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Poll Poll
Question: most effective attacks on our freedom of speech?

Muslims preventing people from mocking Muhammed    
  11 (55.0%)
Journalists not reporting some ASIO intel ops    
  4 (20.0%)
Something else    
  5 (25.0%)




Total votes: 20
« Created by: freediver on: Oct 9th, 2014 at 12:43pm »

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Is Islam against free speech? (Read 166896 times)
Karnal
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Re: Is Islam against free speech?
Reply #330 - Oct 24th, 2014 at 12:50am
 
freediver wrote on Oct 23rd, 2014 at 8:33pm:
Quote:
Now that’s one thing you’ll never hear a priest say. They keep saying blasphemy’s a mortal sin.


I couldn't care less if a Muslim says I am going to hell for mocking Muhammed. It's the helping me get there bit that is the problem.


It must make your blood boil that G isn’t trying to help you get there, FD.

Y, yes, but he doesn’t count.

H’s a Karmic Khristian.
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Re: Is Islam against free speech?
Reply #331 - Oct 24th, 2014 at 8:51am
 
He claimed to support freedom of speech, but then qualified this support to the point of meaninglessness. Then of course, he ran away. His delusions about the vast majority of Australians wanting the government to put religion beyond criticism is also strange, at best. He is currently in the process of running away from that also.

Remind you of anyone?
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polite_gandalf
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Re: Is Islam against free speech?
Reply #332 - Oct 24th, 2014 at 12:02pm
 
freediver wrote on Oct 23rd, 2014 at 6:51pm:
All it would require is you quoting an Australian Muslim leader supporting the right to depict and mock Muhammed.


You won't find one - the idea is absurd. Religious leaders are universally fuddy-duddy on this point. You've been provided with quotes by christian leaders calling for insults to christianity to be outlawed. You won't find any christian leaders supporting the right to mock Jesus or christianity.

What you cannot deny though is the broad community of Australian muslims being on the same page as the rest of the community vis-a-vis our values and our freedoms. Your non-argument about muslim leaders merely proves that establishment muslim leaders are the same as any other establishment religious leaders - ie they want their religion to be beyond criticism.

freediver wrote on Oct 23rd, 2014 at 6:51pm:
If this truly is the best example you can find of a Muslim supporting freedom of speech, you prove my case for me.


No, muslims speak out in support of freedom of speech all the time. Most recently against calls for Hizbt Tareer to be banned. That people are hypocritical about what this means doesn't change the fact that it is a defense of freedom of speech.

freediver wrote on Oct 23rd, 2014 at 6:51pm:
s this you backpedalling, or merely changing the topic? I would appreciate a clarification.


Focus on the actual topic FD, not your pathetic attempts to derail it. *YOU* answer the question - was this response an example of the exact type of spineless apologism you have been railing against, or is it one rule for muslims and another for non-muslims. That is the heart of the topic of the thread here - are mainstream muslims actually demonstrably different in their attitudes about our values and freedoms?

Or if you insist on focusing on those words of mine - answer my other question - if the respondents had been muslim, would you label this as attempting to legally put islam beyond criticism? Be honest, if you can.

freediver wrote on Oct 23rd, 2014 at 6:51pm:
What, a Muslim?


Yes FD, there are some muslims I don't feel at all connected or associated with. . Muslims are not all the same believe it or not. Its called not tarring all muslims with the same brush - I believe you are familiar with the term.
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A resident Islam critic who claims to represent western values said:
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Outlawing the enemy's uniform - hijab, islamic beard - is not depriving one's own people of their freedoms.
 
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Soren
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Re: Is Islam against free speech?
Reply #333 - Oct 24th, 2014 at 1:05pm
 
Meanwhile in cuddly Malaysia:



Liberal ­Islamic scholar Ulil ­Abshar Abdalla has been banned by the Malaysian government from entering the country to speak at a forum on the threat posed by religious fundamentalism.

The forum is being held at the headquarters of the Global Movement of Moderates established by Prime Minister Najib Razak.

Home Minister Ahmad Zahid Hamidi said that Dr Ulil, an Indonesian, had been barred entry because “he would mislead the Muslims in the country if he is allowed to spread his brand of liberalism here”.

