View Full Version : Islam is not a religion of peace .
zianizinou
08-16-2016, 06:53 AM
i'm moslim but i don't know why many people are saying that muslims are terrorists , and islam is not a religion of peace and a lot of accusing islam in violence and hatred,, why each time we should tell to you that islam has nothing to do with terrorism.
Well, let's see just how:
Who's was the responsible of first and second world war and the effects wrought by this war in terms of the destruction and destruction of human lives, societies and economies and about 80 million dead, is he islam?
Who's killed more than million Jewish (Holocaust) is he islam?
Who's was the responsible of the dropping of atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and the scope of the devastation caused by this atomic bomb and the enormity of the humanitarian catastrophe that has ensued , is he islam ?
Who was the responsible of racial discrimination against people of African descent in all parts of the world . is he islam?
Who's committed many massacres against Muslims and human rights violations in bosnia and herzegovina, is he islam?
Who's killed more than 6 million of algeriens (French occupation), is he islam?
Who's committed many crimes in iraq and afghanistan and human rights violations in the name of combat terrorism and excuse of democracy and defending human rights, is he islam?
Who's committed crimes against humanity and genocide and ethnic cleansing against Indigenous peoples of the Americas, in the name of calling and spreading Christianity and excuse of transmission values and civilization , is he islam?
Who's killed hundreds of thousands of muslims and Jewish in andalusia (Spanish inquisition), is he islam?
The genocides in Kampuchea, Rwanda, Congo, Eritrean and Ethiopian is he islam?
Who is killing every day many muslims and committing many crimes against muslims in palestine, excuse of self-defence, is he islam?
Who's committed, Massacres, torture, ethnic cleansing in Burma against muslims, is he islam?
just answer to my ask : is islam committed all this massacres ?
nobody said that Christianity is a religion of terror , so please stop say that muslims are terrorists , and stop accusing islam in violence and hatred, because there are 1,5 billion muslims around the world ,The actions of these few ( ISIS ) should not be seen as an accurate representation of Islamic teachings .
so We invite you to look further and investigate Islam, It is not just another religion
note:
My comment does not mean that I hate christianity and I hate jesus because i love and i respect jesus more of christians themselves.
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Make your life simpler and has meaning, and based on the values of tolerance and respect for others and denounce racism and freedom of expression and mutual understanding among civilizations, cultures and religions ,and keep your principles even in the darkest circumstances
Clopin
08-16-2016, 08:36 AM
Wow, airtight. I hate the West now! Where do I sign up to become a Muslim?
Ecurb
08-16-2016, 10:33 AM
I'm currently reading "The Reformation" by Oxford historian Diarmoid MacColloch. According to MacColloch, one million Western European Christians were enslaved by Muslims (North African raiders and Ottoman Turks) between 1530 and 1640. This is approximately equal to the number of West Africans taken by European Christians across the Atlantic in that same era.
Why didn't the Muslims content themselves with enslaving black Africans, like the decent, God-fearing Christians did?
Pompey Bum
08-16-2016, 11:31 AM
I'm currently reading "The Reformation" by Oxford historian Diarmoid MacColloch.
Good for you, ecurb. It's about time we had some historical literacy on this site. I mentioned that book recently on another thread, by the way. I'm curious as to whether you decided to start it after my reading my comments. You know, like a car rental company asks: How did you hear about us? :)
Ecurb
08-16-2016, 12:19 PM
I don't remember you mentioning it. I own the book, which I believe was given to me for some recent Christmas, and I'm finally getting around to reading it. I'm only 100 pages in, but I'm enjoying it so far. I mention the slavery statistic because I hadn't been aware of the scope of Muslims enslaving Western Europeans until reading about it in "The Reformation", and I fond it interesting.
I did take The Mahabharata on my recent camping trip, based on Mortalterror's and your (facetious) recommendation. I read the first 100 pages or so, but it was a library book with beautiful color illustrations, and I was getting it dirty (cleanliness is not an essential part of camping), so I abandoned it. I enjoyed the start, although some of it was a bit campy. I remember one part: somebody (whose name I can't remember) "was more powerful than ten thousand elephants", which reminded me of the old Superman TV show's "more powerful than a locomotive."
I agree with you that the focus of this site is on fiction and poetry - and that "literature" includes history and biography (as well as other non-fiction genres). One of my pet peeves about this site is the general use of the word "books" to mean "novels".
Pompey Bum
08-16-2016, 01:34 PM
I don't remember you mentioning it. I own the book, which I believe was given to me for some recent Christmas, and I'm finally getting around to reading it.
