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inciting hatred against Muslims (Read 13215 times)
Annie Anthrax
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Re: inciting hatred against Muslims
Reply #75 - Feb 18th, 2010 at 10:39am
 
Helian, when it comes to the Israel/Palestine debate, I personally come down hard with both feet firmly on the side of the Palestinians. But...while I don't 'support' Israel's right to exist - especially when their government's policy towards the Palestinian people is so destructive - I do think it's too late to change the fact that it does now exist, therefore the only option now is to open some kind of productive dialogue.

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How do we motivate the mythical moderate Muslims to publicly denounce militant Islamism and reject their misguided responsibility to Islamic "fraternity"?


Mythical? So there are no moderate muslims? I would have thought you knew better than that. Most muslims do denounce terrorism. We need to give them a platform for their voices to be heard though. We need to listen instead of making assumptions about what they think.

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Aren't you a little tired of the invoking the likes of the Crusades as the reason that it is we who should be apologising?


I don't recall doing that, nor do I see the necessity or even the point of it.

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How do we motivate ourselves to trust Australian Muslims enough to believe that they are not all praying for the destruction of our state and our system of government?


By learning about them and talking to them without any preconceived notions of what they are thinking. Australian muslims (except that small psycho fringe element) have as much motivation for wanting Australia to be a peaceful, productive place to live as the rest of us.
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NorthOfNorth
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Re: inciting hatred against Muslims
Reply #76 - Feb 18th, 2010 at 11:49am
 
Annie Anthrax wrote on Feb 18th, 2010 at 10:39am:
Quote:
How do we motivate the mythical moderate Muslims to publicly denounce militant Islamism and reject their misguided responsibility to Islamic "fraternity"?


Mythical? So there are no moderate muslims? I would have thought you knew better than that. Most muslims do denounce terrorism. We need to give them a platform for their voices to be heard though. We need to listen instead of making assumptions about what they think.

"Mythical" - a mischievous little adjective for rhetorical flourish Grin

Do they (denounce terrorism)? While I may assume that most do (and I do), I hear/read very little of that denunciation.

Platforms are available to all.

We (you and I) make assumptions that the majority of Muslims denounce militant Islam, in the same way many of us made assumptions that the southern Catholic Irish denounced IRA activity... Although whenever I spoke to a southern Irish Catholic, mostly I'd hear equivocation of the same kind many Poles once described the Nazi treatment of Jews.

Annie Anthrax wrote on Feb 18th, 2010 at 10:39am:
Quote:
Aren't you a little tired of the invoking the likes of the Crusades as the reason that it is we who should be apologising?


I don't recall doing that, nor do I see the necessity or even the point of it.

Sorry, should have said "Aren't you a little tired hearing/readingof the invoking the likes of the Crusades as the reason that it is we who should be apologising?"

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Annie Anthrax
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Re: inciting hatred against Muslims
Reply #77 - Feb 18th, 2010 at 12:23pm
 
Quote:
"Aren't you a little tired hearing/readingof the invoking the likes of the Crusades as the reason that it is we who should be apologising?"


Yes, I am. It all gets old after a while. It happens on both sides though... and that's what I've been trying to say. Instead of accusations, insults and dragging up long ago conflicts when there's already so much of it now, we need to collectively take a deep breath and seriously look at how to close the divide. The only way to do that is, as I said before, communication.
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abu_rashid
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Re: inciting hatred against Muslims
Reply #78 - Feb 18th, 2010 at 3:38pm
 
fd,

Quote:
Can you explain how this applies to Afghanistan? Or are you just giving us the definition of a resistance movement?


Not quite sure what you mean there. In recent history, Afghanistan has seen several resistance movements, firstly during the failed British attempt to colonise it in the 19th. century, then during the Soviet attempt, and now during the Western coalition attempt, which is really an extension of the Soviet attempt.

