freediver wrote on May 19
th, 2013 at 4:36pm:
I did not actually criticise them for their violence. The attack on freedom of speech and the message that was sent to the Australian community is far more significant than the violence involved in the protest. I think you should figure out what I am criticising them for before you tell me I am overstating its significance.
I assume your beef was the calls for violence (beheadings) against those who criticise islam. If muslims had gone out in force in an officially sanctioned (by mainstream islamic bodies) protest, then there may be some substance to your fears. But it wasn't - the protest was organised through text messages instigated by a little known fringe group that has no affiliation with mainstream organisations. Not surprising then that they only got a couple of hundred people to turn up. Nor is it surprising that the official bodies immediately condemned the protest and declared any protest against the video as unislamic and would never be sanctioned.
So perhaps you can explain to me how this "message sent to the Australian community" of a few dozen thugs that is roundly rejected and condemned by just about everyone - especially the mainstream muslim community - is in any way significant in terms of the threat posed to our democracy. Usually when this sort of stuff happens with other extremist groups, we just laugh at them, not become frozen with fear.
freediver wrote on May 19
th, 2013 at 4:36pm:
No they wouldn't. Our society mocks religions and religious people. Constantly. Mercilessly.
No we don't, but thats not vilifying an entire group. Vilifying, in this case is using a single isolated and non-representative event to make up stories about the sinnister undemocratic motives of the entire muslim community. Most Australians believe in a fair go, and would rightly acknowledge that such an event is not representative of the majority - and indeed would stand up for that community (note 'community' - ie this is about minorities and how they are treated, not religion) in the face of such vilification.
freediver wrote on May 19
th, 2013 at 4:36pm:
That is not what I said. I am genuinely interested in the internal reasonings they used to stop the protest.
You said it previously - that press releases, public statements etc are merely a cover, and that the real "internal reasonings" are that terrorism is only wrong because its not official and unsanctioned - but that violence is still the main game. All baseless of course.
For any reasonable person, the public explanation that these protests are unislamic is enough - and there is no need to "be genuinely interested" in the "internal reasonings" - which is just code for "why are they lying?". If the Australian muslim community had a history of projecting an anti-democratic and intolerant message, then there would be some justification to not take them at face value. But they do not, so such antics are little more than hysterics.
freediver wrote on May 19
th, 2013 at 4:36pm:
I notice you did not respond to my questions about support for freedom, democracy and human rights and you instead stuck to the same meaningless but media-friendly one-liners we see all the time. Why is that?
Because I ignored the deliberate insult. I don't know why you're trying to get a rise out of me, but quite frankly that little "declare your loyalty" schtick left a bad taste in my mouth, and I won't dignify it with an answer.
freediver wrote on May 19
th, 2013 at 4:36pm:
I suspect you don't have a clue. Muslims march through the streets with banners calling for people to be beheaded over a video, and you think criticising them for that is the threat to freedom.
now whose making up strawmen?
The threat is not criticising the calls for beheading, because by that logic I would be labelling those muslim leaders who condemned those calls as a threat to freedom
The threat is from condemning an entire community over the actions of a few.
freediver wrote on May 19
th, 2013 at 4:36pm:
I made my claims very clear in the opening post.
Yes quite the tedious read. It was quite a challenge to swallow that jingoistic neo-liberal nonsense without throwing up I must say.
The basic take home message was that islam is the number one threat to our virtuous democracy and freedom, and we must be ever vigilant against this global threat.
All I would say in response is that you seem blissfully unaware of the potential such jingoistic "call to arms" (so to speak) can have for targeting, in a negative way, a rather disempowered minority such as the muslim community in Australia - who have done nothing to deserve such vilification. Even just a little disclaimer stating things like "I don't want to tar the entire muslim community - most of whom are peaceful" or "this is not a call to vilify and entire community" - wouldn't have gone astray.