MacCulloch's like a pitcher who can't be hit, but only when he's got his good stuff going. The Reformation is better by far than his more famous Christianity: The First 3000 Years (at 1100 pages, a great bookcase-behind-your-desk tome--purchased by millions and read by dozens). Anyway, enjoy The Reformation. It's a lot of fun.
I did take The Mahabharata on my recent camping trip, based on Mortalterror's and your (facetious) recommendation.
I don't remember wising off about Mahabharata. But you know, like Arthur in that old 80s movie, sometimes I just think facetious things. Indian lit is not my at all my thing though. I wonder what I said.
I agree with you that the focus of this site is on fiction and poetry - and that "literature" includes history and biography (as well as other non-fiction genres).
Well, we get lots of "serious" literature characters here. They seem to derive more than a little of their self esteem from delusions of intellectual superiority. They're hilariously shaky out of their educational depth though. Talk to them about real history (or theology for that matter) and just watch how nervous they get. Heh heh heh. As Jesus said, "Always kick for the kneecaps."
Clopin
08-16-2016, 03:17 PM
I'm currently reading "The Reformation" by Oxford historian Diarmoid MacColloch. According to MacColloch, one million Western European Christians were enslaved by Muslims (North African raiders and Ottoman Turks) between 1530 and 1640. This is approximately equal to the number of West Africans taken by European Christians across the Atlantic in that same era.
Why didn't the Muslims content themselves with enslaving black Africans, like the decent, God-fearing Christians did?
Yeh but who's ever heard of Muslims committing massacres and human rights violations against other Muslims? Obviously it's never happened. Islam is not just another religion!
zianizinou
08-16-2016, 05:42 PM
Yeh but who's ever heard of Muslims committing massacres and human rights violations against other Muslims? Obviously it's never happened. Islam is not just another religion!
As you know brother Islam strongly prohibits harming civilians and destroying safe places such as homes and religious sites. It even goes to the extent of prohibiting harming the environment or cutting down trees. It is clear to anyone who follows the news or studies history that terrorism is a world wide phenomenon that occurs among people from all nations, ethnicities and religions. In fact, upon closer inspection, it becomes obvious that terrorism is not tied to religion
Unfortunately, there are some people who commit crimes of terrorism, even though it is prohibited by Islam. Sadly, they usually try to justify their actions using Islam in an attempt to gain legitimacy among other Muslims.
GOD ( Allah) he said in The Quran : ((...if anyone killed a person not in retaliation of murder, or (and) to spread mischief in the land - it would be as if he killed all mankind, and if anyone saved a life, it would be as if he saved the life of all mankind..)) Chapter Name:Al-Maeda Verse No:32
so some people still mistake it for a cult, or that all Muslims are terrorists,!
The actions of these few should not be seen as an accurate representation of Islamic teachings there are 1,5 billion muslims around the world so The actions of these few don't should representation of all muslims.
the media can give the impression that terrorism is supported by the majority of Muslims. Muslims may feel misrepresented and misunderstood by these and other stereotypes.
It is unfortunate that the Western media often gives the wrong impression of what Islam is all about.
Misconceptions about Islam and Muslims continue because of the lack of availability of correct information about the basic teachings of Islam. The misrepresentation of Islam by the media,
Ecurb
08-16-2016, 06:14 PM
I don't remember wising off about Mahabharata. But you know, like Arthur in that old 80s movie, sometimes I just think facetious things. Indian lit is not at all my thing though. I wonder what I said.
"
It was in one of the "list" threads. Mortal Terror listed Mahabhatra in his ten greatest, I said I might read one of the 3 or 4 on his list that I hadn't read (all of which were non-Western) and you said I should pick Maha because it wouldn't add much weight to my backpack (it's more than 1000 pages).
Ecurb
08-16-2016, 06:18 PM
It is unfortunate that the Western media often gives the wrong impression of what Islam is all about.
Misconceptions about Islam and Muslims continue because of the lack of availability of correct information about the basic teachings of Islam. The misrepresentation of Islam by the media,
And Presidential candidate Donald Trump gives the wrong impression about how most educated Westerners regard Islam. Delusions abound.
Clopin
08-16-2016, 07:28 PM
As you know brother Islam strongly prohibits harming civilians
What if they're gay?
desiresjab
08-16-2016, 07:45 PM
What is this, a contest to see which religion's adherents killed more? All parties guilty as charged!
The true imbroglio centers around cultural assimilation and syncretism. As an historical reference, religions do not characteristically trust each other. There have been notable exceptions, but in general I think a strong argument could be made that syncretism is the agent that enables good harmony where two religions must exist on the same ground. Where too much mentality of diaspora prevails, syncretism fails to implement the necessary changes. On an abstract level, this is how I see this problem. How it will play out is a matter of hope and guesswork.
