I objected to theocracies as a general proposition, regardless of whether they were terrorist. — Hanover
Theocratic rule is antithetical to the Western democratic norms, which I do believe superior to Muslim theocratic norms. — Hanover
And, as I noted, and which you didn't respond to — Hanover
(2) the Vatican is a tiny administrative state without any inhabitants that don't choose to be there, so there is minimal oppression there. — Hanover
I don't believe that Christianity in its modern form supports terrorism — Hanover
but there are obviously those misguided people who wrongly do things in the name of Christianity. — Hanover
He explained to me that as a Muslim he would be obliged - it would be his duty - to kill me, a non-Muslim, in the event of a declaration of a jihad to that effect. This well before 9-11, before even the Iraq wars. — tim wood
I draw from this that Islam, in terms of modern Western morality, is about 800 years in arrears of Christianity. — tim wood
I draw this generalization because my interlocutor at the time was both intelligent and well-informed. — tim wood
And in passing, in the past few days the Sultan of Brunei has decreed death for adulterers and homosexuals. The idea is that Muslim apologists the world around have work to do in cleaning up their own houses. We all do, to be sure, but some more than others, a lot more. — tim wood
And you know this because its not in the news or have you been there? It is still a theocracy and going by your position regardless whether there is a presence of oppression isn't theocracy socially and politically against the foundation of what democracy stands for anyway? — Anaxagoras
I don't believe that Christianity in its modern form supports terrorism
— Hanover — Anaxagoras
I know, I know I'm sure you'll move the goal post after learning about this... — Anaxagoras
Emphasis addedI don't believe that Christianity in its modern form supports terrorism,but there are obviously those misguided people who wrongly do things in the name of Christianity. — Hanover
I can tell you don't do research.....To much "I don't think" and "I believe" usage. Next time come with facts to substantiate your claims. you're talking to a researcher not some armchair scholar. — Anaxagoras
Which means to defend yourself against those that mean you harm, but if they stop then you must stop and not transgress. — Anaxagoras
Morrison, Dutton, the Liberal party, et al, have been terrible with respect to the postion of Muslims in the Australian community. Their rhetoric and understanding of Muslim has been postioning them as an outsider and a threat for years. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Comparing the Vatican to Saudi Arabia — Hanover
The problem with this line of discussion is that it is terribly disingenuous because it inaccurately cites me and then it accuses me of changing facts to support my claim. — Hanover
but there are obviously those misguided people who wrongly do things in the name of Christianity. — Hanover
and I didn't deny that occurs with Muslims as well. — Hanover
This is all ad hom. Your analysis of me and of yourself, even if correct, is irrelevant, designed only to self-congratulate and offend. — Hanover
Tell us then, from authority, what the obligation of any Muslim is with respect to a jihad. — tim wood
if there are different kinds. — tim wood
I'm thinking that jihads and fatwas are binding on Muslims, ignored at the peril of the individual ignoring it, whether spiritual peril or material or both. — tim wood
That is, I know enough about Christianity to know that people who reasonably and with reason call themselves Christians can reasonably disagree on a lot of things, without in their own Christianity risking either their faith or their salvation, such as they may be. — tim wood
If a priest instruct me to murder, I do not feel or think that either my faith or salvation such as they may be are in any danger from my not complying with the instruction. Can a Muslim say the same? — tim wood
The question to you: so, as with Muslims? Or different - and how? — tim wood
Anyone who thinks "The West" or "Islam" can be conceptualized as a monolith, unquestionably has a child's understanding of history and modernity. — Maw
That's all there is to it. — Maw
There are 50 Muslim countries. Your position was generalized towards other theocracies but you are only talking about one theocratic government. — Anaxagoras
But this is wrong. Can one criticize the West as such? Can one criticize Islam as such? — jamalrob
I've heard the anti-Muslim immigration and to be honest, I support it, I don't think the West has been even remotely responsible with it so far. — Judaka
It's a very difficult situation. I would not agree with treating Australian-Muslims differently based on their religion but here's the problem with rhetoric in politics, attacks on individuals and beliefs are interpreted as assaults on the group.
Rooting out Islam extremist, preventing terrorism, handling immigration responsibly and with the intention of assimilation, criticising aspects of Islam like sharia law and many negative interpretations. All that and more is valid and necessary and if it makes Muslims feel like they don't belong here or non-Muslims feel that Muslims don't belong here then the solution can't come from failing to do those aforementioned things and much more, which is all necessary.
Probably the only thing that seems self evident is universal basic freedoms — aporiap
What I think needs to be justified are universal basic rights — aporiap
Islam is like an innocent child instead of a very old and mature religion. — frank
Can you explain what "othering" is and why you feel it's important to bring up here? — Judaka
He tells us a story about the Ilya which pictures him as a westerner (possibly Australian) who condemns some other group in order to raise himself up. He entirely discounts the content of the OP in the process. — frank
The post that Banno made on this thread is the most repugnant and absurd comment I've ever read. — Judaka
he's leveraging a tragedy for political purposes. — Judaka
The general underlying point seems to me to be that we’re incredibly quick to distance ourselves from another’s crime so as not to face up to the fact that we’re capable of the same kind of acts (being human) and that the societal norms we’re born into may just have played a part in the crimes. The veery fact that we can consider these crimes is a good thing - in and of itself it’s little more than misdirected “action” given the form of outrage without consideration of what leading human beings to commit such extraordinary acts. — I like sushi
- SMH"These people don't deserve names," Mr Morrison later said. "Names imply some sort of humanity and I struggle to see how anyone who would engage in this sort of hate and violence is human. He doesn't deserve a name."
The problem with the OP isn't that it 'has problems with a culture and religion'; it's that it conceptualizes them in ways so thin and shallow as to be not only useless but actively harmful. Anyone who wants to talk about religion and culture without at the same time talking economics, politics, and social conditions is a priori ruled out of having anything meaningful whatsoever to say. The OP presents a shallow story for piddling minds. — StreetlightX
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