree with. I think you can make
moral calls on which religions are better, but I don't like that
she calls for force as a means of dealing with people who believe
ideas that require using force on other people. I can understand
her frustration and from a practical standpoint, I don't know what
other solution she could come up with to combat the problems of
Islam. I still disagree strongly with the idea of selective rights
for everybody but Muslims.
In some ways she's got the whole Ayn Rand coming to America
motivations. Country where she comes from is awful, where she goes
allows her the freedom to go way overboard on a good idea.
She's got some definite and strongly-held opinions - big surprise - and she certainly says enough that's debatable and with which a reasonable person might disagree, sure. But she didn't come off as "unhinged" to me, no.
She had endured a heavily religious upbringing in Somalia,
Saudi Arabia, and Kenya, including a brutal circumcision to keep
her "pure."
Female circumcision has more to do with traditions than religion.
Many non-muslim African women are circumcized.
Is it just me, or does she come off as a little bit
unhinged?
It's just you.
This is another quality interview. I have complained and
wondered about why this magazine allows the Michael Young type
article, but nearly every interview is interesting and informative
with some questions that I rarely get to see put to statist.
So forgive me Reason, maybe you are not part of the pro-war CFR
front....now did anyone at reason see the Vicente Fox interview
from last night....i guess vicente is a tinfoil hat conspiracy nut
now huh?
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=58052
I agree with iih. My wife and I had a discussion about the
article when we recieved the magazine, and what iih has been saying
pretty much mirrors what we concluded.
She's dealt with a particular strain of Islam, and assumes all of
Islam must be like that. I don't think it is, judging from the lack
of suicide bombings and beheadings in L.A. and Chicago. It's like
wanting to bulldoze Christian churches -- Methodist and Pentacostal
alike -- because sometimes a Christian will bomb an abortion
clinic.
Does not compute.
I mean come on if you kill 7 milion jews your pretty bad, but if
you kill 1.5 billion muslims your just protecting our
freedoms.
well if you define unhinged as eliminating 1.5 billion people
because they call themselves muslim then yes I guess she is
unhinged.
wait a sec...i just learned they are big on mutilating their children's genitalia...what kind of animals are these people? of course we should kill all of them.
isn't it in the bible somewhere that we should only mutilate male genitalia...man those muslims are backward.
I don't think one has to go into discussing her mental state. It is whether she is right or wrong which is the question. Personally, I do not agree with her.
"I think that the majority of the 3,000,000+ American Muslims
(not counting Canadian Muslims as well) are overwhelmingly against
Ali's view of Islam. So they are all living proof that she is dead
wrong."
iih, no doubt believers don't like to be told they are not TRUE
believers, but the fact millions, if not billions, of religious
people treat their religion like a lunch buffet does not make her
assertion wrong. She may be wrong, but the quantity of people that
were "raised Muslim" vs. being Muslim does not prove anything. Look
at all the "Christians" in prison for real crimes. I might suggest
they are not Christians. (Maybe that's a bad example, as getting
caught living your life according to various parts of the Christian
bible will likely send you to prison)
Was her "horrible and terrible" treatment in line with the
teachings of Islam? If it is then wouldn't that make Islam horrible
and terrible. If her treatment was not in accordance with Islam
then can we assume the people who did that to her were not true
Muslims or were otherwise acting outside their faith? Maybe they
are interpreting the words wrong?
I don't think there is a correct answer, for anything...
You know, she's experienced some pretty bad things first hand. I
get that.
But to insist that moderation is fundamentally impossible for
anybody who calls himself or herself a Muslim is to cast one's lot
with the Bin Ladens of the world. She might as well go to peaceful,
assimilated American Muslims and say "No, don't you get it? You're
supposed to attack me! Please, attack me! Prove that I'm
right!"
She lashes out against a collectivist ideology by painting with
broad brush, and thus becomes the thing that she hates.
I feel sorry for what she's experienced, but that doesn't excuse
her collectivist mindset. It may explain it, but it certainly
doesn't excuse it. She may deserve sympathy, but most of her
prescriptions should not be taken seriously.
Did anyone else think it was wierd that she thinks christians
don't believe there is a hell? and our god of love is much
different than their god of hate.
as a person who was indoctrinated in Tennessee crazy "church of
christ" religion as a 1-5 year old and was later indoctrinated in
catholicism as a 6-14 year old (my dad fled his "crazy" childhood
religion) and finally turned athiest....I think she should go talk
to some middle religous folks, because they do believe that people
go to hell...especially the people who say jesus was not a son of
god.
I am a practicing Muslims, but OBL and the version of Islam that he and his ilk preach truly disturbs.
Why? It's exactly the same version of Islam that Muhammad preached
and practiced. Authentic hadith (Bukhari, Muslim) record that
Muhammad committed mass murder, assassinated his critics, broke his
promises to unbelievers not to kill them when killing them became
convenient, and preached that it's the duty of Muslims to conquer
the world and eliminate all competing faiths. OBL merely follows in
his footsteps, which is why there is no theological foundation
within Islam to reject him.
You cannot say Muslims should not do these things, because to do so
is to say Muslims should reject the example of Muhammad, whom the
Koran repeatedly states is an "excellent model of conduct". Once
you're done rejecting both the example of Muhammad and the word of
Allah, as recorded in the Koran, that you should seek to emulate
him, there isn't much left. I'm not even sure you should call the
resulting religion "Islam".
bigbigslacker,
This gets back to the point I made earlier about Platonic
ideals.
This is the type of Anti-Statist content that Reason should be
putting on thier website.
She is for the fighting of all Statism and for the free market
mindset of the US. She supports war on Islamofacism and wants to
keep its ideology out of muslim schools! This would be the
equivalent of shutting down Communist schools in the US if
Communism was a religion.
In her Country, Muslim schools were government funded and the
welfare state allowed people to plot murder and not assymilate into
the local culture. This is important for us in the US to allow
religion, but to keep it out of politics.
Because Christianity often fights within itself and Islam does not,
we don't really worry about it too much. Islam is a religion of
Statism and Opression of freedom. As she has said it requires full
submission of yourself to Islam.
Bob Smith,
As with the Bible, the Qu'ran and the Hadiths are fairly plastic
texts.
"See, the Christian powers have accepted the separation of the
worldly and the divine... and they don't interfere with the
state."
Not true.
The odd thing of course is that there are particular schools of islamic interpretation that we can describe, etc. Yet somehow there is some "ideal" type of Islam.
anon:
Ayaan is a very smart woman. She is just cashing-in on the
anti-islam hysteria in the west. If it was not for her extreme
views and her anti-islam blather, she would have never been this
popular.
Agreed! We agree on something! :-)
But to insist that moderation is fundamentally impossible
for anybody who calls himself or herself a Muslim is to cast one's
lot with the Bin Ladens of the world. She might as well go to
peaceful, assimilated American Muslims and say "No, don't you get
it? You're supposed to attack me! Please, attack me! Prove that I'm
right!"
I think that misreads what Ms. Ali is saying. I read her comments
as saying that moderation is possible only after Islam as an
ideology of power and conquest is defeated, militarily or
otherwise. In other words, Islam must become something other than
what it is today, since power and conquest are "baked into" the
religion, so to speak. And she sees that as being completely
independent of what assimilated, relatively non-observant Muslims
in the USA believe or do.
Is she right? I have no idea.
As long you can argue it with some intelligence, no one
interferes.
Yeah right. Try to criticize one of their sacred cows and tell us
what happens.
You stop the symbol burning and the effigy burning
Wow, what was that talk about freedom of expression again?
Western civilization is a celebration of life-everybody's life,
even your enemy's life
I guess world-war 2 didn't happen in the West in her world
view.
The British sailors who were kidnapped this year
Where those sailors kidnapped from London? Did I miss that?
See, the Christian powers have accepted the separation of the
worldly and the divine. We don't interfere with their religion, and
they don't interfere with the state.
I guess she need to listen to the Reupublican debates.
Bob Smith,
As with the Bible, the Qu'ran and the Hadiths are fairly plastic
texts.
I'd use contradictory, inconsistent, or doubtfully accurate,
instead of plastic. But yeah, the Bible is replete with horrid
stuff as well as the good stuff.
anon:
Female circumcision has more to do with traditions than
religion. Many non-muslim African women are circumcized.
True. As far as the Muslim world is concerned, it is only practiced
in Somalia, Ethiopia (partially Muslim), Kenya (partially Muslim as
well), and the Egyptian country side (not Metropolitan areas like
Cairo and Alexandria). Elsewhere in the Muslim world, it is almost
nonexistent.
Jake Boone:
She's dealt with a particular strain of Islam, and assumes all
of Islam must be like that. I don't think it is, judging from the
lack of suicide bombings and beheadings in L.A. and
Chicago.
You are right, but I am also one of those Muslims who realize that
the problems with extremist Muslims is big and needs to be attended
to. Sometimes, force is the only way (e.g., Taleban), but I am of
the view that force should always be a last resort. Extremism is an
ideology best fought using ideas. Fighting it with force will give
the extremists more propaganda opportunity to grow in numbers.
She is a Somalie and a lot of what she experienced has more to do with culture than Islam. Islam is practiced in places like Indonesia and is very tolerent. When it is practiced in places like the Sudan, Somalia parts of Pakistan and Saudi Arabia it is downright horrible. But, those places had oppressive cultures to begin with. It is not like Arabia was a tolerant place before Islam.
She may deserve sympathy, but most of her prescriptions should not be taken seriously.
It's the enthusiasm of a convert. More catholic than the pope, so
to speak.
It's the enthusiasm of a convert. More catholic than the
pope, so to speak.
She should join with the evangelical atheists, and denounce the
agnostics who are unwilling to come out and completely reject
theism.
Yeah, she'd fit right in.
bigbigslacker:
Was her "horrible and terrible" treatment in line with the
teachings of Islam? If it is then wouldn't that make Islam horrible
and terrible. If her treatment was not in accordance with Islam
then can we assume the people who did that to her were not true
Muslims or were otherwise acting outside their faith?
FGM is not mandated by Quran. There is one saying of the Prophet
where he suggests that, since the parents of a local girl at the
time were going to do it anyway, that FGM be performed minimally.
(This
I found after a quick Google). In any case, FGM is not Islamic.
Outrageously, last year Ali was interviewed on NPR's On
Point (if my memory does not fail me), and I was outraged when
she said that FGM is an Islamic practice. Callers called in to
object to that statement. Sometimes, Ali spews these things hoping
that Muslims, or those who know, would note notice.
As far as judging whether those who perform FGM are to be
considered Muslim or not, most likely the answer is yes as long as
the people do not practice something that goes against the 5 basic
criteria that determine whether a person is Muslim or not (prayer,
fasting, alms-giving, Hajj, "witnessing"). But that is a different
question. By the "mainstream" Muslim community, they'd be
considered Muslim of course. There is a lot of debate in Egypt
right now regarding the practice of FGM in the countryside and in
poorer, more traditional neighborhoods of the capital.
Because Christianity often fights within itself and Islam
does not
Do the words Sunni and Shia mean anything to you? Islam has been
struggling within itself almost since its inception.
gabe:
Did anyone else think it was wierd that she thinks christians
don't believe there is a hell? and our god of love is much
different than their god of hate.
Colbert made mild fun of her on the Question of Christianity's
tolerance
here.
thoreau,
Would you consider your last statement trolling?
________________________
Anyway, on the business of the Constitution, freedom of religion,
etc. the dangers associated with shutting down Muslim schools, etc.
are I think obvious.
I just re read it, and still get the feeling she's a little
unhinged. Perfectly understandable, given her upbringing. But
still, it seems perhaps something in her is broken, from long ago.
Her ideas seem somewhat contradictory. Do we really have to destroy
freedom in order to save it?
Her role in the AEI certainly seems at odds with much of the line
of thinking around this forum. The more cynical view is her
"cashing-in on the anti-islam hysteria in the west", which seems to
follow.
Hitchens wrote recently about her security woes.
http://www.slate.com/id/2175458/fr/rss/
After the obligatory Europe bashing, he goes on to scold the
Netherlands for discontinuing her bodyguards while she lives in the
US, and the US for not stepping up to the plate. Interesting
article.
Bob Smith:
OBL merely follows in his footsteps, which is why there is no
theological foundation within Islam to reject him.
No. There is. You clearly need to do a lot of reading. May I ask
where you get your assertions from?
gabe,
This is what she stated on the issue of hell:
Catholics should be proselytizing about a God who is love, who
represents a hereafter where there's no hell, who wants you to lead
a life where you can confess your sins and feel much better
afterwards.
I think she is saying what she would like Catholics to be like. Is
this correct?
What she is saying is that Christianity in the West unlike Islam in the Muslim world, does not overwhemingly control policy or base all of thier laws on the Bible. Christians have left a lot of the Old Testament laws out of our laws. This was due to reason and Deist beliefs of our founding fathers. Not saying that they wouldn't if they could, it is just that people in America for the most part will not allow this ideology to happen. She wants this type of practice to occur in Europe as well. Just as any sane person would have wanted a dangerous religious cult stopped if they were known to be terrorists (Timmothy Mcveigh Christianity, if it ever established itself) In the US we don't have as big of a problem with racist hate organizations that they have in the Muslim world (Anti-Semitism and laws based on a persons religion or race). She is doing what any former born again Christian turned aitheist would want to do, get backwards ass religion out of politics. You may not agree that we need to defeat ideologies that support Statism. But when you look at the Muslim world, there are few places that support real freedom. Most of the Muslim world is oppressed, and she simply want to destroy the ideology thatis aflicting and poisoning the minds of her country's immigrants.
Ben Rushing:
As she has said it requires full submission of yourself to
Islam.
Not true. I give a response to a similar question here.
You'd be surprised. While Islam is not libertopia, it is not the
diametrical opposite either. There is away, with some work and
specific interpretations, where libertarianism and Islam can be
practiced in society. This view of mine, and people like Zuhdi
Jasser is that of a minority right now, but it is not that far away
from mainstream Muslim views in North America. See the point raised
by Neu Mejican here and
the discussion that followed (including my response).
Ben Rushing,
Whatever one wants to say about Europe, in much of it religion
plays little part in political decision making.
There is no moderate Islam. There are Muslims who are
passive
I think what she's getting at here is that there seem to be
relatively few Muslims who stand up to the radicals and actively
push for a more tolerant, nuanced, liberal (in the old sense)
version of their faith.
The great mass of Muslims aren't radical, I'm sure, but they don't
seem to be doing much to marginalize and defeat the radicals in
their midst, either.
but they don't seem to be doing much to marginalize and
defeat the radicals in their midst, either.
How should a moderate guy defeat and marginalize the radicals? He's
busy raising his kids, doing his job, living his life, being a good
neighbor. If he happens to have knowledge of violent activities by
a radical, sure, he can report that guy. But it's not like violent
radicals give the details of their plans to every Tariq, Daoud, and
Hari.
Otherwise, all he can do is raise his kids well, attend and support
mosques with moderate teachers, and generally live a good life. He
can't really go out and "defeat" radicals.
ChrisO:
since power and conquest are "baked into" the religion, so to
speak.
Islam did expand in many parts of the world by means of conquest,
but not everywhere. Not a single Muslim soldier set foot in
Indonesia (the most populous Muslim country), Malaysia, Western
China, and Africa (south of the north African modern-day "Arab"
countries).
And she sees that as being completely independent of what
assimilated, relatively non-observant Muslims in the USA believe or
do.
I have problems with the "non-observant" part. It is Ramadan now,
if you have a mosque near you, why don't you pay a visit and see
how many "non-observant" Muslims there praying as part of the
Ramadan "ritual".
R.C. Dean,
What are you doing at this moment to defeat radical Islam?
I think what she's getting at here is that there seem to be
relatively few Muslims who stand up to the radicals and actively
push for a more tolerant, nuanced, liberal (in the old sense)
version of their faith.
Or it might be that a lot of these moderate Muslims aren't getting
much air time. I can think of at least a half a dozen examples of
Muslims who have written books which are critical of radical Islam,
of Islamic practices like FGM, etc. Go down to the local bookstore
and they are easy enough to find.
shecky:
In Hitchen's and Applebaum's articles, some of the responses from
Dutch citizens were quite interesting to read. It seems that the
American audience was just fed sensationalized version (surprise,
surprise!) of the actions of the Dutch government.
She's Ann Coulter with an inspiring personal
story.
Ann Coulter? No. Ann Coulter's so over the top it's hard to believe
even she believes the rubbish she spouts. Like iih said at some
point, for Ann Islamophobia is a job. Hirsi Ali means what she
says.
Norman Finkelstein, perhaps. Whatever the motives of Finkelstein
and Hirsi Ali might be, they've been most useful to those convinced
that the Elders of Zion/Mecca are one step away from taking over
the world. After all, why would an actual Jew/Muslim criticize
their own people like this if it weren't all true?
Ben Rushing:
Most of the Muslim world is oppressed, and she simply want to
destroy the ideology thatis aflicting and poisoning the minds of
her country's immigrants.
You do realize that most of the oppressive dictators of the ME are
secular, don't you? This includes: Tunisia (where the head scarf is
banned), Egypt, Syria (baathist, fringe religious group for leaders
-- the Alawites), Saddam's Iraq (secular baathist), Musharaf's
Pakistan? Is it possible that if Muslims and the practice of Islam
was given a little bit more leeway, is it all possible that
Islamists would not have gone underground, which resulted in the
breeding of all the hate, darkness, and closed-mindedness that we
see today among the Islamists?
KSA is an interesting case. The wahabis were the "puritans" and
Saud wanted to have more a religious leverage over the country to
be able to establish the kingdom. Hence, it was a twisted political
arrangement from the outset, which resulted in, eventually, the
fundamentalist wahabis taking over the religious discourse in
KSA.
But to insist that moderation is fundamentally impossible
for anybody who calls himself or herself a Muslim is to cast one's
lot with the Bin Ladens of the world.
She seems to blur the line between true muslims and muslims by
name. You can see what she's saying "submission" and "passive", but
that's only true of practitioners of the faith. There are plenty of
"muslims", especially in this country. "Muslims" that drink, eat
whatever and only fast for the opening day of Ramadan.
When you consider the fact that Pro-American Immams are given
death threats, kidnapped, and murdered in Iraq, you can see that
the powers that control Islam don't want to give thier people
freedom. They seek to oppress and keep people from the choosing
another religion (an act which is punnishable by death).
Mecca may notbe pure tyranny but it is only a few steps away from
it. The taliban destroyed any remmanence of Buddism in Afgahnastan
and kept people oppressed. Iran kills homosexuals. The Islamic
world has few places which a homosexual man can live freely. To
think that the Islamic world chooses this for themselves is
lunacy.
The followers of Islam are not fanatical unless they are
brainwashed. When a muslim goes to a place where other ideologies
exist they tend to follow thier religion less. This is the way it
is here on a US military base in Iraq where numerous Pakistani,
Iraqi, Turkish Muslims are not fanatical, because the rule of law
here does not allow it. They are treated just as well if not better
here than they are in thier own countries.
Islamic Statism does not seek freedom for its followers it preaches
a fundamental rule of law that does not allow descent. Because of
this, millions are killed in wars started by the actions of
religious leaders who say that thier people can not have a free
choice in religious matters (such as Darfur, Rawanda, Taliban
controlled Afgahnistan, and other places where Islam becomes the
norm).
No one should be incited to kill others for thier beliefs, rather
they should be allowed to chose for themselves what to believe.
Religions should promote peace and tollerance. For the most part
Islamic leaders as well as most religion's leaders, even
Christianity's, do not do this.
iih,
You do realize that most of the oppressive dictators of the ME
are secular, don't you?
I think that is an important thing to point out. of course one
could ask what popularly elected governments in the middle east
might look like.
How should a moderate guy defeat and marginalize the
radicals? He's busy raising his kids, doing his job, living his
life, being a good neighbor. If he happens to have knowledge of
violent activities by a radical, sure, he can report that guy. But
it's not like violent radicals give the details of their plans to
every Tariq, Daoud, and Hari.
Otherwise, all he can do is raise his kids well, attend and support
mosques with moderate teachers, and generally live a good life. He
can't really go out and "defeat" radicals.
I would add to that this. How many years did it take the Europeans
to get to the Enlightenment? Right now, this is the Islamic "Dark
Ages". It has been like that for some 200 years, and now seems to
be the peak. These things do not happen overnight. It is a process.
The roots of reform are starting to take shape.
And, quite honestly, while I disagree with Ali on almost
everything, I think that she is inadvertently playing a major role
in the reform. I'd be for protecting her (from private funds
though), of course. But I also see that her rhetoric is very very
dangerous if taken seriously by enough people in the West.
An Ottawa Reader:
Right on mark.
P.S. The Sens are doing great so far. But Les Canadiens sont sur la
marche!
Syoloson:
I think that is an important thing to point out. of course one
could ask what popularly elected governments in the middle east
might look like.
I personally would not trust today's Islamists in any government.
It has to be a process, a slow one, as in Turkey and somewhat
Egypt, to have parties with Islamic agendas re-evaluate their
positions as they get to experience the realities of the world we
live in. Any fixing should have happened a long time ago, before
the political discourse in the ME becomes so poisoned and
oppressive. Any un-calculated changes now could be dangerous, so
lets leave it to due process.
Islam did expand in many parts of the world by means of
conquest, but not everywhere. Not a single Muslim soldier set foot
in Indonesia (the most populous Muslim country), Malaysia, Western
China, and Africa (south of the north African modern-day "Arab"
countries).
But the problem is that Muhammad himself and the early "rightly
guided" caliphs were the big conquerers, and the religion exists
due largely to their efforts. In order to renounce the
power/conquest aspects of Islam, much of Muhammad's own life and
actions would have to be repudiated. Are you willing to do
that?
I have problems with the "non-observant" part. It is Ramadan
now, if you have a mosque near you, why don't you pay a visit and
see how many "non-observant" Muslims there praying as part of the
Ramadan "ritual".
I went overboard with that.
ChrisO,
Much of what might be called Christendom came to be so via bloody
conquest. Indeed, killing apostates, heathens, etc. is a long and
at one time highly praised tradition in that religion. If that
tradition no longer for the most part hinders Christianity then I
don't see why such a tradition in Islam should necessarily hinder
it.
Ben Rushing:
I appreciate what you say, but you still haven't told me what your
sources are.
To make my point, you mention Rwanda. Rwanda is 4.6% Muslim. But
you are right, the Taliban, the Wahabis, the Pakistani tribal areas
are very radicalized and extreme. But who said that these are the
norms accepted in Egypt, Morocco, Malaysia, or Indonesia.
But it seems to me that your are projecting the snippets of angry,
violent Muslims that Fox, CNN, MSNBC spews (if you look closely,
you'll find the O'Riely recycles his angry Muslim videos a lot) on
to the over all global Muslim community. Why don't you pay a visit
to, say, Egypt sometime. It'll be fun and you'll be surprised.
