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judge Muslims by actions, not views? (Read 54043 times)
polite_gandalf
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Re: Man claiming to be prophet of islam sentenced to death in Pakistan
Reply #15 - Jan 20th, 2014 at 6:45pm
 
freediver wrote on Jan 20th, 2014 at 5:59pm:
It is inevitable that the non-Muslims will be able to exercise their balance of power on those two issues. Presumably the less barbaric laws are easier to get through.


Pure worthless conjecture - as usual. In any case, you avoided the whole question about how the majority of muslims are responsible for those laws - just after lecturing me for pages and pages about the how its next to impossible for the electorate to actually have a say on any one particular issue, elections never referendums on single issues yada yada yada.

freediver wrote on Jan 20th, 2014 at 5:59pm:
Well that's just great isn't it. To get around these barbaric laws, you "merely" have to get your spouse to sign up to Islam in a country where the majority of Muslims support the death penalty for apostasy.


Whats "great" is that your fantasy about Malaysia being an oppressive society that routinely sends apostates to rehabilitation camps is just that - pure fantasy. The reality is completely different to your ignorant spin.

freediver wrote on Jan 20th, 2014 at 5:59pm:
You are talking about a country that has two parallel legal systems and in which one of the 13 states actually passed a law for the execution of apostates. The Muslims have so far been unable to do this, but are not at all unwilling.


I am talking about a country that cannot, by any measure of common sense and ratioanality  be possibly compared to the nazis. We weren't talking about "the muslims" - nice attempt at deflection though.

And I'll stake my arm and leg that not one person will ever be executed for apostasy or stoned for adultery in Malaysia.

freediver wrote on Jan 20th, 2014 at 5:59pm:
Quote:
To even mention Malaysia and the nazis in the same sentence is vile and deeply offensive.


Only if you are blind to what they are trying to do. Islam has been far more successful than Nazism precisely because it plays the long game when it has to, and Malaysia is a great example of this in action.


Roll Eyes no more sensible than the rantings of a raving lunatic I'm afraid FD.


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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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Re: Man claiming to be prophet of islam sentenced to death in Pakistan
Reply #16 - Jan 20th, 2014 at 6:59pm
 
Quote:
Pure worthless conjecture - as usual.


Yet it makes sense to you, doesn't it?

Quote:
In any case, you avoided the whole question about how the majority of muslims are responsible for those laws - just after lecturing me for pages and pages about the how its next to impossible for the electorate to actually have a say on any one particular issue, elections never referendums on single issues yada yada yada.


The Pew survey asked a variety of questions. In general, the less barbaric the law, the more support it has among Muslims. For example, the less barbaric hudud laws (whippings, chopping off limbs) have support among 66% of Malaysian Muslims, compared to 60% for stoning adulterers and 62% for executing apostates.

I did not (as you have attempted) claim to know how many people support a specific piece of legislation based on election outcomes. I made a statement about responsibility. You can hardly lay the blame for these laws at the non-Muslim Malaysians, though I am sure you will demand that I prove it isn't the non-Muslims pushing the Islamic barrow in Malaysian politics.

Quote:
Whats "great" is that your fantasy about Malaysia being an oppressive society that routinely sends apostates to rehabilitation camps is just that - pure fantasy.


I never said anything about how routine it is. Laws are supposed to be a deterrent. Obviously apostates are not going to volunteer for these rehabilitation camps, especially given the number of Muslims who want to execute apostates.

Quote:
I am talking about a country that cannot, by any measure of common sense and ratioanality  be possibly compared to the nazis. We weren't talking about "the muslims" - nice attempt at deflection though.


Sorry. I left out "Malaysian". The Malaysian Muslims have so far been unable to do this (execute apostates), but are not at all unwilling.

Quote:
And I'll stake my arm and leg that not one person will ever be executed for apostasy or stoned for adultery in Malaysia.


You have presented a deluded take on this issue from the very beginning, but I appreciate the irony of you offering up limbs.
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« Last Edit: Jan 20th, 2014 at 7:12pm by freediver »  

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Re: Man claiming to be prophet of islam sentenced to death in Pakistan
Reply #17 - Jan 20th, 2014 at 8:25pm
 
polite_gandalf wrote on Jan 15th, 2014 at 10:26am:
freediver wrote on Jan 14th, 2014 at 8:41pm:
Putting apostates into rehabilitation camps is not living in harmony. It is naked, vulgar oppression, and only a Muslim would even think to spin it any other way.


The number of actual rehabilitation camp cases can be counted on one hand.