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That doesn;t make much sense Abu. They are rival political systems, whether they exist or not. They do not have to be rival countries to be rival options. If you seek a return of the caliphate, then democracy is a rival. Your constant insistance that the nature of the polical system you seek to establish is irrelevant to the discussion about that system because it does not yet exist is just absurd.


Actually if you think about it logically it makes perfect sense. The only way in which democracy is a rival to the Caliphate is if democracy is actually the one trying to enforce it's rule onto other people's countries. But then that destroys the whole argument about Muslims supposedly being a threat to Western societies doesn't it?
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abu_rashid
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Re: inciting hatred against Muslims
Reply #79 - Feb 18th, 2010 at 3:52pm
 
mozza,

Quote:
I could point you toward scholarly works which have studied the rise of militant Islam, and have actually posted links to such works before, but you have always refused to acknowlwdge them as credible, because they were not written by muslims.


Ok, how about you give it a try. Show me, where in 1970~ all of a sudden militant Islam rose, where before it didn't exist.

I might just inform you first that the main groups who are considered to be "militant" are groups like the Salafis, who have been in existence since about the late 18th. century, when their "Wahabi rebellion" first began against the Ottoman Caliphate, backed by the British. Other groups often claimed to be militant like the Muslim Brotherhood have existed since the 1930's, and were instrumental in fighting the creation of the Zionist entity in Palestine from the 1940's onwards, until their branch was established in Palestine (now known as Hamas).

Other groups like Hezbollah were founded in the mid-1980's. I'm curious which groups exactly do you claim "arose" in 1970~??? I can't for the life of me think of one that was formed or rose to prominence around that time. For that reason alone I think you've got absolutely no idea about the history of this conflict at all, and are therefore speaking nothing but bovine faeces.

Quote:
As an exercise in fairness I will ask if you can explain the inter-muslim violence that has been prominent for quite a while longer than any of the resistance movements reacting to colonisation?


Can you provide an example of it??

Quote:
The bottom line is that any would be "teacher"/"leader" that can muster the chutzpah to bang on about their own interpretation of Islamic teachings, is pretty much as valid as any other, as Islam has no hierarchy which is universally accepted and recognised, but more of a nut of the day club, where whoever has overwound his headress a little can direct followers to adopt errant behaviours, and claim it is divinely inspired.

It is the reason for all the confllict, because they never agree with each other, or anyone else, and always claim to be inspired by Allah, so they kill each other, they kill those from rival sects, tribes, countries, and also rival religions and cultures.


Actually this sounds a lot more like Christianity than Islam to me. Islam has a very strict system of authentication of scholarship, which means that it's very hard for any looney to just come along, build a compound, declare himself a messiah-of-sorts, amass weapons and engage in a siege. This kind of thing seems to be the forte of Christians. Likewise any Muslim who claimed to be "inspired by allah" would pretty much instantly be considered an apostate, since we do not believe inspiration exists after the time of Muhammad (pbuh).

This is just another case of your ignorant claims about Islam, which are usually based on transposing your knowledge of Christian extremism onto Islam. Without even the basic knowledge that most of it simply doesn't apply to Islam, and exposes you for the ignoramus you are.

Nevermind though, don't let little things like facts get in the way of your ramblings.
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Re: inciting hatred against Muslims
Reply #80 - Feb 18th, 2010 at 9:04pm
 
abu_rashid wrote on Feb 18th, 2010 at 3:38pm:
fd,

Actually if you think about it logically it makes perfect sense. The only way in which democracy is a rival to the Caliphate is if democracy is actually the one trying to enforce it's rule onto other people's countries. But then that destroys the whole argument about Muslims supposedly being a threat to Western societies doesn't it?



Non-democratic countries ARE a threat to democracies. Non-democraic countries that wish to see their particular system of dictatorship across the world - fascists, communists, sharia-based islamists - are by definition grave threats.

