Matthew Best
Penultimate Amazing
CC TV footage of the moment the attackers were shot by police has emerged today.
Here it is:
That's the Wheatsheaf pub on the left.
Here it is:
That's the Wheatsheaf pub on the left.
Calling some Trump supporters "a basked of deplorables" is not criticizing white nationalism.
It's a personal insult against white nationalists, akin to calling Islamic terrorists "despicable brownies" or something like that. This is indeed not a productive area of discussion and a divisive, destructive approach. If she was against a better candidate than Trump (which is not a tall order) I'd welcome her defeat.
You can criticize white nationalism without insulting white nationalists, not in a way an insult is usually understood anyway. In the same manner we can and should criticize Islam in a way no Muslim would have the right to feel insulted.
McHrozni
This. I've told Archie this ... ugh ... ten times maybe?
Neither he nor anyone else ever came up with an explanation. A lot of hand-waving and dismissals, but nothing with any substance whatsoever.
When a Christian text includes something that sounds bad the assumption is that it means something else because we know Christians are not really murderous loons in the main. When a Muslim text includes something that sounds bad too many people do not extend the same charity....snip
The vast majority of adherents to religions have been introduced into their religion by their parents before they could read. You need to look at converts to get a clearer picture.
Funnily (or perhaps tragically) enough a disproportionately large portion of Islamic terrorism is conducted by recent converts to Islam. In other words either people read Islamic holy books and are convinced they will go to paradise if they kill infidels and convert to Islam, or youngsters want to become killers for whatever reason, read Islamic holy texts, find them readily suitable for their wants (much more to than other religions) and convert to Islam to have justification for their crimes.
There is probably a little of each, truth to be told. Neither option is good for Islam.
McHrozni
Various methods that could not practically be scaled up do deal with significant greater numbers than already exist in that sphere. I would also hazard a guess that gangs are more "leaky" in terms of information than terrorist cells and lone wolves. No terrorist cell, for example, is going to rat on another terrorist cell to the police because they don't want the "competition."How does the UK monitor and deal with gangs?
I've long said that simply applying laws and rights equally to Muslims as to non-Muslims would have prevented most of the problems currently emanating from Islam in the UK. The fact is that historically, and continuing to the present day, Muslims have been granted a huge amount of leeway in both criminal and social spheres. Now we're faced with a situation that may be too far gone to address by simply applying the law equally across society.
<snip>
Correct, in the early days religion was an important tool in getting people to behave. About half of the ten commandments are an affirmation of religion and the other half can be summarized as "also, don't be a jerk". It's an early form of the code of laws, giving it divine background also made it more likely people will follow the code.
Not a bad thing, overall. In those days it was probably the very best one could do. It's outdated nowadays, we don't require the laws and moral standards to have a divine background, we accept them for what they are because we have come to realize they're there to make our society and our lives better (for the most part anyway).
McHrozni
True, to some extent many of the laws set out in Leviticus have been argued to do with avoiding potentially toxic foods (sea creatures scouring the seabeds, for example [I have an unpleasant allergy to prawns, myself] and behaviours, such as incest, that are a threat to future generations.
However, there is more to it than that. Various philosophers (soz, I'm hopeless at names) have focussed on the fact that as 'God is perfect', then anything that falls short of perfection is the cause of 'evil' in the world.
This isn't far away from what the fundamentalist-Islamist-jihadists believe, except, unfortunately, the Qu'ran does exhort them to kill apostates an unbelievers. It is inescapable.
As has been pointed out elsewhere on this board in similar threads, the jihadi recruiters are actively discouraged from referring to their religious texts when they try to recruit people.
Apparently their leaders have learned from experience that the actual word of their god will deter the willing participation of their recruits.
What "huge amount of leeway" are you referring to?
Please be specific.
CC TV footage of the moment the attackers were shot by police has emerged today.
Here it is:
That's the Wheatsheaf pub on the left.
This. I've told Archie this ... ugh ... ten times maybe?
Neither he nor anyone else ever came up with an explanation. A lot of hand-waving and dismissals, but nothing with any substance whatsoever.