Ben Rushing,
To be blunt, in Rwanda it was Christians who were involved in the
genocide there, not Muslims. Indeed, since that event the Muslim
faith has seen singificant growth in that nation in part because
Muslims did not involve themselves in the genocide.
Check out this article:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A53018-2002Sep22.html
I have visited Dubai and liked it very much. The deal with Dubai
is that they have a high level of economic freedom and the
government there seeks to allow as much development as possible and
does not try to have protectionist philosophy.
Dubai has started to allow more personal freedom as well. My beleif
is that personal freedom will follow economic freedom. THe UAE has
already allowed women to be the head of Universities there. Times
are changing.
I fault other Islamic Countries that refuse to give thier people
both Personal and Economic Freedom based on some dusty old book
that was invented because Muhamed was jelous of the success of
Judism and Christianity (two other false religions that Islam
borrows from).
Egypt has been a tourist spot for years, but they have a lot of
trouble with big government getting into thier business (such as
buildings not being completed due to the tax required of them, but
remain in use). I am not really against Islam when the leaders of
it are not advocating terrorism or the submission to old and
foolish laws. But to act like there is an enlightenment period in
the religion is false. It is in the minority and hopefully will
change places like Saudi Arabia (where religious police beat women
that are alone in thier cars).
Much of what might be called Christendom came to be so via
bloody conquest. Indeed, killing apostates, heathens, etc. is a
long and at one time highly praised tradition in that religion. If
that tradition no longer for the most part hinders Christianity
then I don't see why such a tradition in Islam should necessarily
hinder it.
The founding figure of Christianity did not engage in or advocate
such action. The founding figure of Islam did.
And that, I believe, is a large part of why Christians were able to
change their religion and why Muslims have not despite a couple of
centuries worth of contact with Enlightenment ideas. The
Carolingian "convert or die" ethos directly contradicts the entire
New Testament and the words ascribed to Jesus. I can't claim to be
Mr. Expert on Islamic texts, but it's well known that the Koran
supports both violent and pacifist interpretations. The life of
Muhammad and his early successors, however, makes things a lot more
difficult for Muslims who would renounce violence.
Not that I agree with male circumcision, either, but there is a HUGE difference between male and female "circumcision." I've never heard of a male circumcision where the actual organ is removed. In some cultures, the entire clitoris is removed. Then, in a super-freaky twist, some of the cultures sew up the women so that there is only one hole for both urinating and for sex. MUCH bigger deal than just removing the foreskin, IMHO. As you can well imagine, it leads to HORRIFIC ongoing medical problems and is very very painful. At least with male circumcision you would heal from it telatively quickly.
ChrisO:
In order to renounce the power/conquest aspects of Islam, much
of Muhammad's own life and actions would have to be repudiated. Are
you willing to do that?
I have a problem with the first part of this statement. Before
and after Islam, civilizations have decided that the best
way to protect yourself is to be aggressive. One has to carefully
study the history of these times. Many neighboring civilization
felt endangered by this new religious movement (think Rome and
early Christianity), especially the Byzantines and the Persians.
They were on the march to crush the Arabs. It is simply how things
worked back then. Should not be evaluated on today's scale.
So when I say I "follow Muhamad", if by that I mean I will blindly
follow the literal word of Hadith I'd be an idiot and I'd be wrong.
No, I follow the moral value of his experience. At this point,
people would mention "pedophilia". The least one can say is that
Muhamed's actions are highly shaped in the West by the writings,
translations, and interpretations of 18th and 19th century
Orientalists (sometimes a dirty word to many scholars of Islam),
who mixed Dark Ages myths with poor and twisted translations of
Islamic text and scripture. As for the pedophelia charge, the age
of the girl in question (Aisha -- most highly respect Islamic
reference, who also was madly in love with the Prophet) is highly
debateable, and most Muslim (non-Western) scholars say that
marriage happened after Aisha reached puberty (the legal equivalent
of being an "adult" in modern Western terms).
But you see, Muhamad is not only about war and a marrying young
girl. He is whole lote more than that to many Muslims. The West is
just so hung up on those two things: "Jihad" and pedophilia (both
widely controversial -- surely you've heard of "the greatest jihad
is the jihad against one's evil desires"?) To Muslims it is a whole
lot more.
In any case, let me just explain this. What infuriates me is not
that my religion is being attacked on an intellectual level (I am
fine with the intellect part). What I think sucks is when people
attribute stupidly wrong things to (1) the religion, (2) to an
entire group of people and to portray them as monolith. Even worse
is when some portray them as a monolith using lies and half truths.
Liars are disgusting. Some do not lie, but they just ignorantly
propagate these lies.
Should Islam not be criticized? Absolutely not! It is one of the
ways that Muslims will start to have to think about what their
belief mean to them. They will have to come up with answers. They
have to re-evaluate themselves and this re-evaluation came from
such things as the Cartoon Crisis, Irshad Manji's views, Hirsi
Ali's views, and so on. As I mentioned on previous threads, I
prefer a civilized discussion (especially by the West) more than an
insult-based approach (e.g., the Danish cartoons, which I found
stupidly insulting and not the best way to have discourse).
ChrisO,
The founding figure of Christianity did not engage in or
advocate such action. The founding figure of Islam did.
I honestly don't think that matters much at all. Then again, one
can debate who really started Christianity. Was it Jesus? Paul?
Constantine?
And that, I believe, is a large part of why Christians were
able to change their religion ...
If it wasn't part of the founding then why did they have to change
their religion?
The Carolingian "convert or die" ethos directly contradicts the
entire New Testament and the words ascribed to Jesus.
Actually they don't. Jesus did preach a lot about the sort of
things that would be visited (and quite quickly) on those he
disapproved of. Indeed, the early gospels are suffused with the
notion of Jesus as an apocalypticist. Well, guess what happens when
the world is turned upside following that apocalypse? Guess who
gets the shaft as it were?
Anyway, it doesn't take much of a leap of logic to go from Jesus' statements on the coming kingdom and who would profit and not profit by its arrival to discrimination by state which is officially Christian.
I fault other Islamic Countries that refuse to give thier
people both Personal and Economic Freedom based on some dusty old
book that was invented because Muhamed was jelous of the success of
Judism and Christianity (two other false religions that Islam
borrows from).
Ben, I thin this statement is patently false as I explain above.
Most of these oppressive regimes are primarily secular. That is not
to excuse governments like the Taliban, KSA's wahabis. The King of
Morocco for example is a direct descendant of the Prophet. He is a
decent guy, and while Morocco still has to do a lot work on the
democracy front, they are a very tolerant Muslim nation , with a
quasi-religious quasi-secular government.
ChrisO:
The life of Muhammad and his early successors, however, makes
things a lot more difficult for Muslims who would renounce
violence.
See my response at 3:34.
OBL merely follows in his footsteps, which is why there is no theological foundation within Islam to reject him.
No. There is. You clearly need to do a lot of reading.
Ok, what do I need to read?
OBL stands for a number of things:
1) The dominance of Islam over all
2) The permanent subjugation of non-Muslims as second-class
citizens (dhimmis).
3) The installation of Sharia as the supreme law of the world
4) A permanent state of war, whether prosecuted by combat,
propaganda, proselytizing, or money, between Muslims and
non-Muslims until the non-Muslims submit to Islamic rule or are
killed
5) The rejection of existing, on a permanent non-repudiable basis,
as equals with infidels
6) The subverting and corruption of infidel governments and
institutions in order to accomplish these aims
You have a big job ahead if you want to convince me there is a
specifically Islamic theological basis to reject these
things. Please refrain from resorting to unreliable hadith or
abrogated verses. Further explain how a Muslim can reject these
goals without rejecting Muhammad himself, who did exactly these
things.
There are plenty of Muslims who aren't actively working to kill me.
Unfortunately, most of them believe that 1-3 would make an ideal
world, which is why they don't stop the "radicals". In fact they
support them with money and shelter. The difference is not in their
goals, merely the means which they will employ. Plenty of
Muslims would love to see Sharia be installed in the US by
non-violent means, but "non-violent" will be no consolation to the
guy who got his hand chopped off for stealing a bag of potato
chips.
She gets it! When will the rest of us get it!
I authored a proposal to ban Islam in the US, see it at
http://pedestrianinfidel.blogspot.com/2007/02/proposed-constitutional-amendment.html
Here is the whole thing -
Thursday, February 08, 2007
A Proposed Constitutional Amendment
Background and justification to Amendment 28
Whereas Religion is defined as an institution dedicated to
improving social conscience and promoting individual and societal
spiritual growth in a way that is harmless to others not
participating in or practicing the same;
Whereas the United States of America was founded on the ideals of
individual rights, including the individual right to practice one's
religion of choice, or no religion, and that there would be no
compulsion of religion, nor state sanctioned religion, nor a
"religious test" for participation in the body politic;
Whereas Islam includes a complete political and social structure,
encompassed by its religious law, Sharia, that supersedes any civil
law and that Islam mandates that no secular or democratic
institutions are to be superior to Islamic law;
Whereas Islam preaches that it and it alone is the true religion
and that Islam will dominate the world and supplant all other
religions and democratic institutions;
Whereas Saudi Arabia, the spiritual home of Islam does not permit
the practice of any other religion on its soil and even "moderate"
Muslims states such as Turkey and Malaysia actively suppress other
religions;
Whereas Islam includes as its basic tenet the spread of the faith
by any and all means necessary, including violent conquest of
non-believers, and demands of its followers that they implement
violent jihad (holy war) against those un-willing to convert or
submit to Islam, including by deception and subversion of existing
institutions;
Whereas on 9/11/2001 19 Muslim hijackers acting in the name of
Islam killed 3,000 Americans, and numerous other acts of terrorism
have been directed at the American people around the world;
Whereas representatives of Islam around the world including Osama
Bin Laden (architect of 9/11), the government of Iran including
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, HAMAS, Hezbollah, and other Islamic groups
have declared jihad (war) on America, and regularly declare that
America should cease to exist;
Whereas there is no organized Islamic opposition to violent
proponents of Islam;
Therefore: Islam is not a religion, but a political ideology more
akin to Fascism and totally in opposition to the ideals of freedom
as described in the United States Constitution, especially the Bill
of Rights.
Be it resolved that the following Amendment to the Constitution be
adopted:
Article I
The social/political/ideological system known around the world as
Islam is not recognized in the United States as a religion.
The practice of Islam is therefore not protected under the 1st
Amendment as to freedom of religion and speech.
Article II
As representatives of Islam around the world have declared war, and
committed acts of war, against the United States and its democratic
allies around the world, Islam is hereby declared an enemy of the
United States and its practice within the United States is now
prohibited.
Article III
Immediately upon passage of this Amendment all Mosques, schools and
Muslim places of worship and religious training are to be closed,
converted to other uses, or destroyed. Proceeds from sales of such
properties may be distributed to congregations of said places but
full disclosure of all proceeds shall be made to an appropriate
agency as determined by Congress. No compensation is to be offered
by Federal or State agencies for losses on such properties however
Federal funding is to be available for the demolishing of said
structures if other disposition cannot be made.
The preaching of Islam in Mosques, Schools, and other venues is
prohibited. The subject of Islam may be taught in a post high
school academic environment provided that instruction include
discussion of Islam's history of violence, conquest, and its
ongoing war on democratic and other non-Islamic values.
The preaching or advocating of Islamic ideals of world domination,
destruction of America and democratic institutions, jihad against
Judaism, Christianity and other religions, and advocating the
implementation of Sharia law shall in all cases be punishable by
fines, imprisonment, deportation, and death as prescribed by
Congress. Violent expressions of these and other Muslim goals, or
the material support of those both in the United States and around
the world who seek to advance these Islamic goals shall be
punishable by death.
Muslims will be denied the opportunity to immigrate to the United
States.
Article IV
Nothing in this amendment shall be construed as authorizing the
discrimination against, of violence upon, nor repudiation of the
individual rights of those Americans professing to be Muslim. The
individual right of conscience is sacrosanct and the practice of
Islam within the privacy of home and self is strictly protected to
the extent that such individuals do not violate the prohibitions
described in Article III.
I'm surprised at the level of hostility here. Hirsi Ali is an
eloquent, nuanced writer squarely in the classical liberal
tradition. Comparing her to an authoritarian theocratic blowhard
like Ann Coulter is a contemptible cheapshot.
Hirsi Ali's comments on how a tolerant, open society should fight a
totalitarian enemy remind me of Goldwater's chapter on fighting
communism in "Conscience of a Conservative". I don't agree 100%
with either, but saying "Hirsi Ali is an intolerant fanatic just
like Osama" makes as much sense as "Goldwater was just like
Stalin".
The idea that they are secular or islamic does not matter. There
is no real freedom in the Arab world except in small parts of it.
(like Dubai where the Arab population is low)
So what are you saying that if a real muslim was put into power
there would be freedom? That is like Saying Pat Robertson (of the
Christian TBN TV show the 700 club) would allow gay rights, gay
adoption, and would allow the free worship of religions other than
Christianity if he were President of the United States.
I mean come on if you kill 7 milion jews your pretty bad,
but if you kill 1.5 billion muslims your just protecting our
freedoms.
Where did Hirsi Ali advocate genocide against muslims?
Regarding Christianity and "violence". Where did things the DoD come from? Can we say that Christianity lacked an innate "right to bear arms" (pun intended)! Didn't Christians have to protect themselves later. It is not like the crusades did not happen!
Ben:
So what are you saying that if a real muslim was put into power
there would be freedom?
No.
Please at least read my comments. I spend time (I really do have
other things to do, oo) to respond to you. In fact I responded to
this very statement above at 2:48 and at 3:00.
Amazing and thought provoking. Ali is a voice we in the West need to heed. We are at war whether we admit as much or not.
Hirsi Ali is an eloquent, nuanced writer squarely in the
classical liberal tradition.
she certainly doesn't come off as such in the interview.
Reason: We have to crush the world's 1.5 billion Muslims under
our boot? In concrete terms, what does that mean, "defeat
Islam"?
Hirsi Ali: I think that we are at war with Islam. And there's no
middle ground in wars. Islam can be defeated in many ways. For
starters, you stop the spread of the ideology itself; at present,
there are native Westerners converting to Islam, and they're the
most fanatical sometimes. There is infiltration of Islam in the
schools and universities of the West. You stop that. You stop the
symbol burning and the effigy burning, and you look them in the eye
and flex your muscles and you say, "This is a warning. We won't
accept this anymore." There comes a moment when you crush your
enemy.
now do i totally understand why she would feel this way? you
fuckin' bet.
but it's not particularly levelheaded.
Bob Smith @ 3:51:
Many of your statements are collectivist in nature.
Ok, what do I need to read?
Well there is plenty. Stop watching FOX or reading
michellemalkin.com would be a good start. Visit a bookstore near
you. Borders or B&N would do. I can not tell you what to read,
do you have to be told?
Well, read this or this for
example.
iih: I understand your conviction to defend the right to
practice your religion, but to say that it doesn't promote Statism
or the ability for secular governments to come into power and cause
a loss of freedom is incredible.
I work with muslims who are moderate, or liberal depending on what
words you use, who have stopped caring about their religion
since
working over here. I and my American co-workers don't actively
stress it.
They enjoy watching videos with scantly clad women and they will
sometimes eat pork when told that it is beef (I didn't do this
someone before me did).
They have found out that Americans are not the evil people that
they are portrayed to be, but that we are more prone to use science
as a way to stop diseases while Muslim countries will not talk
about condoms (just like Evangelicals in the US) but they will sell
them in the stores.
I have met incredible self educated muslims from Pakistan that have
learned English on thier own and have done some amazing things when
they have stopped listening to the crazyness of thier religion and
have opened thier eyes to science.
One of my guys has told me about how ignorant people are in
Pakistan because the religion calls science a plot of the infidels
to subvert Islam! It is incredible that anyone would actively
defend Muslim nations! They have not yet contributed to the
advancement of society, merely kept it 300-400 years back.
Stop watching FOX or reading michellemalkin.com would be a
good start.
I did not mean that literally of course. It was a figure speech
implying that you should not rely on either one of them solely, if
you did. I can not tell you what to watch and what not to watch.
Sorry.
regarding dhex: Good luck. While you crush them make sure to look
the other way, so that you do not feel the guilt.
she certainly doesn't come off as such in the
interview.
I'm SHOCKED! SHOCKED I SAY that an eloquent writer would come off
less than eloquent in a spoken interview.
SHOCKED!
Amazing. If Ms Ali said that Christian churches needed to be razed, I bet half or more of the atheists on here would applaud and nod. Since she's attacking islam, she gets called unhinged. Very telling.
What are you doing at this moment to defeat radical
Islam?
I'm not a Muslim, so I'm not sure what your point is, since my
observation was that there seem to be a lot of passive
Muslims.
Unlike, say Christians. You don't have any trouble finding
Christians who vocally condemn and actively oppose abortion-clinic
bombers.
Now, with Muslims, I am the first to admit that I am relying on
what I read and see on the media, so this is all very
impressionistic, and who knows what's going on in the big
world.
Even in the US, though, the "public" face of Islam is the likes of
CAIR, which seems to operate under the maxim "No enemies in the Dar
al Islam".
It seems to me that, given the obviously overwhelming desire of the
MSM to normalize Muslims, it is odd that we don't see (in the MSM)
more Muslims taking public issue with their radical and violent
brethren.
Ben,
From your description, I guarantee you that I am probably more like
your colleagues. I have trouble with what happens back in Muslim
countries, but:
it doesn't promote Statism or the ability for secular
governments to come into power and cause a loss of freedom is
incredible.
Yes, it has been used to do that before. But I am one of those
Muslims ("reformers" if you will) who see a version (an
"interpretation") of Islam that does not translate into promoting
statism , or the ability of a secular government to come into
power. There does exist such an interpretation. It is a very small
minority interpretation, but it does exist in theory. It only takes
legal craftsmen, and hard work. This I call reform, which I thought
what people in the West would like to see. The naive idea that
Islam needs to be eliminated or will be elliminated is simply
unpractical. One has to work with what one has.
R.C. Dean,
...given the obviously overwhelming desire of the MSM to
normalize Muslims...
That doesn't seem particularly obvious to me.
Mark,
I bet none or very few would.
She characterizes radical Islamism as some kind of a mind virus
that spreads itself.
There is a core of radical Islam that has always been there and
will always be there, just as there is a core of radical white
supremacists that have always been there and will always be
there.
Radical Islamists that kill themselves in battle can no longer
recruit new radical Islamists. At best they are referred to as
martyrs by other recruiters.
But where are the new recruits coming from? Why the sudden rise of
recruits to radical Islam in the last 50 years?
I submit that radical Islam recruitment is not a mind virus, but an
opportunity driven by the lack of economic opportunity that US
foreign policy has left young people in Islamic countries; and by
the anger that the deaths of millions of their family members due
to US foreign policy produces.
Fix the US foreign policy that is guaranteeing a dead end for young
people, and you end recruitment. Why? Because making money and
enjoying life are more important than any religion, judging by the
number of people in the US who are Christians in name only but
really practice a religion of materialism instead.
It's impossible to live in Iraq and make money and enjoy life
today, so it's impossible for material comfort to divert young
people away from the message of radical Islam. Why wouldn't young
people listen to Islamic zealots who offer them paradise? They've
got nothing to lose because our foreign policy has taken any hope
at opportunity away from them.
When recruitment is ended, then you're left with a core of neutered
blowhards just like any other marginalized religion. And just like
radical Islam pre-1950 before our foreign policy started feeding
their recruitment prospects.
Radical Islamists are like hornets. You can't kill 'em all because
there's another nest somewhere you can't see or reach. You can't
exterminate a hornet problem by killing the nests that are within
reach. The only way to reduce them to a manageable or undetectable
level is to get rid of whatever is feeding them.
In the case of the Middle East, it's our foreign policy of
sanctions, aid, coups, alliances, bombs, and selectively
implementing UN resolutions that is feeding the hornet population
in radical Islam.
600,000 to 1.2 million dead Iraqis, on an expedition that had
nothing to do with addressing radical Islam in the first place,
probably guarantees a matching number of new radical Islam
recruits.
When are we going to stop making the problem worse, beef up our
defense, take our licks for this round of recruitment, and let
radical Islamism suffer an eventual collapse upon its fundamental
flaws compared to a market society?
Instead, we continue to exacerbate the problem, using the problem
itself as justification for the continued exacerbation. Not
logical...
One has to work with what one has.
Well true, but you will be accused of plotting to help the jews and
the kaufers. I am sure the leaders of Islam would likely have you
killed. Just as the Catholics sought with thier reformers. Would it
not be easier to confess that you are a human and say:
"There is no god who activly influences our lives, nor
scientifically reveals himself/herself/itself, and therefor does
not deem himself/herself/itself worthy of being praised, feared, or
worshiped. I shall not live my life perscribing to a belief system
that has caused more division, racism, sexism, and bigotry to all
of the people of the world. I will be who I am and will allow the
free worship of a religion and will only criticize the leaders and
defenders of which who make it possible to legally harm someone
either physically or financially using thier religion." ?
R.C. Dean:
I think what she's getting at here is that there seem to be
relatively few Muslims who stand up to the radicals and actively
push for a more tolerant, nuanced, liberal (in the old sense)
version of their faith.
You have one right here. There are a lot of progressive (some are
Muslim, non--secular) movements in the Muslim world working to
change things. But it takes time. Again, how many years to take
Europe from the Dark Ages to the Enlightenment?
Well, this is certainly not surprising. That dog Ayaan is now
given free rein to spew her hate, on American soil no less, and by
what you would normally like to think of as moderate and freedom
loving American Institutions. She wants to 'go at war with Islam'
and use 'whatever means' to 'remove' it, shut down schools, curb
expression thereof in clear violation of the Constitution I took an
oath to, and yet still be on the payrolls of those
institutions.
It says a lot about American institutions, and Americans who
support them. I continue to be completely side swiped and surprised
by the degree of hypocrisy exhibited by Americans in this country.
Each day I wake up and tell myself that its ok, they would never go
that low, but they still manage to.
And as usual I am being asked my complete strangers to 'denounce
out loud' the actions of other complete strangers simply because we
happen to beleive in the same God.
Sometimes I wonder... sometimes, I really do...
"It's impossible to live in Iraq and make money and enjoy life
today, so it's impossible for material comfort to divert young
people away from the message of radical Islam. Why wouldn't young
people listen to Islamic zealots who offer them paradise? They've
got nothing to lose because our foreign policy has taken any hope
at opportunity away from them"
Uh actually it is not. What is impossible is to live here and not
at some point face threats from foriegn supplied Arab Terorists
(usually Iran or Syria). US troops supply what are known as haji
shops on the base (this is how they are refered to by the Iraqi
shop owners as well). So I would say that while Iraq is hurting,
they are also improving themselves. In Kurdistan (Northern Iraq)
they build thier buildings with glass and not concrete and are
extreamly pro-American. Visit www.theotheriraq.com to find out
more.
