I know the misunderstood concept, by some, of taqiyya exist. How the issue of deception in Islam of whether a strict adherer to Islamic laws/practices would 'feign' to a democracy (ie the will of the people over the will of allah), is seen as an islamophobe, is beyond me. It would seem quite logical that a strict Muslim would not 'feign' to any concept of democracy. Nothing generalized, bigotted, or racist about it...
Interesting article behind taqiyya, for those interested:
Islam's doctrines of deception
It is quit illustrative that that article gives Al-Qaeda as the only recent example of use of taqqiya, don't you think?
Wilders' take on taqqiya is: it is a core tenet of Islam. Every Muslim knows it (
link to parliamentary debate where he says this, around 6:30 min). He also says not every Muslim practices it. So when any Muslim says he doesn't want sharia introduced, he may well be concealing his true intentions. This is conspiracy thinking, plain and simple. And it's unfalsifiable.
I'll up Wilders on this. Wilders is actually an AQ operative. His frequent visits to and pronounced love of Israel is an elaborate ruse to conceal this. His founding an anti-Islam party is a plot to thus strengthen the cohesion in the Dutch Muslim community so that, when they're big enough, they'll stand as one man behind introduction of Islamic theocracy. Everything he does is taqqiyah!
An exception or a freedom of religion, depends how you look at it.
It is an exception, plain and simple, when you look at the law.
And thanks for the fallacious equating of dietary practices, which primarily deals with the most effective and humane form of putting an animal for consumption down and its adherence to religious practices, to that of an issue of security of people of a certain religious/cultural background being armed with swords around in public.
Want this give this another try?
What's the fundamental difference? Secular concerns should trump religious concerns, IMHO. If there's a way to reconcile them - great! However, Ms. Thieme has presented extensive scientific evidence that unstunned slaughter causes more suffering to the animals in question. Who should I trust more when it comes to this point: reports from veterinary associations and from Wageningen University, or claims by rabbis or imams? I sense intellectual dishonesty when, e.g., Moshe Kantor in the same letter first stresses that Jewish slaughter rules are designed to minimize suffering, but then tries to negate the scientific evidence (see the link below).
Feel free to retract your underhanded generalization (ie 'victim card') and this overall issue you have with Jewish organizations being vocal about dietary practices (based on your speculation of course).
For the "victim card", see my previous post. For the rest, I don't have an issue with it, I just noted the difference in reaction. I don't see what your issue is when I say I perceive the Jewish community as well-connected. Is that something bad?
Thanks for the link. The Halalcorrect number deals with 80% of sheep slaughter that occurs in the Netherlands,
I don't see sheep slaughter specifically mentioned in the parliamentary debate I linked to. Maybe you confused the Dutch words "schapen" (sheep) and "schappen" (shelves) - some of the PMs used the words "the meat on the shelves in the supermarkets"?
When it comes to cows, btw, export seems to be the main driver nowadays. The Dutch Jewish community estimates about 2,500 cows yearly for domestic consumption, while the Agriculture Ministry estimates export of about 25,000 (tenfold!) to Israel and smaller numbers to other countries.
Perhaps more in depth comparative analysis and the amount of different meats consumed by Muslims and Jews should be presented rather than this cherry-picking method, more political than anything else.
There are, unfortunately, no definite numbers on numbers of ritual slaughter, due to rules liberalization in the past decade. The estimates differ by a factor of 2. Slaughterhouses with a permit to slaughter unstunned don't have to report these numbers to the inspection agency.
Again, religious freedom of some strict adherents to dietary law in Judaism. And FYI, I don't speak for all of Jews worldwide sitting on my comfy swivel chair, I merely mentioned one of the issues discussed on forums and such as to why stunning isn't permitted in certain sects of Judaism.
It goes without saying that this is about those Jews and Muslims that care at all about kosher resp. halal meat. Let's quote
Moshe Kantor, chairman of the EJC, on this:
This ban will almost solely affect the Jewish community. Under Jewish law, which has been practiced for millennia, stunning before slaughter is completely forbidden whereas under Islamic law, there are many interpretations which allow prior stunning.
Animal welfare is secondary to slaughterhouses, especially when it comes to stunning a large animal. Its an issue of being cost-effective rather than being more humane. Plenty of videos depicting the different methods of slaughter out there and I sincerely doubt that the slaughter of sheep during Eid ul Adha will change one bit. It certainly won't in Beligum.
It's not just an issue of cost-effectiveness. The compulsion to stun an animal before slaughter is in the "Animals Health and Welfare Act". The name of the law should give a hint. And with the last sentence, do you hint to people slaughtering sheep in their backyard? I see no need to drag something that's simply illegal into the discussion. And no need to drag a country without a government into the discussion.