Ecurb
08-16-2016, 10:45 PM
In the other thread about biblical morality's inconsistency with modern moral standards, a sub-discussion has broken out about whether the Reformation was responsible for literal interpretations of the Bible. I'll have to wait until I finish MacColloch's book to chime in.
It seems to me (who knows no more about Islam than the average, reasonably well-informed American) that Islam is, by its nature, a literalist and fundamentalist religion. That's because the Quran was dictated to Mohamed by an angel. The text is a clear divine mandate, for believers.
Although some Fundamentalists make the same claim for the Bible, the Bible is clearly not the foundation of Christianity in the same manner in which the Quran is the foundation of Islam. Most of the New Testament was not written for several decades after Jesus' death. So for the Bible to be "fundamental" to Christian faith, we must conclude that Peter, Paul, and all of the disciples were not Christians (since they had no Bible). Clearly, Jesus' life, death, and rebirth are the foundation of the faith, not the Bible.
As I understand it, Islam, in the 7th century, improved the rights of women, and moderated the violence and oppression regularly practiced among Arabs (and many other people). Nonetheless, by modern standards, Sharia law seems oppressive, prejudiced, and unfair. My questions to zianizinou is: are literal interpretations of the Quran standard in Islam? From your perspective, is the comparison between Islam and Literalist, Fundamentalist Christianity a fair one? If the Quran is the direct word of God, how can changing moral codes and social and economic realities be accounted for within Islam?
Ecurb
08-16-2016, 10:46 PM
What if they're gay?
These days, most gay people join the military.
desiresjab
08-17-2016, 04:38 AM
These days, most gay people join the military.
Send in our transgender marines.
desiresjab
08-17-2016, 06:52 AM
Are there any religions of peace, is a reasonable question only if we distinguish whether we mean the words of their holy texts frozen in time or the actions of their followers moving in time, as the two differ radically. Without this distinction there is no answer and no real question.
As an American on a practical level I must ask myself what I want and what I expect, and try to balance my actions between the two, for what I expect may not be what I want at all, and I must decide how much effort to invest in fighting against what I expect.
If it makes little sense to fight against what one fully expects, then of course why fight for something one fully expects, since that adds needless effort to what seems already fated as the former action fights against fate? Fortunately, such philosophical quandaries do not prevent us from compromising and acting.
What I want is reasonable religion. And of course I (you) define what is reasonable. Well, (I pulled...) could anyone else do that for me, or for you? Since I (collectively) am the host, I will determine what is reasonable and peaceful, not the other way around.
Historically and socially all religions are like dogs to me. All dogs are peaceful until something disturbs them, but I still want dogs. Trained dogs are peaceful dogs all the time in their own kennel. We are not a democracy, we are a democratic republic. We are house-trained dogs, not wild dogs. Now it is time for any wild Moslem mongrels to be trained rather than bark and snarl for their own rules in the kennel.
Don't worry, the training is easy. It only consists of syncretism, where little by little you are secularized and rationalized just as all the other religions have been, hypnotized by prosperity, all the while enjoying a freedom of lifestyle and opportunity not available in the repressive garbage pits of moslemia you fled, if you can only stand it.
It is a one way syncretism, in this case, I am afraid. Moslemia has nothing America needs to make itself better, no amendments to offer to our laws or principles or education or our way of life which would improve them. Come here drunk on religion and we will sober you up, or you will make a poor American. We do not drink hard religion anymore. Our religion is soda pop, and yours will be, too. We have a real war on any religious drunkenness which disturbs our peace.
It is hard to trust dogs who are currently behaving but that you know have not been house trained. A Moslem that has not been house trained is worse than an untrained Buddhist, yes, or a Hindu, because the Moslem comes out of a more stubborn and defiant religious tradition whose most revered text encourages some extreme violence and resistance to the ways of infidels. The Bible encourages all kinds of violence, too, but no one takes those ancient prescriptions seriously anymore in the Christian world, and that is the big difference between being house trained or wild. In moslemia, such precriptions are still taken as divine commands by a too large fringe of backward kooks.
The race is on to house train the whole of Moslemia before it tears up the house. The house is democracy, rather democratic republic. It is a big job, and I would not have taken it.
Stray dogs breed more dogs, but not necessarily more bad dogs, so there is still hope. The progeny of backward moslems and the young of moslemia in general have more time with fresh eyes under democracy to figure out just how goofy some of their elders are, and to submit to voluntary house training. Someone who is twenty-three is an elder to someone who is ten.
