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Is Saudi Arabia Islamic? (Read 13222 times)
GordyL
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Is Saudi Arabia Islamic?
Apr 2nd, 2016 at 6:36pm
 
If one wanted to observe Islam in it's purest form, in living every day practice, is Saudi Arabia a good place to do so?

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Karnal
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Re: Is Saudi Arabia Islamic?
Reply #1 - Apr 2nd, 2016 at 6:45pm
 
GordyL wrote on Apr 2nd, 2016 at 6:36pm:
If one wanted to observe Islam in it's purest form, in living every day practice, is Saudi Arabia a good place to do so?



Hard to say. If one wanted to observe Buddhism in its purist form, would you go to Burma? Nepal? Vietnam? Bhutan? Thailand?

Burma's a recent military state. Nepal's run by Maoists. Vietnam's communist. Butan's a socialist monarchy. Thailand's a lasse-faire constitutional monarchy run by generals.

All of these countries are devoutly Buddhist, so it begs the question: who are the real Buddhists here?
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GordyL
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Re: Is Saudi Arabia Islamic?
Reply #2 - Apr 2nd, 2016 at 6:51pm
 
Karnal wrote on Apr 2nd, 2016 at 6:45pm:
GordyL wrote on Apr 2nd, 2016 at 6:36pm:
If one wanted to observe Islam in it's purest form, in living every day practice, is Saudi Arabia a good place to do so?



Hard to say. If one wanted to observe Buddhism in its purist form, would you go to Burma? Nepal? Vietnam? Bhutan? Thailand?

Burma's a recent military state. Nepal's run by Maoists. Vietnam's communist. Butan's a socialist monarchy. Thailand's a lasse-faire constitutional monarchy run by generals.

All of these countries are devoutly Buddhist, so it begs the question: who are the real Buddhists here?


Thanks for the answer.

The counties you mentioned don't have legal or political systems based purely on religion.

Isn't everything in SA based on the Koran?


The legal system of Saudi Arabia is based on Sharia, Islamic law derived from theQu'ran and the Sunnah (the traditions) of the Islamic prophet Muhammad. The sources of Sharia also include Islamic scholarly consensus developed after Muhammad's death. Its interpretation by judges in Saudi Arabia is influenced by the medieval texts of the literalist Hanbalischool of Islamic jurisprudence. 
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Karnal
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Re: Is Saudi Arabia Islamic?
Reply #3 - Apr 2nd, 2016 at 8:16pm
 
GordyL wrote on Apr 2nd, 2016 at 6:51pm:
Karnal wrote on Apr 2nd, 2016 at 6:45pm:
GordyL wrote on Apr 2nd, 2016 at 6:36pm:
If one wanted to observe Islam in it's purest form, in living every day practice, is Saudi Arabia a good place to do so?



Hard to say. If one wanted to observe Buddhism in its purist form, would you go to Burma? Nepal? Vietnam? Bhutan? Thailand?

Burma's a recent military state. Nepal's run by Maoists. Vietnam's communist. Butan's a socialist monarchy. Thailand's a lasse-faire constitutional monarchy run by generals.

All of these countries are devoutly Buddhist, so it begs the question: who are the real Buddhists here?


Thanks for the answer.

The counties you mentioned don't have legal or political systems based purely on religion.

Isn't everything in SA based on the Koran? 


Not purely based on religion, no, just constitutionally, culturally, visually, on government documents and forms, enshrined in institutions like the monarchy, the basis of most welfare, etc, etc, etc.

Not everything in SA is based on the Koran, Gordy. You'll find a big chunk is based on US contracts.

Still, I don't know much about Saudi Arabia either. You?
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GordyL
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Re: Is Saudi Arabia Islamic?
Reply #4 - Apr 2nd, 2016 at 8:54pm
 
Karnal wrote on Apr 2nd, 2016 at 8:16pm:
GordyL wrote on Apr 2nd, 2016 at 6:51pm:
Karnal wrote on Apr 2nd, 2016 at 6:45pm:
GordyL wrote on Apr 2nd, 2016 at 6:36pm:
If one wanted to observe Islam in it's purest form, in living every day practice, is Saudi Arabia a good place to do so?



Hard to say. If one wanted to observe Buddhism in its purist form, would you go to Burma? Nepal? Vietnam? Bhutan? Thailand?

Burma's a recent military state. Nepal's run by Maoists. Vietnam's communist. Butan's a socialist monarchy. Thailand's a lasse-faire constitutional monarchy run by generals.

All of these countries are devoutly Buddhist, so it begs the question: who are the real Buddhists here?


Thanks for the answer.