Mr Najib said yesterday, after Malaysia had been elected to a temporary UN Security Council seat, that the country would ­advance “a Malaysian vision of peace and moderation”.

Dr Ulil, 47, said the ban was a case of conservative groups wanting to impose a “monoculture of conformism” on Muslim society.

“As sad as this ban might be, it won’t work. Authority might ban my entrance to Malaysia. But ­Islamic progressive ideas can’t be stopped,” he said.

He quoted 18th-century philosopher Thomas Paine. “To argue with a man who has renounced the use and authority of reason ... is like administering medicine to the dead.” (no similar Islamic quote offered itself for some reason)

Indonesia’s Religious Affairs Minister Lukman Hakim Saifuddin said Jakarta hoped Kuala Lumpur would not ban other Indonesians from entering Malaysia for religious discussions.

Jakarta, he said, would not adopt the same policy.

“Malaysians wanting to come to Indonesia to discuss religion” would be welcome, he said. “Differing perspectives on religion should not be a cause for worry — they can be bridged by dialogue.”

Malaysia’s ambassador to Jakarta, Zahrain Mohamed Hashim, warned that if Dr Ulil were ­allowed into his country, he might spread the teachings of minority Islamic sect Ahmadiyyah.

But Dr Ulil said he was a member of one of Indonesia’s two most established and biggest Sunni ­Islamic organisations — Nahdlatul Ulama — and had only expressed the view that Ahmadiyyah should not itself be banned unless it acted in breach of the law.

He has criticised the Islamic council of clerics for prohibiting Muslims from offering Christmas greetings to Christian colleagues.

Zaid Ibrahim, a lawyer and former Malaysian minister suspended from the ruling UMNO party six years ago, said that “the ­jihadist menace is a subject everyone is talking about”, and that the ban underlined that the government itself was now ­fundamentalist.



Uh-oh.
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Karnal
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Re: Is Islam against free speech?
Reply #334 - Oct 24th, 2014 at 2:28pm
 
freediver wrote on Oct 24th, 2014 at 8:51am:
He claimed to support freedom of speech, but then qualified this support to the point of meaninglessness. Then of course, he ran away. His delusions about the vast majority of Australians wanting the government to put religion beyond criticism is also strange, at best. He is currently in the process of running away from that also.

Remind you of anyone?


Abu? Ah.

Except G has done none of those things.  He responds to all of your posts in detail.

I’m starting to think maybe Abu wasn’t so bad after all.
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Re: Is Islam against free speech?
Reply #335 - Oct 24th, 2014 at 2:36pm
 
Come on K, FD can't even remember a simple fact like that the mass execution of the Qurayza isn't even in the Quran - despite being told about 50 times. Or what a burqa is. You can't expect him to remember any of my detailed and considered replies to his posts.

Besides, Abu, Gandalf, ISIS fanboy - whats the difference? FD's moved on from the whole "we shouldn't be tarring all muslims with the same brush" thing, you know.
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A resident Islam critic who claims to represent western values said:
Quote:
Outlawing the enemy's uniform - hijab, islamic beard - is not depriving one's own people of their freedoms.
 
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Soren
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Re: Is Islam against free speech?
Reply #336 - Oct 24th, 2014 at 4:19pm
 
polite_gandalf wrote on Oct 24th, 2014 at 2:36pm:
Besides, Abu, Gandalf, ISIS fanboy - whats the difference? FD's moved on from the whole "we shouldn't be tarring all muslims with the same brush" thing, you know.



And how well that illustrates the utter failure of the propaganda over the last decade or so about Islam being a religion of peace.


In the same period we have seen not only FD but entire countries turn.
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Karnal
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Re: Is Islam against free speech?
Reply #337 - Oct 24th, 2014 at 6:25pm
 
Soren wrote on Oct 24th, 2014 at 4:19pm:
polite_gandalf wrote on Oct 24th, 2014 at 2:36pm:
Besides, Abu, Gandalf, ISIS fanboy - whats the difference? FD's moved on from the whole "we shouldn't be tarring all muslims with the same brush" thing, you know.



