Do you think Islam is facist? — Wayfarer
So theoretically at least, Islam is no more "fascist" than Christianity or Judaism. It's just that Christians and Jews have stopped doing that sort of thing. — Frederick KOH
You will find nothing equivalent to the Sermon on the Mount in the Quran. — tom
Along with everyone else,
1. Their children are required to go to public school and receive 12 years of training in the secular, liberal language, history, science, and civic institutions of the society.
2. Their young adults are liable for military service (unless physically unable)
3. Children, youth and adults may not impose their dietary restrictions on public kitchens
4. Children, youth, and adults may not engage in group religious rituals or wear specific religious clothing in public places (like schools, public institutions, public transit, etc.)
5. Standards accepted by the larger society in the area of dress or undress may not be challenged on a religious or specific basis. Don't like 95% of a body's skin exposed at beaches? Don't go there, then. Don't accept men and women sitting in the same whirlpool at the Y? Don't sit in the whirlpool, then.
6. Religious institutions (of all denominations) must fit into the surrounding community with respect to architectural styles, noise, outdoor events, and so on. Can the Holy Rollers open the windows and doors for their all night soul jam with highly amplified music and associated screaming? No. Can mosques broadcast the call to prayer 5 times a day hearable beyond 500 feet? No. Can a 4-spired big-domed box be built in an area with colonial era architecture? No.
7. Employees of private firms can not claim exemption from contact with unclean or holy meat. We eat pork and we kill sacred cows. Don't like it? Tough.
8. Apply anti-discrimination law (on the basis of gender) where applicable.
9. Expose everyone to non-stop commercial messaging about products, consumerism, pornography, etc. — Bitter Crank
Even opponents of Christianity, like Nietzsche, recognize its pacifistic, democratic tendencies, while Jesus' line about "rendering unto Caesar" is the kernel of the separation of church and state. It's hard to say those things about the Quran and Islam. — Thorongil
Islam lacks any appeal to reason, or even reasonableness. And the 109 sura that exhort violence towards the infidel, stand in stark contrast to the Sermon on the Mount. — tom
I think a way of looking at it is that where Christian fundamentalists and the like failed to overcome their moderate Christian contemporaries and secular thinkers in Europe, the Muslim fundamentalists succeeded. — Chany
Around the 13th century, the Mongols destroyed the material and governmental stability of the empire while the mullahs and clerical hardliners were largely successful in casting philosophers, scientists, and Sufis as heretics. — Thorongil
Arguments to the effect that "Islam hasn't had enough time to develop" (which leads to a kind of soft bigotry of low expectations) or "you can find some verses in the Quran that sound alright" (which ignores the general flow of the book) are red herrings — Thorongil
The fact that the gospels don't preach violence or intolerance has had little or no effect on the conduct of Christians, who've been cheerfully killing and persecuting themselves and others for centuries, for religious reasons. — Ciceronianus the White
That merely establishes that Christians haven't honored their holy books, which doesn't say much for Christianity, the religion. — Ciceronianus the White
But this is massively misleading. Were there such Christians? Sure, but there were many more who did follow the example of Jesus and the principles found in the NT. Anecdote battles are pointless, though. We're talking about the overall historical trajectories of the religions in question and the societies they formed. On that score, Christianity clearly has the better record than Islam. — Thorongil
"There is no crime for those who have Christ." In 1095 at the Council of Clermont, Pope Urban II sanctioned the idea of bellum sacrum ("holy war"). — Ciceronianus the White
In 1095 you say?
Meanwhile in Muslim countries, atheists are killed, children are raped, homosexuals are thrown from high places. In the putative Caliphate, Yezidi children are placed in industrial bread-kneeding machines and fed to their parents, while the girls are bought and sold as sex-slaves. This, in full compliance with Sharia in the 2017. — tom
Reason will, of course, lead to conclusions different from faith. — tom
Christianity does have fundamentally violent (and peaceful) messages, and throughout it's history Christians have practiced violence. — VagabondSpectre
This is where I see contradiction and sloppy comprehension. — VagabondSpectre
Meanwhile in Muslim countries, atheists are killed, children are raped, homosexuals are thrown from high places — tom
In 1095 you say?
Meanwhile in Muslim countries, atheists are killed, children are raped, homosexuals are thrown from high places. In the putative Caliphate, Yezidi children are placed in industrial bread-kneeding machines and fed to their parents, while the girls are bought and sold as sex-slaves. This, in full compliance with Sharia in the 2017. — tom
So, I'm not sure which religion has been more violent over time — Ciceronianus the White
Also, I have no clue about the number of verses in the Bible but Deuteronomy calls for the wholesale slaughter of infidels as well. I suspect the Bible has about the same percentage of violent passages. — Benkei
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