The counties you mentioned don't have legal or political systems based purely on religion.

Isn't everything in SA based on the Koran? 


Not purely based on religion, no, just constitutionally, culturally, visually, on government documents and forms, enshrined in institutions like the monarchy, the basis of most welfare, etc, etc, etc.

Not everything in SA is based on the Koran, Gordy. You'll find a big chunk is based on US contracts.

Still, I don't know much about Saudi Arabia either. You?


Btw you missed Laos which in my opinion is the country which actually lives closest to the ideals of Buddhism despite having such a backwards communist regime. Exclude the Laos/Viet border areas where some horrible stuff is going on, the rest of Laos is/was pretty amazing.


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polite_gandalf
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Re: Is Saudi Arabia Islamic?
Reply #5 - Apr 2nd, 2016 at 8:55pm
 
The Saudis follow the Wahabist school, which is actually a minority sect in sunni Islam. The wahabists were an irrelevancy in the Islamic world until they were funded and empowered by the British who used them as a tool against the Ottomans. Then they discovered oil, and they used the petro-dollars to propagate their extremist version of Islam, as well as spawn a new generation of rich and powerful jihadists like bin Laden.
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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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Karnal
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Re: Is Saudi Arabia Islamic?
Reply #6 - Apr 2nd, 2016 at 8:58pm
 
polite_gandalf wrote on Apr 2nd, 2016 at 8:55pm:
The Saudis follow the Wahabist school, which is actually a minority sect in sunni Islam. The wahabists were an irrelevancy in the Islamic world until they were funded and empowered by the British who used them as a tool against the Ottomans. Then they discovered oil, and they used the petro-dollars to propagate their extremist version of Islam, as well as spawn a new generation of rich and powerful jihadists like bin Laden.


Interesting how things change, eh? They're now one of the most influential minority sects in the world. Their influence trumps that of an ex-Empire, Turkey, a country now struggling with the fruits of the bin Ladens.

What's Qatar like? Are they Wahabist?
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GordyL
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Re: Is Saudi Arabia Islamic?
Reply #7 - Apr 2nd, 2016 at 9:09pm
 
polite_gandalf wrote on Apr 2nd, 2016 at 8:55pm:
The Saudis follow the Wahabist school, which is actually a minority sect in sunni Islam. The wahabists were an irrelevancy in the Islamic world until they were funded and empowered by the British who used them as a tool against the Ottomans. Then they discovered oil, and they used the petro-dollars to propagate their extremist version of Islam, as well as spawn a new generation of rich and powerful jihadists like bin Laden.


Yes. I get all that.
If you could be bothered sifting thru all my posts you'd see my idea for a new world order would begin with independence from oil and neutering KSA.

But it's 2016 and Islam is lerching towards Islamism.

So when I see stuff like this and Im told bugger off you Islamophobe can you not understand the frustration?

http://m.smh.com.au/national/wikileaks-saudi-cables-reveal-secret-saudi-government-influence-in-australia-20150620-ght4kp.html
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polite_gandalf
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Re: Is Saudi Arabia Islamic?
Reply #8 - Apr 2nd, 2016 at 9:10pm
 
No I think Saudi Arabia is the only wahabist state. The rest of the Gulf Monarchies are quite progressive in comparison. On the foreign policy front, Qatar fancies itself as an imperialist - intervening both financially and militarily all over the place, from Libya to Syria. They actually had boots on the ground in Libya during the uprising against Gaddafi. Since being nationalised, Al Jazeera has become a pretty blatant propaganda tool for the regimes imperialism.
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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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Karnal
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Re: Is Saudi Arabia Islamic?
Reply #9 - Apr 2nd, 2016 at 9:12pm
 
polite_gandalf wrote on Apr 2nd, 2016 at 9:10pm:
No I think Saudi Arabia is the only wahabist state. The rest of the Gulf Monarchies are quite progressive in comparison. On the foreign policy front, Qatar fancies itself as an imperialist - intervening both financially and militarily all over the place, from Libya to Syria. They actually had boots on the ground in Libya during the uprising against Gaddafi. Since being nationalised, Al Jazeera has become a pretty blatant propaganda tool for the regimes imperialism.


Why is Egypt so anti-Qatar?
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Re: Is Saudi Arabia Islamic?
Reply #10 - Apr 2nd, 2016 at 9:59pm
 
GordyL wrote on Apr 2nd, 2016 at 9:09pm:
polite_gandalf wrote on Apr 2nd, 2016 at 8:55pm:
The Saudis follow the Wahabist school, which is actually a minority sect in sunni Islam. The wahabists were an irrelevancy in the Islamic world until they were funded and empowered by the British who used them as a tool against the Ottomans. Then they discovered oil, and they used the petro-dollars to propagate their extremist version of Islam, as well as spawn a new generation of rich and powerful jihadists like bin Laden.