And how well that illustrates the utter failure of the propaganda over the last decade or so about Islam being a religion of peace.


In the same period we have seen not only FD but entire countries turn.


FD is perfectly entitled to "turn".

However, in doing so, he has thrown away every semblance of reason he once had. He now argues that telling porkie pies is freeedom of speach. He compulsively interrogates any Muslim he can find, not for any curiousity or willingness to know more, but to score cheap and petty points. If he can’t get a Muslim, he’ll go for an "apologist". He’ll twist their words, pretend they said things they didn’t, and use the same old tired - and disproven - myths at every opportunity.

And all in the name of Freeedom.

You’re different, old boy. You never "turned". You’ve always done this.

Integrity, innit.
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Re: Is Islam against free speech?
Reply #338 - Oct 24th, 2014 at 6:49pm
 
Quote:
Except G has done none of those things.  He responds to all of your posts in detail.


He is doing those things right here in this thread Karnal. I can quote him if you'd like.

Quote:
You won't find one - the idea is absurd.


It is only absurd for Muslims. But I'm happy to make it easier for you. Try coming up with a Muslim 'community leader' who speaks out in support of freedom of speech in the face of his fellow co-religionists trying so hard to destroy it by any means possible.

Quote:
You won't find any christian leaders supporting the right to mock Jesus or christianity.


I don't recall anyone being beheaded for mocking Jesus lately, so it is hardly a hot topic at the moment. But it is easy enough to find Christian leaders speaking out in defense of freedom of speech and showing a genuine understanding of the concept. My first google search threw up a few good ones, for example:

http://reformedperspective.ca/component/content/article/52-magcontent/human-rights/210-a-christian-perspective-on-freedom-of-speech

You'll notice that in contrast to your Muslim, they actually utter the words freedom of speech and take a principled stand in favour of it. They actually say many of the same things I have been saying.

Any luck yet finding a Muslim doing the same?

Quote:
You've been provided with quotes by christian leaders calling for insults to christianity to be outlawed.


And they are howled down by their fellow Christians. You'll notice more big differences here - one, there is a debate, and two, the pro-freedom Christians have won that debate. This is the vast gulf between Muslims and the rest of the community that you are pretending to be blind to.

Quote:
What you cannot deny though is the broad community of Australian muslims being on the same page as the rest of the community


You always resort to the vague and meaningless, because it is impossible to pin down. Yet you have no clue what the rest of the community thinks and you have demonstrated that right here in this thread.

Quote:
No, muslims speak out in support of freedom of speech all the time. Most recently against calls for Hizbt Tareer to be banned.


Again, you merely demonstrate you inability to even comprehend the concept. You have done this a few times already.

Quote:
Focus on the actual topic FD, not your pathetic attempts to derail it.


This is the actual topic Gandalf. I can see I need to quote you again:

Quote:
A survey saying a massive majority of Australians want the government to place religion beyond criticism or mockery does...


Would you mind clarifying whether you are backpedaling or merely changing the subject?

Quote:
*YOU* answer the question - was this response an example of the exact type of spineless apologism you have been railing against, or is it one rule for muslims and another for non-muslims.


I think you could read a lot into the survey. A respondent could have meant nothing more than support for current limitations on freedom of speech in the form of libel and slander laws. You took it to the opposite extreme. On the surface it does appear to be a case of spineless apologetics, but I bet even the respondents who said yes would balk at your effort to reinterpret their response.

Quote:
Or if you insist on focusing on those words of mine - answer my other question - if the respondents had been muslim, would you label this as attempting to legally put islam beyond criticism? Be honest, if you can.


The OIC is an example of Muslims trying to legally put Islam beyond criticism. This on the other hand is a dodgy internet survey. I can find very clear examples of muslims expressing their hostility to freedom of speech and do not need to stoop to your efforts at reinterpretation.

Quote:
Yes FD, there are some muslims I don't feel at all connected or associated with. . Muslims are not all the same believe it or not. Its called not tarring all muslims with the same brush - I believe you are familiar with the term.