McHrozni
I used to think, with great naivety, that when people in authority came out with their platitudes about Islam they were simply attempting to avoid unrest and social upheaval. They must know the truth, I thought, they were just playing down the threat in the interests of the greater good. I assumed that these prime ministers and home secretaries and presidents had educated, unbiased advisers - experts in the field - who tutored them on the subjects in question, so that they spoke from a position of solid understanding.
However, it quickly became apparent that this is not the case. They are, without any exception, utterly devoid of knowledge. They have literally no idea what they are saying. There are no advisers, there is no education, there is simply a gaping void of ignorance into which they reach to pluck out sound-bites such as "This has nothing to do with Islam," and "These attacks are not representative of any religion, least of all Islam." It's an excruciating spectacle, not least because it relies on the assumption that the audience - that's you and me - are borderline retarded.
In different parts of the world these people latch onto the cause-du-jour for that region, so long as it involves a chance to be a "hero"...a somebody.
Can you name the person and post that did this, then?
Why? You said repeatedly people chose to justify their terrorist desires with holy texts. Now you require a terrorist group to go alongside as well? That's moving the goalposts.
After you're done explaining that, can you also explain why Islamic terrorist groups are so prolific while those belonging to other religions are rather rare? Try to do it without hand-waving and wild speculation please, something that will stand the snicker tests at least.
UK had a nationalist conflict in northern Ireland, where some Irish people living there wanted their land to belong to the Republic of Ireland instead. There is no doubt strong nationalist beliefs can cause one to resort to terrorism. It has nothing to do with being Irish at all, the same thing could, did and does happen to just about every other nationality in a broadly similar situation (Austrians in South Tyrol, Brittany nationalists, Corsicans, Basques, ...).
However Muslims in Britain are not engaged in any sort of nationalist conflict. There is no violent movement to either declare a portion of UK independent or a part of another state and that portion of UK just happens to be populated mainly by Muslims at this time. No, an overwhelming majority of Muslims living in UK are content to remain a part of the UK (or at least Scotland). They are no different from their non-Muslim neighbors in that regard. Yet they produce terrorists at a rate that overwhelms any other demographic. Can you explain why?
This was explained to you before and yet you ignore it.
McHrozni
Maybe, but you need to expand this. They overwhelmingly choose Islam. Explain why. If it's organizations explain why Islamist terrorist organizations are so prolific compared to those of other religions, if it's something else explain that.
Good luck!
McHrozni
This. I've told Archie this ... ugh ... ten times maybe?
Neither he nor anyone else ever came up with an explanation. A lot of hand-waving and dismissals, but nothing with any substance whatsoever.
McHrozni
Well gee, I wonder why that is.
A necessary approach when your Word of God looks like this:
Koran, 2:143 Thus We have appointed you a middle nation, that ye may be witnesses against mankind, and that the messenger may be a witness against you. And We appointed the qiblah which ye formerly observed only that We might know him who followeth the messenger, from him who turneth on his heels. In truth it was a hard (test) save for those whom Allah guided. But it was not Allah's purpose that your faith should be in vain, for Allah is Full of Pity, Merciful toward mankind.
Most wannabe killers don't have the stamina to put up with all the word salads in the said texts.
McHrozni
In any group of people, especially those feeling somehow disenfranchised or having the need to be part of something, given an outlet for being an arse, they will grab it.
In Northern Ireland for a long time that was sectarianism, involving terrorism.
In the 60s/70s a lot of people moved into the various shades of Red Brigade etc, or into right wing nuttery later on.
In different parts of the world these people latch onto the cause-du-jour for that region, so long as it involves a chance to be a "hero"...a somebody.
Do you want me to bring up Buddhist terrorism, for example?
This has been brought up with you before, several times, and you choose to dismiss any similarity with "hand-waving".
Most of those 23000? They won't blow themselves up. They have no intention of doing so. Some are just being edgy. However it's a sod to identify which is which. That's why there's 23000 of them.
Who isn't?Oh, so you are willing to see various ideologies proscribed.
Islamism is cause-du-jour in awful many places around the world nowadays - Philliphines, Thailand, Indonesia, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iran, Iraq, Yemen, Syria, Palestine, Egypt, Libya, Tunisia, Algeria, UK, Germany, Denmark, USA and others.
Care to explain why is it so prolific compared to all the others?
McHrozni
He can't be as it isn't true.What "huge amount of leeway" are you referring to?
Please be specific.