Pompey Bum
08-17-2016, 10:03 AM
Most of the New Testament was not written for several decades after Jesus' death. So for the Bible to be "fundamental" to Christian faith, we must conclude that Peter, Paul, and all of the disciples were not Christians (since they had no Bible). Clearly, Jesus' life, death, and rebirth are the foundation of the faith, not the Bible.
Throw in "nor Mother Church" and we've got a deal--on a personal level. But you're argument is flawed by the fact that many books of the New Testament were written by Paul; though most of the others (including certain of the supposedly Epistles) are only attributions, the Gospels use the witness of contemporaries among their sources. Thus "all the disciples" -- or at least many first-generation Christians -- contributed to the texts we have. That throws a monkey wrench into your argument: "So for the Bible to be 'fundamental' to Christian faith, we must conclude that Peter, Paul, and all of the disciples were not Christians (since they had no Bible)." They didn't need a Bible because in a sense the were the (Christian) Bible. And of course, they already had the Hebrew Bible.
Those things being said, my personal conviction is that that the foundation of the Christian faith is the interface of the Christ of God and the heart of the sinful (that is to say, all). The Bible can have a fundamental role in that relationship (as can prayer, discernment, and other things) or it can be part of a world of sin in itself--much to the delight of certain Internet atheists.
As far as Mother Church goes, I actually do have an Ecclesiology: we are all in church all the time whether we like it or not (Clopin, zianizinou, Red Terror, everyone). But please don't mistake that--as one poor character once did here--with some kind of airy-fairy, crypto-Pagan "environmental Christianity." It's more like a scene from the motion picture (and not the insufferable television program) M*A*S*H, in which a doctor motions for a badly shot up soldier to be wheeled into an OR, but a nurse objects, saying "Doctor, that man is a prisoner of war." To which the doctor replies, "So are you, sweetheart, you just don't know it." Heh heh. I contend that this view is truly catholic (small-case c-- meaning universal). For me, that makes the issue of formal church attendance rather beside the point. We're already in Ecclesia-Sangha-Ummah. Deal with it.
OrphanPip
08-17-2016, 12:00 PM
Living in Malaysia I know a number of Muslims who are progressive, accepting and open minded while still being deeply faithful to their religion. Although, I often hear the more liberal Malays complain of the Arabification of Islam in South East Asia (Islam was brought to the region 500 years ago by Indian traders), a country where just 50 years ago Muslims considered beer to be halal but now have conservative states in the rural north trying to implement Sharia Law for criminal offenses. Every year the country becomes more radical and the moderates lose more ground to the easy answers of the extremists. Islam is a massive religion and I haven't studied it at all to really understand it. Even more problematic here is the fact that religion is racialized. The Malays are required by law to be Muslim, while the Indian and Chinese minorities have freedom of religion. When my Chinese students speak of religious festivals they call Ramadan the Malay fasting month, they haven't yet learned what Islam is but they already associate it with race.
zianizinou
08-17-2016, 12:43 PM
What if they're gay?
Well, as you know homosexuals go against the natural disposition which god has created in mankind and also in animals whereby the male is inclined towards the female, and vice versa. Whoever goes against that goes against the natural disposition of mankind and natural instinct.
People become homosexuals because of their environments,the homosexuality it is a deviant behavior and it is a sinful act in Islam , It also causes the breakup of the family and leads people to give up their work and study because they are preoccupied with these perversions ,also has caused ( AIDS) which attacks the immune system in humans. that it does not mean that we hate the homosexual person but we should help those persons as much as we can to get out of this evil,We should not leave them to the temptations of the Satan.
I’ll be conservative: There is a lot of misinformation about Islam in the media,islam does approve the killing of people who engage in homosexual relations,also he does not mandate the death penalty for homosexuals, and who engage in homosexual acts ,Islam just forbids any sexual relationship other than in a marriage between a man and a woman.
The Qur'an describes that everything has been created in pairs which complement one another. Pairing of male and female is thus part of human nature and the natural order. Marriage and family is the accepted way in Islam for a person's emotional, psychological, and physical needs to be met.
So we must resist those with all our might. If one feels a tendency to do something that God prohibits, we should seek help from a community of loving, caring believers help them overcome it. A common ploy of the devil is to convince people that they cannot avoid sin.
. One should not use his or her body contrary to the user guide provided by its Maker.
Clopin
08-17-2016, 08:15 PM
So what would your ideal punishment be?