But they are still Muslims, as are you, and it is in no way dishonest of me to point this out.
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Re: Is Islam against free speech?
Reply #339 - Oct 24th, 2014 at 6:49pm
 
And consistency.   Ask Soren a question and you'll know what the answer will be - "It's all Islam's fault!"    Roll Eyes
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Karnal
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Re: Is Islam against free speech?
Reply #340 - Oct 25th, 2014 at 12:43am
 
Brian Ross wrote on Oct 24th, 2014 at 6:49pm:
And consistency.   Ask Soren a question and you'll know what the answer will be - "It's all Islam's fault!"    Roll Eyes


Always, absolutely, never ever. The old boy’s as tedious and predictable as the Sprintcyclist.

I blame Islam.
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Karnal
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Re: Is Islam against free speech?
Reply #341 - Oct 25th, 2014 at 12:45am
 
polite_gandalf wrote on Oct 24th, 2014 at 2:36pm:
Come on K, FD can't even remember a simple fact like that the mass execution of the Qurayza isn't even in the Quran - despite being told about 50 times.


Yes, but FD doesn’t care about things like that. He simply isn’t interested.

Which is why he drills you with questions about it.

Sometimes a question is just a question, you know.
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Re: Is Islam against free speech?
Reply #342 - Oct 25th, 2014 at 10:34am
 
Karnal wrote on Oct 24th, 2014 at 6:25pm:
Soren wrote on Oct 24th, 2014 at 4:19pm:
polite_gandalf wrote on Oct 24th, 2014 at 2:36pm:
Besides, Abu, Gandalf, ISIS fanboy - whats the difference? FD's moved on from the whole "we shouldn't be tarring all muslims with the same brush" thing, you know.



And how well that illustrates the utter failure of the propaganda over the last decade or so about Islam being a religion of peace.


In the same period we have seen not only FD but entire countries turn.


FD is perfectly entitled to "turn".

However, in doing so, he has thrown away every semblance of reason he once had. He now argues that telling porkie pies is freeedom of speach. He compulsively interrogates any Muslim he can find, not for any curiousity or willingness to know more, but to score cheap and petty points. If he can’t get a Muslim, he’ll go for an "apologist". He’ll twist their words, pretend they said things they didn’t, and use the same old tired - and disproven - myths at every opportunity.

And all in the name of Freeedom.

You’re different, old boy. You never "turned". You’ve always done this.

Integrity, innit.



Country after country questions multiculturalism because of Muslims. Not because of Sikhs, Buddhists, presbyterians or individuals like FD, me or anyone else.
Because of Muslims.  It is Islamic terrorism that exercises Western security forces. The Muslim civil war reaches into every country. Every time a middle eastern Arab country gets the vote, they elect a far worse, Islamic/sectarian government than the distasteful dictatorship that was supposed to be improved upon by the democratic process: See Labia, Egypt,e Iraq, Gaza. They can't sort themselves out at home and they are not shedding their ways when they migrate to democratic western countries. They are not giving up Islam and Islam will not submit to secular, Western liberal democracy.

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Re: Is Islam against free speech?
Reply #343 - Oct 27th, 2014 at 11:51am
 
freediver wrote on Oct 24th, 2014 at 6:49pm:
My first google search threw up a few good ones, for example:


Oh so its Canadian quotes we're looking at then - not Australian?

Here you go...

Quote:
A DEFENSE OF FREE SPEECH BY AMERICAN AND CANADIAN MUSLIMS
We, the undersigned, unconditionally condemn any intimidation or threats of violence directed against any individual or group exercising the rights of freedom of religion and speech; even when that speech may be perceived as hurtful or reprehensible.

...

We uphold the First Amendment of the US Constitution and the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.  Both protect freedom of religion and speech, because both protections are fundamental to defending minorities from the whims of the majority.

Read more: http://www.beliefnet.com/columnists/cityofbrass/2010/09/statement-on-free-speech-by-mu.html#ixzz3HIxuOIdA
Read more at http://www.beliefnet.com/columnists/cityofbrass/2010/09/statement-on-free-speech-by-mu.html#JOVocD8G57pxUBRE.99
Read more: http://www.beliefnet.com/columnists/cityofbrass/2010/09/statement-on-free-speech-by-mu.html#ixzz3HIxOlJrz
Read more at http://www.beliefnet.com/columnists/cityofbrass/2010/09/statement-on-free-speech-by-mu.html#JOVocD8G57pxUBRE.99


There was also a coalition of muslims set up in the wake of the cartoon controversy in Denmark who spoke out in defense of freedom of speech.