Ben:
but you will be accused of plotting to help the jews and the
kaufers
Yes, by those that the MSM keeps talking about 24/7. Most Muslims
and many Muslim leaders are not like that.
Would it not be easier to confess that you are a human and
say:...
Trust me, no. Plus, I do believe in a God and Islam seems pretty
good to me (not the one preached by OBL, or what the MSM wishes the
general public to beieve Islam is -- simply put, Islam is not, has
not, and will not be a monolith.)
Finally, I really have to go, let me just put on the table some
of what Ali has to say and ask yourself if, as libertarians, you
agree with these statements (taken from a previous post):
And you really have to read about her views in reason to see
why even peaceful Muslims are alarmed by her propositions.
For example:
"we are at war with Islam."
When asked about defeating radical Islam, she answers "[n]o. Islam,
period."
She says: "There comes a moment when you crush your enemy."
(Referring to Islam, not radical Islam). Bakel then asks:
"Militarily?", she responds: "In all forms, and if you don't do
that, then you have to live with the consequence of being
crushed."
Then there is her proposition to close all Muslim schools.
She suggests that the Bill of Rights and Constitution are not
infallible in defense of asking for closing all Muslim
schools.
When asked if she met any American Muslims while here, she simply
says that she did not have time to meet any. But still she's for
closing all Muslim schools.
I have a lot of trouble with her views (and still believe she has
every right to her free speech). She should also be protected,
because if a radical Muslim hurts her, it is the ordinary peaceful
Muslims who end up having to live with the consequences in the
public discourse. But I think that she should be protected by
contributions from private donors (and I'd be more than happy to
contribute, as I am sure her AEI friends would want to do,
too).
I have a problem with the first part of this statement.
Before and after Islam, civilizations have decided that the best
way to protect yourself is to be aggressive. One has to carefully
study the history of these times. Many neighboring civilization
felt endangered by this new religious movement (think Rome and
early Christianity), especially the Byzantines and the Persians.
They were on the march to crush the Arabs. It is simply how things
worked back then. Should not be evaluated on today's
scale.
That does not follow any understanding I have of early Muslim
history. The Rashidun Caliphs invaded and conquered Persia and
southeastern Byzantium, starting in the 630s. There was no Persian
or Byzantine invasion of the Arabian peninsula, which was to them
an insignificant backwater. Persia and Byzantium had fought a
crushing war against each other a decade earlier that led to a high
degree of military exhaustion and vulnerability, particularly on
the Persian side.
So when I say I "follow Muhamad", if by that I mean I will
blindly follow the literal word of Hadith I'd be an idiot and I'd
be wrong. No, I follow the moral value of his experience. At this
point, people would mention "pedophilia". The least one can say is
that Muhamed's actions are highly shaped in the West by the
writings, translations, and interpretations of 18th and 19th
century Orientalists (sometimes a dirty word to many scholars of
Islam), who mixed Dark Ages myths with poor and twisted
translations of Islamic text and scripture. As for the pedophelia
charge, the age of the girl in question (Aisha -- most highly
respect Islamic reference, who also was madly in love with the
Prophet) is highly debateable, and most Muslim (non-Western)
scholars say that marriage happened after Aisha reached puberty
(the legal equivalent of being an "adult" in modern Western
terms).
The pedophilia stuff is silly, and "child brides" are certainly not
unique to Islam. However, there is simply no getting around the
fact that Muhammad was a conquerer, and a ruthless one. Obviously
there was more to his message than that, but that's not the point
in this discussion, when dealing with Salafists and their
ideas.
BTW, iih, I'm on your side on this one, really. A reinterpretation
of Islam that fits with the modern world benefits everyone. I hope
you and your cohorts are successful.
I honestly don't think that matters much at all. Then again,
one can debate who really started Christianity. Was it Jesus? Paul?
Constantine?
Syloson, I think you are stretching greatly on this. Doctrinally,
the words ascribed to Jesus do not invite any form of conquest or
violence. And to reformers, it is that which matters, not what
Christian emperors/kings had done in the name of the religion
centuries earlier. I'm a devout atheist, and I can see this quite
clearly.
This is all academic, I suppose. People are going to see in any
religion what they wish to see.
Syloson of Samos - if you get this far down the comments to a
question you asked at the top:
No, the Netherlands is awful. I meant Kenya/Somalia.
Well most muslims don't want the Quran translated the same was
true about the Bible (which wasn't always available in
Engrish)
And look at what Christian reformation brought us: weak
Christianity that was open to criticism followed by a growth of:
deism, agnosticism, and atheism. Is this what you really want for
Islam? Protestant Islam followed by Atheism? If so, then good luck.
I hope the Saudis don't find you, because if you look at
Christianity's reformation, there is going to be a huge tribulation
period before all is well.
That does not follow any understanding I have of early
Muslim history. The Rashidun Caliphs invaded and conquered Persia
and southeastern Byzantium, starting in the 630s.
Shall we call it, to use an often used term in recent years, a
preemptive strike? The spread of Islam at the time was certainly
noticed and the Persians and Byzantines were worried and were
preparing for the assault. Simply, it all boils down to war
tactics. Does this justify terrorism? Absolutely not. Terrorism is
criminal and goes against Islam (named in Arabic by "heraba", and
is prohibited).
What also goes unmentioned is the fact that many locals did see in
the incoming new forces as a change for the oppressive status quo.
For example, the Copts in Egypt were fed up with the Byzantines and
were in fact supportive of the oncoming Muslims. They reached an
agreement by which all Coptic churches remained open, and Egyptians
pretty much kept their self rule (except for the Arabian Emir who
was appointed by the Caliph). This policy led to many
conversions.
Much later, as in India, some Muslim rulers were brutal in their
conquests (e.g., Akbar, who was Mongol -- Mongols were known for
their brutality). Is he a mainstream Muslim figure? No. Salah El
Din (Saladin), on the other hand is loved by all Muslims, and is a
very respected figure in the West.
So yes, some Muslim invaders were brutal in their methods, but that
was more imperialism, than being Islamically motivated. And as with
any religious text, yes you can find something in there to justify
your brutal actions. I can find many other things that do not
justify these kinds of actions.
One can also talk of "Dhimitude". As recently as the 20th century,
Canada, for example, had a head tax. So it is not an entirely
foreign concept. Yes it is discriminatory, that is why you won't
find many Muslims, or Muslim nations even applying the concept
today (in fact since the 17th and 18th century). I do not know
about KSA. I think they'd still impose it.
However, here is the explanation I know of: it is a tax paid by
non-Muslims so that they are exempt from joining the army. That is
why it was imposed on male non-Muslims only. It is the cost of
having the Muslim state defend and protect the non-Muslim in the
state, from foreign invasion. On today's standards, is it
right? Is it applicable? No.
People are going to see in any religion what they wish to
see.
So, then, evaluate people as individuals, each based on his/her
actions, and not in a collectivist approach as Ali suggests.
And I am glad that we do agree on something.
I hope the Saudis don't find you, because if you look at
Christianity's reformation, there is going to be a huge tribulation
period before all is well.
Who said it is going to be easy?
I realize there is no obligation for anyone to denounce anyone else's views just because they worship the same god, but I have to say, I personally am very careful to distance myself from people who claim to be speaking for me.
Mark | October 10, 2007, 4:21pm | #
Amazing. If Ms Ali said that Christian churches needed to be razed,
I bet half or more of the atheists on here would applaud and nod.
Since she's attacking islam, she gets called unhinged. Very
telling.
Very telling indeed.
Islam delenda est.
For example, I have over the past few years come to question
whether Islam in practice is reconcilable with liberal traditions
that are the basis of modern civilization. I have come to question
whether iih's very reasonable views form only the extreme fringe of
current Islamic thought, with the bulk of practioners being
essentially hostile to notions of rights and liberty.
In those concerns, I may be seen as similar to Ali. Let me distance
myself now. I would never agree to the public persecution of a
religion as a whole. I would never support and would indeed
stridently oppose any plan to close schools founded on religious
teaching. I don't know what she means when she talks about crushing
your enemy, but it can't mean anything good.
I simply wonder if her assessment of the state of Islam as
essentially hostile to liberty is correct. From my perspective,
were this to be true, it would mean more conflicts in the future
and not fewer (as is implied by the notion that violent Islam is
withering in the face of a modernized version).
What I found most interesting in the interview were the
assumptions which the interviewer wore on his sleeve and was
passionately stubborn to renounce. For instance:
In Infidel, you point out many positive religious experiences
you had as a Muslim. For instance, you describe Mecca's Grand
Mosque as a place of vastness and beauty. You praise the kindness
that you experienced there, a sense of community, a lack of
prejudice. Are there times when you miss that aspect of being a
practicing believer?
He asks this because he is desperate to find some good things in
Islam to balance out the many horrible, horrible things in Islam
that are blatantly obvious (Farfour the Mouse, for example) yet,
for the sake of multiculturalism, impossible to denounce.
Don't you mean defeating radical Islam?
Borne from the idea that the horrible things we see in Islam are
actually part of a fringe and radical movement as opposed to being
integral to and inextricable from of the Shari'a (Islamic Law) and
Sunnah (ways of the Islamic prophet Mohammed). It's very hard for a
multicultural liberal to accept that A) Islam teaches that
everything the Islamic prophet Mohammed did was right and perfect
and should be emulated by everyone, and B) Mohammed practiced
murder, offensive war, torture, slavery, and pedophilia.
I'm not so sure they ought to diplomatically engage some idiots
burning a piece of cloth or a straw figure in the streets of
Islamabad.
He calls them "idiots" to minimize the threat. Muajhedin who chant
"Death to America!" and "Allahu Akhbar!" are much easier to accept
when you call them "idiots" or "clowns". It's a way of telling
yourself, "They're harmless." After all, if they meant what they
said and actually had a means of making good on the threat they
pose, then that means we might have to do something. For a
black-and-white-thinking liberal, anything that makes the Evil
George W. Bush look right is unthinkable. To them, beating one's
wife is a lesser sin than agreeing with Bush. That's part of the
problem we have in dealing with Islam.
One of the things in your book that struck me was that many of
the women in the book made religious choices that seemed entirely
free.
This "struck" the author because he is dying, desperate to find
something good in Islam. "Look, these women who are forced to cover
up their evil female bodies *chose* to do it! That looks something
like freedom!"
I also thought that the most insightful thing that Ali wrote was
this:
Look, in a democracy, it's like this: I suggest, "Let's close
Muslim schools." You say, "No, we can't do it." The problem that
I'm pointing out to you gets bigger and bigger. Then you say, "OK,
let's somehow discourage them," and still the problem keeps on
growing, and in another few years it gets so bad that I belatedly
get what I wanted in the first place.
She's so right. Ask yourself: is the problem with Islam going to
get better or worse in the next few years? Though you might have to
understand what "the problem with Islam" actually *is*, first. That
will come with the swallowing of the incredibly bitter pill: there
is NOTHING un-Islamic about initiating deadly force in order to
impose Islamic law on the entire world. The Islamic prophet, the
"perfect model of conduct" to the Muslims, did precisely that, and
that law is still in effect today because it can never be changed.
That's why Muslim reformers (that's you, iih) have a very hard time
coming up with an purely Islamic justification for repudiating OBL
and his ilk. Instead, they have to divert the discussion to Bush or
the Crusades or Ann Coulter. That, and also that shirk (disbelief)
and ijtihad (apostacy) are punishable by death under Shari'a. iih,
was it not your prophet who said, "He who changes his religion,
kill him"?
Islam delenda est.
SuprKufr: Awsome commentary. I think a lot of people who come
here are not true champions of liberty, rather they seem to be
hacks for the left or the right and choose only one type of freedom
or turn Centrist and don't know what to think.
Most atheists in America have come from a christian background
(like myself) and therefore just deride thier Christian upbringing.
This woman is doing the same, but this time to Islam. The
Liberal-Statist who make up the Democratic party often find a hard
time when critisizing Islam. Thier choice to blame America first
happens I think because they lose the debate to facts and don't
want to offend potential voters. They were Socialists in economics,
but now choose to be Nanny staters by taxing behavior that they
don't like (along with the Christian right). So they are stuck on
election day in most places.
I tend to think that the Libertarian party and libertarians in
general have a hard time dealing with this anti-Islam woman,
because they genrally dissagree with the war in Iraq. This is due
to the fact that most Libertarians seek to return to the good ol'
days of Isolationism (1776, forgetting the Marines that were sent
to Tripoli to save Americans that were captured by pirates and
Americas other involvements at the time). To me this has allowed
them to become soft on Statism. Thier willingness to allow it to
exist has caused likable guys like Ron Paul to lose valuable
endorsements. Rush Limbaugh would have been all over this guy to
win had he simply said that he wants to win this war and keep Iran
from developing nuclear weopons. Because we do not champion liberty
world wide we allow millions upon millions of people to suffer the
affects of Statism. This is an issue beyond political beliefs and
therefore I think this is why it is controversial. To some it gets
down to the basic idea of if it doesn't make money, then it doesn't
make sence.
I simply wonder if her assessment of the state of Islam as
essentially hostile to liberty is correct. From my perspective,
were this to be true, it would mean more conflicts in the future
and not fewer (as is implied by the notion that violent Islam is
withering in the face of a modernized version).
I honestly believe that she is wrong on that. To use GWB's words,
the West should be attempting to win Muslim hearts and minds.
Certainly not by escalation of more wars, unless in clear self
defense (as what happened with Afghanistan). Why am I right? This
whole "America is Satan" thing and terrorism are modern phenomena
-- only in the last 30-40 years or so. Where in Islam does it say
go blow yourself up? Has suicide bombing been practiced by Muslims
before Palestinian militants started employing it? In fact suicide
bombing was first practiced by the Tamil Tigers, and before them
has been practiced in history.
Humans, all humans, love and want liberty from tyranny. It is a
matter of time. And it could just be me, but I do not think that
that means entirely abolishing Islam by Muslims. Liberty and Islam
can co-exist. It is just a matter of time. But if the West follows
Ali, it is truly going to be disastrous.
Humans, all humans, love and want liberty from tyranny. It is a
matter of time. And it could just be me, but I do not think that
that means entirely abolishing Islam by Muslims. Liberty and Islam
can co-exist. It is just a matter of time. But if the West follows
Ali, it is truly going to be disastrous.
True but this would mean that Islamic countries (Iran, Syria,
Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and others) would have to give up investing
in the sabatoge of the West's attempt to bring liberty and
Democracy to Iraq (It has suceeded in that, now we are attempting
to keep the peace so that the government can govern itself.)
The Palestinians along with the rest of the Muslim world will also
have to allow Isreal to coexist peacefully.
This is a lot easier said then done when you consider what the
thugs routinely say that run these Muslim countries.
The Netherlands is awful?
S of S, she isn't from the Netherlands.
Now, in retrospect, I've never been to the Netherlands, so...
West's attempt to bring liberty and Democracy to
Iraq
Do you truly believe that democracy can be spread by the use of
force, even if well intentioned? It took Americans 200 years before
the revolution to develop American Democracy and to decide to get
rid of the Brits. Sure there are thugs in the ME. But blame the
thugs, not an entire group of people who belong to a specific
religion. Last time I checked, these very people hate their
leaders, and not they do not trust the Islamists to govern the
respective countries. Again, you really need to read more than the
right-wing neocon crap. And no, I do not believe that
reason or libertarianism is right wing. So may be you are
in the wrong place.
I have been to Amsterdam, and loved it. Not so sure if I had felt comfortable in the Red Light District. But it was freedom and liberty taken to the limit (or as close to them limit as I have ever seen).
Paul,
Her last place of residence was the Netherlands, and she has lived
there from 1992.
ChrisO,
I am not stretching anything in the least. Jesus was an apocalyptic
preacher (like many in his day) with all the entails.
Ben Rushing says:
"Most atheists in America have come from a christian background
(like myself) and therefore just deride thier Christian upbringing.
This woman is doing the same, but this time to Islam."
Use of the word "deride" is the what I am curious about. Tell us
Ben, is their any fact or interpetation of Islam that Ms Hirsi Ali
states that is incorrect? For example, when she says :
"Where I come from, in Islam, the only concept of God is you submit
to Him and you obey His commands, no quarreling allowed. Quarreling
or even asking questions means you raise yourself to the same level
as Him, and in Islam that's the worst sin you can commit."
Is she deriding Islam by saying this or is she stating something
that is critical, but, nonetheless true?
To the muslims on this board, tell us please if Islam allows you to
quarrel with Allah, and if so, please provide some examples how you
have questioned the word of Allah, in public, preferably. Perhaps a
posting, or a blog entry you have composed. Tell us please what
teachings of the prophet mohammed that you reject and the reasons
you reject same? Tell us whether, in the 1,350+ years of islamic
history whether any muslims scholars were ever ,successfully ( and
without being killed for blaphemy, no Irshad Manji's either) ever
quarreled with the word of Allah or the teachings of Mohammed? And
while you're at it, point to one fact about Islam that Hirsi Ali
states that is not true?
I don't think you can or you will.
Hirsi Ali's evaluation of Islam is 100% correct, her motivations
notwithstanding. It is simply to fantastic an idea for most people
to grasp, particularly those who have not bothered to learn of the
origins of the Koran , the history of Islamic jihad, and the life
of mohammed. You can't fathom the possibility that Hirsi Ali may be
correct because of the implications to the West.
iih
Read some Islamic history. Read a not too friendly critique of the
Koran and what it says about muslims' duty to spread the word of
Allah by holy war. The Koran does not limit the means or the tools
that can be used to spread Islam. That is why Hirsi Ali points to
Islamic schools in the west (the dawa tool) as well as violent
jihadist. If bombs were available in the time of Mohammed you
better believe he would have used them. (if he had them, he would
never have had to leave Mecca for Medina). Do you think that
beuuase the Koran doesn't mention nuclear weapons that we ought not
worry about Ahmedinejad because they are not mentioned in the
Koran?
Please, whatever else you do, do NOT use GWB as any type of
authority on Islam. He is an ignorant fool when it comes to knowing
what Islam is all about. His nonsense about Islam being a religion
of peace does more harm to our country than than a thousand Nancy
Pelosi's.
Sounds like she's still a tribalist. She's just changed her
tribe.
She's also got a wicked case of pessimism bias.
iih says we can bring democracy to Iraq.
".. blame the thugs, not an entire group of people who belong to a
specific religion. Last time I checked, these very people hate
their leaders, and not they do not trust the Islamists to govern
the respective countries. Again, you really need to read more than
the right-wing neocon crap."
The neo-cons ( Bush, Rice, Cheney, Hughes, Rumsfield, Perle,
Wolfowitz, et all) DO BLAME THE THUGS. That is of course, if those
extremists and radicals and fundamentalist or whatever else you
want to mislabel them as, are the thugs referred to. That is what
makes them neo-cons.
Islam and liberal democracy cannot exist in the same polity. Islam
requires adherence to Sharia law. Sharia Law prohibits freedom of
speech, freedom or religion and allows blatent discrimination of
jews and women. The common Iraqi, those "ordinary moms and dads"
Bush refers to, may want to exercise all those freedoms, but they
cannot practice liberal democracy and Islam simultaneously. If you
can explain how Sharia law and liberal democracy are compatible (I
presume you are aware that Sharia law is made an integral part of
Iraq and Afhganistan consitution).
That is not "right-wing neo-con crap".
Well not every Iraqi is Muslim or Arab. That is why the Kurds
are sucessful, they lived in oppression for far too long. The
Christian Iraqis that I have talked to have told me that they are
scared of being kidnapped by Iranians or Foriegn Arabs when they
leave the base to go get more stuff. The Muslim Iraqis have started
to reject the crazyness of thier faith in order to justify helping
America. Some will go so far as to violate the Koran and say that
Women should be treated as equals in the new Iraq. What we are
seeing is a religion weakening. This will eventually lead to an
increase of Atheism in Iraq. I am not right wing, just
anti-statist. As I said this war is not on the political map but on
the ideological map of how we should deal with statism. Fight it,
or let millions suffer.
I am not happy to know that the world has major problems that the
US has solved years ago that remain unsolved in the third world,
when we know that the cause of it is bad government.
There was a very non-socialistic approach to solving problems that
Jesus has said and that is: If you give a man a fish, you feed him
for a day. If you teach a man to fish you feed him for life.
I feel that our training and equiping of Iraqi troops teaches them
to be reliant on theirselves. Eventually we will only be in Iraq
for positioning reasons, just like we are in Germany, Italy, Japan,
Kosovo, Korea (even though the war with the North is at a
ceasefire) our presence there will allow the world to see what a
nation like Iraq can become with democracy. Hopefully Iraqis will
elect free market civil libertarian thinkers to govern themselves
on the comming elections.
If this happens I can definitly say that Iraq will be better off in
the next 10 years, than they would have in 30 years without us.
Liberty creates wealth this is not an accident.
UsorThem:
I'll only respond by giving you two quick examples: Al-Ghazali. His
critical thinking led him to disbelief in God and, ultimately,
through reason reworked his way back to mainstream Islam. Despite
this huge excursion from the norm, he is today considered as one
the greatest thinkers. In that link I give, check who he's
influenced by. Many of his contemporary Muslim thinkers where
equally critical of everything Islamic and otherwise. And, yes,
this kind of discourse and critical thinking is missing in the
Muslim world. Does this mean we have to get rid of the whole thing
by naively believe that the religion of 1.2 Billion people can
simply be eradicated?
Ibn al-Arabi is
another philosopher whom the Islamists today would hate to see
speak. But he is widely accepted despite his statements and
beliefs.
Given the website you link to, I think my breath will be wasted on
you. But, yes, there are statements in the Quran that limits the
use of force in wars (e.g., surat Baqara a verse essentially says
something to the effect: "Fight (in self-defense), but do not
transgress". Transgression (beyond self defense) is mentioned
frequently in the Quran -- just go read it, but read it
properly and not superficially. There is also the
famous verse "There is no
compulsion in religion" and "To you your religion, and to me
mine" [Surah 109]). You see there is room here for something. But
people like you wish to just crush any such possibilities of
reconciliation, multiple interpretations, or giving moderate
Muslims a chance to say that there is a leeway here that can get us
all out of this apocalyptic vision of the world (in Islam there is
no apocalypse, BTW).
Whatever you want to do, please just don't tread on me. Yes, I am
Muslim, but I am peaceful and so are most of the several million
Muslims in this country. I respect what the US stands for. I love
the liberty and freedoms I am offered here. And, please, do not
seek to change the constitution or get rid of the Bill of Rights
while you are on your "crusade", for Ali seems to suggest something
like that.
Where I come from, in Islam, the only concept of God is you
submit to Him and you obey His commands, no quarreling
allowed.
"Where I come from". Okay, her sect of Islam was pretty intolerant.
Is that all Muslims everywhere?
No. Islam, period. Once it's defeated, it can mutate into
something peaceful. It's very difficult to even talk about peace
now. They're not interested in peace.
No. Islam, period. Once it's defeated, it can mutate into
something peaceful. It's very difficult to even talk about peace
now. They're not interested in peace.