The whole point is why brainwashing camps would have to exist at all. The reason is that you serve a god whose heavily abrogated, 23 year, 7th century record is revealed as the exact opposite of the Gospel of the God of the Christians and Jews. You serve a "messenger" that couldn't be more opposite to Jesus Christ.
http://www.falseprophetmuhammad.com/jesus_or_muhammad.htm

You serve a god whose lies are so apparent and transparent, that the only way the antichrist anti-religion of Islam was able to last any longer than Muhammad, is the threat of punishment for going against Islam.

polite_gandalf wrote on Jan 15th, 2014 at 10:26am:
The fact is, as vulgar as they are, they only come up in cases where the person is attempting to "officialize" their apostasy - either by changing their identity card, or marrying a non-muslim .....


Can't even you see that you have been brainwashed away from even being able to remotely conceptualize our God-given rights to freedom, liberty and self-determination? If you were one of the non-Muslims you oppress, or wanted to marry a Christian, your view would obviously be considerably less casual. Even if you were an Ahmadiyya Muslim.

polite_gandalf wrote on Jan 15th, 2014 at 10:26am:
..... and to be clear, the vast majority of those cases do not result in rehabilitation camps. The reality is, it is a system that is easy to get around - get your husband to sign a paper saying they are muslim, or simply don't drag it through the courts insisting on an identity change.


Christians can't live a life filled with lies like Muhammad's followers do.

Mat 10:33 But whosoever shall deny me before men, him will I also deny before my Father which is in heaven.

A Malaysian Muslim dropped me a note on one of my YouTube channels. He confided that he had increasingly recognized that so much was false and evil about Islam, that he knew it couldn't be from a true and loving God, but he never thought Christianity could be right because of Islamic brainwashing against Christianity. He wrote "I am not saying I am a Christian or anything like that, but just that now I think it's possible that Christianity could be the right way."
All I did at that point was direct him to the Gospel of John on one of my websites, and told him to humbly ask Jesus directly, and right out loud, to help him find the truth.
http://www.islamandthetruth.com/gospel_of_john.htm

A couple weeks later he wrote "I am a Christian now." This, without any church being involved, or any men congratulating him and patting him on the back, or anything else. Purely a direct relationship between himself and Jesus Christ. We baptized him over the phone, because it is important to get that done to cover past sins, so a person isn't haunted by them going forward.

He was living outside of Malaysia at the time and was afraid to let his also-Muslim roommate know that he had become a Christian, and I told him there was no reason to, unless he was directly asked. But I also told him to be careful, because his face would likely give him away, as a result of the new found joy in his heart. It did, and when his roommate asked, he told him. Shortly thereafter a group of Imams came to his room to sit on him, but he resisted their pressure. He even became a Christian evangelist and street preacher in that small Islamic enclave in that foreign country.

Last time we made contact he was back in Malaysia, and had found some Christians to fellowship with, but he was absolutely confident that if his father found out he was a Christian he would kill him without hesitation. THAT is the only way, that Satan's anti-religion of Islam - a provable evil lie at every level - lasted any longer than Muhammad. When was the last time you heard about a Christian father murdering his child for leaving Christianity? Why do you suppose that is?

John 14:6 Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life:
no man
cometh unto the Father, but by me.

polite_gandalf wrote on Jan 15th, 2014 at 10:26am:
I'm not defending the system, but it is hardly "naked, vulgar oppression" in the scheme of things.


But that's exactly what it is, in the real scheme of things, in the light of the truth. Start with:
https://www.google.com/#q=churches+burned+malaysia

http://www.examiner.com/article/9-malaysian-churches-burned-dispute-over-allah

...

Try:
https://www.google.com/#q=christian+oppression+malaysia

polite_gandalf wrote on Jan 15th, 2014 at 10:26am:
And just to clarify, most apostates don't actually go to rehabilitation camps, they simply have their application to be legally recognised as a non-muslim rejected.


Until you recognize Islamic slavery is the result of the struggle between truth and lies, between good and evil, you will remain on the wrong side of the equation. It doesn't have to be that way.
http://www.falseprophetmuhammad.com/the_love_of_god.htm
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« Last Edit: Jan 20th, 2014 at 9:00pm by Pete Waldo »  

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Re: Man claiming to be prophet of islam sentenced to death in Pakistan
Reply #18 - Jan 20th, 2014 at 8:45pm
 
Pete Waldo wrote on Jan 20th, 2014 at 8:25pm:
You serve a "messenger" that couldn't be more opposite to Jesus Christ.


