RE: US Muslims struggle with condemnation
December 8, 2015 at 12:35 pm
(This post was last modified: December 8, 2015 at 1:28 pm by Thumpalumpacus.)
(December 7, 2015 at 9:13 pm)God of Mr. Hanky Wrote: Maybe you meant to elaborate a little more. You seem to be the only one who's aware of any Muslim leaders specifically condemning fatwas, political misogyny, barbarism for justice, or any other stomach-turning practices carried out in the Middle East, Africa, and Indonesia which are supported by their holy book. Islam may be bitterly divided, but the last time I checked they still had one relatively unmodified book. If any of the world Imams so much as condemned acts of terror, that in itself would be something, but in no way would it be enough.
A couple of points:
1) You've gone asking for condemnations from Muslims ([...] where the f*** are the Muslims who actually stand up and explain to the world how wrong they feel this is") to asking for links to Muslim clerics criticizing the practices of sharia in Muslim countries ... quite the move of the goalposts there. To satisfy your original request, check out this post I made over a year ago:
(October 30, 2014 at 10:52 am)Thumpalumpacus Wrote: MUslim moderates denounce terror attacks all the time.
Of course, that doesn't make for great headlines ... you actually have to look to find them. Not many people take the effort.
http://mediamatters.org/research/2014/08...c-s/200498
http://en.radiovaticana.va/news/2014/07/...ns/1103410
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2010/01/08...da-and-U-S
http://baheyeldin.com/terrorism/do-musli...tacks.html
Against 9/11, 7/7, and a couple of other attacks, and with a list of links to other denunciations at the bottom: http://kurzman.unc.edu/islamic-statement...terrorism/
These aren't very hard to find.
Also, I agree that the utility of the denunciations is not in holding back the extremists, who are going to pursue their violent agneda no matter what.
The utility of the denunciations is to demonstrate that contrary to the narrative propagated by a significant portion of the media, not all Muslims are bloodthirsty killers. Of course, it appears to have questionable utility in that regard, as well; this thread is in itself evidence of that.
In this link, you will find leaders denouncing violence against women, the killing of civilians, and extremism in general: http://theamericanmuslim.org/tam.php/fea...t_i_fatwas
This page in particular is applicable to you, and many, many other Westerners, because it addresses the fact of your ignorance of these denunciations directly. You are responsible for collecting the information upon which, ideally, you should ground your opinions. Your opinion that Muslims do not condemn extremist violence is clearly incorrect. You should update your opinion to take into account these facts that have been presented to you.
2) In the links above, you will have seen many, many imams condemning terrorism in general, and specific attacks; and seen their fatwas against terrorism and killing civilians. In your own words, that is something.
3) Simply because they have the same book does not mean they have the same interpretation. Cherry-picking is not restricted to Christians.
I almost missed this one:
(December 7, 2015 at 3:51 pm)God of Mr. Hanky Wrote: Either give us a credible reason to believe that your holy book, in its ugliness as we understand it, is not your religious, social, and political philosophy, or go cry up a river elsewhere!
I'm not Muslim. I'm atheist. The fact that you make such an assumption speaks volumes about your mindset and outlook. You seem incapable of imagining someone speaking up for a demonized group without that speaker being a group member themselves.
You clearly haven't heard Pastor Niemoller's famous quote. You can Google that one, too.
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(December 7, 2015 at 5:26 pm)CapnAwesome Wrote:(December 7, 2015 at 3:04 pm)Thumpalumpacus Wrote: ... but racist groups aren't.
The fact that I'm not asked to answer for the behavior of white-supremacist groups, while random Muslims are expected to answer for the acts of other Muslims who have a different version of their religion -- that fact is the point. It's a double standard.
If my son were a white-supremacist, I would denounce him (and any atrocity he might commit). But some random asshole up in Idaho? He has to answer for himself. And I have the luxury of holding that attitude, because it is not expected of me to answer for him.
You want an American Muslim to condemn acts of terror? They do it all the time. They have to -- it is expected of them.
There a big difference between a white supremacist and you. You probably don't consider Hitler to be a good and moral person. Every Muslims presumably considers Muhammad to be a good and moral person. Yes, I know he's probably just average for a warlord of the time but the fact that Muslims worldwide, today, say that he's a perfect example for humanity to live by. That is a reality to deal with, Isis and Muslims around the world share a philosophical base in a way that a random white person and a white supremacist just don't. Isis is following the example of Muhammad by conquering territory and enslaving people for a world wide religious empire. That's what Muhammad called for and that is the real issue that Muslims who condemn Isis need to and will never address.
Indeed, modern Muslims cherry-pick their book, to the extent of exalting an asshole while knowing that his behavior shouldn't be emulated. (Sounds familiar!)
The difference between most modern Muslims and ISIS is that while they both derive their beliefs from the Koran, the former aren't terrorists, and the latter are, for whatever reason.
A random white person in America has a 70% chance of being Christian. In that sense, they absolutely do share a philosophical basis with the white supremacists who managed campaigns of terror against blacks in rural America in the 1930s. You do realize that those groups cited the Bible to justify their bigotry, right?