I think that we are at war with Islam. And there's no middle
ground in wars. Islam can be defeated in many ways. For starters,
you stop the spread of the ideology itself; at present, there are
native Westerners converting to Islam, and they're the most
fanatical sometimes. There is infiltration of Islam in the schools
and universities of the West. You stop that. You stop the symbol
burning and the effigy burning, and you look them in the eye and
flex your muscles and you say, "This is a warning. We won't accept
this anymore." There comes a moment when you crush your
enemy.
There is no moderate Islam. There are Muslims who are passive,
who don't all follow the rules of Islam, but there's really only
one Islam, defined as submission to the will of God. There's
nothing moderate about it.
I stand by my analysis: this is Ann Coulter with an uplifting
personal story.
de·ride (d-rd)
tr.v. de·rid·ed, de·rid·ing, de·rides
To speak of or treat with contemptuous mirth. See Synonyms at
ridicule.
Ok ok bad choice of words. Sometimes former Christians do this with
thier belief. I think that she is doing this because of all of the
harm dealt to her. She might be accurate, but i don't think that
she is lying at all. I mean I understand that a religion can weaken
this is what I see with Christianity. But in Islam this does not
happen too often they go with the Koran too often. If christians
did this there would be rich men with 6 or 7 wives in America
because the Bible has no specific law forbiding it I mean King
David had how many wives and concubines yet still managed to find
time to commit adultry!?
And, one last thing, again, as long as I and other Muslims in this country abide by the law, please do not tread on us. As for those that you are crusading against, if they happen to be the Islamist terrorists, I'd be more than happy to stand by you and your organization. Unfortunately, what you are proposing will harm many many innocent standbiers simply because they happen to be Muslim.
"And, one last thing, again, as long as I and other Muslims in
this country abide by the law, please do not tread on us...
Unfortunately, what you are proposing will harm many many innocent
standbiers simply because they happen to be Muslim."
US Or Them Is simply going off on Pure Islam. Just like Pure
Christianity (taking all of the bible in a literal sence, and
saying that it is the perfect word of god) is easy to do. I
understand what you are saying, but you are sounding like the
christians when you say that we shouldn't want to destroy your
ideology. We don't want to keep you out of your Mosque, but if the
Mosque is supporting Terrorism or advocating financial harm or
personal harm, then the police and law should go after it and bring
people inciting the riot to justice using the legal system.
All ideas are subject to criticism. I, as an moral agnostic (morals
preventing physical and financial harm), can see the falicy of all
religion. Yours is not above criticism. Taken in a litteral sence
Islam is foolish and dangerous (so is the Old Testament). If you
are offended when someone asserts that someone with a litteral
interpretation of Islam (or even the Old Testament) cannot accept
democracy or Libertarian ideals of allowing people to live freely,
then you are foolish.
What you are advocating is a less devoted following of your faith,
which is fine. But just like with Christian leaders, some Immam out
there will say that you can not believe what you believe and be
Muslim. It is just the truth. Just as some Christians will say that
about other sects of thier faith. But your idea of Islam would be
unlike what most of the Islamic world has already seen, and if
sucessful will lead (just like protostant christianity did) to a a
weaker view of Islam and/or Atheism. That is why Pro-American
Immams are getting killed, because the fundamentalists need the
faith to control people. This was true of the Vatican and is true
of the black house in Mecca.
In truth, I have a great deal of internal conflict about what
she says in the interview, and about this debate in general.
First of all, let me provide some context. I was born in the Soviet
Union, and have a gut-level hatred of government control of
individuals "for their own good", or for "the good of society". I
was also educated at the University of Chicago, and have a strong
belief in the power of markets. I also hold the firm conviction
that people who commit themselves to the effort and sacrifice of
coming to this country (and if you don't know what it's like to be
uprooted - lose all connection to everything you have ever known
and loved - please don't minimize how serious a decision that is)
tend to contribute to this society far more than the average
American born and raised to expect a comfortable life. Also, I
think it's clear (as the Cold War showed us) that open societies
outproduce autocratic societies so drastically that in the
medium-to-long run a democratic society will always win.
What I am most uncertain about in the article itself is Hirsi Ali's
statements about shutting down Islamic schools. The classical
liberal in me really buys into the idea of "I may disagree with
what you say, but I'll defend to the death your right to say it"
(sorry, at the moment the attribution of this [?mis]quotation is
escaping me).
In the larger picture, there is something that I would like to
believe - that fundamentalist Islam is doomed in any society like
the US, no matter how quickly they immigrate or breed. Let me
explain first, and then I would love to hear y'all's opinions
(yeah, I spent many years in Texas... you got a problem with the
way I talk? :)
There is a classic book called "Coup d'Etat - A Practical
Handbook", by Edward Luttwak, written in 1968. It outlines what
sort of societies are susceptible to violent overthrow, and backs
up the reasoning with many and diverse examples from the history of
the 19th and 20th centuries. In order for a country to be a good
setting for a coup, most of the population has to be almost
completely removed from political life. The USA is a textbook
example of a place that is NOT susceptible to a coup. The
population here is absolutely not content to receive governmental
edicts and accept them quietly. No matter how autocratic and
ideologically inflexible our current president may be, it's a far
cry from Middle Eastern societies. Also, the organs of power (the
military, police, etc.) are definitely not under the direct and
firm control of a few individuals, or even a single power group.
The military does answer to civilian/political control here, and is
not going to become an instrument of broad domestic political
repression, but can certainly take out groups of wackos (even well
organized ones - remember Waco).
Now, let's accept the premise that there are millions of Muslims
infiltrating our country. Let's also accept the premise (and I do)
that they want complete power. No, these are not nice guys - they
want to enslave or kill everyone who does not agree with
them.
How could they do this? If they commit terrorist acts here, they
will bring down upon themselves an enormous storm of vindictive
power, enforced by the most advanced intelligence and military
force ever assembled. If they want to take over politically... what
happens then? Do you believe for a moment that they will be able to
coordinate their political agendas well enough to make a single
political masterstroke that lands them in power? I don't. I think
that in order to gain any ground and make their influence felt,
they'll have to form political parties. As soon as they do that,
they effectively buy into our political system. They will HAVE TO
compromise, negotiate, wheedle, sell out, run focus groups,
campaign, etc. etc.
What I am saying is that to have any power in our society, they
will have to become part of the society, and then they will
inevitably lose the monolithic fundamentalism that makes them such
a threat to the ideals of a (classical) liberal society.
So, why not let them in and let them talk? It's just talk, and our
ideas are better than theirs, in a very concretely demonstrable
way. What's more recognizable worldwide, the star and crescent, or
the Coca-Cola sign?
OK, I know that there are lots of logical holes in the argument I
have made. It's not a tightly written position paper. I hope that
through debate and argument, some parts will be weakened, and
others strengthened.
but if the Mosque is supporting Terrorism or advocating
financial harm or personal harm, then the police and law should go
after it and bring people inciting the riot to justice using the
legal system.
And trust me that I'd be the first one to report it.
All ideas are subject to criticism.
Of course! When I say "don't tread on me" I mean physically. Ideas
can be fought or argued by other ideas. As I said earlier above,
and in the previous post regarding Ali, I'd pay from my own money
to protect her (for reasons mentioned in the previous thread on
Ali). I have numerous times spoken out against the violent
reactions by some Muslims. But I would also speak out against
collectivists like "UsorThem". You simply can't lump all Muslims in
the terrorism basket.
If you are offended when someone asserts that someone with a
litteral interpretation of Islam (or even the Old Testament) cannot
accept democracy or Libertarian ideals of allowing people to live
freely, then you are foolish.
I would be foolish indeed. As others on H&R know of my
opinions, I am for responsible free speech (as George Bernard Shaw
once said: "Liberty means responsibility. That is why most men
dread it.") But I am most certainly not against unrestricted
freedom of speech. I only think that one is smarter than the
other.
some Immam out there will say that you can not believe what you
believe and be Muslim.
That imam would indeed be dead wrong. But most imams I have seen in
the US, Canada, and abroad would not accuse me of such a thing. We
may have lengthy arguments, but not to the level of accusing me of
not being Muslim. All the ones I have seen in the US (all have been
affluent parts of the country, so I do not know about all imams, of
course) would not accuse me or other liberals of not being Muslim.
The imams in Mecca, BTW, would probably be very tolerant of America
(simply because they are appointed by Bush's friends in the KSA
Royal Family). I have heard them (on TV) speak extensively in favor
of toleration and rejection of violence. But there is speech is
considered mostly PC since they are watched by many around the
world.
Grisha G:
I, for one, wholeheartedly agree with you, despite the porousness
of the arguments (but which can be fixed in a full paper) ;-)
(simply because they are appointed by Bush's friends in the KSA
Royal Family).
You mention the worst country in terms of spreading wahabism and
then actually believe that you are safe. Tell that to any of the
Iraqi families who are victims of Muslim Terorism started shortly
after the Baath party fell. The Saudis (royal family) put on a
false front to keep thier oil flowing, they don't teach thier
people about it and depend on foriegn employees to run thier rigs.
The Saudi Royal Family has befriended every American President for
the longest time, they needed to. They distribute as little oil
money as possible and use it to fund all kinds of activities. They
commit public beheadings and punishments for all kinds of crimes.
They supply money for elaborate mosques in the western world where
the Muslim population is few and poor, and knowingly support
Terorism. If that is not bad enough they do not allow any liberty
for common women in thier country. They allow a montly crew of
religious police to beat people publicly (especially women) for
violation of the "holy" muslim law. Tollerant? Yeah right. If you
would have mentioned the Immams in Dubai who turn a blind eye to
the prostitution and dress of the foriegn women there, you might
have had a chance. But Jumpin Jimmney Jesus H. Christ man! Saudi
Arabia Immams as "tollerent"? You have got to be kidding me!
iih says:
Yes, I am Muslim, but I am peaceful and so are most of the several
million Muslims in this country. I respect what the US stands for.
I love the liberty and freedoms I am offered here. And, please, do
not seek to change the constitution or get rid of the Bill of
Rights while you are on your "crusade", for Ali seems to suggest
something like that.
A few questions for you as a Moderate peaceful muslim:
Does the Islam not teach muslims to look at the world as between
only two types of humans, believers and non-believers?
Does not the Koran and the teachings of Mohammed direct you spread
Islam until it dominates the world? (I am not asking if you do
this, I ask if that is what Islam teaches) and that where it is
dominant, the sharia law should apply?
Do not all 5 schools of Islamic jurisprudence hold that jihad (not
the "peaceful inner struggle" nonsense) is the duty of every
muslim?
Would you like to see Sharia law become dominant in the U.S.?
Do you think you could maintain your peaceful, free and liberated
lifestyle here in the U.S. if Islam was the dominant religion? or
if Sharia law applied instead of the constitution?
Grisha G: "What I am saying is that to have any power in our
society, they will have to become part of the society, and then
they will inevitably lose the monolithic fundamentalism that makes
them such a threat to the ideals of a (classical) liberal
society."
Have a think about what happened in Lebanon.
She makes the same point as you - that the trouble is with us.
Islam is not a strong enemy provided we have our house in order.
But we don't. That is her point.
As Walid Shoebat (ex PLO) says to those such as (most of) the
commentators here: "What part of 'kill the unbeliever' don't you
understand?"
Ben: You missed my point. Read my sentence again. At some point you referred to the imams in Mecca. I was just pointing out that they do not usually sound like the extremist types because they are appointed specifically to be PC towards the West (i.e., for propaganda purposes). I was not defending them, the general imams in KSA, and certainly not the Royal Family or Bush for that matter.
My goodness even Micheal Liberal Statist Moore went off on Saudi Arabia! How nuts is that? I don't think that you live in reality. No one could possibly take you seriously.Have you been on a haj? I know that the company I work for does work in Saudi Arabia and they have a major major zero tollerence policy for that area. It is the same for Dubai. It all involves personal behavior, that is legal in the US. To be totally respectful we were told durring ramadan not to drink, eat, or smoke in the daytime in public view. We went so far as to move the resturaunt in the hotel to a spot where we couldn't even be seen, and this is Dubai! Saudi Arabia? Give me a break!
Islamic leaders put on a fascad when speaking to the west and often say different things when in public. This occurs all of the time in the Muslim world. Lebenon is a great example. So to are the traitor Palestinians in Kuwait in 1991 when they were invaded by Iraq. The Palestinians showed the Iraqis where everything was and gave aid and comfort to them.
UsOrThem: Good questions indeed. But one minor correction: Islam commands that the Good Muslim work to spread Sharia over the world, not Islam.
Grisha G
I think you can find answers to all of your issues by looking at
Europe today.
There is no "coup" occurring in the sense you refer yet muslims are
slowly taking control over many institutions in Europe.
In Europe muslims are immigrating in astounding amounts. They
refuse to assimilate since that would mean abandonement of their
religion. It is forecast that a muslim majority will prevail in at
least 1 european country within 25 years. (Holland or Belgium?)
Amsterdam and Rotterdam will become muslim majority cities within
10 years.
Muslim conquest of europe is not an organized coup in the sense
that there is one central authority that controls all european
muslims and that there is an accpeted leader of such coup.
But it is common knowledge among the ummah that conquest will occur
over the long term and they need not do much more about it as long
as a. immigration continues ,and, b. muslim birthrates continue to
exceed those of native europeans. Demographic conquest is every bit
as effective as violent jihad. But what is going on in europe is
still jihad, that is, spreading Islam by whatever means
available.
Ali is trying to bring what is occuring in europe to our attention
here in the U.S. She is trying to tell us that it could happen here
as it is happening in europe. As long as our laws, particularly the
constitution, treats Islam as ONLY a religion, it is a possibility
that it becomes the dominant religion. That is what Ali is talking
about when she says we in the U.S. are eventually going to have to
change the constitution so that Islam is treated not just as a
religion, but as a political organization, just as every bit
threatening to liberty and freedom as communism.
So does the Royal KSA Family have no control of thier country? Who is really in charge there?
Does the Islam not teach muslims to look at the world as
between only two types of humans, believers and
non-believers?
Not my version. Mine also talks about the sinners, the hypocrites,
the good Christians, and even non-believers. I personally have many
good Jewish, Christian, atheist friends at work and on-line
(including here on H&R).
You still have not responded to any of my comments above.
What do you think of the Muslims mentioned in my comment at
9:24pm? Aren't these Muslims
Does not the Koran and the teachings of Mohammed direct you
spread Islam until it dominates the world? (I am not asking if you
do this, I ask if that is what Islam teaches) and that where it is
dominant, the sharia law should apply?
No. According to the interpretation I follow (which I learned in my
country of origin before coming here), this is not true. I by the
way went to a British school for K-12 and an American school for
college, before continuing my education here.
Do not all 5 schools of Islamic jurisprudence hold that jihad
(not the "peaceful inner struggle" nonsense) is the duty of every
muslim?
"peaceful inner struggle" is not nonsense. It is the "major" jihad.
The "minor" jihad, according to my personal belief, can only be
done in a matter of self defense. If there has been Muslims and
Muslim leaders who have abused that definition, as I mention in a
comment above in some detail, then they have abused then
they, not me, should be blamed for it.
Would you like to see Sharia law become dominant in the
U.S.?
Call me a liar, but NO.
Do you think you could maintain your peaceful, free and
liberated lifestyle here in the U.S. if Islam was the dominant
religion? or if Sharia law applied instead of the
constitution?
Call me a liar, but NO.
There you go. Why don't you answer my single question:
How do you think these
Muslims, and these other Muslims
would respond to your questions?
So does the Royal KSA Family have no control of thier
country? Who is really in charge there?
The wahabis, but when it comes to the imams of Mecca and Medina,
these are selected by the Royal Family to be as PC vis-a-vis the
west as possible.
I am reading her book now. It is awesome. She was in the belly of the beast and knows what the dealth cult of islam is all about. We need to destroy it. Completely. She is correct. The big shooting war is coming. If iran has its way it will be nuclear war. Kill the troubled ones, men, women and little shahids. They will kill us.
It seems to me that bin Laden and company are "good Muslims."
They embrace the Quran and Hadith totally. They don't pick and
choose. So when they're told by the Quran to compel people to
submit to God (Sura 9:29), they believe and they act on it.
Many Muslims don't believe totally in the Quran and Hadith -- thank
goodness.
So isn't Hirsi Ali is correct after all? In other words, Islam is a
problem to the extent that people actually believe in it?
iih
I read your referenced wikipedia links to Al-Ghazali. I do not find
any mention of how he quarelled with Allah or Mohammed.
I did read about his love for sharia law. Is there something about
him I cannot locate and that you can explain makes him any
different from a modern day so-called Islamic scholar? What did he
quarrel about?
re: Ibn Arabi- instaed of me reading a bunch of pages that may lead
nowhere- why don't you tell me how he quaralled with Allah and
Mohammed?
Re: the no compulsion in religion. You write like an intelligent
person. yet, you attempt to persuade by citation to this verse, as
most muslim apologists do, as if to indicate that Islam teaches
NOTHING about the blatent and explicit directions for how muslims
are to treat kaffir.
You know about abrogation I bet , yet you fail to mention how the
later verses abrogate the earlier ones. Right there, by doing that,
you instantly lose credibility as to your agenda.
Yes, like many muslims, you have non-muslim friends, but we know
what the Koran says about NOT having non-belivers as friends.
So you, don't want sharia law, (do you defend a persons right to
flush a koran down the toilet?- not do you approve of it- do you
recognize a persons right to do this?) you have non-muslim friends
despite the Koran's clear prohibition in keeping non-believers as
friends,...you are willing to challenge the word of Allah and of
Mohammed teachings...
So what is left for you in Islam to call yourself a muslim? You
basically reject most, if not all, of what Islam teaches, why even
continue to call yourself muslim? family pressure? peer pressure?
what is it about islam that makes you proud to remain a muslim?
what redeeming features are there that I should know about?
iih
re muslims in the military.
EVERY muslim in the military should be asked to take the following
oath, and, if ever found doing ANYTHING contrary to the promises
and statements made therein, should be immidiately dishonorable
discharged from service:
We are secular Muslims, and secular persons of Muslim societies. We
are believers, doubters, and unbelievers, brought together by a
great struggle, not between the West and Islam, but between the
free and the unfree.
We affirm the inviolable freedom of the individual conscience. We
believe in the equality of all human persons.
We insist upon the separation of religion from state and the
observance of universal human rights.
We find traditions of liberty, rationality, and tolerance in the
rich histories of pre-Islamic and Islamic societies. These values
do not belong to the West or the East; they are the common moral
heritage of humankind.
We see no colonialism, racism, or so-called "Islamaphobia" in
submitting Islamic practices to criticism or condemnation when they
violate human reason or rights.
We call on the governments of the world to
reject Sharia law, fatwa courts, clerical rule, and
state-sanctioned religion in all their forms; oppose all penalties
for blasphemy and apostacy, in accordance with Article 18 of the
Universal Declaration of Human rights;
eliminate practices, such as female circumcision, honor killing,
forced veiling, and forced marriage, that further the oppression of
women; protect sexual and gender minorities from persecution and
violence;
reform sectarian education that teaches intolerance and bigotry
towards non-Muslims;
and foster an open public sphere in which all matters may be
discussed without coercion or intimidation.
We demand the release of Islam from its captivity to the
totalitarian ambitions of power-hungry men and the rigid strictures
of orthodoxy.
We enjoin academics and thinkers everywhere to embark on a fearless
examination of the origins and sources of Islam, and to promulgate
the ideals of free scientific and spiritual inquiry through
cross-cultural translation, publishing, and the mass media.
We say to Muslim believers: there is a noble future for Islam as a
personal faith, not a political doctrine;
to Christians, Jews, Buddhists, Hindus, Baha'is, and all members of
non-Muslim faith communities: we stand with you as free and equal
citizens;
and to nonbelievers: we defend your unqualified liberty to question
and dissent.
Before any of us is a member of the Umma, the Body of Christ, or
the Chosen People, we are all members of the community of
conscience, the people who must chose for themselves.
This is the St. petersburg declaration. I belive Hirsi Ali helped
draft it. What do you think? Would you sign such a declaration?
Even though it presumes that Muslims are traitors by definition,
I would if it makes everyone feel safer.
P.S., I have never felt any offense when asked to be "randomly
searched" at airports.
I would not sign this.
I would not because the premises with which it is based on are
false on a grand scale.
Furthermore, the very fact that Muslims are asked to sign this in
contrast to anyone else of any other faith implies that there is an
implicit anti-freedom streak in 'default' Islam.
Hypocrisy at its peak.
iih,
Even though it presumes that Muslims are traitors by
definition, I would if it makes everyone feel safer
... You sadden me with this statement my sister. Dont appease those
fools.
UsorThem:
Referring to your post before the last one:
You see, you are trying to define what kind of Muslim I am. I think
we are playing around terms here (intentionally or
unintentionally). I think I do understand your concerns. I do get
concerned, too. You may feel like undermining my loyalty. I really
do not know what to tell you. But may be this will help:
1. Yes, Ali should be protected. Her freedom of speech allows
discussions like the one we had above. I think that was useful.
Same goes for all ex-Muslims and all critics of Islam, including
Manji, Shoebat, and others.
2. You may not trust my or other Muslims' intentions. You have
every right to do so. But that is why there is the law of the
country. If a Muslim is shown to intend to harm the country, then
that person should prosecuted and sent to jail. But without that,
no one has the right to assume that a person is guilty until proven
otherwise. That is exactly how I feel about your questioning my own
intentions.
If it is worth anything to you. On 9/11 I was with a Gulf
War I veteran AF pilot. i was there for him to secure a land line
to call his wife. He was there for me to give me a sense of
security -- me being a Muslim and possibly endangered on that very
sad day. I will never forget that from him. I am
grateful.
I believe that all the wannabee and actual terrorists caught here
and abroad deserve what they get for intending to harm others using
terrorism.
The 6 imamns deserved what they got for their stupidity. I think
the whole public foot baths thing in Minneapolis stupid and should
not allowed (they actually cause more harm than any good, plus
there are substitute solutions -- I know that).
And the list can go on.
So please call me what you want. But, just don't tread on me or
other peaceful/passive/fake Muslims (whatever you want to call
them) in this country. We do not deserve that treatment. Among
these Muslims are those who are in Iraq right now, translators,
marines, etc (see above links to the two articles about the Muslims
in the Military), serving this very country, and freedoms and
liberties that we all have here. Is it possible that I, too, serve
this country in my own capacity?
And, yes, if it makes you feel safer, I'd take that oath (though I
think I did something similar when I first landed here).
Actually, USorThem, re-reading it very carefully, I have no problem with the oath (with all its postulations) at all. The only problem I have with your proposition is that it singles out Muslims.
Unfuckingbelievable. She had to flee the Netherlands because her
friend Theo van Gogh was mudered by a muslim who also threatened to
kill her, all for daring to participate in a movie criticizing the
treatment of women by muslims and she is the one being called
unhinged? I guess it was Salman Rushdie's fault that he had a
contract placed on his head.
