You and Fareed Zakaria share the trait of being plagiarizers. I have repeatedly warned you and/or deleted your posts because you simply copy and paste. You are not only a simple bigot, but a bigot so unimaginative that you cannot even write your own bigotry. Your post is copied verbatim from here (with the exception of your first sentence): http://www.huffingtonpost.com/ali-a-rizvi/an-open-letter-to-moderat_b_5930764.html |
Agree, how can it be possible to reform or revise something that is considered infallible? |
No. His actions are relevant to those who choose them to believe them relevant. That includes any Muslim who is not one in name only. The only relevant comparisons to Muhammad for Muslims would be Jesus for Christians or Moses for Jews or Buddha for Buddhists. Find me an actual Muslim scholar with any significant following that believes the actions and words of the Prophet have no relevance. Your argument is laughable. |
Your first sentence is practically the same as mine. So, if one is laughable, they both are. I don't care about Muslim scholars, but rather Muslims, the vast majority of whom are not scholars. Just as Christians choose specific verses to emphasize, while ignoring others, so do Muslims. Virtually none of them emphasize or even care about a battle that was well over a thousand years ago. |
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wonkblog/wp/2014/10/06/ben-affleck-and-bill-maher-are-both-wrong-about-islamic-fundamentalism/ From the above it is quite clear the hundreds of millions of Muslims are not ignoring even the most vile and risable passages like the "Death to Apostates" and "Stoning Adulterers" ones. Care to find similar sentiments held in such numbers among other religions in order to try to perpetuate your false equivalency? |
I really detest this tactic that is so common here that when a discussion doesn't go your way you simply change the topic. I never argued that there were not Muslims that support horrible things. We have been discussing specific references in the Quran and actions by Muhammad related to beheading. There are very few Muslims today who support such things. The article you reference -- since I guess we are now discussing a new topic -- shows that hundreds of millions of Muslims are ignoring even the most vile and disable passages of the Quran. In many countries, strong majorities ignore those passages. What that tells us is that discussing "Islam" as if it were a monolithic entity is useless. It is not a monolithic entity. If you went to Uganda today and polled Christians whether they supported killing gays, I am pretty sure that you would find majority support. Uganda's anti-homosexual laws have had support from American Christians. Specific biblical passages are used to justify anti-gay measures. So, should this be used as justification to condemn all of Christianity? If it is your position that Islam is a fundamentally evil religion, we are going to strongly disagree. If your point is simply that there are Muslims who are evil, we probably will find more common ground. I have the same position regarding every other religion as well. |
I, on the other hand, regard all religions as evil. Among them, no religion has as much violent, reactionary content as Islam. This, combined with its lack of any distinction between temporal and religious authority makes it a uniquely malevolent force in the world. The question that should be asked of Muslims is whether they support Sharia law. If the answer is yes, they are an enemy of all the liberal values you and I hold dear. You may choose to ignore that fact. I will not. |
You say that as if there were such a thing as an agreed upon, codified, universally-accepted thing as "Sharia law". Since there is not, the question you want to ask is pointless and only serves to highlight your own lack of understanding. |
There are eight recognized different schools of thought regarding. They are all highly illiberal, drawing as they do from highly illiberal source material. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madhhab The only one lacking understanding is you. I highly suggest you read the Koran and the Hadiths. I also suggest you also read Qutb and the statements from IS's leader and chief spokesman as I have. Perhaps you will learn something. Perhaps you will remain so wedded to your cultural relativism you will remain blind. |
Originally you said, "The question that should be asked of Muslims is whether they support Sharia law." There is not a single agreed-upon "Sharia law". So, as a result, two people could both answer affirmatively while actually supporting much different things. The Sharia law found in Indonesia, for instance, is much different from that found in Afghanistan. But, now you have gone a step further. Now you suggest that I "read the Koran and the Hadiths". I have read the Quran and have both English and Arabic versions on a shelf in front of me. I no longer have sufficient Arabic to read the version in that language, though I once did. However, your point now, apparently, is that the problem is not actually "Sharia law", but the "Koran and the Hadiths". So, your issue is not with Sharia law, but Islam itself. But, then you completely lose logic by referring to "IS's leader and chief spokesman" as if IS has any standing with regard to Sharia law outside the territory it controls. Do you see how your thought process went from "those who support Sharia law" to "the Quran and Hadiths" to "the leader of IS" as if they were all the same thing? That is really revealing. |
What defines Sharia law is not the interpretation but the source. The source for Sharia law are Koran and Sunnah. There is no disagreement on this. Note particularly the Sunnah, in which the words, deeds and practices of Muhammad are used as a guide. Thus the deeds of Muhammad very much have relevance to anyone who supports Sharia.
No. The primary difference is in its extent of application, not its content. In most of Indonesia Sharia courts only have authority in civil matters. Go, however, take a look at the Indonesian region of Aceh where Sharia law has been extended to criminal matters: http://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/gay-indonesias-aceh-brace-100-lashes-front-crowd-n219066
Oops. Not exactly the picture you wanted to paint is it?
My problem with Islam is that it supports Sharia law, giving fertile ground for people that want to impose it, by force if necessary. There is no version of Sharia law that is in any way compatible with liberal western values. Take a hard look at this, particularly the "making sharia the official law of the land" question: http://www.pewforum.org/2013/04/30/the-worlds-muslims-religion-politics-society-beliefs-about-sharia/ A large majority of Muslims world wide support making Sharia law the "law of the land". That thought should terrify every liberal. What could possibly motivate something like a billion people to support such a reactionary goal? Religion, in this case Islam. |
Thank you for being clear in this matter. You are knowingly anti-Muslim and, apparently, proud of it. I personally find that sort of thinking narrow-minded and not worthy of intelligent people. But, given that your position is clear, I probably can't change your opinion. |
Yes, unlike you I am far too "narrow minded" to be an apologist for a belief system that commands such things as lashing for fornication of any sort, and amputating hands for theft. You are completely correct in this. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hudud |
That is the perfect illustration of a narrow-minded view of Islam. It is so interesting that those who are anti-Islam and the extremists of the Islamic State share such similar views of the religion. But, between the two extremes are hundreds of millions of Muslims who must really frustrate both ends of the spectrum. If only the world actually adhered to your simplistic views. It it almost surreal that an apparently intelligent person would not only announce his opposition to an entire religion, but go to such lengths to justify it. Sad that today's intellectual environment actually allows for such a thing. I imagine that smart and sophisticated people once sat around saying similar things about Jews and Catholics. |
All religions are lies. Foolish, absurd, harmful lies. Islam only manages to out do the others by the volume of its belligerence towards "unbelievers", the lack of distinction between religious and temporal authority, and the intransigence of its followers. |