We could start with the one saying that homosexuals should be killed. Next up might be the admonition for parents to kill their children if disobedient.I would be interested to see some examples [of violent intolerant quotes] — Wayfarer
No, it doesn't, because the Christian West is not an agent. Perhaps you mean that certain legal systems in some Western countries encode that separation in their constitutions. That's an entirely different thing and is to do with politics and law, not religion.The 'Christian West' does recognise the separation of Church and State — Wayfarer
We could start with the one saying that homosexuals should be killed. Next up might be the admonition for parents to kill their children if disobedient. — andrewk
Perhaps you mean that certain legal systems in Western countries encode that separation in their constitutions. — andrewk
What is important is that there are, on average, far lower levels of drinking in Muslim countries, and hence lower levels of violence. I felt much safer walking back streets in Pakistan, Iran and Turkey than I would in many neighbourhoods of the urban USA. — andrewk
In UK Muslims comprise ~5% of the population, but 20% of inmates in high security prisons. — tom
I really don't like Daniel Pipes, but I think he has a point when he says there's medieval Islam and there's Islamism. Moderate Islam is mostly a resident of the imagination. — Mongrel
The argument that seeks to establish Islam as uniquely violent and oppressive which relies on cherry-picking it's doctrines (something all religions tend to do) and cherry picking acts of extreme violence in the modern world as representative of Muslim behavior strikes me as too simplistic and just unpersuasive. — VagabondSpectre
Religion is not a universal and transhistorical phenomenon. What counts as "religious" or "secular" in any context is a function of configurations of power both in the West and lands colonized by the West. The distinctions of "Religious/Secular" and "Religious/Political" are modern Western inventions.
The invention of the concept of "religious violence" helps the West reinforce superiority of Western social orders to "nonsecular" social orders, namely Muslims at the time of publication.
The concept of "religious violence" can be and is used to legitimate violence against non-Western "Others".
Peace depends on a balanced view of violence and recognition that so-called secular ideologies and institutions can be just as prone to absolutism, divisiveness, and irrationality.
Wosret, as this post immediately followed mine and contains a question, I think it may be directed to me, but, if so, I am unsure what you're asking. Which maniacal asshole do you speak of? Sam Harris? Harris has never advocated "genocide" in the Muslim world, for thought crimes or for anything else (some who distort his views erroneously suggest that he has advocated a nuclear first strike on the Muslim world, but this is not the case).How do we honestly confront the problem? Genocide them for thought crimes? Serious question... isn't that crazy asshole a maniac? — Wosret
It isn't Islam, but there are certainly cultural attitudes amongst certain Islamic communities that are violent. Think of Sudanese Muslims circumcising women; it is not a practice by all Muslims, — TimeLine
Food for thought. How do Buddhists, Hindus, Christians, Muslims and Jews treat co-religionists who leave their religion? — Frederick KOH
The question is not so much unfair as just incoherent. Exactly which rights are you suggesting should be taken away from these 'groups'? And given the fuzzy boundaries of Islam, like any other religion, how are you going to determine to whom this stripping of rights should be applied?So I think it's a fair question to ask, should rights granted to religious groups be done on the basis of mutual recognition? In other words, why would a pluralist culture recognise the rights of a theocratic totalarianism, like Wahabism, part of the aim of which is the abolition of secular culture. — Wayfarer
There is no the hadith. There are a number of different hadiths. I implore you to speak only when you know what you are talking about. — TimeLine
... circumcision for men. — TimeLine
I don't understand what you're saying here. Most Muslims are moderate people, just like the rest of us. Perhaps you mean that there aren't prominent Muslims who are widely quoted as being moderate. Well, I live in a town in the north of England, and here and across the north from Liverpool to Manchester and Leeds and up to Newcastle, there are atheists, Christians, Muslims and all sorts mostly living quiet lives. — mcdoodle
Pipes' insight is not an indictment of the behavior of the average Muslim. It's the observation that there is no religious apparatus behind a so-called moderate Islamic viewpoint. That apparatus is like a baby trying to be born. — Mongrel
I would be interested to see some examples [of violent intolerant quotes] — Wayfarer
According to UNICEF 200,000,000 girls and women alive today have suffered FGM. — tom
In order of highest percentage of FGM from the UNICEF document, here's a couple of statistics that show that it isn't a practise informed by Islam — Benkei
If a man has sex with an animal, he must be put to death, and the animal must be killed. Leviticus 20:15
— Michael
No such prohibition is to be found in the Quran or the Sahih.
The Quran does contain 109 verses that call Muslims to war with the kufar though. — tom
So, are we to suppose here that there are no objections to sex with an animal in Islam? I doubt it. — Bitter Crank
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