"Furthermore, the very fact that Muslims are asked to sign this in
contrast to anyone else of any other faith implies that there is an
implicit anti-freedom streak in 'default' Islam. "
This should be no mere implication, rather it should be an explicit
statement of fact.
It is no coincidence that the majority of the most regressive,
anti-democratic regimes on earth are in countries with muslim
majorities. I will defend Islam from anti-democratic criticism when
the pillars of its faith, as expressed by the koran, do not call
for the forced conversion or subjugation of non-muslims. And please
do not waste my time and yours trying to convince me that the Koran
does not advocate this. Furthermore, when muslims admit that the
founder of their religion was a war-mongering pedophile, I will
perhaps listen to what they say. The history of Islam is almost
entirely (I am probably being to charitable in including the word
almost) one of conversion by the sword; a vast amount of its
adherents still follow this principle. Until Islam is honest about
its past and until more than a handful (this is probably too
generous of an estimate)of "moderate" muslims protest the actions
of their murderous brothers, I will call Islam and the koran what
they really are: blueprints for the most violent, misogynistic,
backward-thinking, perpetually-stuck-in-the-dark-ages
societies in existence.
Regarding your request:
I read your referenced wikipedia links to Al-Ghazali. I do not
find any mention of how he quarelled with Allah or Mohammed.
His philosophy led him to deny the existence in God. He was not
killed or anything of the sort. Later in his life, he "found his
way back to Islam". But the fact remains that he did at some point
become an atheist without being killed.
Ibn al-Arabi, like many sufis said and believed many things counter
to basic Islamic belief (e.g., among them wine drinking) but was
not killed. Same can be said of sufis in general. Sufism
flourished, declined, and flourished over time. Read Rumi's poems
for example and you will understand the level of "blasphemy".
Muslims saved, kept and studied Greek philosophy, why weren't there
mass killings of those who saved, kept and studied these texts
(which obviously was Helenic, with the obvious implications
vis-a-vis Islamic beliefs in God, etc)?
Mr Jews-Dont-Kill-People-Over-Cartoons-but-
will-kill-them-over-land-thats-not-theirs-anyway,
This should be no mere implication, rather it should be an
explicit statement of fact.
It is no coincidence that the majority of the most regressive,
anti-democratic regimes on earth are in countries with muslim
majorities.
Let me be blunt: I dont give a flying f**k over what other Muslims
are doing, any more than a give a flying f**k over how often people
in Uganda receive blowjobs.
This isnt a statement about THEM. Its really, a statement about US.
Me. Her. Other muslims. About your average Muslim signing such a
document, implicitly assuming that he is in fact guilty of being
violent 'by default'.
If you subscribe to that, then you assume that WE are guilty until
proven innocent. Coming from what appears to be a Zionist anyway, I
shouldnt be surprised, you Zionist Jews are all crypto-Facsists
anyway. I thought all the Germans were doing were cooking you in
those camps, I didnt realise they had Fascist seminars too.
Either way, touche.
Ryan, you wrote;
"Fix the US foreign policy that is guaranteeing a dead end for
young people, and you end recruitment. Why? Because making money
and enjoying life are more important than any religion, judging by
the number of people in the US who are Christians in name only but
really practice a religion of materialism instead."
How exactly does US foreign policy leads to a dead end to young
people? Care to elaborate?
'An Arab' writes:
"You Zionist Jews are all crypto-Fascists anyway?"
Behold, the face of moderate Islam.
RuyDiaz,
Oh I forgot, now we Muslims have no right to call people Fascists.
You do of course. How silly of me.
I tell you what all this talk about what rights we Muslims have,
dont have, what we are guilty of by default and stuff me making me
very confused. Is there a brochure we can look over telling us what
we statements we are and arent allowed to say, and what political
parties we are supposed to submit too?
Gladly awaiting. :)
"An Arab";
You are missing my point. I'm just glad you show your true colors;
by bringing your "fascistic" nonsense, you are undermining the
Taqiyya/Kitman your correligionaries practice.
By the way, did somebody censor my first post? I think my initial post lambasting Muhammad was erased, but, er, I may have simply pressed the wrong button somewhere.
I thought all the Germans were doing were cooking you in
those camps, I didnt realise they had Fascist seminars
too.
Wow! It only took one comment to get "An Arab" into a
frothing-at-the-mouth fit of hysterical rage and bigoted
hate.
I'd hate to see how he drives on a busy Interstate.
RuyDiaz,
You are missing my point. I'm just glad you show your true
colors; by bringing your "fascistic" nonsense, you are undermining
the Taqiyya/Kitman your correligionaries practice.
Did I sign a paper somewhere stating I was supreme ambassador of
all Muslims, or are you just telepathic?
What did I have for lunch yesterday? Ha! Trick question. I didnt
have lunch.
In all seriousness though, this is interesting:
Somehow, you just know that my 'co-religiouaries' are
hiding their 'true colors' through taqiyya. If they say something
you like, you assume they are hiding. If I say something you dont
like, you say 'Aha! You WERE in fact hiding! ALL of you!'
Games. What silly games. My god man youre worse than my
ex-girlfriend.
Tell you what: Prove your telepathic powers to me - you already
know that I consider Jewish Zionism Fasicsm as some promiment
Israelis will tell you themselves, (they add thats its necessary),
but please, based on this, tell this forum what this Muslim's
political views are. Deduce my own political views for me. You seem
to know what goes on inside my head. Go for it.
Wow! It only took one comment to get "An Arab" into a
frothing-at-the-mouth fit of hysterical rage and bigoted
hate.
Ahh this is hate right?
But this is not:
This should be no mere implication, rather it should be an
explicit statement of fact. (that muslims are guilty by
default).
Wow.
Re: "An Arab"
I'm talking about you, not him. What he has to say is irrelevant
concerning my criticisms of you. Stop playing silly tu
quoque games.
My religion, Buddhism, teaches that hate cannot counter hate; only
loving-kindness can counter hate. With your tasteless comments on
the Holocaust, you are only proving the stereotype that your
religion counters everything by drawing your "trusty
skibouk/with a cry of 'Allah! Il Allah! Al-lah!'"
An Arab
Your vitriol for zionist confirms everything Hirsi Ali has to say
about the danger Islam poses to the free world.
You say:
"About your average Muslim signing such a document, implicitly
assuming that he is in fact guilty of being violent 'by
default'.
The Koran, supported by hadith, and scores of Islamic scholars
throughout Islam's 1350 year history confirm that the Islam teaches
that death to apostates is appropriate; so is death to homsexuals
and adulterers, and to those who blaspheme the Allah or mohammed.
There are many books available to infidels to detail the 1,350
history of violent Islamic jihad that resulted in the death of
millions of people in the world from Algeria to Indonesia for the
simple fact that they were not muslim.
Mohammed, the perfect Man, the role model for all devout and true
muslims, uswa hasana, al-insan al kamil, lived a life of violence
and taught his followers the proper use of violence.
So yes,An Arab, there is REASON to presume any person who calls
themself a devout muslim, has an inclination of towards violence in
the name of religion. Islam as a supposed "religion" explicitly
sanctions that violence. It is written in the holy books for all,
including apostates such as Hirsi Ali and her infidel admirerers
(such as myself), to examine. So asking a muslim who claims to be
devout and pious, and therefore holy and spiritual, and who seeks
to enter the military, where a muslim's allegiance to Allah
supercedes allegiance to country, can lead to much harm to that
country, is a most REASONABLE request.
iih wrote,
There is also the famous verse "There is no compulsion in
religion" and "To you your religion, and to me mine" [Surah
109])
This is an example of Taqiyya, or Islamic lying. Surah 109 is one
of the earlier Suras, called the "Meccan" Surahs because they were
"revealed" when the Islamic prophet Mohammed had not yet been
thrown out of Mecca.
What most non-Muslims fail to realize is that later suras abrogate
earlier suras. This way, the Koran doesn't contradict itself when
sura 9:5 states, "Then, when the sacred months have passed, slay
the idolaters wherever ye find them, and take them (captive), and
besiege them, and prepare for them each ambush. But if they repent
and establish worship and pay the poor-due, then leave their way
free. Lo! Allah is Forgiving, Merciful." (The "poor-due" mentioned
here is the jizyah.)
How can one reconcile 9:5 with "no compulsion in religion"? It's
unnecessary, because 9:5 abrogates it.
Tell me, iih, does 9:5 govern the way that Muslims are supposed to
treat non-Muslims? Is it binding? Many Muslims say that it is. What
is your Islamic way of repudiating their claim? (Perhaps you'll
bring up the Crusades?)
In Europe muslims are immigrating in astounding amounts.
They refuse to assimilate since that would mean abandonement of
their religion. It is forecast that a muslim majority will prevail
in at least 1 european country within 25 years. (Holland or
Belgium?) Amsterdam and Rotterdam will become muslim majority
cities within 10 years.
Muslim conquest of europe is not an organized coup in the sense
that there is one central authority that controls all european
muslims and that there is an accpeted leader of such
coup.
There is a term for this. It is: Demographic
Conquest.
It's a shame that we have to continually define and explain this
term to people in this day and age. But let me give everyone a few
more examples of Demographic Conquest.
1. "Manifest Destiny" was a euphemism for it.
2. When Israelis were doing it in Gaza and the West Bank, it was
called "settlements".
3. Mexicans are presently doing it in several cities in the
USA.
And so on, and so forth. It's happened many, many times in human
history. Armies and declarations of war are not always necessary to
conquer another land. It's possible to do it with civilians and
history proves me right. It's how this country (the USA) was
created, after all.
Islam delenda est.
The Koran, supported by hadith, and scores of Islamic
scholars throughout Islam's 1350 year history confirm that the
Islam teaches that death to apostates is appropriate;
It depends.
The "People of the Book" (Jews and Christians) were given three
options:
1. Convert to Islam
2. Become a dhimmi and pay the jizyah
3. Fight
The "Polytheists" (in practice, Hindus) were not given option #2.
They had to convert or die. But some Muslims later included them in
"dhimmifyable" peoples. I imagine that counts as a "controversial
issue" in Islamic culture.
Islam delenda est.
This discussion has taken a wrong turn a while back, and I'm
afraid some legitimate issues are being obfuscated. No offense, but
the argument over doctrine and original text doesn't mean much
here. Such arguments carry the assumption that muslims all agree on
which parts of their text to live by. Clearly they don't. Just as
clearly, religions in practice in almost every case deviate wildly
from whatever doctrines have been laid out historically.
To me, what is of concern is the extent to which Islam in practice
in 2007 is hostile to liberal ideologies. Is there an inevitable
war of values because most muslims in 2007 hold views, for whatever
reason, that are inconsistent with western notions of a free
society?
Framed another way, the appropriate response to a withering fringe
movement is to ignore them in large part. The response to a
majoritarian movement of people who hold that it is good to silence
cartoonists may be entirely different.
Somehow, I find the term 'conquest' as applied to hispanic immigration hilarious. Do you get to use that word to describe any demographic shift? Nevermind the Mexican conquest, we are facing a much more substantial Old Fart conquest in these here United States.
USorThem :
"EVERY muslim in the military should be asked to take the following
oath, and, if ever found doing ANYTHING contrary to the promises
and statements made therein, should be immidiately dishonorable
discharged from service:"
I agree completely that an oath along the lines of what you posted
should be required, but not only of muslims. If we could make it
apply to all religions, I'd support such an idea.
I know the founding of our country was a long time ago, but oddly
enough, the founders seem to have anticipated this. What an
excellent principle: "Practice your religion in private, but don't
push it into my government (extended to any exercise of government
power)."
Do you get to use that word to describe any demographic
shift?
I can tell you're not taking this seriously, but I'll answer you
anyway.
No. If Mexicans emigrate to the USA, then that's not necessarily
demographic invasion. It's when they start flying Mexican flags
over US flags, start putting up billboards that read "Los Angeles,
Mexico", and start aggressively marching in the streets that it
takes a "We Mexicans are TAKING OVER!" flavor. I know, it's kind of
fuzzy, but since when are a conquering culture supposed to be overt
and clear about their desires? If they wanted to be overt and
clear, then they'd use the army and then it wouldn't be demographic
invasion any more, it'd be just regular ol' invasion.
What did you think of my other examples of demographic
invasion?
Who rightly rules Alcase and Lorraine?
JasonL,
No offense, but the argument over doctrine and original text
doesn't mean much here.
No offense taken, and you're dead wrong. The argument over doctrine
(Shari'a) and original text (Koran and Hadith, and, to some extent,
Sira) are what this discussion is about, as those things are what
Islam *IS*.
What some Muslims practice is what doesn't mean much here, because
the "pure" Muslims will tell them that they are not practicing
"pure Islam" and will exhort them to participate in or support
jihad (those are the two choices Muslims have: if you can't fight,
then pay for someone else to fight).
What kind of response will the so-called "moderate" (in truth, LAX)
Muslims have that is grounded in Islam? How will they Islamically
say that they do not have to wage or support jihad?
And what should the non-Muslim response be?
Your words:
Framed another way, the appropriate response to a withering
fringe movement is to ignore them in large part.
"Ignore it and it will go away!"
Time will tell, dhimmi.
Manifest Destiny was a policy of just plain (no pun intended)
conquest. Soldiers were used to drive the conquered from their
lands.
Broadly, I think the idea that a culture is a monolithic thing
seeking expansion is a improbable. It seems like taking a
multi-variable problem, identifying a marker of some sort (whether
it be skin color, language, or a flag), and reducing the whole
problem to that symbol.
Concerning Islam, for example, my concern is one of values and not
imperialism. I don't perceive Islamic culture as an engine of
conquest. I don't care about language or customs or dress or color,
and in fact believe that more variety is better. What I worry about
is whether one of the defining characteristics of present day Islam
is opposition to liberal society.
"What kind of response will the so-called "moderate" (in truth,
LAX) Muslims have that is grounded in Islam? How will they
Islamically say that they do not have to wage or support
jihad?"
Religions of all stripes have faced modernization of exactly this
sort. It can be done because people always choose the parts of
doctrine they like and discard the rest. The doctrine is not the
religion because people aren't robots.
Mr Expat,
I'm talking about you, not him. What he has to say is
irrelevant concerning my criticisms of you. Stop playing silly tu
quoque games.
You are critisizing my response to him. Ergo, his response is
relevant and not independant. I can respect your love-counters-hate
argument, but often in real life, I find that it cannot be that
useful. Although I like to think it can be.
With your tasteless comments on the Holocaust, you are only
proving the stereotype that your religion counters everything by
drawing your "trusty skibouk/with a cry of 'Allah! Il Allah!
Al-lah!'"
Quite simply sir, my off-color holocaust remark is in response to
his off-color damnation of us all. Tit for tat. As simple as
that.
Furthermore, why do you assume, that my remarks on Zionism and the
holocast have ANYTHING to do with my religion?
Furthermore still, you say that those remarks reflect badly on my
religion - my response is that if you are to take anything 'bad' I
do and equate it to my religion, then you will always think my
religion is bad. Its like telling me that you shouldnt come to a
rolling stop at a stop sign because if you do, you will be
reflecting bad on your religion. One has nothing to do with the
other, and yet you assume they are intertwined.
In other words, damned if you do, and damned if you dont.
My critisizms of Zionism are based on its actions and goals as
chartered within itself. Its actions, players, and ideals are,
after you see them on my side of the planet, Fasicst. Simple as
that.
Now if you are going to say "Oh, yet another violent Muslim" - even
though there is no correlation between this statement and my
abstract faith, then you are the one making a false connection. Its
almost like argumentative-blackmail (is there a latin for that?).
Someone says 'if you slurp when you drink coffee ans are muslim,
you reflect badly on your religion'. That is the equivalent.
Either way I dont expect you, or anyone else of those Zionists on
here to understand this. (Im not calling you a Zionist).
But I do say it because what I see today, is Western Civilization
slowly lose the Civilization part of it - it slowly and slowly
erodes. Western Civ we are told is based on the enlightenment and
reason, but all I see when engaging people like Mr Jews-dont-blah
is fanaticism, hysteria, and guilty-until-proven-innocent
sentiments.
"Western Civ we are told is based on the enlightenment and
reason, but all I see when engaging people like Mr Jews-dont-blah
is fanaticism, hysteria, and guilty-until-proven-innocent
sentiments."
Western Civ lives as long as people get to say what they want and
not be threatened for it. Western Civ is not in danger because
someone said some extreme things on an internet forum. These places
attract activists rather than the majority of participants in
Civlilization (tm). Never forget that you are likely speaking to an
activist and not the guy across the street. At least, I find that
thought generally comforting.
JasonL,
Western Civ is not in danger because someone said some extreme
things on an internet forum.
This is true, just as its true that I have not made such an
implication.
Your point is well taken, and I see where you are coming
from...
But by the same token, one activist here, one activist there, a
couple newspaper endorsements, etc etc, it all adds up. Pretty much
you have a sizable category of Westerners preaching 'non-Western'
values. (As I notice). This is the issue/irony I am referring
to.
JasonL,
Manifest Destiny was a policy of just plain (no pun intended)
conquest. Soldiers were used to drive the conquered from their
lands.
You are partially correct. Soldiers were used once the indigenous
people starting resisting the demographic invasion. Read about the
Homestead Act or the history of Texas.
Broadly, I think the idea that a culture is a monolithic thing
seeking expansion is a improbable.
That's an ignorant thing to say. Read about the Commonwealth. Why
do people in India play cricket?
Concerning Islam, for example, my concern is one of values and
not imperialism. I don't perceive Islamic culture as an engine of
conquest.
That is a profoundly ignorant thing to write. I think your
statement comes from willing, deliberate ignorance. Why was the
Spanish Reconquista called a REconquista?
I don't care about language or customs or dress or color, and
in fact believe that more variety is better. What I worry about is
whether one of the defining characteristics of present day Islam is
opposition to liberal society.
We first have to agree as to what "present day Islam" is and
whether or not it is "true" Islam. The Muslim Enemy (you know, the
so-called "fringe") says that their Islam is the "true" Islam and
they have the Koran and Hadith and Sira and Sunnah and Shari'a to
back them up. Their view of Islam is spreading among lax Muslims.
How will lax Muslims repudiate their message Islamically?
And if we ignore that problem will it just go away?
Time will tell, dhimmi.
Islam delenda est.
JasonL,
Religions of all stripes have faced modernization of exactly
this sort. It can be done because people always choose the parts of
doctrine they like and discard the rest. The doctrine is not the
religion because people aren't robots.
Yes, people can say that.
And then other Muslims call it "kufr" (disbelief) and kill the
kafir (unbelievers) which is keeping in Islamic traditions. The
Islamic prophet Mohammed said, "He who changes his religion, kill
him." In other words, the response you propose is NOT Islamic, and
I asked you for an Islamic response.
Were you trying to show me that there is no way a Muslim can refuse
to engage in or support jihad and be Islamic? You succeeded.
Islam delenda est.
An Arab,
Furthermore, why do you assume, that my remarks on Zionism and
the holocast have ANYTHING to do with my religion?
We can read the Koran and we know what it says about the Jews. Your
religion teaches you to hate them. That's why it's very Islamic of
you to teach Muslim children to hate Jews. Have you seen Farfour
the Mouse and Nahoul the Bee? Islamic schools = child abuse.
Islam delenda est.
iih,
I think you should forsake Islam completely. If you absolutely must
be superstitious, then you may choose any other religion in the
world, for none of them are as bad as Islam.
Of course, if you take my advice, then some Muslims (perhaps An
Arab?) will try to kill you, and that is Islamic.
Islam delenda est.
I stand by my analysis: this is Ann Coulter with an
uplifting personal story.
Oh yeah, well you're Noam Chomsky without the tweed. Whee, this
game is fun.
No. If Mexicans emigrate to the USA, then that's not
necessarily demographic invasion. It's when they start flying
Mexican flags over US flags, start putting up billboards that read
"Los Angeles, Mexico", and start aggressively marching in the
streets that it takes a "We Mexicans are TAKING OVER!" flavor. I
know, it's kind of fuzzy, but since when are a conquering culture
supposed to be overt and clear about their desires? If they wanted
to be overt and clear, then they'd use the army and then it
wouldn't be demographic invasion any more, it'd be just regular ol'
invasion.
This is not "conquest" or "invasion" by any reasonable definition.
There's no evidence that Mexican immigrants resist assimilation
more than past immigrant groups. The USA survived the Irish
invasion, the Italian invasion, the Chinese invasion, the Jewish
invasion, etc, just fine, and Mexican immigration is no
different.
I do think that those of us who follow reason should exhort
Muslims to abandon their faith and do so openly, pointedly, and
frequently.
If that statement offends you, then re-read it replacing "Muslims"
with "Christians". If the revised sentence offends you less than
the original, then there is something horribly wrong with you.
Daze,
This is not "conquest" or "invasion" by any reasonable
definition.
The "Los Angeles, Mexico" billboard (with "CA" crossed out) begs to
differ. There are plenty of Mexicans who feel like they're taking
over and they like that very much. Not all Mexicans feel that way.
It's only a percentage (how large?) of the several million illegal
aliens living here presently.
There's no evidence that Mexican immigrants resist assimilation
more than past immigrant groups.
Por que puedo leer espannol, he leido muchos opiniones de
inmigrantes en el periodico hispanoamericano "Mundo Hispanico".
Eses eran opiniones que dicen que no hay mucho ...
Oh, you don't speak Spanish? Well then. Because I can read Spanish,
I recently read in the local spanish-lanugage newspaper "Mundo
Hispanico" several opinions from many different immigrants in which
was stated that a latino can live in the USA for *years* (even as
much as ten years) without any need to learn English. This is
because there are so many illegal aliens here now that they form
large communities in which Spanish can be spoken in totality and
the culture can be completely separate. Furthermore, my good friend
and co-worker's wife is Mexican and he also has lived in Mexico for
several years, so he has a keen insight into the lives of Mexicans
who live in the United States. It was he who told me that Mexicans
who come here illegally aren't "resisting" assimilation. Instead,
they aren't even trying because they do NOT want to be American.
But I suppose you in your lily-white cordoned enclave would know
nothing about this.
The USA survived the Irish invasion, the Italian invasion, the
Chinese invasion, the Jewish invasion, etc, just fine, and Mexican
immigration is no different.
No different...
...except for the SCALE of the immigration.
And the sense of grievance. Remember the Mexican-American war? The
one that happened right before the War between the States? Do you
remember when our troops marched into Mexico City, lowered the
Mexican Flag, and raised the American flag? Do you remember when we
were given half of their country as a result of completely
conquering them?
Do you think they might feel a little bit bitter about that?
JasonL wrote: "Is there an inevitable war of values because most
muslims in 2007 hold views, for whatever reason, that are
inconsistent with western notions of a free society?"
Yes.
Islam as practiced today (since its inception, really) is
completely incompatable with western ideas of freedom and
tolerance. Which is why I've said from the onset that what I view a
a "noble experiment" in Iraq was doomed.