Middle Eastern born man who now has a large worldwide following with roots in the Old Testament.  Totally opposite of course.

Pete Waldo wrote on Jan 20th, 2014 at 8:25pm:
is the threat of death for going against Islam.


The Old Testament has many laws for believers that result in death, for very trivial things sometimes such as picking up a bundle of sticks on the wrong day.

Pete Waldo wrote on Jan 20th, 2014 at 8:25pm:
Can't even you see that you have been brainwashed away from even being able to remotely conceptualize our God-given rights to freedom, liberty and self-determination?


How does this fit in with your justification of your God ordering his people to kill babies?  What happened to their "god given rights to freedom liberty and self-determination?

Pete Waldo wrote on Jan 20th, 2014 at 8:25pm:
A couple weeks later he wrote "I am a Christian now." This, without any church being involved, or any men or elders congratulating him and patting him on the back, or anything else. Purely a direct relationship between he and Jesus Christ. We baptized him over the phone, because it is important to get that done to cover past sins, so a person isn't haunted by them going forward.


Good for him.  Good luck in his new faith.

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Pete Waldo wrote on Jan 15th, 2014 at 11:24pm:
Thus killing those Canaanite babies while they were still innocent, was a particularly merciful act
 
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Re: Man claiming to be prophet of islam sentenced to death in Pakistan
Reply #19 - Jan 20th, 2014 at 9:22pm
 
Quote:
Can't even you see that you have been brainwashed away from even being able to remotely conceptualize our God-given rights to freedom, liberty and self-determination?


Gandalf was recently trying to argue that Malaysian Muslims who say they support the death penalty for apostasy do not actually support it. He argued that the reason they do not have the death penalty for apostasy is because the Muslims who support it (who make up roughly 1/3 of the population) do not really think what they think or are somehow not motivated to get what they want. He even attempted to argue that the non-Muslims among the other 2/3 of the population support the "right" of Muslims to impose these laws on "themselves" (which for some reason includes apostates).
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Re: Man claiming to be prophet of islam sentenced to death in Pakistan
Reply #20 - Jan 20th, 2014 at 9:33pm
 
freediver wrote on Jan 20th, 2014 at 9:22pm:
Quote:
Can't even you see that you have been brainwashed away from even being able to remotely conceptualize our God-given rights to freedom, liberty and self-determination?


Gandalf was recently trying to argue that Malaysian Muslims who say they support the death penalty for apostasy do not actually support it. He argued that the reason they do not have the death penalty for apostasy is because the Muslims who support it (who make up roughly 1/3 of the population) do not really think what they think or are somehow not motivated to get what they want. He even attempted to argue that the non-Muslims among the other 2/3 of the population support the "right" of Muslims to impose these laws on "themselves" (which for some reason includes apostates).


While I was perusing the two search links I left him, I happened upon this article by a Malaysian Christian that describes what life is really like in Malaysia, and how the Malaysian courts and legal system actually in fact work:
http://www.frontpagemag.com/2011/jamie-glazov/islam%E2%80%99s-persecution-of-chr...

Which is how Islam always goes, in every case:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VEXWjlgJ83E

The thing I don't get, is how gandalf doesn't get that they he is consigning his heirs, ultimately to be enslaved under rulers like the Taliban, or even worse.

AP - December 06, 2006 MOGADISHU, Somalia - "Residents of a southern Somalia town who do not pray five times a day will be beheaded, an Islamic courts official said Wednesday, adding the edict will be implemented in three days."

Consigning his heirs to be enslaved by whoever are the most morally reprobate, that wield the biggest beheading knifes.
http://www.falseprophetmuhammad.com/islamic_slavery_dhimmitude.htm
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« Last Edit: Jan 20th, 2014 at 9:57pm by Pete Waldo »  

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Re: Man claiming to be prophet of islam sentenced to death in Pakistan
Reply #21 - Jan 20th, 2014 at 9:46pm
 
freediver wrote on Jan 20th, 2014 at 6:59pm:
Yet it makes sense to you, doesn't it?


Of course it makes sense. But its still worthless conjecture without any supporting evidence.

freediver wrote on Jan 20th, 2014 at 6:59pm:
For example, the less barbaric hudud laws (whippings, chopping off limbs) have support among 66% of Malaysian Muslims, compared to 60% for stoning adulterers and 62% for executing apostates.


Wrong. Its 60%, 54% and 58% respectively. And guess what? According to that survey that you insist so vehemently is only about cutting off limbs and flogging for crimes, less than 30% of Chinese Malaysians disagreed with the notion that hudud could be a solution to widespread crime.