Yes. I get all that.
If you could be bothered sifting thru all my posts you'd see my idea for a new world order would begin with independence from oil and neutering KSA.

But it's 2016 and Islam is lerching towards Islamism.

So when I see stuff like this and Im told bugger off you Islamophobe can you not understand the frustration?

http://m.smh.com.au/national/wikileaks-saudi-cables-reveal-secret-saudi-government-influence-in-australia-20150620-ght4kp.html


The way I see it, so much of all this is determined by geo-politics. Saudi influence - and with it the rise of Islamism in the middle east (and to a lesser extent across the muslim world), was instigated by dramatic geo-political changes: first the fall of the Ottoman hegemony, and then the decline of western imperialism. The arab spring was another major geo-political change that emboldened the Islamists even more. And then throw into the mix the catastrophic political vacuum left by the invasion of Iraq that directly led to the rise of ISIS.

What I'm saying is, everything to do with Islamism in the muslim world comes down to geo-political influences. It rose only because of changing geo-political factors, and if it falls, it will be because of geo-political factors. Actual philosophical and theological developments in the Islamic religion don't even rate a mention. All the different ideas are already there: extreme, moderate, reformist, conservative - you name it, they all exist, and any of them can become dominant given the right conditions. And the only thing that determines which particular ideology dominates and prevails is mundane and wholly secular political issues. And on that score, my sense is that we are on the verge of another tectonic shift in Islam - brought about by the fact that the petro-dollar economic bonanza and associated western protection racket enjoyed by the Saudis is coming to a shuddering halt. It was revealed recently that the Saudis can only balance their budget with an oil price of around $100 a barrel. For the last 6 months or so it has been around $30-$40. The Saudis have been panicking - ramping up production (and in so doing so putting even more downward pressure on prices) in a desperate attempt to push the North American shale operators out of the market, in the hope that this will eventually enable prices to go back up to where they want it. How long can this brinkmanship go? Not long methinks. Moreover their geo-political rivals - the Iranians, have just stabilized relations with the US, forging a new historic economic agreement that effectively leaves the Saudis out in the cold. Its not hard to see the writing on the wall: economic imperatives will finally merge with a rediscovered moral compass. Saudi Arabia now executes more of its citizens than any other country - beheading people for such crimes as witchcraft and abused women and/or foreign workers defending themselves. Why would the US continue awkwardly pretending that Saudi Arabia isn't actually ISIS on steroids - when there is less and less economic incentive to do so? The US's logistical support for the Saudis current hospital and school bomb-fest in Yemen could well be the last hurrah for this unholy alliance.

Long story short, I think Saudi Arabia is about to enter a period of deep economic decline - and with it, the decline of the main source of middle -eastern Islamism. However it could well get worse before it gets better: as extremist as the current Saudi regime is, sadly, the current alternatives are all much worse. There simply is no moderate or progressive opposition in Saudi politics - so if the regime falls, it will inevitably be replaced by something much worse. And the new 'even-whackier-than-the-other-guys' regime will doubtless use whats left of Saudi wealth to drag as much as it can of the muslim world into the abyss. But it won't last for long, and eventually a non-Saudi/Wahabist Islam will have its opportunity to dominate, and things will improve.
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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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polite_gandalf
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Re: Is Saudi Arabia Islamic?
Reply #11 - Apr 2nd, 2016 at 10:02pm
 
Karnal wrote on Apr 2nd, 2016 at 9:12pm:
polite_gandalf wrote on Apr 2nd, 2016 at 9:10pm:
No I think Saudi Arabia is the only wahabist state. The rest of the Gulf Monarchies are quite progressive in comparison. On the foreign policy front, Qatar fancies itself as an imperialist - intervening both financially and militarily all over the place, from Libya to Syria. They actually had boots on the ground in Libya during the uprising against Gaddafi. Since being nationalised, Al Jazeera has become a pretty blatant propaganda tool for the regimes imperialism.


Why is Egypt so anti-Qatar?


Qatar supports the muslim brotherhood, which the current Egyptian regime has been spending the last 2 years or so ruthlessly suppressing.
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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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Karnal
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Re: Is Saudi Arabia Islamic?
Reply #12 - Apr 2nd, 2016 at 10:33pm
 
polite_gandalf wrote on Apr 2nd, 2016 at 10:02pm:
Karnal wrote on Apr 2nd, 2016 at 9:12pm:
polite_gandalf wrote on Apr 2nd, 2016 at 9:10pm:
No I think Saudi Arabia is the only wahabist state. The rest of the Gulf Monarchies are quite progressive in comparison. On the foreign policy front, Qatar fancies itself as an imperialist - intervening both financially and militarily all over the place, from Libya to Syria. They actually had boots on the ground in Libya during the uprising against Gaddafi. Since being nationalised, Al Jazeera has become a pretty blatant propaganda tool for the regimes imperialism.