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Re: inciting hatred against Muslims
Reply #81 - Feb 18th, 2010 at 9:35pm
 
Quote:
Not quite sure what you mean there. In recent history, Afghanistan has seen several resistance movements, firstly during the failed British attempt to colonise it in the 19th. century, then during the Soviet attempt, and now during the Western coalition attempt, which is really an extension of the Soviet attempt.


I see. So it was just an exercise in stating the obvious. You could take the word muslim out and nothing would change:

Quote:
The only thing consistent about Muslim resistance movements is the presence of a colonising power.


Quote:
Actually if you think about it logically it makes perfect sense. The only way in which democracy is a rival to the Caliphate is if democracy is actually the one trying to enforce it's rule


That doesn't make sense. Democracy is a system of government that can be used by groups of people with any ideology. It is not an entity that acts of it's own free will. This is like saying that Islam blew up the world trade centre.
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Soren
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Re: inciting hatred against Muslims
Reply #82 - Feb 18th, 2010 at 9:58pm
 
freediver wrote on Feb 18th, 2010 at 9:35pm:
That doesn't make sense. Democracy is a system of government that can be used by groups of people with any ideology. It is not an entity that acts of it's own free will. This is like saying that Islam blew up the world trade centre.



Democracy cannot be used by any ideology. It is not an entity with free will but an entity devised by people who regard exercising their free will as one of their essential characteristics. This immediatly rules out Mohammedans.

That Islam blew up the world trade centre, as a shortand, is a very apt summary of what is happening - Muslims are exporting their civil wars everywhere. ANd their civil wars are fought about the meaning of Islam, which, evidently, includes blowing up the world trade centre and trains in Spain, England, India, bars in Bali and so on and on and on and on. And on.
It is the same civil war that started in 632.




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Re: inciting hatred against Muslims
Reply #83 - Feb 18th, 2010 at 10:10pm
 
abu_rashid wrote on Feb 18th, 2010 at 3:52pm:
mozza,

Quote:
I could point you toward scholarly works which have studied the rise of militant Islam, and have actually posted links to such works before, but you have always refused to acknowlwdge them as credible, because they were not written by muslims.


Ok, how about you give it a try. Show me, where in 1970~ all of a sudden militant Islam rose, where before it didn't exist.

I might just inform you first that the main groups who are considered to be "militant" are groups like the Salafis, who have been in existence since about the late 18th. century, when their "Wahabi rebellion" first began against the Ottoman Caliphate, backed by the British. Other groups often claimed to be militant like the Muslim Brotherhood have existed since the 1930's, and were instrumental in fighting the creation of the Zionist entity in Palestine from the 1940's onwards, until their branch was established in Palestine (now known as Hamas).

Other groups like Hezbollah were founded in the mid-1980's. I'm curious which groups exactly do you claim "arose" in 1970~??? I can't for the life of me think of one that was formed or rose to prominence around that time. For that reason alone I think you've got absolutely no idea about the history of this conflict at all, and are therefore speaking nothing but bovine faeces.




abu_rashid wrote on Feb 18th, 2010 at 3:52pm:
mozza,

Quote:
I could point you toward scholarly works which have studied the rise of militant Islam, and have actually posted links to such works before, but you have always refused to acknowlwdge them as credible, because they were not written by muslims.


Ok, how about you give it a try. Show me, where in 1970~ all of a sudden militant Islam rose, where before it didn't exist.

I might just inform you first that the main groups who are considered to be "militant" are groups like the Salafis, who have been in existence since about the late 18th. century, when their "Wahabi rebellion" first began against the Ottoman Caliphate, backed by the British. Other groups often claimed to be militant like the Muslim Brotherhood have existed since the 1930's, and were instrumental in fighting the creation of the Zionist entity in Palestine from the 1940's onwards, until their branch was established in Palestine (now known as Hamas).

Other groups like Hezbollah were founded in the mid-1980's. I'm curious which groups exactly do you claim "arose" in 1970~??? I can't for the life of me think of one that was formed or rose to prominence around that time. For that reason alone I think you've got absolutely no idea about the history of this conflict at all, and are therefore speaking nothing but bovine faeces.


