Quote:That you can't see that you are blatantly assuming what the respondents meant
You introduced the survey. You made claims (that do not even make sense) about what it means regarding stoning adulterers and executing apostates.
Quote:By the way, the "fair to all" and "reduce rampant crime" responses were two separate questions
OK, please point out the response to questions about executing apostates and stoning adulterers to death.
Quote:I'm only going to say this once more - they were asked if "hudud promises justice for all" - there are no qualifications about only including certain parts of hudud - and unless you can demonstrate that the respondents were applying any qualifications about the question, you don't have a leg to stand on.
I am not "standing on" this survey. I am not trying to make anything out of it. You are. I am merely pointing out that it does not show what they think about adultery and stoning laws.
Quote:Only someone with your blinding prejudice would claim with a straight face that people who apparently are so "passionately opposed to hudud could possibly give the responses they did - ambiguous question or not.
Your words Gandalf, not mine.
Quote:he reality is, if non-muslims really thought the way you claim about hudud
You mean if they were opposed to Muslims killing people in the name of Islam?
Quote:they would have a massive red flag light up in their brains as soon as the word "hudud" is mentioned
The survey was conducted in a foreign language. I have no idea how it was presented. I just know that even after translation to English, it is still transparent spin.
Quote:Just after you assured me that there is a "small but significant minority" of non-muslims who do indeed support this law. If, as you claim, this really was about executing apostates and stoning adulterers, and they failed to mention this in the survey, then it is obvious and transparent spin and you are either incredibly naive or seeking to reinforce your own self delusion.
Your words Gandalf, not mine. It is all there if you wish to quote me instead of lying about what I said.
Quote:Yes, but isn't it funny that every time we get to the evidence question, it always comes out as "take an honest guess - how many non-muslims would allow muslims to kill people in the name of islam".
No Gandalf. You are wrong on that also. It did most times, for the obvious reason that I copied and pasted it. I often have to ask you something 100 times before getting a straight answer. I know the drill.
Quote:Isn't it curious, while you don't disagree with my version, you have never once justified your non-evidence by saying (for example) ""take an honest guess - how many non-muslims would allow muslims to enact their own hudud apostasy and adultery laws". Could it be because this wording sounds just slightly more viable and less hysterical than your words? Food for though no?
I did exactly that. Surprise surprise, Gandalf still could not give a straight answer. At any time you could have given a straight answer and if you felt it necessary, qualified it with the context. After all, you spent many posts explaining that I was trying to make it sound like blowing up malls. Surely it would have been easier to give a straight answer and explain that you were not talking about blowing up malls.
Quote:*NEWSFLASH* FD - the government is dominated by the Malay UMNO party. Malay (muslim) -represented parties make a majority of parliament. If 53% of these parties members and supporters really were "frothing at the mouth", "desperate" to get these "killing in the name of islam" laws through, I'm pretty sure you would at the very least see something more than the complete inaction on the issue we are seeing now.
Complete inaction means not getting the laws through parliament, but getting less barbaric ones through (eg the "rehabilitation" camps). If only 1/3 of the country supports the laws, this makes perfect sense.
Quote:do you think its possible to answer positively about something in a survey and not be "frothing at the mouth" and "desperate" about it?
Your words, not mine.
Quote:lol - confused as always FD. Straight after explaining to me that elections are never referendums on single issues, you then use PAS's (relatively) high vote to argue that it "demonstrates a high level of motivation" on this hudud issue. In the spirit of "elections never being referendums on single issues", is it possible that PAS's high vote actually had little to do with their hudud policy? Do you think that just maybe Malaysians were voting in favour of some of PAS's far more prominent (and appealing) credentials such as anti-corruption, anti-status-quo and anti-BN in general? And that Malaysians voted for PAS because of these issue, and quite possibly in spite of, not because of their policies on hudud?
Sure, that's possible, just as it is possible that the reason Muslims who support these laws and don't vote for PAS do so for any number of reasons. You have spent a few pages arguing that you can read whatever you feel like into the election results. You seem perfectly capable of understanding the potential flaws in this when I do it, but seem oblivious when I try to explain the same thing to you.
BTW, all minor parties rail against the corruption etc of the major parties.