I wasn't trying to be persuasive. I was just stating the obvious with extra emphasis on what I consider most important. — T Clark
The implicit premise of your arguments is <Secularism never transgresses religious tolerance>, and I take it that this is the erroneous premise. — Leontiskos
Jihadism is a neologism for modern armed Islamic movements that seek to base the state on Islamic principles. In a narrower sense, it refers to the belief that armed confrontation is a theologically legitimate method of socio-political change towards an Islamic system of governance. — Wikipedia
Secularism is the principle of seeking to conduct human affairs based on naturalistic considerations, uninvolved with religion. It is most commonly thought of as the separation of religion from civil affairs and the state and may be broadened to a similar position seeking to remove or to minimize the role of religion in any public sphere. — Wikipedia
So, you see, Leontiskos, it is the jihadists themselves who claim that jihadism and secularism are incompatible. — Arcane Sandwich
I did something subtle — Arcane Sandwich
For example, in the West we don't consider militant religions real religions, — Leontiskos
Do you disagree with that argument? — Leontiskos
radical interpretations of scripture in the Quran tend towards producing mass-murdering maniacs at a (relatively) high rate. — ToothyMaw
How do we know that these interpretations are radical in the sense of aberrant or misguided vis-a-vis the Quran? — BitconnectCarlos
See my point? — Arcane Sandwich
Sort of, but does the "religion" in "religious tolerance" exclude Islamic Jihadis? If so, why? — Leontiskos
Searching through scripture to determine theological truth/ what is "real" Islam is not a normal or proper function of the US government. — BitconnectCarlos
Suppose a state has a law against prohibiting the free exercise of religion. — Leontiskos
There ought to be no way to deal with Jihadis save for leaving them alone. In fact, one ought to go out of his way to defend the jihadi’s right to speak, believe, and live he wishes, so long as he doesn’t transgress another’s right to do the same. Nothing does more for Jihadism, and brings more to its cause, than its oppression. — NOS4A2
How do we deal with American Christian Nationalism? Who is responsible for 'causing' it? Should it be stamped out? Should it be punished? Forbidden? Who has the responsibility for solving the problem of American Christian Nationalism? — BC
if your armed group wants to take over the White House for religious reasons, then, from a federal point of view, your armed group cannot invoke religious protection as an excuse to commit a federal crime. — Arcane Sandwich
But that's one of my other points: no state in the West, no country in the West, prohibits the free exercise of religion. — Arcane Sandwich
The reason the U.S. has a First Amendment is because those rights are often transgressed by states. — Leontiskos
Why not? Because no state or country recognizes it as such. — Arcane Sandwich
Easy: You let the Federal government decide that. — Arcane Sandwich
A federal court in the US state of Nebraska ruled that Flying Spaghetti Monster is a satirical parody religion, rather than an actual religion, and as a result, Pastafarians are not entitled to religious accommodation under the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act:
"This is not a question of theology", the ruling reads in part. "The FSM Gospel is plainly a work of satire, meant to entertain while making a pointed political statement. To read it as religious doctrine would be little different from grounding a 'religious exercise' on any other work of fiction."[87]
Pastafarians have used their claimed faith as a test case to argue for freedom of religion, and to oppose government discrimination against people who do not follow a recognized religion. — Wikipedia
It seems clear to me that Jihadism is a religion (or a religious tenet). — Leontiskos
So jihad is legitimate, but jihadism is apparently what the "bad muslims" do. But did Muhammad not use violence to expand the influence of Islam? — BitconnectCarlos
So I'm asking couldn't Muhammad be considered a jihadist? — BitconnectCarlos
No, I would not consider Jesus a crusader. — BitconnectCarlos
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