Question FD - why are hudud flogging and chopping off limb laws not in place in Malaysia, given that the evidence strongly suggests that a majority of Malaysians demonstrably do *NOT* oppose it? Food for thought.

freediver wrote on Jan 20th, 2014 at 6:59pm:
I did not (as you have attempted) claim to know how many people support a specific piece of legislation based on election outcomes. I made a statement about responsibility.


Yes responsibility. Muslims are "responsible" for laws that were instituted not by the democratically elected government, but by the sharia courts that no one votes for. Yet when muslims overwhelmingly *CHOOSE* not to vote for the one party that offers the hudud laws they supposedly love so much, then the subsequent failure for those laws to get up is somehow *NOT* muslims responsibility. It is also *NOT* the muslims responsibility it seems, when both major parties (who incidentally both rely primarily on the Malay vote) consider it expedient to take an anti-hudud position into the election.

In short, muslims are responsible when bad things get through, but not when bad things are prevented/blocked.

Also what percentage of muslims do you think support these rehabilitation camps? Oh sorry I forgot, you only deal in baseless assumptions  Tongue
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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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Re: Man claiming to be prophet of islam sentenced to death in Pakistan
Reply #22 - Jan 20th, 2014 at 9:54pm
 
Pete Waldo wrote on Jan 20th, 2014 at 9:33pm:
While I was perusing the two search links I left him, I happened upon this article by a Malaysian Christian that describes what life is really like in Malaysia, and how the Malaysian courts and legal system actually in fact work:


Malaysia's problem in regards to the legal system and courts is not Islam, it's just corruption.  Grease the right palms and no one cares what you do in Malaysia. 

I'm sure you will try and argue that corruption is due to Islam anyway, in between advocating the  murder of babies and genocide.
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Pete Waldo wrote on Jan 15th, 2014 at 11:24pm:
Thus killing those Canaanite babies while they were still innocent, was a particularly merciful act
 
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Re: Man claiming to be prophet of islam sentenced to death in Pakistan
Reply #23 - Jan 20th, 2014 at 10:13pm
 
Quote:
Of course it makes sense. But its still worthless conjecture without any supporting evidence.


Grin I knew it would be an uphill struggle to use common sense
personal attack removed


Quote:
Question FD - why are hudud flogging and chopping off limb laws not in place in Malaysia, given that the evidence strongly suggests that a majority of Malaysians demonstrably do *NOT* oppose it? Food for thought.


Because people do not vote "NOT against" candidates and policies. That survey is transparent Islamic spin for the foolish and gullible.

Quote:
Yes responsibility. Muslims are "responsible" for laws that were instituted not by the democratically elected government, but by the sharia courts that no one votes for.


There is a democratic process that determines what those courts are able to do. If the majority of Malaysians were opposed to that arrangement, they could end it. The majority of Malaysians support the arrangement. The laws in Malaysia are a surprisingly accurate reflection of the opinions shown in the survey.

Quote:
Yet when muslims overwhelmingly *CHOOSE* not to vote for the one party that offers the hudud laws they supposedly love so much, then the subsequent failure for those laws to get up is somehow *NOT* muslims responsibility.


Correct. Now repeat after me. An election is not a referendum on a single issue. The minority of Muslims who oppose those barbaric laws can take credit for blocking them, just as the non-Muslims who oppose them can also take credit for it, but you cannot tell who they are or how many of them there are based on an election outcome.

Quote:
It is also *NOT* the muslims responsibility it seems, when both major parties (who incidentally both rely primarily on the Malay vote) consider it expedient to take an anti-hudud position into the election.


Gandalf I am not sure why I need to point out the obvious again, but the issue splits the Malaysian Muslim community nearly right down the middle. I can only assume that you lump them all together as part of your endless misleading spin - I recall you made some BS claim that if the majority of Muslims support the law they could achieve it, even if they only make up 1/3 of the total population.

Quote:
In short, muslims are responsible when bad things get through, but not when bad things are prevented/blocked.


Do you remember demanding I prove "my claim" that 2/3 of the population oppose these laws and that is why they are not law? How can you not see that that is giving credit where it is due?

Quote:
Also what percentage of muslims do you think support these rehabilitation camps? Oh sorry I forgot, you only deal in baseless assumptions


A lot more than support executing apostates.