Western nations with Constitutions requiring freedom of religion-
definately and immiediately including my own USA- should draft
amendments that in effect define Islam as the intolerant, sexist,
homophobic, violent hate group it is.
Islam: pervert it, kill it, or surrender to it; you cannot just
co-exist with it as a free man.
Islam: pervert it, kill it, or surrender to it; you cannot
just co-exist with it as a free man.
How do you kill Islam?
read christopher hitchen's God is not great. You can't kill a religion, you can put in translated rouge brodcasts of Penn and Teller's Bull Shit! And Libertarian Propoganda that shows the failure of Islam and Dictatorships, Statism, Communism, and Socialism. Islam will only meet the same fate that Christianity met when you show them that they can live better without Sharia law.
Islam will only meet the same fate that Christianity met
when you show them that they can live better without Sharia
law.
Who is currently living under Sharia? Emperical evidence suggests
that its not as popular as you imagine it to be, save for a few
loud mouths.
Either way, the problems in the Middle East are political and
territorial - you are barking up the wrong tree imagining that if
everyone left Islam the ME would be a better place. The middle east
has more glutony than Vegas. Although ill tell you, a world without
Israel would solve a lot.
An Arab,
you are barking up the wrong tree imagining that if everyone
left Islam the ME would be a better place.
That's true only if the ex-Muslims pick an ideology which is worse
than Islam. They'd probably have to invent one, because I cannot
think of any of the world's religions which is worse than Islam.
Islam is rock bottom when it comes to world religions.
Although ill tell you, a world without Israel would solve a
lot.
Yes, we get it! You hate the Jews! Very, very Islamic of you!
Islam delenda est.
Yes, we get it! You hate the Jews! Very, very Islamic of
you!
hahahaha! I actually mentor a Jew in maths (for free) and have many
of them as close friends.
So I dont hate Jews, I hate Zionists, (a subset of Jews). Those are
the ones that need to be eradicated one way or another. (From
Israel). In USA we have to let them speak because I support freedom
of speech as Ben Franklin said I dont agree with you, but I will
fight for your right to say it. So in USA, we must engage Zionists
in debates to make them see the error of their ways.
But in Israel, where Zionists have engaged in action, that deserves
action, implies Israel needs to be wiped out!
Islamofascism vs. Christian Fundamentalism: Which is the Greater
Threat?
I view the contemporary Islamofascist memeset as currently more
globally dangerous to freedom and tolerance than the Fundamentalist
Christian one, for a number of reasons.
1) Recent History
The lion's share of mass-killing terror attacks in the past
quarter-century have been perpetrated by these people, and not
Fundamentalist Christians (although they, too, are on my "Danger,
Will Robinson!" list). 9/11, London, Beslan, Bali, Madrid, the USS
Cole, the Kenyan and Tanzanian embassies, the Khobar Towers...the
list could go on and on.
2) Fundamentalist Literalism
Christians believe that the Bible was written by human beings,
under Holy inspiration, while the official position of Islam is
that the Qu'ran (literally, the Recitation) was dictated to
Muhammed, from Allah (God) by the Archangel Gabriel, and is
word-for-word accurate and correct for all time. Thus, while there
is a reasonable split between Fundamentalist Christians, who take
the Bible literally, and the rest of Christians, who see parable,
poetry, metaphor, simile, era-linked human prejudices,
contradictions and inaccuracies in the Bible, no such split is
officially possible within Islam. All observant Muslims are
expected to submit to the literalist stance; in fact, Islam
translates as Submission.
3) More Violent Character
While there are a half-dozen or so peace-and-tolerance passages
contained within the Qu'ran, there are also more than a hundred
vicious and violent passages to be found there. People say, well,
the Old Testament is indeed itself to a significant degree a
'testament' to divinely sanctioned brutality, and this is true.
However, most of that brutality was superseded by the
pronouncements in the more peaceful and tolerant New Testament,
while the Qu'ran is divided into the Meccan and the Medinan
sections. The Meccan section, which came first, when Muhammed was
militarily weak and was forced to placate his enemies, contains all
of the peace-and-tolerance passages, while the Medinan section,
which contains many (although not all) of the brutal and violent
passages, was written later, and supercedes the more moderate
Meccan section. It is as if, in the Bible, the Old Testament came
later and superceded the New; if this were so, the majority of
Christianity would most likely be much more brutal and intolerant
than small sections of it (see the former Yugoslavia) are
now.
In fact, there is no such thing as enduring peace with infidel
nations in the Muslim lexicon; instead, they employ truces
(hudnas). These are, according to the Qu'ran, supposed to be
offered when the Faithful are militarily weak vis-à-vis their
adversaries, to give them time to increase their military numbers
and augment their armaments. When the weak faithful become
militarily strong compared to their adversaries, the hudna is to be
unilaterally broken by the faithful, and jihad is to resume. Once
one understands the conceptual character of the hudna, it becomes
obvious that it is never in a nation's interest to accept
one.
4) The Examples of the Respective Primary Protagonists
Jesus only once became violent in the Bible, when he whipped the
moneychangers. Mainly, he preached faith, love of one's neighbors,
and nonviolence. When one of his disciples raised a sword against
and cut the ear off of one of the people sent to arrest him, he
supposedly put it back on. Muhammed, on the other hand, was
historically a warrior and guerilla fighter. His life was
circumscribed by military conquest. The hadiths, which are records
of occurrences in and commentaries on the life of Muhammed and
records of his words (when they were not supposed to be dictated by
the Archangel Gabriel), are nearly as important as the Qu'ran
itself to them.
5) The Confrontation with Modernity
Christianity began to behaviorally moderate and domesticate itself
around 500 years ago, due to the effects that the Reformation and
the Enlightenment had upon it. Islam has yet to go through this
confrontation; it is only now just beginning for them. However, in
the present era, with the advent of global anonymous communications
and travel, and with easy access available to both the materials
needed to construct WMD's and the knowledge needed to properly
employ these materials, this is a particularly dangerous time for
fanatics to lash out from the growing pains. Giordano Bruno
conceived of relativity 350 years before Einstein and was burned as
a heretic for it, and rockets (fireworks) were already known to
Europe by then, due to Marco Polo's sojourn in China; think of what
it would have been like if the medieval world had had the option of
ballistic thermonuclear conflagration (not to mention genetically
engineered plagues and mass-produce-able deadly chemical
compounds). There is the added factor that one of the Muslim
death-penalty heresies (or shirks) translates as 'innovation'
(Islamists are quite willing to appropriate death-dealing
technology while rejecting the science behind it - a Pakistani
'scientist' actually wrote a paper that advocated solving his
country's energy problems by harnessing djinn (genie) power!); thus
it can be dangerous for Muslims to publicly embrace novel concepts
- and this will only make it more difficult for Muslim adaptation
of include accommodation to other perspectives rather than to
simply be comprised solely of the Borgian assimilation, subjugation
or elimination of all of their vectors.
6) The Evolution of Universality and Intolerance in Totalizing
Memeplexes
Mind viruses are unlike the viruses that plague our bodies. If a
physically infectious disease kills its host too quickly, that host
cannot serve as an infection vector (which is why AIDS is so much
more of a global threat than the Ebola virus - the long,
symptom-free yet contagious incubation period). This is also why
deadly diseases demonstrate the historical propensity to become
slower killers as time goes on. However, a different survival
strategy presents itself for totalizing mind-viruses, which MUST be
cognitively rather than physically communicated, and thus, if they
are elaborate and/or involve significant behavioral changes,
difficult to contract under the radar of one's attention: to kill
and/or enslave all those who RECOGNIZE the attempted dissemination
(proselytizing) and REFUSE to be infected (part of these memesets
is invariably the inculcation of the desire and/or duty to infect
others - this is how they propagate). This eliminates competition
for cognitive residence from alternative memeplexes (the dead
cannot communicate their competing vectors). Unlike physical
diseases, where people may be infected with multiple differing
phages simultaneously (like measles AND the flu), a totalizing
memeplex must have SOLE possession of its niche, or it cannot be
said to possess it at all. And in fact, to reject conversion to
Islam is considered by Islamofascists to be an insult and attack
upon it, punishable by death.
Now, remembering that the historical function of tribal religion
has been to enhance group cooperation and cohesion, thus giving
religious tribes an advantage in warfare against tribes with less
mutual commitment and more individualism (and most likely the
pre-historical function, too - thus setting up a group selection
which would tend to reproductively favor those who were
increasingly susceptible to infection by religious memeplexes),
let's take a quick look at the evolution of universality and
intolerance in Patriarchal Monotheism.
The memeplex of Judaism originally involved a divine gift of a
particular parcel of land to a particular chosen people - Israel
for the Jews (although, lately, converts to Judaism, although not
sought, are accepted from every racial and ethnic classification).
Thus the parameters for the growth of the Jewish memeplex were set
by the nature of the memeplex itself - only within ethnic Jews, who
were only promised dominion over historical Israel (most Zionists
still think this way).
However, with the evolution of Christianity from Judaism, the
ethnic imperative and the geographical rootedness were pruned off,
and all one had to do was to accept the memeplex. This allowed
Christianity to spread to all sorts of ethnicities, and for them to
take control of previously non-Christian lands, as their
demographics grew to majority within them. It also had the
advantage of spreading the genetic sacrifice idea beyond a tribe,
so that multiple tribes sharing the same memeplex could band
together and both protect each other and cooperate in the
confrontation of common enemies (a feature that the Roman Empire
put to conscous use when they adopted Christianity as the state
religion of the Roman Empire). However, Christianity was written so
it could be disseminated via persuasion - the Great Charter, which
comprises the Christian memeplex's infection module, reads: "Go ye
therefore and TEACH all nations". Of course, the construction of
this module implies the conviction that the vector is offering a
gift of knowledge to the ignorant, and for this reason many have
been historically forced to adopt Christianity 'for their own
good', even when they were too (willfully or otherwise) ignorant to
recognize what their own good was, and sometimes at the cost of
their mortal bodies, if in the process their immortal souls were
saved.
Still, the language of Christianity's proselytization module is
persuasional rather than coercive, and this left room for the
development of tolerance for other faiths, even while missionaries
continue to be perpetually funded to 'spread the Good Word'.
This is a weakness that the evolution into Islam has exploited. The
Muslim memeplex explicitly substitutes coercion for persuasion. It
is quite precise in what may and may not be done: all 'People of
the Book' - that is, Jews and Christians (and I suppose
Zoroastrians - they have a single holy book called the Zend Avestra
of Zarathustra)- have the option to a) convert to Islam, b) be put
to death, or c) live in Dhimmitude, a serfic, subservient state
somewhere between slavery and second-class citizenship,
characterized by less civil rights, the fact that any Muslim's word
will always be legally favored over theirs in courts of Shari'a
law, and the payment of perpetual monetary tribute known as the
jizya. For all the rest - Buddhist, Taoists, Hindus, Pagans and
Atheists - the options are only two: convert or die.
Islam officially divides the globe into two camps; Dar-el-Islam
(the World of Islam) and Dar-el-Harb (the World of War). This
stance entails the conviction that the only means by which final
global peace may be attained is the total elimination of the Dar el
Harb, and the establishment of a Global Muslim Caliphate ruled by
Shari'a law. Those who choose to embark upon Jihad (actually, it is
described in the Qu'ran as a duty rather than as a choice just like
Christian witnessing is in the Bible) and are killed (martyred)
while engaging in it, are Qu'ranically assured of a Paradise in
which they may perpetually and guiltlessly enjoy practically all of
the pleasures that are religiously forbidden to living Muslims;
those who live are Qu'ranically permitted to take possession of the
spoils of war, be they the property or the women of the conquered
and/or slain infidels. This stance is, of course, patently
hegemonistic and militantly imperialistic, and becomes even more
appealing to poor male Muslim youth, when they see their chances of
having their own (appealing) wife as negligible (since the more
wealthy Muslims are religiously free to marry as many as four of
them each - as long as they can financially support them all). When
one takes a look at the historical spread of Islam, primarily by
coercion and conflict, from its inception in the Arabian Peninsula
some 1300 years ago to its reach from Spain to the Philippines
today, and one discovers that, of the forty-five military conflicts
extant in the world today, Muslims are fighting on one or both
sides of them all, it would appear that this particular module
possesses great expansionistic efficacy.
Supporting this memetic module are some others, such as the
doctrine that all humans are naturally born as Muslims, and that
those who profess other beliefs have fallen into apostasy (and thus
must be rescued from their error or suffer the dire consequences),
and the dictum that people are free to convert TO Islam - in fact,
as we have seen, the 'inducements' are quite formidable - but that
to convert FROM Islam to anything else (or, in the case of atheists
and agnostics, to nothing) is a religious crime for which the
punishment of death is prescribed. It is also better for one's
assimilational purposes if one's infidel target is kept in the
dark. Thus, Muslims are religiously free to both deceive infidels
as to their intentions regarding them (taqiyya) and to misdirect
their attention from those intentions (kitman), in the interests if
the greater good - that is, in the interests of the expansion of
the Ummah (the fellowship of the true believers).
Now, I'm not saying that all Muslims, or even a majority of them,
are inexorably drawn from live-and-let-live tolerance to Mujaheddin
Jihadism in the service of the annihilation of the Dar el Harb and
the establishment of the Global Caliphate (Daniel Pipes estimates
the number at around 15%), but the vast majority those who are not
so drawn are very quiet, because the message contained in the
memeplex of Islam supports not them, but the militants, and they
are quite reasonably frightened of suffering the Righteous
Retribution of the Violent Faithful should they dare to attempt to
speak out in dissent (Some exceptions are Salman Rushdie, Ayaan
Hirsi Ali, Irshad Manji, Taslima Naslim, and Ibn Warraq; these
brave souls continue to suffer for their courage and integrity, and
many of their outspoken brethren have been killed).
Next, let us take a brief look at the particular strain that is
presently so globally troubling.
Imaam Muhammad Ibn Abdul Wahhab was born in and lived in eighteenth
century Arabia (1703-1792), and promulgated the idea that Islam had
fallen away from its seventh century roots, the Edenic era when
Muhammed and the Four Great Caliphs (Abu Bakr, Umar, Uthman and
Ali) succeeded each other, and needed to return to them. This
involved a Puritanical purging of all non-Muslim influences, the
return of draconian enforcement of religious edicts against
infidels, and the toughening of restrictions upon women. Wahhabism
subsequently spread throughout most of the Arabian Peninsula and
gained significant footholds beyond, but concentrated itself
primarily upon the peninsula itself, as the defender of the purity
of the faith in Muhammed's birth land, the Land of the Two Mosques.
In the early 20th century, the House of Saud brokered a deal with
the Wahhabists, and Saudi Arabia was born.
Sayyid Qutb was a Wahhabist born in Egypt (1906-1966). He traveled
to the US, and sojourned there between 1948 and 1950. This
experience shocked and disgusted him. He was horrified by the
presence of uppity and voting women, freedom of religion and
thought, widespread substance use and rampant sexual
licentiousness. He then put forth the idea that the US was the
fount of Jahiliyya (a word roughly translatable as pre-Musim
Paganism), and, as such, was a danger to Islam and must be forcibly
subjected to Shari'a rule. He did not view the US as a military
threat, since he believed that life in such a dissipative culture
had weakened and softened its citizenry, but rather contended that
its various freedoms and vices were slatternly temptations that
could seduce the faithful away from the true path. Thus, for the
good of both the faith and of all humankind, the US as it was must
be destroyed, and Muslim piousness enforced there. He later
generalized this view to include, first European, and later all
non-Muslim societies.
Notice that, without Qutb, Wahhabism would have remained directed
inwards, and without Wahhabism, Qutb would not have had a pious and
puritanical Islam with which to compare and contrast the US culture
that he encountered. Together, their contributions combine to
create the present Al Qaedan stance that the entire globe must be
subjugated to a religious regimen that consciously holds itself in
the seventh century. Interestingly enough, the head of Al Qaeda,
Usama Bin Laden, came from Saudi Arabia (like Wahhab), while Al
Qaeda's chief ideologue, Zawahiri, came from Egypt (like
Qutb).
Considering all of these points taken together, it is surpassingly
obvious that, in the present era, Radical Islamism is a far greater
threat to the continued existence of the secular, nonsectarian
governance of open and constitutionally democratic societies than
is Fundamentalist Christianity.
How do we, as free, democratic and tolerant societies, deal with
the aggressive encroachments of this virulent memeplex? I believe
that we're already on the path to doing so, and this is why:
The primordial form of government, one that long predated the
advent of the written word, is monarchial, composed of royal
masters, typically from a single family lineage that served as a
simulacrum of the genetic heritage of the tribe, and ruled slaves,
who owed the masters familial bonds of fealty. However, this form
of government often entailed power struggles and intrigues by the
royal relatives to either lay claim to or to seize the reins of
succession during the authority change when the king, czar, pharoah
or emperor would die, and this was not conducive to smooth and
orderly transition and the smooth continuation of civil
order.
Spoken religious myths had most likely been invoked to legitimize
royal rule for as long as humans spoke and gathered in tribes.
However, with the creation of written language, it was possible to
create a form of leadership that would not change or die like
rulers did; blueprints - that is, sets of ideas - that could codify
the regal rule as divinely sanctioned, serve as abstract monarchs
with which to supplement the concrete yet generationally changing
kings, provide a common glue which smoothed transitions and soothed
the populace while transition happened, and, via the inclusion of
explicit tribal history, the encoding of symbolic abstractions of
important past tribal decisions within the religious myth, or the
insertion of purportedly divinely communicated rules, provide both
guidance as to how such transitions should be effectuated, and
within what parameters a particular king should circumscribe his
decisional alternatives. These blueprints are the holy texts of
written religions.
As time passed, certain written religions spread across several
kingdoms each, and the kings themselves became in their turn ruled
by their ecclesiastical authorities, who held sway over multiple
kingdoms; as religion mattered more, royalty mattered less. In such
a manner, genetic monarchies gradually evolved into, or were
superseded and supplanted by, ideological monarchies, whose rulers
were chosen from within the membership of the religion itself, the
successor being decided, whenever a ruler died, via the consensus
of the most influential members remaining.
Where religious government was itself supposedly superseded, in
most cases, its supersession was apparent rather than real. Thus
with communism and fascism, the god of matter and labor, and the
god of the spirit (geist) of the people and its will to power,
replaced the transcendent god of heaven, mind and prayer. Still,
however, the master and the slave remained; the divinely granted or
prescriptively composed sets of ideas and rules were the
acknowledged rulers, but the actual rulers were those who mandated
to the general populaces what those rules meant. Hegel was the
philosopher who first explicitly described this structure.
The Hegelian master-slave dialectic was composed of Masters (who
were willing to risk death in order to rule) and Slaves (who were
not willing to risk death in order to not be ruled), and Hegel did
not present any manner by which governmental form could evolve past
this basic inequity. However, in the past couple of hundred years,
a synthetic new level has emerged, that of Free and Independent
Individuals, who refuse to rule others, but who are willing to kill
and die in order not to be ruled by others - that is, they are
willing to, in fact, even desirous of, letting others rule
themselves, and will even take pains to free enslaved others, but
in return they insist upon the right to rule themselves also, via
representatives who are neither divinely chosen nor doctrinally
imposed by exclusive vote from within an ideological apparatus, be
they priests or commissars, but are instead popularly elected by
the populace at large, in accordance with a constitution that, in
addition to codifying those ethical precepts contained within both
holy and secular precursors which are genuinely ethical, mandates
the existence, frequency, and structure of such a process. In a
way, the principle of ecclesiastical or commissar vote was
generalized to encompass the entire citizenry (just as, in prior
times, the Gutenberg printing press wrested the holy texts away
from their elite cadres and made them available for perusal and
judgment to all literate citizens), and a new memeplex has thus
evolved; the constitutional democracy memeplex
In fact, evolution is an explicit module of this memeplex; whereas
holy texts were forever frozen in their revealed forms,
constitutions could be amended or modified by elected
representatives responding to popular consensus in the face of
changing circumstances, like species evolve in response to natural
selection acting via changing environments. This capacity for
evolution from within relieves pressure for revolution, as popular
changes can be made to the established order without the need to
overthrow that order in its entirety. However, so that the rights
of minority citizens are protected from any oppressive 'tyranny of
the majority', basic guaranteed civil and political rights for all
are also included as a submodule qualification of the popular
evolution module. This submodule grants and guarantees all of the
memeplex's citizens equal rights and freedoms to individually
pursue their own personal and economic well being. The interpreters
of this constitution (the written and codified template of this
memeplex) are appointed by the popularly elected representatives of
the citizens, and those who amend it via legislation are separated
from those who execute its enforcement and from those who interpret
its meaning, as a barrier against groups of representatives
collaborating in order to create and implement mutually
self-serving rather than citizenry-benefitting changes, or issuing
and enforcing self-serving interpretations, and to prevent the
executors from authoring self-serving provisions which they then
may enforce to their own benefit, or from interpreting existing
provisions in self-serving ways. Of course, the concrete personal
and political reality of a citizenry as codified in their
constitution can never completely catch up to their abstract ideal,
as this ideal is itself a moving target, in constant evolution in
response to evolving and expanding potential rights,
responsibilities, opportunities and choices, but, as noted before,
their constitution can be continuously modified to progressively
approach it.
Competition between the governments and peoples of countries that
embrace this principle, that is, competition between constitutional
democracies, is removed from the politico-military sphere
(democracies generally do not war with one another - it's
counterproductive) and relocated in the economic sphere, comprised
of international trade and the competition between producers for
consumers via the manufacture of better and/or less expensive
products. This competition of course financially and materially
benefits the consuming citizenry, at the same time that it
furnishes them with gainful productive employment by means of which
they may self-support (self-support and self-responsibility being a
necessary corollary of freedom and self-rule). Thus, the
constitutional democracy memeplex is likely to appeal to a
significant percentage of those who presently suffer political and
personal oppression and economic privation under theocratic and
totalitarian systems, and are prevented by such systems from having
an electoral voice in their government's conduct, making personally
benefitting economic decisions, exercising personal choice, or
changing (or even advocating the changing of) the nature or rules
of the system in order to permit themselves to do these things.
This appeal renders it likely that the constitutional democracy
memeplex can, by offering people the opportunity to achieve
concrete and actual this-world economic benefits, expanded ranges
of personal choice, and genuine political empowerment, successfully
compete for their cognitive memespace with the abstract and
hypothetical next-world paradisiacal promises and infernal threats
proferred to them by the Wahhab/Qutb memeplex. The hope for the
future of secular and tolerant civilization could well lie in this
constitutional-democratic memeplex synthesis proliferating through
the populations of the globe, siphoning a large enough percentage
of their potential members away from the enslaving embrace of the
Wahhab/Qutb memeplex that they are unable, after membership
attrition via natural and jihad-related causes, to increase or
maintain their acolyte population, and finally ridding the world,
via democratic revolution (assisted where possible and necessary),
of the remaining totalitarian and theocratic enclaves which
continue to employ the oppressive master-slave dialectic, and
maintain their citizenries in its stifling thrall.
