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[Merged] General Criticism of Islam/Islamophobia Topics

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A'isha said:
I think it's extremely unfair to lump Belgian thought in with those others. As I said above, I've certainly had my disagreements with him vis-a-vis Islam, but in my experience Belgian thought has certainly shown a willingness to learn that the others have not.
I can accept that (I haven't had much interaction with Belgian thought). That said, he's still making the mistake of assuming that because something is convincing to him, it's convincing o the theists. It's a good illustration of a flaw the anti-theist crowd engages in, even if he's not a member.

Belz... said:
It gets a bit confusing, though, when I have to use the same word differently depending on who I'm talking to.
After bouncing all over the country, you get no sympathy from me on that point. :D Local jargon sucks, particularly online when you don't know where someone's from, and the terminology is still being sorted out on this topic. :) Could be history will render my definition inaccurate. The reason I use it is because anti-theists (by my definition) start with the dogmatic position that religion is wrong, and find arguments to support their position. The "attack religion" idea is their central motivation, even tot he point of abandoning rationality.

Because I'm half of the conversation, too, and it takes two points of view to have a conversation.
Fair enough, and I've been guilty of under-emphasis on that point. Your point of view is, obviously, what you're intending to bring the other person to (and for rational people, there's always the option of an alternative view that's not present at hte start of the conversation becoming the preferred option--ie, it's possible neither of you is right).

That said, what convinces you and your views on the topic only, under this model, serve as establishing the ideal end-point of the encounter. What a lot of folks forget is that it's not sufficient to simply point to the end point; the theists, quite obviously, aren't there yet, and we need to provide the path, meaning we need to work them through the logical arguments both FOR our stance and AGAINST their stance. That means understanding what their stance is in the first place, both because it's the second half of that equation and because knowing what they believe allows us to tailor our arguments to them. Again, saying that the Bible isn't true history isn't going to have much impact on a Wiccan, and saying that one interpretation of a holy book is wrong isn't going to have any impact on someone who doesn't believe htat interpretation anyway.

All of this assumes, of course, that the purpose of debate and discussion is to convince people you're right. My old rhetoric professor would cringe to hear me say such a thing--he always advocated viewing debate as "moving the conversation forward". Personally, I view it as a sword fight: we each have our points of view, and ideally one will fall and one will stand. Sometimes, however, both fall. You bring your best arguments forward, learning what the other person can do and suiting your arguments to them.
 
For people who are so adamant about their accumen in psychiatric diagnonsis to label believers "delusional", New Atheists seem awfully quick to argue that empathy is unnecessary–given the correlation between lack of empathy and several major psychopathologies.
 
It's freedom of speech. Something Islamic apologists have a complicated relationship to.

Please tell me you're not one of those idiots who thinks freedom of speech has anything to do with other people not criticizing your statements, employing their own freedom of speech.
 
Here's a very simple challange for you, Humes fork, metacristi, and all the other Islamophobes in this thread: How are you going to convince people they're wrong when you are unwilling to learn what they believe? Until you can answer that, the only rational option is to learn what they believe and THEN try to convince them that they are wrong.

Uhh, where have I stated I don't want to learn what Islamic beliefs are?

However, I know enough about Islam to know that those who deny that the penalty for apostasy is death according to all major schools of thought within Islam are either lying or ignorant.
 
Uhh, where have I stated I don't want to learn what Islamic beliefs are?

Here, for example:

However, I know enough about Islam to know that those who deny that the penalty for apostasy is death according to all major schools of thought within Islam are either lying or ignorant.
 
Humes fork said:
Uhh, where have I stated I don't want to learn what Islamic beliefs are?
I have precisely zero patience for the "I never said that!" game. A'isha has provided extensive and well-documented information on Islam, and your continued practice of attacking her and ignoring her information in favor of demonstrably inaccurate smear attacks against Islam demonstrates quite clearly that you have no interest in actually learning what Muslims believe.

However, I know enough about Islam to know that those who deny that the penalty for apostasy is death according to all major schools of thought within Islam are either lying or ignorant.
So Muslims lie about what they believe. You get to determine the arguments made by both sides of the debate, and if the other side disagrees with the argument you demand they make they can be dismissed as ignorant or liars.

I have seldom seen a more thorough and open rejection of rational discourse in my life. No one capable of making such a statement has any interest in honest discussion.
 
Okay, you educate me then.

This is going to be hillarious...

A'isha has been doing it for more than a year now. It would be hillarious if it weren't so depressing, and if you weren't costing the rest of us credibility.
 
Okay, you educate me then.

This is going to be hillarious...

You're the one making the positive claim to know; you need to present the corroborative evidence. I thought you were this uber-skeptic and would know that positive claims to knowledge bear the burden of proof.

I also note you complete lack of good faith, which is strange, since you have yet to demonstrate that you can, for instance, read Arabic–a skill that someone who is claiming authoritative knowledge of Islam would absolutely need.
 
Uhh, where have I stated I don't want to learn what Islamic beliefs are?

However, I know enough about Islam to know that those who deny that the penalty for apostasy is death according to all major schools of thought within Islam are either lying or ignorant.

Do you still believe that "the tafsirs" say that Q 8:39 commands Muslims, believing Muslims, living right now, today, to carry out an agenda of eliminating all religions other than Islam by waging aggressive war to "fight the infidels until all worship is for Allah alone"?
 
@Aisha, I wish to thank you for all your links and tireless effort. Has helped me greatly. Chin up, head high, have at 'em!
 
Do you still believe that "the tafsirs" say that Q 8:39 commands Muslims, believing Muslims, living right now, today, to carry out an agenda of eliminating all religions other than Islam by waging aggressive war to "fight the infidels until all worship is for Allah alone"?[/quote

Those who cherry pick, yes, as did that twat in Texas when he wanted to burn the koran. His justification was the bible.