Harvard uni press OK with you?

http://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog/ROUEVE.html

Here's the jist: Palestinian refugees comprise about 12 percent of Lebanon's population. Considered foreigners by law (only a handful have obtained Lebanese citizenship since 1948), they are subject to a number of onerous restrictions, and somewhat more than 60 percent live in 12 United Nations Relief and Works Agency camps that have become semisovereign small towns. Everyday Jihad builds on an in-depth case study of everyday politics in one such camp, Ain al-Helweh, to explain the larger role of the Palestinians in Lebanon. It is a complex and depressing story. The organizing theme, as the subtitle suggests, is that the Palestine Liberation Organization, once the preeminent force among Palestinians in Lebanon, is losing out to jihadists as nationalist ideology gives way to Islamism. An implicit theme is that of the Palestinians as an alien underclass in Lebanon and the region -- caught up in ongoing Lebanese politics while remaining outsiders, manipulated by Syria, and embracing political programs, once nationalist and now increasingly Islamist, that hold out scant chance of being realized.
http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/62784/l-carl-brown/everyday-jihad-the-ris...



Militant Islam has existed  since 632 but in modern times it rose to prominence when it succeeded Arab nationalism (an incomprehensible notion for clannish, tribal people) proved to be, predictably, unable to rouse and bind them to defeat Israel in 1967 and 1973.

The spelling, by the way, of one of those toxic outfits is is Hizb 'Allah, the party of Allah. Hezbollah conceals the true name of these thugs. Or are you now worshipping Ollah?


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Re: inciting hatred against Muslims
Reply #84 - Feb 18th, 2010 at 10:36pm
 

you incite hatred against yourself abu.

same as many muzzies
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Re: inciting hatred against Muslims
Reply #85 - Feb 18th, 2010 at 11:45pm
 
Quote:
Harvard uni press OK with you?


I'm fine with it, but nowhere in that excerpt does it say militant Islam arose in 1970~.

Quote:
...bollah conceals the true name of these thugs. Or are you now worshipping Ollah?


Since you're obviously not aware of the complexities of a language which has case endings, and initial consonants that can be elided, I guess it escapes you why it becomes ollah or ullah when the word is placed in construct state. Nevermind.
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Re: inciting hatred against Muslims
Reply #86 - Feb 18th, 2010 at 11:50pm
 
abu_rashid wrote on Feb 18th, 2010 at 11:45pm:
Quote:
Harvard uni press OK with you?


I'm fine with it, but nowhere in that excerpt does it say militant Islam arose in 1970~.

Quote:
...bollah conceals the true name of these thugs. Or are you now worshipping Ollah?


Since you're obviously not aware of the complexities of a language which has case endings, and initial consonants that can be elided, I guess it escapes you why it becomes ollah or ullah when the word is placed in construct state. Nevermind.




Take it up with these guys:
http://www.ag.gov.au/agd/WWW/nationalsecurity.nsf/Page/What_Governments_are_doin...

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Re: inciting hatred against Muslims
Reply #87 - Feb 24th, 2010 at 12:42pm
 
[quote author=abu_rashid link=1265797120/60#66 date=1266395874]
I can bring you countless incidents of Muslims resisting the colonialists prior to 40 years ago. The idea that all of a sudden something changed 40 years ago is not historically sound. [quote]

Muslims resisting western imperialism is old news. If you want, you can go back to the crusades, and following that, to the expansion of the Ottoman empire into Western Europe.

But imperial warfare is hugely different to what we see today. Geopolitically, it's like the difference between WWI and the Cold War. Afghan tribesmen defending their territories against the British is different to the various forces and ideas battling it out in Afghanistan right now. Of course, you'd think the west would learn from history.

They never do...

