It is clear that the arabs - and given who they are, are until repudiated representative of all arabs - have betrayed themselves in the betrayal of their own customs. — tim wood
I have not blamed, merely presented — tim wood
that represents a community — tim wood
the community itself, willy-nilly, is burdened and remains burdened until and unless it finds a way to throw off that burden. — tim wood
Lots of communities have such burdens imposed. In the US, for example, of historic slavery and current racism. It becomes incumbent on us in the US and me individually and as much as possible and as soon as possible to repudiate and eliminate racism and substantively and finally address the historic issues of slavery. Germans labor with Nazism, with some success, in their passage of certain laws and certain efforts at retributive and rehabilitative justice. — tim wood
I am well-persuaded that most middle-easterners take their respective cultural practices personally and seriously. — tim wood
No, you have associated Arabs with murderers. — John Doe
but calling on anyone associated with Arabs ethnically or religiously to assume responsibility for a particular government's brazen act of cruelty. — tim wood
This particular case seems an arab's burden. — tim wood
It's not because that implies (despite your protestations to the contrary) that Arabs in general are in some way responsible for the murder, which is absurd. — Baden
no-one gave a shit about that — Baden
I'm sure hospitality is part of the American culture as well. — Πετροκότσυφας
Not all middle-easterners are Arabs. Not all Arabs are middle-easterners. Nevertheless, use of the terms interchangeably is, can be, justified. My purpose was to associate what I call their guest status with both region and people. I note online that "Arab" is apparently not-so-easy to define.1. Stop equivocating between "Arab" and "Middle-Eastern". — Πετροκότσυφας
Middle-eastern, in my usage, includes anyone whose home is in the middle-east and all those people not in the middle-east whose heritage/culture is middle-eastern or whose origin is from the middle-east. Excepted, in my usage, are folks born "accidentally" in the middle-east, such as the children of diplomats or business people whose homes and cultures are neither in nor of the middle-east.2. Clarify what "Middle-Eastern" means. Whom this category includes and why. — Πετροκότσυφας
From arabacademy.com: Hospitality, friendliness, and generosity to strangers is an expression of sacred duties.3. Back up your ideas on "Middle-Eastern" hospitality. — Πετροκότσυφας
Two points. First, on being accepted in he is a guest. Second, "why this incident should be judged on these grounds and not on purely political grounds": is it your suggestion that this "incident" should be judged on purely political grounds? If yes, we can part company. If it is to be "judged on purely political grounds," then clearly, on political grounds, you can justify this murder, or any murder, or anything at all.4. Clarify why the journalist counts as a guest in this way and why this incident should be judged on these grounds and not on purely political grounds. — Πετροκότσυφας
A burden. I don't know what the burden is. My understanding is that folks in the middle-east take some cultural practices seriously in ways that most of the rest of us don't. That is, they follow some rules. Among them are rules concerning guests. Viz, if you want to kill a man, it's very bad form to do it while he's your guest. Such a rule, coming into being in such a place, seems reasonably plausible. Having seen it referred to at different times and in different places, I don't question it; I assume the accounts I see are more-or-less accurate.5. Clarify why the burden falls on all "Arabs" or "Middle-Easterners". — Πετροκότσυφας
Let me unequivocate it, then. I mean to refer to those people, wherever found, that count themselves as culturally middle-eastern, in that they value, observe, practice certain customs in distinctive ways."Middle-Eastern" is even harder to define, so, equivocation just makes it worse, I'd say. — Πετροκότσυφας
It's geography you want? Anywhere you would not be terribly surprised to see a camel. Not including the camel cage at the zoo.That does not explain the term, I'm afraid. What counts as the "Middle-East"? — Πετροκότσυφας
First, on being accepted in he is a guest.
— tim wood
What does this even mean? — Πετροκότσυφας
Actually, your political grounds, not mine. As to international law and criminal law, neither of those are the topic. Saudi and Turkish law and international pubic opinion appear to be at work here. And if it were Saudi law alone, well I guess it's whatever they say it is, whenever they feel like saying it. And if they don't say, just watch what they do. As to "age-old customs," they often are a repository of collected and collective wisdom representing hard-earned and hard-won knowledge of what's best. Whether it translates into modern culture is an open question, but that such values are in many cases held is intrinsically a modern - current - phenomenon.If these are your political grounds, then I guess that we can indeed part ways. International law and criminal law, fortunately, are more efficient than age-old customs which survive in very different forms today. — Πετροκότσυφας
5. Clarify why the burden falls on all "Arabs" or "Middle-Easterners". — Πετροκότσυφας
Actually, it was, It just wasn't the question that you wanted to answer, that wasn't asked.Nah, no answer to my question here. — Πετροκότσυφας
Sure. No one in his right mind, middle-eastern or otherwise, treats what happened based on the custom of hospitality. The reasons should be obvious to anyone who's not living under a rock or to anyone who's not trying to express his disgust for arabs while hiding behind pretentious nonsense. — Πετροκότσυφας
Never mind the disgustingness of the murder and of the murderers, never mind that. It is clear that the arabs - and given who they are, are until repudiated representative of all arabs - have betrayed themselves in the betrayal of their own customs. In this they are utterly disgusting. — tim wood
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