This discourse of opposing a percieved and basically imagined foe, be it either the "left" or sometimes "the right". Hence you don't attack what the other side says, you attack what you percieve or imagine them to say. It is very typical of our times.Labeled pejoratively as "regressives" by their peers (on the basis of endorsing moral regression as opposed to progression) this vocal group provides the fodder for the perception that the left has an Islam problem (For anyone who may not know, the perceived problem is that the left is unable to discuss Islam objectively due to bias, fear of being racist, etc...). — VagabondSpectre
We know the kind of tomfoolery that results from having no compassion and also being close-minded, and also what results from the angelic inverse, but what do you get when someone is both close-minded and highly compassionate?...these are the sad roots of the portrayal of the left's Islam problem. — VagabondSpectre
Well said, but to complete the logical tetrad, who would the open-minded non-compassionate be? — Baden
The condemn extreme is growing of late, hence the impetus for the thread, and given that this far right has already angrily driven compassion out of town, a dispassionate approach might be the only thing that can possibly diffuse i — VagabondSpectre
If you look at prof. Saad's youtube metrics and those of other youtube pundits who are windy on the subject, you can actually see charted growth. But unfortunately, hobby grade you-tube political punditry comes with sloppy double standards too (not that all of prof. Saad's input is worthless, but applying evolutionary behaviorism to economics only gets you so far in a discussion and debate on theology and politics). In the case of this video, he accuses Islam of broadly disguising hate speech and threats of violence with religious freedom, and ends with doomsday talk to get us to "rise up" and "talk openly about how to solve the problem, in order to solve the problem"... Though he doesn't ever get around to actually defining the problem beyond: "Islam".It's not growing, and that's the problem. — tom
He advocates for special anti-islamic speech laws (essentially); what could possibly go wrong? Christian doctrine can reasonably advocate genocide and child slavery too, so shouldn't we censor the offending bits of both religious texts? — VagabondSpectre
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