It is regardless. all these events show how such books, which we should apparently all learn about, can result in horrible repercussions.

Going on with the idea that one must learn everything, I decided to create my own tome of godly rights, having had a period of enlightenment (on the way home tonight - can you believe it?) - crazy - but now in my eyes, true.

It starts as follows:

'And so god decided he liked pink flowers and wanted to place them everywhere, and because he could, did so. But, some people did not like pink flowers and they planted blue ones. God then said, those blue planters have ignored my wishes and will be sent to work for Tescos'

Now this book will be some 600 pages, but I hope Dinwar, you will not stop to criticise this book until I have finished it, and you have read it too.


ETA - there is an icon on this post, I do not know how to delete it - the winking one
 
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It's fascinating that you are dismissing contextualizing verses as cherry picking when your assumption verses must be taken literally is equally cherry picking.

ETA: The assertion must know everything about a topic before critcizing it is a straw man created largely by those who know relatively little about said topic and don't want to take the time to evaluate nth-ary (e.g. secondary, tetiary, quaternary) sources that they base their cirticisms on. The issue in particular with Humes fork and Islam is that Hume fork doesn't seem to want to take secondary sources (e.g., scholarly examinations of primary texts) or tertiary sources (e.g., analyses of competing secondary sources) at face value. Instead, he is apparently depending on what ideologues say about secondary and tertiary sources in translation and using his projections to generalize about what other Muslims with widely varying social and political ideologies say about their religion.
 
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Okay, you educate me then.

This is going to be hillarious...

As Dinwar and mijopaalmc noted: A´isha has been doing that at least since this thread started - and you completely ignored it.
 
The hadiths contradict the Koran all the time, in a similar vein that some of what Jesus said contradict what the OT claims. The sharia (largely out of the hadiths) 'eccentricities' are, however, not drafted and held to court by a fringe element within Islamic communities. It's been the m.o for quite some time, regardless of western (or islamic) cherry-pickin of the Koran. And yeah, they (islamic voices and opinion-makers within their own communities) generally lend support to the punishment of death in the case of apostasy. Thanks to western influence and some of the muslims assimilation to the former, we've noticed plenty of reform'esque sentiments concerning views of law which has (as I think has and should be noted again) given rise to intra-islamic debates about such punshiments and interpretations as well.

So it really doesn't matter what non-muslims believe the Koran says, or what the Hadiths say, but what muslims (and their leaders) do. Given the literature they have at hand, such interpretations are hardly "mysterious" or purported independantly from the same old religious texts out of the same old deserty area.
 
It's based on the tafsir that the Wahhabiyya favor.



Indeed. And what he said his translation means is kind of at odds what Hilil-Khan (and you, and your friend "JihadJoe") want it to mean.



Nope.



Which range from the Saudi interpretation to Yusuf Ali's interpretation (fight until your enemies stop persecuting you, and if they stop persecuting you, your hostility towards them ends) to Muhammad Asad's interpretation ("Most of the commentators agree in that the expression la ta'tadu signifies, in this context, 'do not commit aggression'; while by al-mu'tadin 'those who commit aggression' are meant. The defensive character of a fight 'in God's cause' - that is, in the cause of the ethical principles ordained by God - is, moreover, self-evident in the reference to 'those who wage war against you', and has been still further clarified in 22:39 - 'permission [to fight] is given to those against whom war is being wrongfully waged' - which, according to all available Traditions, constitutes the earliest (and therefore fundamental) Qur'anic reference to the question of jihad, or holy war (see Tabari and Ibn Kathir in their commentaries on 22:39). That this early, fundamental principle of self-defence as the only possible justification of war has been maintained throughout the Qur'an is evident from 60:8, as well as from the concluding sentence of 4:91, both of which belong to a later period than the above verse") to Tabatabaei's interpretation (that this was a specific command regarding the polytheists of Mecca, and not applicable to anyone else) to Mawdudi's interpretation ("It does not mean that Islam incites the believers to go to war to force unbelievers at the point of the sword to give up disbelief and polytheism and adopt the Way of Allah instead...One may adopt any way of life that one chooses and may or may not worship anyone or anything.")

The passage clearly equates non-worship of Allah (and polytheism for that matter) with oppression. It seems to be a matter of theological dispute if it only applies to Meccans or to all of humanity. But shouldn't Meccans have freedom of religion too?
 
"How Jihadists Use the Internet"

From here:

Jihadists have been on the internet a long time, and they probably know how to use it better than you do. Since the early years of the world wide web, radical Islamist groups used it for a number of different jihad-y means, from recruitment and financing to propaganda and communication. But how has this changed over the past decade, and in the wake of Edward Snowden's revelations of NSA spying, what does the future hold for jihadists and the internet?

"Jihadists are no different than others in using emerging software, web applications and sites," said Adam Raisman from SITE, an intelligence group that monitors jihadist behavior on the web. They used the internet to communicate "long before 9/11" according to Adam.

However, the world of Islamic extremism didn't get its own dot-com boom until late 2001, when al Qaeda's first official website was launched—a static, not very impressive platform for making press announcements, mostly in Arabic, and with very little video content. And trying to cultivate a brand identity by plastering their black flag logo all over the site meant that it was easy to identify and ended up being constantly shut down, until eventually it didn't resurface again.

But what that initial online presence spawned was a surge of jihadist-themed forums and social networks. They weren't al Qaeda branded in the same way as the original website, but sympathetic to the cause—fan pages for Mohamed Atta and others fighting the jihadist fight, pooling like-minded people together to share ideologies.

They are ideologically opposed to modernity, yet seem keen to use its technological products. Interesting...
 
I imagine they spend a lot of time on 4chan and watching cute dog videos.
 
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