Oliver
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Aug 12, 2006
- Messages
- 17,396
A sentence in English can sometimes mean more than one thing, and can mean something other than you intend it to mean. When you say "it's not a muslim problem in general", there are multiple ways to take this. I think I know how you intend it, but I'm not sure. In any case, jihadis are indeed a small minority of muslims. However, it IS a muslim problem in general in several senses:
1) fellow muslims are actually the number 1 target of jihadis, and jihadis kill more muslims than people of any other religion
2) while jihadis are a small minority, those who sympathize with and tolerate their presence are a large minority. And that's a MAJOR problem.
3) widespread cultural values within the arab world which often ARE adopted by majorities (such as oppression of women and low value placed on education) have led those countries to chronic failure and create environments fertile for the rise of jihadi ideology.
What to do about it? Well, Iraq and Afghanistan are part of what we're doing about it. We've fractured the old stability of the middle east, exposed fault lines which were always there, forcing the jihadis to do battle to hold what should be their heartland (and they are losing that battle and alienating muslims in the process by their visciousness). We are demonstrating rather vividly that the old way of doing things will lead to continuing failure, that they cannot escape paying a price for those failures, and offering them help in finding a way out of the old pathologies. But none of those things can happen when they are ruled by despots.
Edit: oh, and this is entirely cultural, NOT racial. Race has absolutely nothing to do with any of this.
Well, I refuse to believe that if you hit me in the face until I accept your opinion is the right way to do anything. I also honestly believe that this is what democracy or Jesus is about.
Also the "oppression" of women is a weak argument for the majority of women who use to live this tradition. It's like saying that the church forces their members to go to church on Sundays because if they weren't raised religious, they wouldn't have to do this.
But in any way - that's not your business to decide what's a wrong or right just because something is outlandish or you don't like it. I guess you have the same western understanding of law and order. You can't force opinions violently if you believe in free speech, free opinions or democracy in general.
Now to fight extremist fundamentalists in all religions would be to show people that our way of life is better. But reality shows that this isn't the case concerning family values - to get back to the "women oppression". In Muslim countries this is a big argument to adopt western openness because it destroys family values. That's a fact. The same is pornography.
These are just two examples for Fundamentalist arguments.
So what to do? Force them to have unstable social values and pornography, too?
Another thing is the influence in the Middle East. Jihadists argue that the western world doesn't care about their opinion at all. And that's also true. If someone refuses to give us the needed oil, we have a long history of replacing such unwanted people.
Matter of fact is that I don't remember that one single Muslim country invaded or tried to militarily intervene in a western country in the last 50 years.
So the western world has no arguments concerning "We are better". It's simply not true.
Also the occupation and declaration of Israel was violently. It was foreseeable that this will result in conflicts.
Just imagine the native Americans invading and declaring West Virgina as their own country.You really think your Government wouldn't play the Palestinians and blow them off the face of the earth? That's exactly what would happen, wouldn't it?
So please don't argue we are/were/will be better. That's BS, and you know that as much as I do.