I'm sure its all very sinnister and an example of taqqiya in action.

freediver wrote on Oct 24th, 2014 at 6:49pm:
This is the vast gulf between Muslims and the rest of the community that you are pretending to be blind to.


There are nearly half a million muslims in Australia. You cite quranic passages that only you believe in, and a few dozen idiots waving beheading signs as some sort of "proof" that most of these half a million are "chipping away at our freedoms at every opportunity". I'll keep quoting that f* cking retarded claim of yours - I won't get tired of it. Maybe some day you will look back at all this and think "wow did I really say that sh*t?? - what a douche I was!" Not likely I know, but I refuse to believe that somewhere deep in the recesses of the brain of someone who once declared that all muslims must not be tarred with the same brush, and that most muslims are no different to anyone else - there isn't a faint little voice of reason who is shaking his head sadly.

freediver wrote on Oct 24th, 2014 at 6:49pm:
Yet you have no clue what the rest of the community thinks and you have demonstrated that right here in this thread.


I have demonstrated that you have not a shred of evidence to support your BS claim that the mainstream of half a million muslims in this country are "chipping away at our freedoms at every opportunity" - and that you pathetically resort to logical fallacies to try and prove it.

freediver wrote on Oct 24th, 2014 at 6:49pm:
Would you mind clarifying whether you are backpedaling or merely changing the subject?


Again, if muslims had said it, it wouldn't be a "dodgy internet survey", and all sorts of smears would be being produced from it. Again, can you say honestly, with a straight face that if muslims had said - even in an internet survey - that people shouldn't be offended on the basis of their religion, you wouldn't label that as a case of muslims trying to put religion beyond criticism? Would you be trying to obfuscate the results by dismissing it as a mere "dodgy internet survey" (with no justification) thats been "reinterpreted beyond recognition"? A straight answer, please.

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A resident Islam critic who claims to represent western values said:
Quote:
Outlawing the enemy's uniform - hijab, islamic beard - is not depriving one's own people of their freedoms.
 
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Re: Is Islam against free speech?
Reply #344 - Oct 27th, 2014 at 1:14pm
 
Quote:
There are nearly half a million muslims in Australia. You cite quranic passages that only you believe in


I believe they are there, in the Koran. In what sense do you not 'believe' them?

Quote:
I'll keep quoting that f* cking retarded claim of yours - I won't get tired of it.


Perhaps you should quote the whole thing. Maybe even include a link. Merely quoting the bit that says "chipping away at our freedoms at every opportunity" makes it look like you are trying to misrepresent what I said.

Quote:
Maybe some day you will look back at all this and think "wow did I really say that sh*t?? - what a douche I was!"


While we're at it, how do you feel about this claim?

Quote:
A survey saying a massive majority of Australians want the government to place religion beyond criticism or mockery does...


Quote:
Again, if muslims had said it, it wouldn't be a "dodgy internet survey"


Yes it would be.

Quote:
Again, can you say honestly, with a straight face that if muslims had said - even in an internet survey - that people shouldn't be offended on the basis of their religion, you wouldn't label that as a case of muslims trying to put religion beyond criticism? Would you be trying to obfuscate the results by dismissing it as a mere "dodgy internet survey" (with no justification) thats been "reinterpreted beyond recognition"? A straight answer, please.


Sure. Here is what I said in the last post about it Gandalf:

Quote:
On the surface it does appear to be a case of spineless apologetics, but I bet even the respondents who said yes would balk at your effort to reinterpret their response.


Is there anything confusing or 'not straight' about that Gandalf? Like I have already pointed out, there are issues with that survey on many levels - including your effort at interpreting the results. One of those issues is ambiguity - the same ambiguity we get from your refusal to elaborate on when it should be illegal to depict and mock Muhammed. In the case of the survey, this is a flaw that cannot now be undone. In your case, it is a continued and deliberate effort at obfuscation.
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