Stratos wrote on Jan 20th, 2014 at 9:54pm:
Pete Waldo wrote on Jan 20th, 2014 at 9:33pm:
While I was perusing the two search links I left him, I happened upon this article by a Malaysian Christian that describes what life is really like in Malaysia, and how the Malaysian courts and legal system actually in fact work:


Malaysia's problem in regards to the legal system and courts is not Islam, it's just corruption.  Grease the right palms and no one cares what you do in Malaysia. 

I'm sure you will try and argue that corruption is due to Islam anyway, in between advocating the  murder of babies and genocide.


I have no doubt that corruption is a problem, but that does not mean you can somehow white-wash over all the problems that can be traced directly back to Islam. The country has two parallel legal systems - because of Islam.
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« Last Edit: Jan 20th, 2014 at 10:50pm by polite_gandalf »  

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Re: Man claiming to be prophet of islam sentenced to death in Pakistan
Reply #24 - Jan 20th, 2014 at 10:26pm
 
freediver wrote on Jan 20th, 2014 at 10:13pm:
I have no doubt that corruption is a problem, but that does not mean you can somehow white-wash over all the problems that can be traced directly back to Islam. The country has two parallel legal systems - because of Islam.


No of course not.  One of my closest friends grew up in Malaysia as a non Muslim. While their systems do favour Muslims, there was pretty much nothing of a problem which relates to anything extremist or fundamentalist.  Police and officials accepting bribes as basically common practice instead of actually following the law.

The thing is though, the Malaysian government is a Muslim party, and they have been in charge for the longest of any "elected" government (seriously, look up the most recently election, dodgy as balls), and they do not do any of the things you are suggesting, even though they clearly could install these laws if they wanted.

I really don't think it is on the radar for them to start amputating thieves and stoning adulterers, despite the fact they could have these laws if they so choose
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Pete Waldo wrote on Jan 15th, 2014 at 11:24pm:
Thus killing those Canaanite babies while they were still innocent, was a particularly merciful act
 
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Re: Man claiming to be prophet of islam sentenced to death in Pakistan
Reply #25 - Jan 20th, 2014 at 10:36pm
 
Quote:
The thing is though, the Malaysian government is a Muslim party, and they have been in charge for the longest of any "elected" government (seriously, look up the most recently election, dodgy as balls), and they do not do any of the things you are suggesting


What have I actually suggested the government is doing, other than representing the will of the majority?

Quote:
even though they clearly could install these laws if they wanted


What could they do?

Quote:
I really don't think it is on the radar for them to start amputating thieves and stoning adulterers, despite the fact they could have these laws if they so choose


I notice you left out executing apostates. Is that because you know it almost came to pass in one state?
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Re: Man claiming to be prophet of islam sentenced to death in Pakistan
Reply #26 - Jan 20th, 2014 at 10:52pm
 
freediver wrote on Jan 20th, 2014 at 10:36pm:
What have I actually suggested the government is doing, other than representing the will of the majority?


You mean that the majority DON'T want violent punishments then?

freediver wrote on Jan 20th, 2014 at 10:36pm:
What could they do?


They are a corrupt government.  They could do whatever they want basically.

freediver wrote on Jan 20th, 2014 at 10:36pm:
I notice you left out executing apostates. Is that because you know it almost came to pass in one state?


I notice you left out the majority of my argument.  Maybe because you know they aren't actually punishments based on Shari-ah law in Malaysia?

Also, note your phrasing, ALMOST came to pass in ONE state.  Just to clarify, of course I don't condone any form of violent punishment.

Another way of phrasing that would be did not come to pass in any state.
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Pete Waldo wrote on Jan 15th, 2014 at 11:24pm:
Thus killing those Canaanite babies while they were still innocent, was a particularly merciful act
 
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Re: Man claiming to be prophet of islam sentenced to death in Pakistan
Reply #27 - Jan 21st, 2014 at 10:51am
 
freediver wrote on Jan 20th, 2014 at 10:13pm:
There is a democratic process that determines what those courts are able to do. If the majority of Malaysians were opposed to that arrangement, they could end it.


Not really. And this line of argument is a pretty funny turnaround after pages and pages of lecturing about the near impossibility of getting any one specific issue up on the political/election agenda due to lack of press freedom, "layers of obscurity" in the Malaysian system and of course the 'elections no referendum on single issue' jig.

the key difference of course between the two cases is that in the case of hudud, the major parties took a very clear stance on the issue, whereas no one took any stance on what the syaria courts currently are able to do.

