Indeed. As Sam Harris has said, it may increasingly be the case that the only people who are willing to honestly confront the problem of radical Islam are far-right xenophobes and racists. The left has simply become totally complicit on this issue, making a bizarre set of bedfellows with religious theocrats who hold decidedly anti-liberal views on many issues (so long as said theocrats come from a place where the people are poorer and browner than most people in the West - Christian theocracy would never be tolerated, of course). — Arkady
Obviously, sex with a goat is to be preferred over child-rape. — Bitter Crank
There's not enough pushback to constrain them. Yet. As Harris often has said, it will require moderate Muslims to constrain the fundies, and it is such moderates that we non-Muslims would do well to encourage and support. — Brainglitch
If reform of Islam was possible, it would have happened by now. — tom
Obviously, sex with a goat is to be preferred over child-rape. — Bitter Crank
Muslim societies have not had anywhere near the external interrelationships and pressures that are currently in play. It is these that can and do provide influence for possible reform. — Brainglitch
You've got to be joking! There was once an Islamic empire that stretched from the borders of China and India, across Central Asia, the Middle East, North Africa, Sicily, and the Iberian Peninsula, to the Pyrenees. Also, let's not forget the Ottoman empire which lasted until 1922. — tom
But the individuals and societies they were interacting with were not evidencing or demanding the widely established liberal values that interactions with present day individuals and societies do--the very values that could influence reform. There was none of the pressure on them to reform that I spoke of. — Brainglitch
I've heard it said that the establishment of the theocracy in Iran was a reactionary response to too radically abrupt a societal shift toward western ways and values. And also that there has been a continuous undercurrent of resistance to the theocracy, and pressure to reform or even replace it. — Brainglitch
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
The question is not so much unfair as just incoherent. — andrewk
I think there was an opportunity lost in 1960s and 70s. Google "Afghan/Iranian women 1960s" etc and you will find photographs of beautiful, liberated, educated, modern women barely distinguishable from Europeans and Americans of the day. You might even find some photographs of the Hajj, which reveals women dressed in many different and colourful ways. Modesty 50 years ago did not mean the oppressive black burqa of today.
Then we had the Islamic revolutions and the rise of Saudi religious imperialism. — tom
Hence the violence. Islam's power rests in the use and religious justification of killing. — tom
But if a Muslim holyman wanted to preach pacifism... how would he go about doing that? That's the question that puzzled me for several months. How does religious authority work in Islam? — Mongrel
am not asking you not to raise it. I am asking you to make it comprehensible. Which rights are you proposing to remove, and from whom? — andrewk
i am saying that civil rights and freedoms depend on acceptance of a framework of laws and conventions which I don't think are compatible with the Islamic conception of civic law, which is essentially theocratic in nature. — Wayfarer
Fascist and communists openly organize in liberal democracies. — Frederick KOH
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