The Sahaabah were unanimously agreed on the execution of homosexuals, but they differed as to how they were to be executed. Some of them were of the view that they should be burned with fire, which was the view of ‘Ali (may Allaah be pleased with him) and also of Abu Bakr (may Allaah be pleased with him), as we shall see below. And some of them thought that they should be thrown down from a high place then have stones thrown at them. This was the view of Ibn ‘Abbaas (may Allaah be pleased with him).*
Some of them thought that they should be stoned to death, which was narrated from both ‘Ali and Ibn ‘Abbaas (may Allaah be pleased with them).*
After the Sahaabah, the fuqaha’ differed concerning the matter. Some of them said that the homosexual should be executed no matter what his situation, whether he is married or not.*
Some of them said that he should be punished in the same way as an adulterer, so he should be stoned if he is married and flogged if he is not married.*
Some of them said that a severe punishment should be carried out on him, as the judge sees fit.*
Ibn al-Qayyim (may Allaah be pleased with him) discussed this issue at length, and he mentioned the evidence and arguments of the fuqaha’, but he supported the first view. This is explained in his book al-Jawaab al-Kaafi’ li man sa’ala ‘an al-Dawa’ al-Shaafi, which he wrote to deal with this immoral action. We will quote some of what he said:*
Because the evil consequences of homosexuality are among the worst of evil consequences, so its punishment is one of the most severe of punishments in this world and in the Hereafter.*
Homosexuals are beheaded, hanged and stoned in modern Saudi Arabia and Iran, where Muhammad's laws are applied most strictly.* Five other Muslim countries also have the death penalty on their books for homosexual behavior.* In the past, gays were burned.*
As one cleric recently put it, the only point of theological debate is not whether the homosexual should be killed, but how it should be done.*
In 2016, an educated imam in Tunisia explained that while it may seem harsh, there is not ambiguity about this in Islam:
God is very straightforward about this — not we Muslims, not subjective, the Sharia is very clear about it, the punishment for homosexuality, bestiality or anything like that is death. We don’t make any excuses about that, it’s not our law — it's the Quran
Ecurb
08-17-2016, 10:21 PM
Throw in "nor Mother Church" and we've got a deal--on a personal level. But you're argument is flawed by the fact that many books of the New Testament were written by Paul; though most of the others (including certain of the supposedly Epistles) are only attributions, the Gospels use the witness of contemporaries among their sources. Thus "all the disciples" -- or at least many first-generation Christians -- contributed to the texts we have. That throws a monkey wrench into your argument: "So for the Bible to be 'fundamental' to Christian faith, we must conclude that Peter, Paul, and all of the disciples were not Christians (since they had no Bible)." They didn't need a Bible because in a sense the were the (Christian) Bible. And of course, they already had the Hebrew Bible.
.
Well, I suppose Mohamed wouldn't need the Quran, since he was the one Gabriel dictated it to. Nonetheless, I stand by my point that the Quran is (seems to me) more fundamental to Islam than the Bible is to Christianity. Both report the word of God (the Gospels exist mainly to quote Jesus), but the Bible is further removed from the Word than is the Quran. In addition, Islam was founded on the notion of the Quran; when Jesus taught, there were no gospels, and probably no notion that there ever would be.
Since the letters of Paul predate the Gospels, in one sense Christian theology predates Christian myth. One wonders whether the myth is to some extent based on the theology, whereas in most religions it seems the theology is based on the myths.
Pompey Bum
08-18-2016, 11:45 AM
Nonetheless, I stand by my point that the Quran is (seems to me) more fundamental to Islam than the Bible is to Christianity.
I've never read the Koran, so I can't address that point.
(the Gospels exist mainly to quote Jesus)
I dunno. I mean, each Gospel has its own theological agenda. But in a way you're right: the Evangelists arrange the sayings and stories they have into contexts that support their theological contentions. But many Christians would tell you that the Gospels' purpose is to convy the Passion Narrative and the good news of the empty tomb. In that respect, those texts at least may be seen as fundamental to the Christian cultus as it eventually emerged.
when Jesus taught, there were no gospels, and probably no notion that there ever would be.
This is an excellent point. In the synoptic Gospels, Jesus's message is one of imminent Apocalypse ("the Kingdom of God is at hand"). A written Gospel--or a Christian religion at all--would not have been seen as necessary by his disciples. But that doesn't mean that the Gospel message was not foundational to the religion that eventually formed. I will resolve your chicken and egg problem below.
Since the letters of Paul predate the Gospels, in one sense Christian theology predates Christian myth. One wonders whether the myth is to some extent based on the theology, whereas in most religions it seems the theology is based on the myths.
Wonder no further. A little over a decade after the Crucifixion, Paul already knows a version of the story; he writes: "This Gospel I have received" (that is from others). The comment is usually taken to indicate oral transmission of an essential narrative--though not the written Gospels. (There was probably also an independent Passion Narrative circulating at this time, and a Sayings Source recording the quotations you mention). Pauline theology, moreover, is not represented in all the canonical Gospels, and there is some evidence that Paul himself may have become alienated from Peter's group and gone his own way fairly early.
