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Re: Muslims to march in London
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Re: Muslims to march in London
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Calling someone an a******e isn't a valid criticism. If they are rude, which makes them an a******e then calling them rude would be a criticism. ----------------- Quote:
People shouldn't be too scared to confront parts of Islam they want to criticise, because of the reaction. That's precisely why they wanted to criticise their holier-than-thou position. ----------------- Quote:
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It comes down to a simple point: Do you think they Muslims were right to be insulted. You and Homer agree there were right. That's fine. I don't agree. I think its very wrong of them. I'm Christian, and you could say anything you like about Christianity, I really couldn't give a monkey's. Everyone I have asked about this (7-10 people who are commited Christian) have agreed. IMO its a problem with Islam, not a problem with freedom of speech. |
Re: Muslims to march in London
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I do see your point, but I must admit I am basing my opinion on the reaction in the UK, rather than the rest of the world. So far, I have seen one small scale, but very nasty, demonstration & a larger peaceful protest which sought to distance British Muslims from the calls to violence, while at the same time expressing the hurt they felt at the perceived insult to their faith. I agree that the more extreme reactions are OTT, I said in an earlier post that I deplore the stereotype image of a hate spewing, flag burning fanatic. I can see what you mean about the motive for re-publishing the cartoons, but to be honest if someone says 'if you poke that bear with a stick he will attack you' - would you still go ahead & poke it with a stick, just to prove the point? So, I'm glad the British Muslims showed they are capable of rising above the stereotype, and I hope we can move on & re-establish our mutual respect. As for the rest of the world, I really don't know, I just hope there are some people there as sensible as the dignified spokespersons at Saturdays march, who can try to calm people down. |
Re: Muslims to march in London
To do it once maybe punky.Twice perhaps.Three times plus seems like overkill to me and was a definite attempt to get precisely the reaction they got..
I got your point just fine I just don't think it is a valid one. :erm: |
Re: Muslims to march in London
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I would hope that everyone here would know me well enough to know what I don't insult them or incite hatred, but its Europeans' legally protected right to criticise whoever they like. I don't think Islam should be exempt from criticism because the Koran or Mohammed said so, or as you say, exempt the third time either. |
Re: Muslims to march in London
"Everyone I have asked about this (7-10 people who are commited Christian) have agreed. IMO its a problem with Islam, not a problem with freedom of speech."
Hardly the best "sample" of society to get a reasoned or well formulated interpretation of how practitioners of another religion might feel insulted by a lampooning of their God. Not a dig at christians, simply an observation that a more culturally diverse sample base would most probably have resulted in a different outcome. In my opinion these cartoons are in no way a "criticism" of Islam. Anyone who can interpret them as a criticism is simply fooling themselves and excusing irresponsible actions on the part of (sales led) media outlets. There is nothing critique based about them, nor has anyone involved in their creation cited "criticism" as the basis for their creation. They were designed to cause offence / poke fun and that is exactly what they did - in spades. Those who are better placed than I to understand the current mindset of muslims (both moderate and fundamental) have cited these cartoons as the last straw as far as the muslim religion and its current stigmatism is concerned. I don't subscribe to this theory of "Oh, lets print a few cartoons to prove they're all nutters" that some people are peddling. In light of some of the atrocities that have been carried out to date "in the name of Islam" I think there is more than substantial proof of a small hardcore of "nutters" - I really don't require any more proof - thanks all the same mr international newspaper publisher man. As someone who has lived through 30 years of a religious based war of attrition of bombings, shootings and murderers visiting in the night I can tell you this - NO religious based war is right and any right thinking human being should do all in their power to prevent them rather than fanning the flames of what ignites them - be that in the guise of freedom of speech or whatever. Religious wars and intolerance are based and founded on the teachings of individuals or deitys whose existence or divine proximity to a God no one can definitively prove. Those of us who subscribe to any religion do so on the basis of faith - I respect everyones right to express their faith, it is a fundamental human right. What never ceases to amaze me though is our lack of faith in our fellow man. Perhaps if we spent a bit more time expending faith and goodwill to "tangible entities" like our neighbours, the "black guy down the road", "the white kid on the corner" or the "indian single parent round the corner" then we would be reciprocated in a fashion that is more becoming of a civilized society. Two wrongs don't make a right, an eye for an eye leaves everyone blind. Cliches, I know, but sadly very true. I think everyone should step back from this and reflect for a minute. Is it worth the loss of a single life just to print a cartoon? Does anyone want to see multiple 7/7's happening on a regular basis? Do honest hard working muslims want to spend an eternity thinking "Do they secretly think I'm a terrorist"? I think the answer is no. We lost over 3000 lives here in Northern Ireland, and many lives were lost elsewhere, through one or other of the two main religious groupings over here citing "freedom of speech", "human rights", the right to "self determination" or "go back to where you came from" rhetoric. This s**t costs LIVES - real human being lives, families. We can debate all we want on an internet discussion board but our actions beyond this safe environment will shape the future of intercultural relationships throughout the UK and beyond. I have no vested interest in the political leanings of anyone on this board but I think our troubles here in Northern Ireland were best summed up with the statement that we needed to "disarm the mindset". This was a profound statement and, to this day, rings true and effective in the continued relative peace we have over here (I have managed to raise three wonderful young sons who have never heard a bomb go off or a weapon discharged - and for that I am eternally grateful). This may seem consequentially small to many readers of this post but it means the world to me. You do not want to suffer what we suffered. It benefits no one and, as has been the case here in Northern Ireland, after the fact everyone will sit back, draw a deep breath and try to gauge the worth of a war. No one I know thinks that anything good came out of those 30 years. We are now only nearly at a stage of mutual religious respect & tolerance that most countries achieved in the middle ages. To see the potential for the UK / Europe to show that they have learnt nothing from our intolerance for each other is both disappointing and worrying to say the least. Peace out. |