PS: Do not think that this is a racist stance which I am taking; I
am expressing dismay at the propagation of a violent, virulent
memeset that may cognitively infect any racial or ethnic
classification, and trying to figure out what can be said and/or
done to persuade Muslims to refuse to embrace it. In fact, there
are quite a few non-Muslim Arabs, and the majority of Muslims are
themselves not Arabs - the most populous Muslim nations are
Malaysia and Indonesia, and their populations are East Asian, not
Arab). Likewise, I am not criticizing Islam alone or in its
entirety; the problem we face and the task set before us is to gain
enough understanding of the workings of the Islamofascist memeplex
to be able to memetically counter the propensity, a propensity
particularly inherent in the Islamic memeplex but also present in
the memeplexes of the other Patriarchal Monotheisms, to facilitate
the spawning of intolerant and murderous mutational variants, such
as, in the case of Islam, the Wahhab/Qutb Al Qaedan strain.
Also do not think that I have written this analysis from the
standpoint of a hidden Christian or Jewish agenda. Putting aside
the fact that attacking the racial or ethnic membership or the
religious affiliation of the author of a position, rather than
critiquing the merits of the position itself by assessing the
evidence presented and checking the logical links in the chain of
reasoning by means of which the items of evidence are connected, is
a 2500 year old Greek logical fallacy known as ad hominem, I am
neither Christian nor a Jew, either ethnically or as a religious
stance; I am English, Irish, Dutch and Native American, and
consider myself to be a secular humanist with pagan overtones (I
tend towards sympathy with both the gender egalitarianism and the
ecologically friendly stance embraced by many pagan faiths and
their adherents, as well as their typically tolerant and positive
attitude towards the freedom of all to make uncoerced and
unfettered personal choices for themselves in matters both
political and religious, and their opposition to such matters being
dictated by some for others). I am not a fundamentalist of any
stripe. Philosophically, I favor existential and hermeneutic
phenomenology, Jean Piaget's genetic epistemology, semiotics, and
memetics (my BA is in philosophy) and my graduate studies have been
in interdisciplinary humanities, including philosophy, psychology,
sociology, anthropology, economics, political science, and
comparative religion.
I do, however, believe that the one thing that tolerant people
cannot tolerate is the coercive intolerance of others. Once people
begin to tolerate such a thing, it is a short and slippery step for
them to begin to share those others' intolerances, as well as the
coercive manner by means of which they endeavor to force such
stances upon people who would not freely embrace them (Tolerance:
Between Intolerance and the Intolerable by Paul Ricoeur).
John Quincy Adams wrote:
In the seventh century of the Christian era, a wandering Arab of
the lineage of Hagar [i.e., Muhammad], the Egyptian, combining the
powers of transcendent genius, with the preternatural energy of a
fanatic, and the fraudulent spirit of an impostor, proclaimed
himself as a messenger from Heaven, and spread desolation and
delusion over an extensive portion of the earth. Adopting from the
sublime conception of the Mosaic law, the doctrine of one
omnipotent God; he connected indissolubly with it, the audacious
falsehood, that he was himself his prophet and apostle. Adopting
from the new Revelation of Jesus, the faith and hope of immortal
life, and of future retribution, he humbled it to the dust by
adapting all the rewards and sanctions of his religion to the
gratification of the sexual passion. He poisoned the sources of
human felicity at the fountain, by degrading the condition of the
female sex, and the allowance of polygamy; and he declared
undistinguishing and exterminating war, as a part of his religion,
against all the rest of mankind. THE ESSENCE OF HIS DOCTRINE WAS
VIOLENCE AND LUST: TO EXALT THE BRUTAL OVER THE SPIRITUAL PART OF
HUMAN NATURE (Adams's capital letters)… Between these two
religions, thus contrasted in their characters, a war of twelve
hundred years has already raged. The war is yet flagrant… While the
merciless and dissolute dogmas of the false prophet shall furnish
motives to human action, there can never be peace upon earth, and
goodwill towards men."
Lord Tebbit wrote:
"The Muslim religion is so unreformed since it was created that
nowhere in the Muslim world has there been any real advance in
science, or art or literature, or technology in the last 500
years"
Vernon Richards wrote:
"The true Islamic concept of peace goes something like this: "Peace
comes through submission to Muhammad and his concept of Allah"
(i.e. Islam). As such the Islamic concept of peace, meaning making
the whole world Muslim, is actually a mandate for war. It was
inevitable and unavoidable that the conflict would eventually reach
our borders, and so it has."
Andre Servier, 1922 wrote:
"Islam was not a torch, as has been claimed, but an extinguisher.
Conceived in a barbarous brain for the use of a barbarous people,
it was - and it remains - incapable of adapting itself to
civilization. Wherever it has dominated, it has broken the impulse
towards progress and checked the evolution of society."
Theodore Roosevelt wrote:
"The Greeks who triumphed at Marathon and Salamis did a work
without which the world would have been deprived of the social
value of Plato and Aristotle, of Aeschylus, Herodotus, and
Thucydides. The civilization of Europe, America, and Australia
exists today at all only because of the victories of civilized man
over the enemies of civilization, because the victories stretching
through the centuries from the days of Miltiades and Themistocles
to those of Charles Martel in the eighth century and those of John
Sobieski in the seventeenth century."
"During the thousand years that included the careers of the
Frankish soldier and the Polish king, the Christians of Asia and
Africa proved unable to wage successful war with the Moslem
conquerors; and in consequence Christianity practically vanished
from the two continents; and today nobody can find in them any
"social values" whatever, in the sense in which we use the words,
so far as the sphere of Mohammedan influence. There are such
"social values" today in Europe, America, and Australia only
because during those thousand years the Christians of Europe
possessed the warlike power to do what the Christians of Asia and
Africa had failed to do - that is, to beat back the Moslem
invader."
David Selbourne - The Losing Battle with Islam:
"Of course, there are distinguished precedents even for the
bleakest and coarsest of these judgements. To Montesquieu in 1748,
Islam's 'destructive spirit' spoke 'only by the sword'; to
Schopenhauer in 1819, the Koran was a 'wretched book' in which he
had 'not been able to discover one single idea of value'; to De
Tocqueville in 1843, Islam was 'deadly', 'to be feared' and a 'form
of decadence'". -
Winston Churchill, wrote in 1899:
"The religion of Islam above all others was founded upon the sword
… Moreover it provides incentives to slaughter, and in three
continents has produced fighting breeds of men - filled with a wild
and merciless fanaticism".
John Quincy Adams who wrote in 1829:
"The precept of the Koran is, perpetual war against all who deny,
that Mahomet is the prophet of God. The vanquished may purchase
their lives, by the payment of tribute; the victorious may be
appeased by a false and delusive promise of peace; and the faithful
follower of the prophet, may submit to the imperious necessities of
defeat: but the command to propagate the Moslem creed by the sword
is always obligatory, when it can be made effective. The commands
of the prophet may be performed alike, by fraud, or by
force".
John Wesley (1703-91) who wrote,
"Ever since the religion of Islam appeared in the world, the
espousers of it...have been as wolves and tigers to all other
nations, rending and tearing all that fell into their merciless
paws, and grinding them with their iron teeth; that numberless
cities are raised from the foundation, and only their name
remaining; that many countries, which were once as the garden of
God, are now a desolate wilderness; and that so many once numerous
and powerful nations are vanished from the earth! Such was, and is
at this day, the rage, the fury, the revenge, of these destroyers
of human kind".
Hilaire Belloc who wrote in 1938:
"Will not perhaps the temporal power of Islam return and with it
the menace of an armed Mohammedan world, which will shake off the
domination of Europeans -- still nominally Christian -- and
reappear as the prime enemy of our civilization? The future always
comes as a surprise, but political wisdom consists in attempting at
least some partial judgment of what that surprise may be. And for
my part I cannot but believe that a main unexpected thing of the
future is the return of Islam".
Bishop Fulton J Sheen who wrote in 1950:
"Today (1950), the hatred of the Moslem countries against the West
is becoming hatred against Christianity itself. Although the
statesmen have not yet taken it into account, there is still grave
danger that the temporal power of Islam may return and, with it,
the menace that it may shake off a West which has ceased to be
Christian, and affirm itself as a great anti-Christian world
Power".
Patriarch Cyrus of Alexandria, while negotiating the surrender of
Alexandria to the Muslims, 640 AD:
"I am afraid that God has sent these men to lay waste the
world".
Gregory Palamus of Thessalonica, 1354:
"For these impious people, hated by God and infamous, boast of
having got the better of the Romans by their love of God…they live
by the bow, the sword and debauchery, finding pleasure in taking
slaves, devoting themselves to murder, pillage, spoil…and not only
do they commit these crimes, but even - what an aberration - they
believe that God approves of them. This is what I think of them,
now that I know precisely about their way of life.".
William Eaton, US Consul to Tunis, wrote in 1799:
"Considered as a nation, they are deplorably wretched, because they
have no property in the soil to inspire an ambition to cultivate
it. They are abject slaves to the despotism of their government,
and they are humiliated by tyranny, the worst of all tyrannies, the
despotism of priestcraft. They live in more solemn fear of the
frowns of a bigot who has been dead and rotten above a thousand
years, than of the living despot whose frown would cost them their
lives…The ignorance, superstitious tradition and civil and
religious tyranny, which depress the human mind here, exclude
improvement of every kind…"
And how about this quote from Ayatollah Khomeini from 1942:
"Islam makes it incumbent on all adult males, provided they are not
disabled and incapacitated, to prepare themselves for the conquest
of [other] countries so that the writ of Islam is obeyed in every
country in the world. But those who study Islamic Holy War will
understand why Islam wants to conquer the whole world…. Those who
know nothing of Islam pretend that Islam counsels against war.
Those [who say this] are witless. Islam says Kill all the
unbelievers just as they would kill you all! Does this mean that
Muslims should sit back until they are devoured by [the
unbelievers] Islam says Kill them [the non-Muslims], put them to
the sword and scatter [their armies]. Does this mean sitting back
until [non-Muslims] overcome us Islam says Kill in the service of
Allah those who may want to kill you! Does this mean that we should
surrender to the enemy Islam says Whatever good there is exists
thanks to the sword and in the shadow of the sword! People cannot
be made obedient except with the sword! The sword is the key to
Paradise, which can be opened only for Holy Warriors! There are
hundreds of other [Koranic] verses and Hadiths [sayings of the
Prophet] urging Muslims to value war and to fight. Does all that
mean that Islam is a religion that prevents men from waging war I
spit upon those foolish souls who make such a claim." - Ayatollah
Khomeini
In defense of the UK, Winston Churchill 1941:
You cannot tell from appearances how things will go. Sometimes
imagination makes things out far worse than they are; yet without
imagination not much can be done. Those people who are imaginative
see many more dangers than perhaps exist; certainly many more than
will happen; but then they must also pray to be given that extra
courage to carry this far-reaching imagination. But for everyone,
surely, what we have gone through in this period - I am addressing
myself to the School - surely from this period of ten months this
is the lesson: never give in, never give in, never, never, never,
never-in nothing, great or small, large or petty - never give in
except to convictions of honour and good sense. Never yield to
force; never yield to the apparently overwhelming might of the
enemy. We stood all alone a year ago, and to many countries it
seemed that our account was closed, we were finished. All this
tradition of ours, our songs, our School history, this part of the
history of this country, were gone and finished and liquidated
hahahaha! I actually mentor a Jew in maths (for free) and
have many of them as close friends.
What lovely Taqiyya!
"War is deceit." -- The Muslim prophet Mohammed.
So I dont hate Jews, I hate Zionists, (a subset of
Jews).
Again, lovely, gorgeous Taqiyya.
Is is Islamic to hate the Jews? Of course it is. I've read the
Koran. Do you pine for the days in which the rocks and trees will
call out to you, saying, "Oh Muslim, there is a Jew hiding behind
me, come kill him!"
But in Israel, where Zionists have engaged in action, that
deserves action, implies Israel needs to be wiped out!
Very Islamic of you.
I personally think that the ideology of Islam should be eradicated,
much like the ideology Nazism and the ideology of political
Shintoism were eradicated. I suggest that you abandon Islam
completely. It's the worst religion.
Islam delenda est.
"Hirsi Ali: Yeah, but there are rebels and rebels. There are
rebels who are always against something, like the Socialist Party
in the Netherlands. To them, rebelling itself is the aim. That's
where they get their thrill from. But I'm rebelling for something.
I want something to be established."
A lot of the old hippies in western universities railing against
the establishment don't realize that they are the
establishment.
Isn't this stupid woman a serial liar? Didn't she lie in the
Netherlands and got caught and was forced to resign over her lies?
Didn't she get eaten alive on The BBC about her lying?
She is stuck on stupid.
She was stuck on survival and escape.
Falsifiying some items on her admissions form was the only way that
she could gain admission to the Netherlands, and leave her past
horrors behind. Remember, she had her clit cut off as a child, and
was running away from a forced marriage to a stranger.
What lovely Taqiyya!
Ahh, I get it.
If a muslim says something 'bad', hes just being a true
muslim.
I a muslim doesnt say something 'bad', he is actually lying and did
in fact do something bad.
Two points:
1) Muslims arent robots.
2) You cant prove a negative.
3) You arent a Westerner in the ideological sense. More like a
fasicst. No wonder you cozy up to those Zionists. You are cut from
the same cloth afterall.
I hate this vague rhetoric about "facing down the threat". Name the policy. It sounds to me like she is advocating war with every country in which Muslims denounce the United States. If not that, then what?
Re: "An Arab"
"Invite (all) to the Way of thy Lord with wisdom and
beautiful preaching; and argue with them in ways that are best and
most gracious: for thy Lord knoweth best, who have strayed
from His Path, and who receive guidance." - Qur'an 16:125 - (Yusuf
Ali translation)
You fail at being a Muslim.
/end argument
It is always fascinating to listen to people who have absolutely no experience of a circumstance talk down to someone who has spent a lifetime living the circumstance. Let's not patronize the native chappies, shall we?
You fail at being a Muslim.
How right you are. Our faith is lost everytime one of us flies off
the handle in an argument.
All this is very entertaining. I have one guy telling me im a 'very
real' Muslim because I dont like Israel. I have another guy telling
me im not really a Muslim because I am not soft and nice when
argueing my point.
It makes me laugh! haha! Who ... who do you all think you are
anyway? hahahaha! Stupid Americans.
I am somewhat amazed by the facts presented in this article. It
seems to be written quite recently. However, last year it became
clear that AHA lied through her teeth to gain entrance to the
netherlands. Eg, the "heavy religious upbringing" was a lie. It
turns out she had rather enlightened parents, who let het study
etc, travel abroad and were no fan of the regime. Furhermore she
implies that she was forced to marry a man her parents had chosen
for her and that it was a great insult to the family honour to
defie her parents. In fact, the country she was brought up in,
doenst have "forced: marriage as most of the islamic countries do.
It is just not part of their culture. Let alone that she had to
flee from her parents. Though this is true for countries like
Turkey, where rampant daughters do have to be carefull not to get
murdered to satisfy the hurt pride of the family, it again is
something unformiliar in the country she was brought up in.
Howcome the writer of this article seems totally oblivious of these
facts. Most peculiar.
>How right you are. Our faith is lost everytime one of us
flies off the handle in an argument.
Damn! With the number of times that happens on any given day how in
the world does anyone find it? You would think it would be like
finding a needle in a haystack.
>All this is very entertaining. I have one guy telling me im a
'very real' Muslim because I dont like Israel. I have another guy
telling me im not really a Muslim because I am not soft and nice
when argueing my point.
Well we all know the first guy is right and not the second guy.
Vince,
Damn! With the number of times that happens on any given day
how in the world does anyone find it? You would think it would be
like finding a needle in a haystack.
Exporting armed foreign Jews into our lands has that effect ya
know? You guys are already throwing a shit fit about
unarmed Mexican workers crossing your
border.
Maybe us Arabs should encourage them to declare California the new
Mexican province and provide them with the occasional AK47 and see
how 'nice' you become in arguments after that.
Oh and if you become meanies in arguments after that its.. its.. oh
i know! Its because of your faith! yeah!
lol
Such simpletons! hahahahha
I
>Maybe us Arabs should encourage them to declare California
the new Mexican province and provide them with the occasional AK47
and see how 'nice' you become in arguments after
Go ahead and try it. Wouldn't be the first time that happened and
we took care (went to war with and defeated) of the country that
had that idea.
...(went to war with and defeated)...
War? Defeat? ... Ahh! I see! Because your religion is violent
right?
LOL
Religion had nothing to do with it. I know that's a hard concept
for you since you're a slave of the pagan moon god, but you should
know the rest of the world.. the world that invented electricity
and toliet paper .. don't live like or think like you do.
What country do you live in, anyway?
Oh my god, this is too easy.
Religion had nothing to do with it.
Why! Thanks for making my point for me! :)
I hate Israel on my territory not because of my religion, just as
you would hate a new Mexican province on your territory not because
of your religion.
Maybe next time we wont have to go through that roller coaster ride
to show that you do in fact agree with me.
Wait! Ooo! ooo! You agree with a Muslim!? Ack! The horror!
Quick! Check your blood pressure! Look in the mirror - do you see a
turban?? Oh my god is that your carpet levitating all the sudden?!?
ahhhh!!
hahahahaha!
the world that invented electricity and toliet paper .. don't
live like or think like you do.
And how do I live exactly? Hey speaking of which are you guys gonna
use a former Nazi again for putting men on Mars? Just
curious.
As far as which country I live in, ill give you a hint: The
president here has no regard for the constitution. ;)
>And how do I live exactly? Hey speaking of which are you
guys gonna use a former Nazi again for putting men on Mars? Just
curious.
Considering how much the Muslims were throwing themselves at Hitler
to be his friend, I'm surprised you would speak of NAZIs with such
a negative tone.
After all, in the 1930s, Muslims loved Hitler so much that some of
you thought he was the 12th Imam.
Quote:
"Radio Zeesen was a success not only in Cairo; it made an impact in
Tehran as well. One of its regular listeners was a certain Ruhollah
Khomeini. When in the winter of 1938 the 36-year-old Khomeini
returned to the Iranian city of Qom from Iraq he "had brought with
him a radio receiver set made by the British company Pye … The
radio proved a good buy… Many mullahs would gather at his home,
often on the terrace, in the evenings to listen to Radio Berlin and
the BBC", writes his biographer Amir Taheri. Even the German
consulate in Tehran was surprised by the success of this
propaganda. "Throughout the country spiritual leaders are coming
out and saying 'that the twelfth Imam has been sent into the world
by God in the form of Adolf Hitler'" we learn from a report to
Berlin in February 1941"
Of course you hate Jews so much, that's what the pagan moon demon
wants.
Salamantis,
"Falsifiying some items on her admissions form was the only way
that she could gain admission to the Netherlands, and leave her
past horrors behind. Remember, she had her clit cut off as a child,
and was running away from a forced marriage to a stranger."
I dont know if you know this but if you are a person who is truly
seeking asylum you go to the closest and safest country you can get
to. The point is to be away from harm. After that you cant just go
from country to country trying to find the best place to live. You
cease being an asylum seeker and become an oppurtunity seeker. Lots
of asylium seekers are denied access to countries like the UK,
France, or the Scandinavian countries because it wasnt their first
stop when they left their native country. You cant falsify claims
on your asylum application. Those are legal documents and are
grounds to have your application denied. Its happens to so many
people so often who too are seeking asylum.
An Arab,
Fascism is a Western ideology. Being Western and Fascist arent
mutually exclusive.
Suprkufr,
What is Taqqiyah (from the Islamic texts please and not your
opinion) and how can you prove that it is being used.
Kufr delenda est. (Youre not the only one who can wiki latin
bullshit)
Fascism is a Western ideology. Being Western and Fascist
arent mutually exclusive.
So it would seem, from comments I am seeing here Bikhair.
Oh, let me save you the trouble: Apparently if Muslims say 'We hate
Israel' they are being 'real true Muslims', but if we say 'We have
nothing against Jews' then we are in fact hiding our true
motivations to slaughter Jews.
In other words Bikhair, we're guilty until proven innocent.
Which is ok, because such circular logic entertains me - I am
currently handing Vince his own ass so its ok. :)
-----------------------------
Vince,
Hey if Americans used Nazis to put men on the moon and give them
technology honed from genecide, I suppose you guys didnt think they
were all that bad either eh?
Bikhair aka Taqqiyah , I'll answer your question to suprkufr
with this:
Question:
When is deliberate ambiguity valid? If that is in cases of
necessity only, then what is the definition of necessity in this
case?.
Answer:
Praise be to Allaah.
The Arabic word tawriyah [translated here as deliberate ambiguity]
means to conceal something.
Allaah says (interpretation of the meaning):
"Then Allaah sent a crow who scratched the ground to show him how
to hide [yuwaari] the dead body of his brother. He (the murderer)
said: "Woe to me! Am I not even able to be as this crow and to hide
the dead body of my brother?" Then he became one of those who
regretted"
[al-Maa'idah 5:31]
"O Children of Adam! We have bestowed raiment upon you to cover
yourselves (screen your private parts - yuwaari saw'aatikum) and as
an adornment; and the raiment of righteousness, that is better.
Such are among the Ayaat (proofs, evidences, verses, lessons,
signs, revelations, etc.) of Allaah, that they may remember (i.e.
leave falsehood and follow truth)"
[al-A'raaf 7:26]
With regard to the meaning in sharee'ah terminology, it refers to
someone who says something that may appear to have one meaning to
the listener but the speaker intends something different that may
be understood from these words. For example, he says, "I do not
have a dirham in my pocket," and that is understood to mean that he
does not have any money at all, when what he means is that he does
not have a dirham but he may have a dinar, for example. This is
called ambiguity or dissembling.
Deliberate ambiguity is regarded as a legitimate solution for
avoiding difficult situations that a person may find himself in
when someone asks him about something, and he does not want to tell
the truth on the one hand, and does not want to lie, on the
other.
Deliberate ambiguity is permissible if it is necessary or if it
serves a shar'i interest, but it is not appropriate to do it a
great deal so that it becomes a habit, or to use it to gain
something wrongfully or to deprive someone of his rights.
Al-Nawawi said:
The scholars said: If that is needed to serve some legitimate
shar'i interest that outweighs the concern about misleading the
person to whom you are speaking, or it is needed for a reason that
cannot be achieved without lying, then there is nothing wrong with
using deliberate ambiguity as an acceptable alternative. But if
there is no interest to be served and no pressing need, then it is
makrooh, but is not haraam. If it is a means of taking something
wrongfully or depriving someone of their rights, then it is haraam
in that case. This is the guideline in this matter.
Al-Adhkaar, p. 380
Some scholars were of the view that it is haraam to resort to
deliberate ambiguity if there is no reason or need to do so. This
was the view favoured by Shaykh al-Islam Ibn Taymiyah (may Allaah
have mercy on him). See al-Ikhtiyaaraat, p. 563.