The historical sequence is most likely to have been: historical events (including Jesus' teachings and Crucifixion; oral and some lost written accounts supporting an emerging cultus with missionary activities; Paul's break from Peter and his mission west (featuring his all-important written communications to the communities he had founded); the writing of the canonical Gospels and probably the Gospel of Thomas (possibly the Sayings Source rewritten for an alternative theology--or is it a surviving record of Jesus original theology?); the Neronian persecution, possibly featuring the martyrdom of both Peter and Paul; the eventual petering out (no pun intended) of all non-Pauline churches; liturgical and theological use of Paul's letters (including new fake ones); the inclusion of other Christian writings such as Gospels, various other fake letters, and the Apocalypse of John; the eventual inclusion or exclusion of early Christian writings into an orthodox Canon; the establishment of an Orthodox Creed that had precious little to do with anything Jesus ever said but made essential distinctions between orthodoxy any alternative theologies ("heresies"); and the eventual violent persecution of heretics.
Or to simplify: events/teachings--stories/mythos--theologies/orthodoxy--perversion/killing. So no, it worked like most other religions. But hey, people are basically good, right?
Ecurb
08-19-2016, 10:23 AM
Your discussion of the relationship of event to myth to theology (to ritual) seems reasonable regarding Christianity. But Islam (as I understand it in a limited way) is different. The Bible is (among other things) the written version of the Christian myth (I am not using the word "myth" pejoratively). The Quran (which, like Pompey, I have never read except in small doses) is a set of laws or rules by which Moslem faithful should live. It has little in common with myth, except for the origin story which gives it its divine mandate. Myth resembles history; the Gospels read like a biography, although, through the quoted teachings of Jesus, they also resemble the Quran.
In addition, to my horror, according to MacCulloch Martin Luther did not say, "Here I stand; I can do no other." Don't tell me! I don't want to know! The myth, sometimes, trumps the history.
Pompey Bum
08-19-2016, 06:06 PM
In addition, to my horror, according to MacCulloch Martin Luther did not say, "Here I stand; I can do no other." Don't tell me! I don't want to know! The myth, sometimes, trumps the history.
Those kind of anecdotes need to be preserved and understood. When was the story first told that way and why? My working hypothesis would be that the Lutheran Church (eventually) so subverted Luther's ideas that the distortion became possible and even desirable (to them). But I'd have to look into it more.
fajfall
10-27-2016, 12:52 AM
Living in Malaysia I know a number of Muslims who are progressive, accepting and open minded while still being deeply faithful to their religion. Although, I often hear the more liberal Malays complain of the Arabification of Islam in South East Asia (Islam was brought to the region 500 years ago by Indian traders), a country where just 50 years ago Muslims considered beer to be halal but now have conservative states in the rural north trying to implement Sharia Law for criminal offenses. Every year the country becomes more radical and the moderates lose more ground to the easy answers of the extremists. Islam is a massive religion and I haven't studied it at all to really understand it. Even more problematic here is the fact that religion is racialized. The Malays are required by law to be Muslim, while the Indian and Chinese minorities have freedom of religion. When my Chinese students speak of religious festivals they call Ramadan the Malay fasting month, they haven't yet learned what Islam is but they already associate it with race.
Shariah law isn't "radical", nor is banning alcohol. It's simply what Islam requires.
Volya
10-27-2016, 04:53 PM
I don't know how you can say with a straight face that homosexuality is evil and must be stopped, yet still claim it is a religion of peace.
YesNo
10-28-2016, 11:34 AM
When a group advertises that they are for "peace" or "love" or "reason", I assume they are not. What they are doing is trying to create a distinction between their group and other groups with the intent of gaining new members or at least encouraging others to tolerate them. They want to increase the market share of their brand. The act of using peace, love and reason in such contexts is an example of not being peaceful and not being loving and not being rational.
This is a good example of "showing" versus "telling". The rule for missionaries (both theistic and atheistic) should be to show peace, don't talk about it. Show love, don't tell me you love which assumes that someone else doesn't. Speak rationally, don't preach chains of reasoning justifying the existence of whatever one has believed already exists.
The problem is that Christians and atheists can see that when Muslims talk about peace, it is just a propaganda tactic. However, they are deluded when they think that when they talk about peace they have somehow transcended to a higher ground where they can justify their groups with the very same propaganda.