Why is Egypt so anti-Qatar?


Qatar supports the muslim brotherhood, which the current Egyptian regime has been spending the last 2 years or so ruthlessly suppressing.


So that's it. Why aren't Egypt bigger players? Big army, big population. Why are they so touchy about a rich, but tiny country like Qatar?
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Re: Is Saudi Arabia Islamic?
Reply #13 - Apr 2nd, 2016 at 11:30pm
 
polite_gandalf wrote on Apr 2nd, 2016 at 9:59pm:
GordyL wrote on Apr 2nd, 2016 at 9:09pm:
polite_gandalf wrote on Apr 2nd, 2016 at 8:55pm:
The Saudis follow the Wahabist school, which is actually a minority sect in sunni Islam. The wahabists were an irrelevancy in the Islamic world until they were funded and empowered by the British who used them as a tool against the Ottomans. Then they discovered oil, and they used the petro-dollars to propagate their extremist version of Islam, as well as spawn a new generation of rich and powerful jihadists like bin Laden.


Yes. I get all that.
If you could be bothered sifting thru all my posts you'd see my idea for a new world order would begin with independence from oil and neutering KSA.

But it's 2016 and Islam is lerching towards Islamism.

So when I see stuff like this and Im told bugger off you Islamophobe can you not understand the frustration?

http://m.smh.com.au/national/wikileaks-saudi-cables-reveal-secret-saudi-government-influence-in-australia-20150620-ght4kp.html


The way I see it, so much of all this is determined by geo-politics. Saudi influence - and with it the rise of Islamism in the middle east (and to a lesser extent across the muslim world), was instigated by dramatic geo-political changes: first the fall of the Ottoman hegemony, and then the decline of western imperialism. The arab spring was another major geo-political change that emboldened the Islamists even more. And then throw into the mix the catastrophic political vacuum left by the invasion of Iraq that directly led to the rise of ISIS.

What I'm saying is, everything to do with Islamism in the muslim world comes down to geo-political influences. It rose only because of changing geo-political factors, and if it falls, it will be because of geo-political factors. Actual philosophical and theological developments in the Islamic religion don't even rate a mention. All the different ideas are already there: extreme, moderate, reformist, conservative - you name it, they all exist, and any of them can become dominant given the right conditions. And the only thing that determines which particular ideology dominates and prevails is mundane and wholly secular political issues. And on that score, my sense is that we are on the verge of another tectonic shift in Islam - brought about by the fact that the petro-dollar economic bonanza and associated western protection racket enjoyed by the Saudis is coming to a shuddering halt. It was revealed recently that the Saudis can only balance their budget with an oil price of around $100 a barrel. For the last 6 months or so it has been around $30-$40. The Saudis have been panicking - ramping up production (and in so doing so putting even more downward pressure on prices) in a desperate attempt to push the North American shale operators out of the market, in the hope that this will eventually enable prices to go back up to where they want it. How long can this brinkmanship go? Not long methinks. Moreover their geo-political rivals - the Iranians, have just stabilized relations with the US, forging a new historic economic agreement that effectively leaves the Saudis out in the cold. Its not hard to see the writing on the wall: economic imperatives will finally merge with a rediscovered moral compass. Saudi Arabia now executes more of its citizens than any other country - beheading people for such crimes as witchcraft and abused women and/or foreign workers defending themselves. Why would the US continue awkwardly pretending that Saudi Arabia isn't actually ISIS on steroids - when there is less and less economic incentive to do so? The US's logistical support for the Saudis current hospital and school bomb-fest in Yemen could well be the last hurrah for this unholy alliance.

Long story short, I think Saudi Arabia is about to enter a period of deep economic decline - and with it, the decline of the main source of middle -eastern Islamism. However it could well get worse before it gets better: as extremist as the current Saudi regime is, sadly, the current alternatives are all much worse. There simply is no moderate or progressive opposition in Saudi politics - so if the regime falls, it will inevitably be replaced by something much worse. And the new 'even-whackier-than-the-other-guys' regime will doubtless use whats left of Saudi wealth to drag as much as it can of the muslim world into the abyss. But it won't last for long, and eventually a non-Saudi/Wahabist Islam will have its opportunity to dominate, and things will improve.