There are a number of influences that have occurred over the last 50 years or so that have changed the face of Islamic struggle (and conflict with the west). Technological changes like the invention of light arms (AK47s and hand-held missile launchers) have played a huge role, not to mention the internet.

But these things always occur within a history of ideas. One of the chief influences on Al Qaida and the whole notion of militant jihad was the writer/martyr Sayyid Qutb, executed in Egypt in 1966 for allegedly plotting to overthrow the Nasser regime. Qutb focused the struggle onto the US and western materialism, and he advocated the notion of struggle as miltant in the persuit of defending the Islamic faith against the creep of western corruption and decadence.

After his execution, Qutb's brother, Mohamed Qutb, moved to Saudi Arabia, and went on, through connections in the "Muslim Brotherhood", to personally influence Osama bin Laden.

Then Osama moved to Afghanistan to fight the Soviets in the 1980s, and the rest is history.

In the 1960s, the main theme in Arab foreign policy was Pan-Arab nationalism (or Nasserism), which centred around the 1967 war with Israel, but stretched to a range of treaties and shared agendas. Pan-Arab nationalism was a shared nationalist cause, not Islamic, but of course the two influenced each other.

Also fundamental was the rise of OPEC (with its offshoot branch, OPAEC: Organisation of ARAB Exporting Petrolium Countries), who flexed their collective muscle and implimented the oil crisis in 1973, causing a global recession that the west didn't forget - especially Dick Cheney.

The oil embargo was a response to the 1967 war, and the inability/unwillingness of the UN to move Israel back to its former borders. So Israel, and the US using its Security Council veto power in the UN, were crucial in pissing off the Arabs, and then militant groups like Al Qaeda, since 1967.

But I'd say it was Sayyid Qutb's writings, particularly his 30 volume treatise on the Koran, In the Shadow of the Qur'an, that placed Islam's gaze outwards and re-interpreted the notion of jihad as a form of physical warfare against various external enemies (like Western materialism). For Qutb, jihad should not be defensive, but offensive. Also, through his influence on groups like Al Qaeda, Islamic concepts like Ummah (or community) have been re-interpreted into the geopolitical realm, manifesting in the dream of some for an Islamic Caliphate to spread out and rid the world of non-Muslim evil.

Qutb's "martyrdom" at the hands of the US-collaborating Nasser government occurred in 1966. The shockwaves from this event - and Qutb's writings - have influenced the modern idea of militant jihad.

Defending your tribe or empire's borders through conventional warfare is one thing. Strapping on an explosive belt and committing suicide (which is unforgivable in Islam) - not to mention mass murder - is another.

And it is in the last 40 years or so that we've seen such a fundamental re-interpetation of Islam's core teachings.
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Re: inciting hatred against Muslims
Reply #88 - Feb 24th, 2010 at 12:49pm
 
Karnal wrote on Feb 24th, 2010 at 12:42pm:
And it is in the last 40 years or so that we've seen such a fundamental re-interpetation of Islam's core teachings.


For some, that is, not all. Islam is by no means monolithic.
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Re: inciting hatred against Muslims
Reply #89 - Feb 24th, 2010 at 5:44pm
 
I agree with Karnal, Islamist extremism does seem to have emanated from sayid qutb, and his reinvigorating the brotherhood of Islam, after his time in the US in the 1950's, where he was outraged and disgusted to see teenagers dancing together, and even holding hands in public.

He returned to egypt to see the US culture creeping into the youth culture of egypt, where some women were even immoral enough to wear T Shirts in public.
That was it, obviously it was his duty to try and have the president of egypt assassinated, and stop the slide into decadence which would spell doom for decency as he saw it.

Meanwhile we had a corrupt regime in Iran, and a crazy ayatollah in exile, colluding with lunatic french socialist extremists, and VOILA, we had a muslim revolution, and the Isllamic state of Iran was born.

The extremist muslims had found a voice on the world stage, and as they say, the rest is history.
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