So, what is one to do? This is what I do: I reject any proselytizing claim to a superior higher ground by any religious group whether they are Muslim, Christian or atheist. I make sure I include the atheists in that rejection, because they think they don't belong in the same category. The only way to escape that skeptical scrutiny is not to belong to a group, but it is hard not to belong to some group, or herd. We are all members of many herds and so I have to point that skeptical scrutiny against myself as well.
Regarding homosexuality I think it is has been established that this is a natural way to be a human being using new brain scanning technology originating in the late 20th century. To claim that such people are sinners whom one has to "love" to death is moronic given such information. To say that such people need to be socially constructed into something else is only a left-wing version of the same out-dated idea.
Clopin
10-28-2016, 02:08 PM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K0hD7IffTJs&feature=youtu.be
Religion of peace lol
YesNo
10-29-2016, 10:13 AM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K0hD7IffTJs&feature=youtu.be
Religion of peace lol
The video suggests that some Muslims are using forced sex as an act of proselytizing to their religion and the European police are not able to stop it. If that is the case, it makes sense to stop the migration and start deporting them.
Here are a couple of quotes from the video I liked.
About 6:06: "Basically the US is providing these flows for us. You make war and we get the refugees."
About 10:26: "The best way for them is to get the banks off the backs of their countries so they can live in peace in their countries and Europeans can live in peace in ours."
The dream of world harmony and multi-culturalism is something that would appeal to people if there is "positive" social mood. I don't think positive social mood is better than negative social mood. It is a shallow happiness that comes from seeing one's stock portfolio increase in value or seeing an increase in one's paycheck. It also depends on big brother policing things properly.
desiresjab
11-04-2016, 09:35 PM
I am not a devotee of Quigley. But there is the globalist who pulled all the threads together. He launched the whole conspiracy industry but was not anti round table himself.
Fifty-nine million legal immigrants in fifty-two years. Why would they want to do that? Are they just fine spirits, our leaders?
Well, they do not drop the immigrants off at the statue of liberty and tell them to go find a city to live in. They settle them all together so they can load the voting precincts to their favor. This is quite favorable when you can redraw a few voting districts in conjunction with it.
Fifty-nine million does not sound like a number that makes me think only one party has been playing this game with America for votes. That is one of their dirty games. They have been busy as beavers stuffing America with people who were not successful elsewhere but were almost guaranteed to love the party that took them in. Some politicians would like to continue this practice. They can always read Quigley, pee down their own legs and think of themselves as advanced humanitarians.
Steve Van
12-13-2016, 11:13 PM
The fact that Western nations and the Catholic Church had violent eras is no logic to answer whether or not Islam is violent. In my copy of The Hadith of Mohammed, compiled by Fazlul Maulana Karim, I find that Mohammed had more to say about Jihad than any other topic. This fact presents the impression that violence is very important in Islam. History tells us also that Mohammed used a great deal of violence to establish Islam, as did Omar. I think that people with knowledge of the origins of Islam would like to hear why these facts do not color Islamic thinking today. Also, why do Muslims kill each other so much, such as with Sunni and Shiites? If Islam is about peace, why are the Saudis killing the Yemenites? The only Muslims who seem to do well at keeping out of violence are the Ismaeli Muslims. I look forward to you thoughts.
I don't like Islam. There are sites devoted to educating people on the number of passages within the Quran that incite violence against infidels, and if you do not believe in Islam and you are reading this, YOU are considered an infidel.
There are major distinctions between Islam and other religions. Islam was founded by a radical militant. Jesus may have been radical for his time, but he was peaceful. Buddha was peaceful, and so on.
Another difference is that ALL of the Quran is fair play in modern interpretation. With Christianity, the violent aspects of The Bible deal with history, and the book does not incite violence against others, as The New Testament explicitly makes this clear.
It is also common for Muslims to heavily immigrate to other places and make demands and impose their will on other's cultures and political systems. With Christian faith you might get a knock on the door every now and then, with Islam you might have a Muslim screaming at you on the street. Europe at this moment in time is a prime example of the problems Islam poses to the Christian faith and Western Civilization and its culture.
In London, as of December 2016, there have been multiple large protests by Muslims demanding a caliphate to be established. That is a BIG problem. It's not being covered by mainstream media in the U.S.
What many people don't seem to understand is that Islam isn't just a religion. It's a complete system of life, incorporating political, religious, and cultural elements. So when you invite large numbers of Muslims into your country you are going to have problems in the long run - PERIOD.
As for it being a peaceful religion, well we already know it was established by a ferocious militant, and it has military rules and doctrine encoded into it. People don't read their history anymore. Islam spread like the plague, attacking and taking control of huge portions of countries throughout parts of Europe, The Middle East, and Northern Africa. The Crusades were a direct response to the invasions and attacks of militant Muslims, and if it wasn't for those Crusaders, Europe and the U.S.A. as we know it wouldn't exist.
