Forgive me, but there is something unreal about this

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The Weekenders
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Forgive me, but there is something unreal about this

Post by The Weekenders »

I know this is serious business but the article below sounds like it came from the Onion. I guess it's the now accepted usage of the term hooligans and this statement:

"Football hooligans communicating over the internet have spoken of the need to put aside partisan support for teams and unite against Muslims."

http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk_news/story ... 09,00.html
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Post by BrassBlower »

So, it's not OK to brainstorm, but it's OK to be a hooligan? :boggle:
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Post by perrins57 »

Sounds like a sure fire method of recruiting more Muslim-extremist wackos to me. When will people learn, the best answer to violence is peace?
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Post by jsluder »

perrins57 wrote:Sounds like a sure fire method of recruiting more Muslim-extremist wackos to me. When will people learn, the best answer to violence is peace?
When all the "others" are dead? :(
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Post by The Weekenders »

Well, the uneasy inference to me is that hooliganism is the last arena for the visceral words and actions of men who feel protective of their nation (no matter if you agree with what that conception represents). Just like in this country, I don't find the soothing words of our leaders, Bush or Blair, to assure us the Islam is the religion of peace, etc. to really be that appropriate. Very controversial, but there ya go.

To me, it feels like many in our nation would rather die in a dirty bomb attack rather than face the messy task of actually racially profiling and examining the Islamic threat within the country and its a very bad feeling to have. I don't think the hooligans are fettered by such concerns.

[insert flaming icon here]

Editing to add a line from an editorial in this morning's Knight-Ridder paper, on the subject of the British-born bombers:

"What has become abundantly clear is that we can no longer afford to maintain the politically correct fiction that Islam is not the problem. While there are millions of devout, law-abiding Muslims – and we deplore the attacks targeting Pakistanis that have occurred in England since the bombing – it is an undeniable fact that Islam the religion is infected with an extremist faction that threatens our way of life."
– Contra Costa Times editorial, July 15.

This is nearly incredible, coming from this paper, which spouts the diversity, multicultural, special treatment stuff all the time and has for years. They are right of Bush on this one.

Verrry interesting.
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Post by peeplj »

I don't think I can agree with the sentence from the Times editorial as written.

If you change a few words, though, I think it really is true...

It should read: "It is an undeniable fact that religion is infected with extremist factions that threaten our way of life."

Islam the religion isn't the real problem--violent fanaticism is, and I think it's found in more religions than just that one.

--James
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Re: Forgive me, but there is something unreal about this

Post by fluti31415 »

The Weekenders wrote:I know this is serious business but the article below sounds like it came from the Onion. I guess it's the now accepted usage of the term hooligans and this statement:

"Football hooligans communicating over the internet have spoken of the need to put aside partisan support for teams and unite against Muslims."

http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk_news/story ... 09,00.html
Well, I work for the University of Colorado system, so "football players" and "hooligans" just seem to go together naturally.
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Post by The Weekenders »

peeplj wrote:I don't think I can agree with the sentence from the Times editorial as written.

If you change a few words, though, I think it really is true...

It should read: "It is an undeniable fact that religion is infected with extremist factions that threaten our way of life."

Islam the religion isn't the real problem--violent fanaticism is, and I think it's found in more religions than just that one.

--James
The difference are major Reform movements. Islam continues to be a medieval religion and is practiced that way, uneasily mixing with the modern world. Judaism, Christianity even Hinduism have all undergone vast changes over the centuries, even if fundamentalists practitioners remain. The call for reform is coming from within Saudi Arabia and it's heartening to me.

Islam is at war with the world in at least 12 places globally and no amount of cultural relativism and equivocation can change that sobering fact. From its eruption in its origins to different times in history, the Western-based reality we live in was shaped by those who put up a bulwark againt Islam, in France and in Central Asia. Charles Martel is famous, but the Khazars, who held back the Muslims from entering Europe from the East are less known and in fact, assimilated into various cultures. I believe its the weakening belief in the West of its own values and the rise of cultural relativism, well-meaning as it is, that has allowed the fires of Islam to be stoked around the planet. People quite easily blame Israel and oil dependance as the causes, but does that account for Islamic insurgency in the Phillipines, in Malaysia, in Kashmir, and the continued persecution of animist and Christian Africans? Not really.