Re: Muslims to march in London
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Freedom of expression as you see it, is the BNP's right to continually incite racism in that case.There has to be a point at which you stop offending deliberately or you will incite hatred.It is only common sense. I actually do believe in freedom of expression but not in the right to say and do offensive stuff just to get a rise out of a particular group.Frankly I think incitement against religious groups is as offensive as incitement against racial groupings. |
Re: Muslims to march in London
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Other than that, good post. Quote:
They wern't designed to cause offence, but they were commissioned after an Islamic children's author who wrote works based on Mohammed couldn't get illustrations of Mohammed for fear of violent reprisals. The cartoons were commissioned to remind Muslims that freedom of speech protects valid criticism or anything, be it Islam, Christian, or even Bush/Blair, and that people should never be forced, under threat of violence to exercise their legally protected right. ---------- Post added at 01:03 ---------- Previous post was at 00:56 ---------- Quote:
I perfectly accept that criticism could lead to people being upset. You have the right to call me ignorant. I have the right to be upset, or not upset. However, you shouldn't be too afraid to use that right because you think i'll come and stab you. I'm not trying to criticise Islam, which is how I think I am starting to come across. I have the utmost respect for Islam as well as everyone elses religion, as I wish people would have respect for mine. However, I see a world where people are too afraid to use their human rights because of fear of violent reprisals, and I find that extremely worrying. |
Re: Muslims to march in London
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I think your final comment transcends this particular problem, though, the implication that there are numerous other squabbles that can turn into major rows is, indeed, scarey :erm: |
Re: Muslims to march in London
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The offensive images are not those of Mohammed with a bomb in his turban (why oh why would an arab muslim be wearing a turban anyway?) but images of a French pig squealing contentstant (dressed as a pig) with the caption "Here is the true face of Muhammad" another showing a muslim being mounted as he prays, and another image portraying Muhammad as a demonic paedophile (none of these images were published by the Danish newspaper). Those images I can understand offending people. The outrage from the middle east becomes more understandable when you take into account the way these images (along with the 12 that were published) are introduced to people, within a dossier which also states that dane's are infidels, there's a ban on the building of mosques and the claim that Islam is not officially recognised, along with other right wing anti-islamic properganda portrayed as the official line. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jylland...ammad_cartoons What the Islamic community should be doing right now is thinking long and hard as to why some non-muslims view Mohammad and Islam in such a negative way. When people think of christians, they tend to think of nice people who'll smile and say they'll pray for you if they hear you're not well When people think of buddists, they tend to think of peaceful monks dressed in orange When people think of Sikhs, they think of honour and the help they gave us in WW2 When people think of muslims, well, a lot of the great unwashed think of them as flag burning extremists who want to wipe out the west. Is that what Muslims want people to think of them? |
Re: Muslims to march in London
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Re: Muslims to march in London
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We are constantly being told in this thread that we should not label all muslims the same, that is something that I agree with entirely. On the other hand however we see some muslims labelling all of the west as bad, have we heard them say only some westerners are bad? These muslim terrorists have targeted the general public with the terrorist actions, and any criticism of them will result in more of the same. The people who want us to apologise and brush it all under the carpet are looking at a solution that will give more power to the terrorists. I appreciate the west may of upset the whole nation of Islam with these cartoons etc, but apologising will be a moral victory for the terrorists. |
Re: Muslims to march in London
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Apologizing will not give "more power to the terroirists". It would, in fact, remove a lot, if not all, of the impetus of their argument and any so called "retaliatory" strikes they might be planning, had you thought of that? As for "some muslims labelling all of the west as bad" I think it's worth noting that atrocities committed to date appear to have occured only in countries / sovereign states who have actively engaged in a war on Islam in either Afghanistan or Iraq. My earlier point of two wrongs not making a right refers. I find it bizarre that anyone would put the purported awarding of a "moral victory" ahead of peoples lives, truly bizarre. |
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Re: Muslims to march in London
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No one has anything to lose by apologizing - this isn't a macho exercise. Believe me, it's a lot easier not having to deal with "what if" after the fact. Denmark is the only Scandanavian country to throw it's full weight, both in the form of troops and diplomatic backing, behind the US led occupations of Afghanistan and Iraq. |
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