Oh and I won't even bother asking for evidence that "the majority of Malaysians" support the current arrangement  Roll Eyes

freediver wrote on Jan 20th, 2014 at 10:13pm:
Gandalf I am not sure why I need to point out the obvious again, but the issue splits the Malaysian Muslim community nearly right down the middle.


According to one random survey - *NOT* according to voting behaviour or the pattern of political agenda setting of Malay (muslim) political parties.

freediver wrote on Jan 20th, 2014 at 10:13pm:
Quote:
Also what percentage of muslims do you think support these rehabilitation camps? Oh sorry I forgot, you only deal in baseless assumptions


A lot more than support executing apostates.


Roll Eyes Let me guess, another deferring to common sense, and "just taking an honest guess"? Beats actual evidence right?
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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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Re: Man claiming to be prophet of islam sentenced to death in Pakistan
Reply #28 - Jan 21st, 2014 at 12:32pm
 
Quote:
Not really.


Why not?

Quote:
And this line of argument is a pretty funny turnaround after pages and pages of lecturing about the near impossibility of getting any one specific issue up on the political/election agenda due to lack of press freedom, "layers of obscurity" in the Malaysian system and of course the 'elections no referendum on single issue' jig.


Despite it's flaws, there is a limit to what the government can get away with, especially for highly contentious issues. You were attempting to read an absurd level of detail into specific election results. That is what I was criticising with those arguments. It is still a reasonable assumption that the outcome of a democratic process eventually reflects the will of the majority on issues that the public take an interest in.

Quote:
the key difference of course between the two cases is that in the case of hudud, the major parties took a very clear stance on the issue, whereas no one took any stance on what the syaria courts currently are able to do.


Malaysia did not end up with it's version of Shariah law by some kind of accident. Are you suggesting the majority of Malaysians oppose the current arrangements?

Quote:
Oh and I won't even bother asking for evidence that "the majority of Malaysians" support the current arrangement


Is that because it would be another stupid demand? BTW, the evidence is there in the Pew survey results. There are enough Muslims who nominally support Shariah law to make a majority of the total population, and it is perfectly reasonable to assume the more benign aspects are more broadly supported than the more barbaric aspects.

Quote:
According to one random survey


It was not random. It is the only evidence that has been presented in which Muslims were actually asked what they think, and you have presented no rational criticism of the evidence. Every criticism you made has been shown to be a lie.

Quote:
*NOT* according to voting behaviour or the pattern of political agenda setting of Malay (muslim) political parties.


Both of these are entirely consistent with my position and with the Pew survey results. I have explained how. You ignored it.

Quote:
Let me guess, another deferring to common sense, and "just taking an honest guess"? Beats actual evidence right?


Common sense is a great place to start. Not sure why you have a sudden interest in demanding proof for the bleeding obvious. Is it because every time you took an actual stance on this it was shown to be transparently misleading Islamic spin?

Do you have any rational reason for why the Malaysian political situation would somehow defy common sense? Is it all just wishful thinking on your part? Are you embarrassed because you 'vouched' for all those Muslims based on your personal experience in Malaysia without ever bothering to ask them what they think?

All the evidence we have is consistent. The only thing that is inconsistent is the spin you are trying to put on it.
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freediver
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Re: Man claiming to be prophet of islam sentenced to death in Pakistan
Reply #29 - Jan 21st, 2014 at 12:40pm
 
Stratos:

Quote:
You mean that the majority DON'T want violent punishments then?


Welcome to the debate. The majority of Malaysian Muslims do. However they only make up less than 1/3 of the total population.

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They are a corrupt government. They could do whatever they want basically.


Corruption is not the same thing as being all-powerful.

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I notice you left out the majority of my argument.  Maybe because you know they aren't actually punishments based on Shari-ah law in Malaysia?


What are you on about now? Malaysia has two separate legal systems, one of which is based on Shariah.

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Also, note your phrasing, ALMOST came to pass in ONE state.  Just to clarify, of course I don't condone any form of violent punishment.


What is your point? Are you suggesting this is consistent with it not even being on the radar? Or are you just changing the goal posts now you realise it is indeed on the radar? If Queensland passed a controversial law and it was knocked down on appeal in the federal court on constitutional grounds, would it be reasonable to argue that it is not even on the radar in Australian politics?

Quote:
Another way of phrasing that would be did not come to pass in any state.


Because the majority of Malaysians oppose it. The state in question has far more Muslims and the law is likely supported by the majority there. If those Muslims had their way, they would be executing apostates.
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People who can't distinguish between etymology and entomology bug me in ways I cannot put into words.
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