It just is what it is, not what some prosaic vision indicates.
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Post by OnTheMoor »

I can agree with most of if not all of what your saying Weekenders. After awhile those "isolated incidents" become a bit much and that "small minority" of fanatics does not seem so small anymore. There is a problem within Islam and it distresses me to see that most Muslim advocacy groups have thrown all their energy against racial profiling rather than at reforming their religion.

But I can't agree with declaring War against Islam as the Hooligans have done. Change has to come from within Islam. I've often heard Muslims on the radio, in letters to the editor etc. distance themselves from the terrorists and then continue with "but..." and various things about the evil Jews and how they deserve everything they get. People who blow themselves up on buses may be in the minority but I'd wager that the people quietly cheering them on from their living rooms is larger than many would suspect.
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Post by s1m0n »

The bald facts of the matter is that western, nominally "christian" nations have fought more wars and killed more people over the past couple of centuries than has Islam.

Intra-christian warfare is just "conflict" to us*, whereas intra-islamic warfare gets reported as religious war.
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Post by The Weekenders »

s1m0n wrote:The bald facts of the matter is that western, nominally "christian" nations have fought more wars and killed more people over the past couple of centuries than has Islam.

Intra-christian warfare is just "conflict" to us*, whereas intra-islamic warfare gets reported as religious war.
Christians, animists, Hindus and Buddhists are being killed and enslaved in the various hot spots around the world, such as Phillipines, Kashmir and Sudan. It's more than intra-Islamic and it certainly is religious war, at least on their part. Even in Iraq, the US went in to depose a secular Socialist leader who is hardly a "good" Muslim but are portrayed as "Crusaders," as though the point was to wipe out Islam. I do understand that there are sacred sites in Iraq, for what that is worth, but you still have to stretch the point to claim that its a Western attack on the Faithful.

And, On the Moor, I didn't mean to suggest I was agreeing with the hooligans and their methods and I did mention reform from within.
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Post by missy »

ok - I'll be the first to admit I don't know a lot about Islam. I mean, I know the basic tenents - but not what all the factions are (of course, it's mind boggling to try and keep up with all the Christian factions!).
And, I am definately against "profiling" - however.........

What I don't understand is IF the "main" groups of Islam are not the fanatics that are committing these atrocities - why aren't they (the main groups) at least not going out of their way to have the fanatics identified and prosecuted?

Take the abortion fanatics in this country that bomb clinics, target doctors, etc. I think that the "mainstream" Christians look on such behavior as criminal (I know I do) and would definately turn over someone like this to the authorities to be prosecuted.

Heck - you can even take the same argument to the "problems" in inner cities in this country. When there is a shooting, the police often times can't get any cooperation from the witnesses. Supposedly it's because of retaliation - but if people would WORK to get these thugs off the streets - there would be no worries of retaliation. Instead, it's the same cry of "profiling" and the police are damned if the do and damned if they don't.
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Post by anniemcu »

peeplj wrote:I don't think I can agree with the sentence from the Times editorial as written.

If you change a few words, though, I think it really is true...

It should read: "It is an undeniable fact that religion is infected with extremist factions that threaten our way of life."

Islam the religion isn't the real problem--violent fanaticism is, and I think it's found in more religions than just that one.

--James
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Post by perrins57 »

I know what you're saying about Muslims Weekender, but, as a Christian I have to deal with the fact that whilst Jesus preached peace, Christians have gone all over the world beating and killing people who dont follow Christ! To me none of these people were or are Christians (how can they be if they dont follow Christ's teachings?) but I know many non-Christians just see what "we've" done as proof that religion causes wars. Most Muslims do not want to make the world believe Islam by force, if they did there would already be a Muslim world - Western world war. But just as I have to take any opportunity to try and combat those "Christians" who have perverted Jesus' message of peace, so all Muslims everywhere must make clear their total, unconditional rejection of the violent actions now being taken in their name.
As for the religion as the cause for most wars argument, wake up! Oil land, religion, tribalism, racism, politics, ideology and many other things have been used as excuses for the hatred that causes war.
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Post by anniemcu »

perrins57 wrote:... As for the religion as the cause for most wars argument, wake up! Oil land, religion, tribalism, racism, politics, ideology and many other things have been used as excuses for the hatred that causes war.
Yup... anything that can be used for power can abused by those who seek power. REligions are just one of the power trips that have played a heavy hand throughout history.

As for actually following the teaching of Jesus VS the practices of the reigion known as "Christianity", Jesus did NOT teach war, and there are no "unless"es in the 10 Commandments.
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