There are situations in which the Prophet (peace and blessings of
Allaah be upon him) taught that we may use deliberate ambiguity,
for example:
If a man loses his wudoo' whilst praying in congregation, what
should he do in this embarrassing situation?
The answer is that he should place his hand over his nose and
leave.
The evidence for that is the report narrated from 'Aa'ishah (may
Allaah be pleased with her) who said: The Messenger of Allaah
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: "If anyone of you
breaks his wudoo' whilst praying, let him hold his nose and leave."
Sunan Abi Dawood, 1114. See also Saheeh Sunan Abi Dawood,
985.
Al-Teebi said: The command to hold his nose is so that it will look
as if he has a nosebleed. This is not a lie, rather it is a kind of
ambiguity. This concession is granted so that the Shaytaan will not
trick him into staying put because of feeling embarrassed in front
of people.
Mirqaah al-Mafaateeh Sharh Mishkaat al-Masaabeeh, 3/18
This is a kind of ambiguity that is permitted, so as to avoid any
embarrassment and so that whoever sees him leaving will think that
he has a nosebleed.
Similarly If a Muslim faces a difficult situation where he needs to
say what is against the truth in order to protect himself or
someone who is innocent, or to save himself from serious trouble,
is there a way for him to escape the situation without lying or
falling into sin?
Yes, there is a legal way and a permissible escape that one can
make use of if necessary. It is equivocation or indirectness in
speech. Imaam al-Bukhaari (may Allaah have mercy on him) entitled a
chapter of his Saheeh: "Indirect speech is a safe way to avoid a
lie". (Saheeh al-Bukhaari, Kitaab al-Adab (Book of Manners),
chapter 116).
Equivocation means saying something which has a closer meaning that
the hearer will understand, but it also has a remote meaning which
what is actually meant and is linguistically correct. The condition
for this is that whatever is said should not present a truth as
falsity and vice versa. The following are examples of such
statements used by the salaf and early imaams, and collected by
Imaam Ibn al-Qayyim in his book Ighaathat al-Lahfaan:
It was reported about Hammaad (may Allaah have mercy on him), if
someone came that he did not want to sit with, he would say as if
in pain: "My tooth, my tooth!" Then the boring person whom he did
not like would leave him alone.
Imaam Sufyaan Al-Thawri was brought to the khaleefah al-Mahdi, who
liked him, but when he wanted to leave, the khaleefah told him he
had to stay. Al-Thawri swore that he would come back. He then went
out, leaving his shoes at the door. After some time he came back,
took his shoes and went away. The khaleefah asked about him, and
was told that he had sworn to come back, so he had come back and
taken his shoes.
Imaam Ahmad was in his house, and some of his students, including
al-Mirwadhi, were with him. Someone came along, asking for
al-Mirwadhi from outside the house, but Imaam Ahmad did not want
him to go out, so he said: "Al-Mirwadhi is not here, what would he
be doing here?" whilst putting his finger in the palm of his other
hand, and the person outside could not see what he was doing.
Other examples of equivocation or indirectness in speech include
the following:
If someone asks you whether you have seen so-and-so, and you are
afraid that if you tell the questioner about him this would lead to
harm, you can say "ma ra'aytuhu", meaning that you have not cut his
lung, because this is a correct meaning in Arabic ["ma ra'aytuhu"
usually means "I have not seen him," but can also mean "I have not
cut his lung"]; or you could deny having seen him, referring in
your heart to a specific time and place where you have not seen
him. If someone asks you to swear an oath that you will never speak
to so-and-so, you could say, "Wallaahi lan ukallumahu", meaning
that you will not wound him, because "kalam" can also mean "wound"
in Arabic [as well as "speech"]. Similarly, if a person is forced
to utter words of kufr and is told to deny Allaah, it is
permissible for him to say "Kafartu bi'l-laahi", meaning "I
denounce the playboy" [which sounds the same as the phrase meaning
"I deny Allaah."]
(Ighaathat al-Lahfaan by Ibn al-Qayyim, 1/381 ff., 2/106-107. See
also the section on equivocation (ma'aareed) in Al-Adaab
al-Shar'iyyah by Ibn Muflih, 1/14).
However, one should be cautious that the use of such statements is
restricted only to situations of great difficulty, otherwise:
Excessive use of it may lead to lying.
One may lose good friends, because they would always be in doubt as
to what is meant.
If the person to whom such a statement is given comes to know that
the reality was different from what he was told, and he was not
aware that the person was engaging in deliberate ambiguity or
equivocation, he would consider that person to be a liar. This goes
against the principle of protecting one's honour by not giving
people cause to doubt one's integrity..
The person who uses such a technique frequently may become proud of
his ability to take advantage of people.
End quote. From Madha taf'al fi'l-haalaat al-aatiyah (What to do in
the following situations)?
And Allaah knows best.
Wow. This is the first time ive heard of this. (Taqiyyah
above).
Even so, we are speaking in English, not Arabic, thereby
automatically invalidating the linguistic ambiguity.
So the question stands - how does X know that Y is engaging in
'evasion', (or as you refer to it, in taqiyyah?)
In other words, the onus of proof lies on the accuser, to
prove that someone else is indeed lying.
>So the question stands - how does X know that Y is engaging
in 'evasion', (or as you refer to it, in taqiyyah?)
In other words, the onus of proof lies on the accuser, to prove
that someone else is indeed lying.
Since Muslims are in perpetual war against Non-Muslims and since
deception is an allowable war tactic (especially in Dar Al Haarb),
a Non-Muslim should take the Islam religion seriously and
understand that he should never believe anything a Muslim tells
him.
Undeniable truth there Vince.
Bottom line: Why is there greatness and prosperity where
judeo-christian culture is dominant, and mostly death and suffering
in islamic controlled states ?
Right! Exactly! It IS the jooooos fault.
Vince,
What you just posted to me doesnt make any sense at all. You
probably didnt bother to read what you copied and pasted. Youre
such a lazy bum. Please tell me where you got that stuff from so I
can do the research myself. This is ridiculous.
MD,
"Bottom line: Why is there greatness and prosperity where
judeo-christian culture is dominant, and mostly death and suffering
in islamic controlled states ?"
Actually, it would be more precise to say that where
judeo-Christian white culture is dominant, there is prosperity.
Also Japanese, and Tawianese. Capitalism and open markets? Eastern
Europe is after all Judeo Christian but because they were
communist, an ideology created from a Judeo-Christian cultural
milleu, it tends to be vastly poorer.
Riddle me this: Western Europe has been Judeo-Christian for
hundreds, close to two thousand years but has just recently, within
the past 200 years, been prosperous. What changed?
Also if you consider Central and South America, also
Judeo-Christian, for the most part, though not white/European,
tends not to be as wealth. The Carribean which is also
Judeo-christian, but is black and mestizo is even poorer. Do you
think there maybe a correlation between not only being
Judeo-Christian but being Caucasian also? Just throwing some ideas
out there.
"Right! Exactly! It IS the jooooos fault."
Because blaming the joooos is such a time honored Christian
tradition, Muslims dont much engage in it.
Bikhair aka Taqqiyah
I was about to answer you and then you said this: "Because blaming
the joooos is such a time honored Christian tradition, Muslims dont
much engage in it."
As smart alecky as I am, you sir are just rediculous. I reject the
premise that, unlike Medved/Hannity etc., simply for your stating
of an argument, that you automatically have validity. You're a joke
man! "Muslims dont much engage in (blaming the jooooos)"? No one is
that stupid. You are a willing tool. What the jihadis would call "a
useful infidel". An empty vessel. It's no use pal, you're a lost
cause. Your brain has been utterly scrubbed of any semblance of
reason, and yet you argue HERE. Too ironic.
Bikhair aka Taqqiyah,
p.s. NonWhitey-AMERICANS are doing fine thank you. At least when
they subscribe to the western M/O for success: work hard, follow
your dreams, live and let live
>Because blaming the joooos is such a time honored Christian
tradition, Muslims dont much engage in it.
http://www.matthiaskuentzel.de/contents/hitlers-legacy-islamic-antisemitism-and-the-impact-of-the-muslim-brotherhood
An especially striking example is the charter adopted in 1988 by
the Muslim Brotherhood in Palestine, better known as Hamas. In this
charter-which "sounds as if it were copied from the pages of Der
Stürmer," as Sari Nusseibeh, former PLO representative in
Jerusalem, has written -Hamas defines itself as "the spearhead and
the avant-garde" of the struggle against "world Zionism."
In the Charter, the Jews are accused of being behind all the shocks
of modernity: "They aim at undermining societies, destroying
values, corrupting consciences, deteriorating character and
annihilating Islam. (They are) behind the drug trade and alcoholism
in all its kinds so as to facilitate its control and expansion." In
addition, they are held responsible for every major catastrophic
event in modern history: The Jews "were behind the French
Revolution [and] the Communist Revolution. . . . They were behind
World War I . . . they were behind World War II, through which they
made huge financial gains by trading in armaments, and paved the
way for the establishment of their state. . . . There is no war
going on anywhere, without having their finger in it. . . . Their
plan," states Article 32 of the charter, "is embodied in The
Protocols of the Elders of Zion, and their present conduct is the
best proof of what we are saying." How can it be that ardent
supporters of Hamas such as Azzam Tamini, who is a regular guest of
the BBC and Channel 4, is never seriously challenged about the
antisemitic content of the charter?
As in the 1930s and 1940s, the sheer absurdity of such claims makes
it difficult for educated people to believe that anyone could take
them seriously. Such claims, nonetheless, triggered Pogroms in
Russia, were used as the textbook for the Holocaust in Germany and
motivated the perpetrators of 9/11. Islamic antisemitism is the
reason why Hamas prioritise weapons and war rather than peace and
welfare. Islamic antisemitism is the reason why Hezbollah's leader
Hassan Nasrallah recently warned Saudi Arabia and other Arab
countries "not to normalize relations with Israel". Islamic
Antisemitism is the only reason why Iran - a county that has
neither a territorial dispute with Israel nor a Palestinian refugee
problem - calls for the destruction of Israel again and again.
i think people here are mostly hanging on to 2 of the phrases in
the interview to slam hirsi ali.
1.
"Don't you mean defeating radical Islam?
Hirsi Ali: No. Islam, period."
well, this may sound extremist among the deafening cries of
'Islamophobia' in the MSM, but there's nothing wrong against
declaring war against a cult that's threatening your way of life
and liberty, no matter how many people swear loyalty to that cult
and even if some of them happen to be peaceful.
If someone who has a christian heritage wants to defeat
christianity, i doubt anyone here would find anything wrong with
that stand (and i'm definitely certain no one in the islamic world
will complain). Similarly since she's a muslim (or technically, has
islamic heritage), it's natural she feels compelled to challenge
her religion in a strong manner.
then some may raise the point that it's okay to smash christianity
in america, cuz it's the dominant religion, but we shouldn't
criticize a minority religion. but then you're refusing to ask
yourself the question, can a muslim(or anyone) criticize their
religion in any muslim country with the impunity that we enjoy to
tear apart christianity (actually, all religions except islam) in
the West.
2.
"We have to crush the world's 1.5 billion Muslims under our boot?
In concrete terms, what does that mean, "defeat Islam"?
......
Reason: Militarily?
Hirsi Ali: In all forms, ...."
Stupid question from the interviewer. we did not CRUSH the, what
200 million or so, soviet people to defeat communism. we fought it
ideologically -keeping military option alive- until the threat from
it was more or less neutralized.
She never advocated any sort of killing of people just to eradicate
them. but 'arab' did say he wanted to eradicate all zionists, 'by
any means'. and the ones who were disturbed by hirsi ali's
statement about defeating an intolerant ideology which less than
likely to reform, do not seem to have a problem with this wish. I
wonder what's the parameter for deciding whether advocating killing
a people is wrong or right? that they shouldn't number above 1
billion? or that they should number below 10 million, which would i
guess qualify the zionists to be fair game for 'eradication'?
True, early islam was similar to christianity and judaism. they
changed, Islam didn't - or, perhaps, started moving back in time to
7th century, before it changed enough.
It's pretty obvious to anyone who's judgement isn't clouded with
western guilt or the stupid phrase that all religions are peaceful
by default, that present day islam is more akin to nazism than any
other present religion.
It is supremacist, it is expansionist, it is totalitarian, and most
importantly, it is underestimated just like Nazism was before it
reached its peak. We did defeat Nazism without killing every german
(or 'aryan')who espoused the Nazi ideology. How?
Supremacism is a very strong common element in these two and, along
with perceptual grievances ,is the driver of agression in
both.
But once it's defeated categorically and humiliated, the
supremacist perception takes a big beating. that's how we solved
the nazi problem. that will be what it takes to solve the Islamist
problem. and just the same way, the longer we wait, the enemy will
get stronger and the bigger will be the price to pay for both
sides.
iih: "Much later, as in India, some Muslim rulers were brutal in
their conquests (e.g., Akbar, who was Mongol)."
clearly this IIH guy isn't very informed, cuz Akbar is considered
the greatest Mughal emperor. In fact, he is called 'Akbar the
Great' by indians. And i think he was, becuz he practiced tolerance
toward other religions, repealed jizya tax on Hindus, and even
tried to launch a new religion 'Din Elahi', a mix of islam and
hinduism and more.
and about Islamic countries being secular:
their are about 50 islamic countries in the world. none of them are
secular by western standards. even the ones that are formally
secular like turkey or tunisia, it's not easy being a non-muslim.
their non-muslim population continues to dwindle and languish. most
of these countries, even the 'modern' malaysia and indonesia,
practice institutionalized discrimination toward minorities-
shariah courts overruling secular courts for non-muslims,
nonmuslims not being allowed to marry muslims etc. and almost all
have their constitutions based on the koran.
they do not debate whether something is right or wrong before they
pass a law. they debate whether it's islamic or not. so when some
reformers in the pakistan tried to repeal the hudud ordinance (an
islamic law that allows a woman to be prosecuted for adultery, if
her accusation of rape is not proven in a sharia court!!), it just
didn't fly with peaceful muslims there. Opponents claimed that
without the law, the society will degenerate into sexual depravity,
decadence, blah-blah.
And dont call me a stupid american, cuz i am from India (another
one of the countries that muslims peacefully invaded) and a true
hindu heathen who worships rocks and drinks cow urine. but still
somehow we don't use micky mouse imitations teach our children
children to hate muslims even though islam cut apart our country in
half compared to the arabs who lost a tiny chunk of desert to the
jews they attacked around the same time. being in india, I have
considerable first-hand knowledge of muslims and even have a number
of close friends. and i can tell you that the average muslim is
much more religious (or his religion is much more involved in
worldly life) than the average non-muslim. these guys believe in
everything that's said in the koran, LITERALLY!! But despite that
they do not know mohammed raped a 6-year-old girl, massacred an
entire jewish tribe, and a lot of the horrible stuff about their
religion. for a non-Muslim, if he finds something in his religion
conflicting with his conscience, he will make a choice. but a
muslim guy, it's hard for him to make a choice, cuz he 'knows' he
has to follow the will of allah as written in the koran, he has no
will of his own cuz that's the first thing he will submit to allah
as a muslim. that's why you can piss on the crucifix and consider
yourself a smart ass, but if you ever criticize islam, you have to
watch out for the jihadi who will put you in your place.
Vince,
Since Muslims are in perpetual war against
Non-Muslims
Prove that all Muslims are in perpetual war against
Non-Muslims.
By your statements, if a Muslim says 'we are at war with X', and
'X' is a non-Muslim, its because he is an Islamic terrorist.
If a Muslim says 'we dont want war with X', and 'X' is a non-Muslim
entity, then the Muslim is actually lying and actually is secretly
planning a war.
In effect, you are immune to emperical evidence regarding all
Muslims - when they fight, they do for Islam, when they dont
fight... well, they are secretly planning to fight.
It is attitudes like this (conspiratorial) that led to the
extermination of the Jews by the Nazis - the real argument was that
no matter what the Jews did, no matter what evidence was brought to
bear, they were guilty because of some perceived evil, with often
quotations from the Old testament brought to bear on their 'evil
and wicked' ways.
Like I said before, we dont fight the Jews for being Jews. We fight
the Zionists who happen to be Jews, for stealing our land. Just as
you said before that you would fight for your land if Mexicans
invaded California.
The heart of the USA, the heart of its great ideals, is that one is
innocent until proven guilty. You subscribe to the reverse of this,
because you simply dont LIKE Muslims. And to this end, you are
ready to apply a policy that is the reverse of the Constitution of
this land.
To that end Vince, you are definately, by all measures, objective
and subjective, without any reasonable doubt, a Fasicst, in the
purest terms.
You are a dispicable human being, whos opinions and formations of
those opinions follow methods used by Nazis themselves. You would
damn 1 billion Muslims simply because the Quran contains verses
that are by todays standards ludicrous, even though every holy book
has questionable stances in its own right.
You refuse to judge those contents in context of the time it was
written, and in the context of today's geo-politcal landscape,
where territorial and ethnic conflicts in the middle east abound,
most of the time uncorrelated with religion. In fact it was Islam
that sought to unite the various ethnic and tribal entities of
Arabia to stop them from constant bickering over who killed whose
goat.
But you refuse to judge this in context - and here you are ready to
damn any Muslim whom you assume to be some sort of automatons or
robots - as if reading some obscure violent verse will download
software into their brains and make them a zonbies.
You are ignorant of how human psychology works - neigh - you are
actually very capable of understanding how it works, and for sure
you know very well that rarely if ever, do human beings fight for
purely existential terms, and that most fights weather religious or
otherwise, ALWAYS stem from some concrete Earthly matters.
You refuse to see the Israeli-Conflict as a territorial one, even
though the leader of Hamas himself has said repeatedly, that 'We do
not hate the Jews for their culture or their religion - but for
their Zionism'. You conveniently ignore this, and surrender your
reason and ears to thinking that this conflict is something
'Islamic'.
Because of all this Vince, you sir are an e.v.i.l. h.u.m.a.n
b.e.i.n.g. No, you are in fact, a monster.
You dare blame innocent folks you dont even know, and accuse them
of things they would never do, because it fits your narrow and
disgusting world view. People you have never seen, never met,
somehow, against all odds and against all reason, are secretly
plotting your death and destruction. Such is a level of paranoia
that if was not associated with such vile accusations, would
qualify you for entrance into the nearest mental ward. Although
with this association you make, qualifies you to be a criminal at
the very least.
You my friend, are what mass-murderers are made of, and I am simply
disgusted to my stomach, that I have had this exchange with you,
knowing that somewhere out there, on some computer, a person who
does not deserve to breathe the same oxygen as us, lives.
You deserve to burn in the 7th layer of Hell.
The hour was black when you were conceived, and even God cannot
forgive himself for this.
KP:
I meant Timur. That was an unintentional mistake. I first learned
about him as well as Akbar from two Indian (non-Muslim) colleagues
of mine. I simply juxtaposed the names.
Others:
A lot of interesting stuff and views. But reason participants don't
usually copy/paste or go on very long "monologs" without a
discourse if KF, USorThem, and others can afford to actually have a
discourse as opposed to lengthy rants.
iih,
without a discourse if KF, USorThem, and others can afford to
actually have a discourse as opposed to lengthy rants.
I hope you didnt lump me in with those people.
With the sidenote that I'm pretty much in agreement with what I
didn't comment on, there is at least one thing I downright disagree
with Hirshi Ali on. Things are not fine and dandy as long as people
only picture god to embody values that secular humansists could
identify with.
If I believe that God is love, that's a small step removed from
wondering "who on earth would reject the love of love incarnate?",
leading me to believe that atheists are cold and heartless. Many
Americans, for instance, have a very negative kneejerkreaction to
the word atheist, because they see it as not just a rejection of
the idea that there's a supernatural being who's the embodyment of
values like compassion and justice, but as an outright rejection of
the values themselves. Even with a cudly teddybear god, the
potential for bigotry remains.
Hirchi Ali has come a long way, but I think she still naively
underestimates how sinister a phenomeneon theism is.
M.A.Rombouts. Den Helder, the Netherlands
I hope you didnt lump me in with those people.
I think there is room for improving your debating methods. I think
many of the above posters you were debating with are not regular
reason commenters.
I think there is room for improving your debating methods. I
think many of the above posters you were debating with are not
regular reason commenters.
Appreciate the sentiment. I always try to improve my style.
I am baffled as to why regular reason posters have not some to
condemn those lunatics here.
Some have indeed at a later post ;-) -- don't get distracted by the distracters though, they will be ignored as long as one argues with reason. Just try to keep the responses pointed, brief and polite, i.e., civil, and discussions are usually fruitful.
Thank you iih,
One can always depend on a lady to bring elegance and grace to any
craft. :)
The length of a post comment is proportionate to the degree the author is committed to a cult. It takes far more language to disguise fallacies and immitate reasonable arguments than it does to mereley speak the truth.
Ayaan Hirsi Ali is a sheer genius. Period.
If you want an education on the subject of Islam, check out this
site:
The Truth About
Islam
The introduction refers to the face that Hirsi Ali had "allegedly" lied on her asylum application. There is no "allegedly" about it - she says in her memoir that she lied (claiming to be fleeing war-torn Somalia, rather than to have lived legally in Kenya for many years). The issue is whether the "lie" was justified. She says that it was, because she was fleeing a forced marriage (although the pressure by her own description was emotional rather than physical, the power of emotional pressure should not be underrated). The issue then is one of moral consistancy - as a member of the Dutch parliament, she belonged to a political party that was deporting other asylum seekers for "lies" no worse than hers.
I was really shocked by her comments. She makes no distinction between radical Islamists and the religion of Islam. She ignores countries like Indonesia and India (the states with the highest Muslim populations) that do not, by and large, have a terrorist problem. Unfortunately, Ali's words are great for the radical right in this country who love to smear whole groups: Muslims, Mexicans, gays.
If a Christian dressed liked Jesus and placed demands upon public services and institutions to accommodate special dietary, hygiene, and prayer scheduling requirements, most western people would think the person nuts. Yet westerners line up to kowtow to Muslims making these same demands. Pointing out inconsistencies like this will get one labeled as "radical" or some flavor of "con" these days. Give me a break. Libertarians were more interesting before the leftys and anarchists moved in, before they quit caring about moral value.
Hirsi Ali makes no distinction between "radical Islam" and plain
old Islam because there IS no distinction - and that's something
EVERYONE needs to get through their heads. If you actually study
ISLAM, as laid out by the Quran, Hadith, Sunnah, etc., what the
so-called radicals are practicing IS ISLAM. What the so-called
moderates do is something different - and the true, devout Muslims
vehemently disagree that the moderates are Muslims. The "moderate"
Muslims are almost as much at risk from the REAL Muslims as are the
dirty kaffirs.
Grow up already. It's ideology, period. And Hirsi Ali is
right.
The Truth About
Islam
Human rights are more important than any religious or culture
rights.
Islam is the problem in the world today.
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