Islam is not a religion of peace. It is a dangerous doctrine.
P.S. What is essentially going on, is Islam, and by obvious extension Muslims, are taking over countries by immigrating, and massively outbreeding the native population. In the video Clopin linked, fast forward to 5:10 and listen to what the guy says. The Muslim explains how to deal with Islam: A. kick them out of your country, B. starting having a lot of babies and FAST. Then he laughs because the liberals are too stupid to see what's happening. They don't see the big picture.
Some people might think that is bigotry, and side with Muslims, yet everywhere Muslims are allowed in, in massive numbers, they begin to takeover the very same country that let them in. Who are the bigots? Who has the insidious agenda? Think long and hard about that.
Tammuz
01-01-2017, 01:14 PM
I can only agree with my previous speakers.
Different from Judaism and Christianity, Islam claims from the start political domination over the whole mankind in its basic text and in important secondary texts. Highly alarming is also the brutality and cruelty of founder Mohammed. Strangely enough, this contemptuous behavior is not perceived at all by the pro-Islamic sweet talkers of our days. Mrs. Merkel in Germany, daughter of a Protestant theologian and pastor, is a tragic example for this. Of course, she is only instrumental to several background stakeholders, such as Bilderberger and the Freemasons.
How can one offically accept a teaching as ´world religion´ whose founder has ordered the cruel killing of thousands of people?
+ Mohammed, who financed his army and enriched himself by carrying brutal assaults on caravans and nearby tribes, and by selling the families of killed males, which refused to convert to Islam, into slavery.
+ Mohammed, who elicited information about a gold hideout from Kinana, chief of Jewish tribe Khaibar, by laying glowing charcoal on his breast until he finally talked.
+ Mohammed, who then had the chief and his nephew decapitated, and raped the 17-year-old bride of the nephew.
+ Mohammed, who had fleeing ´nonbelievers´ cut off their hands and cut out their eyes and had them abandoned in the desert.
Unfortunately the list could be continued, however, the following quote should do:
(Craig Winn in ´Mohammed, the Prophet of Doom´ p. 13)
Mohammed financed his religion entirely through piracy and the slave trade.
In the case of Islam, the concept of ´freedom of religion´ borders on the absurd: if this religion was really ´freely´ practized it would logically work towards the abolishment of secular democracy, which is according to true Islam a sin against Allah. What the Islam apologists (= sweet talkers) have in mind is not the true Islam but its thinned-out pseudo-version which has surficially adopted Western values. Below this surface the true Islam is on the advance, at least in Europe, and there with special support of Mrs. Merkel.
Sir Winston Churchill in ´The River War´:
How dreadful are the curses which Mohammedanism lays on its votaries! Besides the fanatical frenzy, which is as dangerous in a man as hydrophobia in a dog, there is this fearful fatalistic apathy. The effects are apparent in many countries. Improvident habits, slovenly systems of agriculture, sluggish methods of commerce, and insecurity of property exist wherever the followers of the Prophet rule or live. A degraded sensualism deprives this life of its grace and refinement; the next of its dignity and sanctity. The fact that in Mohammedan law every woman must belong to some man as his absolute property – either as a child, a wife, or a concubine – must delay the final extinction of slavery until the faith of Islam has ceased to be a great power among men. Thousands become the brave and loyal soldiers of the faith: all know how to die but the influence of the religion paralyses the social development of those who follow it. No stronger retrograde force exists in the world. Far from being moribund, Mohammedanism is a militant and proselytizing faith. It has already spread throughout Central Africa, raising fearless warriors at every step; and were it not that Christianity is sheltered in the strong arms of science, the science against which it had vainly struggled, the civilisation of modern Europe might fall, as fell the civilisation of ancient Rome.
Ecurb
01-04-2017, 01:15 PM
Some people might think that is bigotry....t.
Well, yes, some people might. That's because it IS bigotry.
"Outbreeding"? Are Muslims animals? Since when do English speakers use "breeding" to describe human reproduction?
This is just one of many examples of the bigotry endemic to Vota's post(s).
Scheherazade
01-04-2017, 06:59 PM
That's because it IS bigotry.Indeed it is, which is not tolerated on this Forum.
This thread will now be closed because singling out groups or religions in such a manner is not permitted.
We take pride in the fact that we welcome literature-lovers from different corners of the world, regardless of their cultural, social or religious backgrounds.
Anyone who has issues with this fact should reconsider their own place and membership within our community.
May we all have a peaceful year ahead.
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