So, 19 Wahhabs fly planes into buildings killing 3000 people and it has nothing to do with their religion? Its just "geo-political influences." The Sauds and Wahhabs are going to disappear and things will improve? Of course their are no raving Muzlims in Pakistan or Iran, or the rest Islam. Forget Bali, Paris, Madrid, California, and Africa. No Islamic assassins in any of those geo-political places either. Go ahead and pontificate, there are a lot of people who will want to believe you.
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Karnal
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Re: Is Saudi Arabia Islamic?
Reply #14 - Apr 3rd, 2016 at 1:59am
 
polite_gandalf wrote on Apr 2nd, 2016 at 9:59pm:
GordyL wrote on Apr 2nd, 2016 at 9:09pm:
polite_gandalf wrote on Apr 2nd, 2016 at 8:55pm:
The Saudis follow the Wahabist school, which is actually a minority sect in sunni Islam. The wahabists were an irrelevancy in the Islamic world until they were funded and empowered by the British who used them as a tool against the Ottomans. Then they discovered oil, and they used the petro-dollars to propagate their extremist version of Islam, as well as spawn a new generation of rich and powerful jihadists like bin Laden.


Yes. I get all that.
If you could be bothered sifting thru all my posts you'd see my idea for a new world order would begin with independence from oil and neutering KSA.

But it's 2016 and Islam is lerching towards Islamism.

So when I see stuff like this and Im told bugger off you Islamophobe can you not understand the frustration?

http://m.smh.com.au/national/wikileaks-saudi-cables-reveal-secret-saudi-government-influence-in-australia-20150620-ght4kp.html


The way I see it, so much of all this is determined by geo-politics. Saudi influence - and with it the rise of Islamism in the middle east (and to a lesser extent across the muslim world), was instigated by dramatic geo-political changes: first the fall of the Ottoman hegemony, and then the decline of western imperialism. The arab spring was another major geo-political change that emboldened the Islamists even more. And then throw into the mix the catastrophic political vacuum left by the invasion of Iraq that directly led to the rise of ISIS.

What I'm saying is, everything to do with Islamism in the muslim world comes down to geo-political influences. It rose only because of changing geo-political factors, and if it falls, it will be because of geo-political factors. Actual philosophical and theological developments in the Islamic religion don't even rate a mention. All the different ideas are already there: extreme, moderate, reformist, conservative - you name it, they all exist, and any of them can become dominant given the right conditions. And the only thing that determines which particular ideology dominates and prevails is mundane and wholly secular political issues. And on that score, my sense is that we are on the verge of another tectonic shift in Islam - brought about by the fact that the petro-dollar economic bonanza and associated western protection racket enjoyed by the Saudis is coming to a shuddering halt. It was revealed recently that the Saudis can only balance their budget with an oil price of around $100 a barrel. For the last 6 months or so it has been around $30-$40. The Saudis have been panicking - ramping up production (and in so doing so putting even more downward pressure on prices) in a desperate attempt to push the North American shale operators out of the market, in the hope that this will eventually enable prices to go back up to where they want it. How long can this brinkmanship go? Not long methinks. Moreover their geo-political rivals - the Iranians, have just stabilized relations with the US, forging a new historic economic agreement that effectively leaves the Saudis out in the cold. Its not hard to see the writing on the wall: economic imperatives will finally merge with a rediscovered moral compass. Saudi Arabia now executes more of its citizens than any other country - beheading people for such crimes as witchcraft and abused women and/or foreign workers defending themselves. Why would the US continue awkwardly pretending that Saudi Arabia isn't actually ISIS on steroids - when there is less and less economic incentive to do so? The US's logistical support for the Saudis current hospital and school bomb-fest in Yemen could well be the last hurrah for this unholy alliance.

Long story short, I think Saudi Arabia is about to enter a period of deep economic decline - and with it, the decline of the main source of middle -eastern Islamism. However it could well get worse before it gets better: as extremist as the current Saudi regime is, sadly, the current alternatives are all much worse. There simply is no moderate or progressive opposition in Saudi politics - so if the regime falls, it will inevitably be replaced by something much worse. And the new 'even-whackier-than-the-other-guys' regime will doubtless use whats left of Saudi wealth to drag as much as it can of the muslim world into the abyss. But it won't last for long, and eventually a non-Saudi/Wahabist Islam will have its opportunity to dominate, and things will improve.


Good post - I missed this. I’d like to think the Saudies are declining, but it seems that the brand they helped to inspire will remain. ISIS, it would seem, are worse than the Saudis, at least in their overt aggression and suicidal ideation.
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