As I said earlier, I hated the Christian religion I was raised with, long before I even knew the names for other religions,
and I don't see anything wrong with my Anti-Theism views (and I don't object to Deism)
....but Religion, to me, is evil....and some more than others.
Christianity didn't stand up to scrutiny,
but the people who wanted to convert me to Christianity would get
hurt or
angry
....if I countered their efforts to convert me....
with challenges to their religion that they couldn't answer.
The other part that bothered me was the lack of accountability that religion took for its actions;
(and I'm not even talking about the big obvious ones, like rampant pedophilia or centuries of war)
What I refer to is the way religion...especially Christianity and Islam...is so codependent in its nature;
believers so often need for non-believers to believe, to justify their own belief;
basically they want the RIGHT to harass you,
but whenever I exercise my RIGHT to OBJECT TO THAT HARASSMENT,
they act like I'm the one who is stepping all over their "right to their religion".
JoHo's coming to the door is perfect example.
They don't see any harm in simply knocking on someone's door,
but what they are doing, is, to me, noxious.
Not only do they NOT take 'no' for an answer,
and keep coming back,
and act like their RIGHT TO PROSELYTIZE has been infringed upon,
because I exercise my RIGHT TO BE LEFT ALONE, ESPECIALLY IN MY OWN HOME;
but, IMO, even one visit is too many,
because they are peddling an idea I consider to be unfounded and therefore irresponsible.
It's like false advertising.
I don't like door-to-door sales, either,
but at least the salesman is actually offering a product or service;
whereas, like all religions, the Mormons and JoHos are offering an unsubstantiated fairytale AS IF IT IS FACT,
and that angers me.
I don't care how good their intentions are.
The road to hell is paved with good intentions.
I am
not similarly codependent on my side:
I am not out to convince anyone that God does NOT exist;
as I said, I'm fine with Deism.
I don't even particularly to object to people taking their mere belief in God to the next level,
and applying a "belief structure" to it;
giving God a name and attributes...
...as long as they keep it to themselves, and their belief structure doesn't hurt anyone.
But it reaches full fruition, and becomes a RELIGION, when they pass it off as TRUTH to other people.
That is the part I take issue with, and rightly so.
The only time I challenge an individual on their religion
is either when they personally try to convert me, first;
or when they want to be free to publicly proselytize their views,
but object to opposing views being publicly proselytized
(IE: there was a huge public uproar from the religious communities in Toronto when an Atheist ad campaign
tried to rent out advertising space on the side of buses and streetcars)
or when they try to make encroachments upon civil rights...especially in my country.
Like practicing Sharia law.
or, when that fails, trying to slowly make it SOCIALLY UNACCEPTABLE to criticize Islam,
without risk of being accused of racism.
THAT is my problem with the mere USE of the word "Islamophobia",
nevermind passing a law, or a bill, or even a mere motion,
in a formal, legal, political forum.
I want the distinction drawn between what criticism of a religion is,
versus plain old mindless racism.
If people mean "Arabphobia" then that's what they should say.
I don't know how many times I have to say it:
I have far more respect for the Arab risking his life for the sake of his Apostasy in an Islamic country,
than I do for a white, western Christian.
Because once you make it SOCIALLY UNACCEPTABLE to criticize Islam,
(without risk of being accused of racism)
then installing other changes to that society,
such as Sharia law,
become much easier.
So, in summary,
I have always found racism to be, more than anything else, mindless.
I will continue to call it so.
I find Religion irresponsible, damaging, harassing, and controlling,
and will continue to vocally oppose it whenever I catch it being such.
I think it's good for a community and a government to condemn violence
and work to stamp it out, together.
But what I object to is the reckless and undefined use of the term Islamophobia,
especially in a legal or political context,
and the growing inclination to label anyone who criticizes Islam as being racist,
because THE ABILITY TO CRITICIZE A RELIGION MUST NOT BECOME SOCIALLY UNACCEPTABLE
(February 25, 2017 at 6:37 pm)abaris Wrote: (February 25, 2017 at 6:29 pm)Exian Wrote: Like MTL says, it gets confused with racism, but at the same time you gotta know when to use tact.
It bigotry, plain and simple. Racism is only the son of bigotry. If you broad brush any group, you're a bigot. That can be about religion or it can be as simple as not liking cyclists.
There are political forces at work, pretty successful political forces, that single out muslims. Personally I don't care about religion, but I also not condemn it just because. Fact is, these pople are presented as the source of all evil, better to get rid off, to keep off ones borders, even if persecuted in their place of origin. That's exactly what has been done to jews. No, it's not racism, but that's just a cheap argument to wiggle out when the stone is turned and the ugliness reveiled. It's as ugly as if it was racism. It's broad brushing a group of people to be the same. Open season for harassment or in it's extreme, to be killed. As it happened in Canada recently.
Um......no.
It is not that simple.
Yes, there is a political agenda against Islam.
There is also a demonstrable political agenda working FOR Islam....certainly here in Ontario.
But it wasn't a political agenda by Trump that made a group of Islamic extremists shoot up a kosher grocery in Paris, or shoot up the Bataclan Theatre.
Maybe there's a political agenda by Trump to silence all the OTHER attacks being carried out by Buddhists and Hindus and Wiccans, around the world, in an effort to make Islam look worse than it is.
Look, abaris, by no stretch do I believe for one second that all muslims are extremists.
But to say that Islam is being targeted purely through political agenda, due to racism, is absurd.
This is NOT a chicken-and-egg situation,
Republicans didn't "create" the threat of extremist Islam
.....we know which came first.
The Ottoman empire was suppressing the rights of non-muslims long before 9/11.
There are groups of MUSLIM IMMIGRANT WOMEN here in Ontario who have actively been opposing Sharia law being allowed here...saying that is what they came to Canada to try and get away from.
And I support those muslim women.
In the UK, there are grown Muslim women coming forth to expose the FGM being done on young muslim girls in the UK, in great numbers.
Unless this political agenda you mention is silencing reports of just as many similar incidents in other religions,
it is ludicrous to suggest that all this fear of Islam is entirely unfounded and purely political.
And I'm sorry....it is entirely possible that I'm ignorant...you compare the treatment of Islam today to the way Jews were once treated in Europe.....what similar events did Extremist Jews engage in, prior to WWII? Were the Jews shooting up theatres, engaging in honour-killings of their own women, or flying planes into skyscrapers? What were they doing that made Germans so Jewphobic, other than merely existing, practicing their religion amongst themselves, not seeking to recruit new members on the street, and prospering in business, thus contributing to the economy?
And I have another important point to make:
When people criticize "Islamophobia",
one of the reasons they often cite is that when you tar all Muslims with the same brush,
you ostracize the otherwise-moderate, non-extremist Muslims out there,
and may actually be sowing the seeds to create more alienated, persecuted, extremist mindset in those
otherwise moderate Muslims.
Well, then,
isn't the reverse true?
If you want to tar all critics of Islam with the same brush,
and say anyone who criticizes Islam might be a racist,
then aren't you also ostracizing the otherwise non-racist non-muslims,
and making them feel unwarranted shame for their criticism of religion,
tarring them instead as the very racists whom they also despise?
Don't you possibly create more inner conflict and outrage in them,
thus possibly fanning the fires of more extremist thinking than they were originally guilty of?
Just a thought.