Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Muslima wrote:Pope Francis, a human Pope who understands people's realities and psyches quite well.
Pope Francis suggested there are limits to freedom of expression, saying in response to the Charlie Hebdo terror attack that "one cannot make fun of faith" and that anyone who throws insults can expect a "punch."
The pontiff said that both freedom of faith and freedom of speech were fundamental human rights and that "every religion has its dignity."
"One cannot provoke, one cannot insult other people's faith, one cannot make fun of faith," he said. "There is a limit. Every religion has its dignity ... in freedom of expression there are limits."
http://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/paris-magazine-attack/pope-francis-freedom-speech-one-cannot-make-fun-faith-n286631
Indeed, the Catholic church has sued CH many times over the years. Although I am surprised by Pope Francis's words. What about turning the other cheek?
The men who murdered all of the cartoonists were not Catholic. Did you forget?
I am not surprised at all, the Catholic church has a very long history of strict control of the press and total intolerance toward anything that goes against the teaching of the church or that it may be considered blasphemous. in the middle ages the death penalty was normally administered. Galileo had to recount his scientific publication on heliocentrism after being tried for heresy and then spent the rest of his life under house arrest. if he did not recanted, he would have been executed (and for a scientific paper). the Church State (the area of Italy under control of the Pope) had the death penalty until around1860, when it was conquered by Italy's king and the Pope lost control of the land except for the Vatican, and offending the Church was a crime. Changes on the Church have been forced from the outside society. The Church certainly does not advocate the execution of somebody for blasphemy (although it happily did it in the past), but on the limitation to the freedom of speech and expression as far as religion is concerned, it is fully aligned with Islam
Seems to me that this paradigm might be changing fast. For the first time in well over 1000 years, there's finally a Pope who actually seems to be following the Gospels as opposed to one who's just caught up in playing and pandering to various factional and partisan politics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Muslima wrote:Pope Francis, a human Pope who understands people's realities and psyches quite well.
Pope Francis suggested there are limits to freedom of expression, saying in response to the Charlie Hebdo terror attack that "one cannot make fun of faith" and that anyone who throws insults can expect a "punch."
The pontiff said that both freedom of faith and freedom of speech were fundamental human rights and that "every religion has its dignity."
"One cannot provoke, one cannot insult other people's faith, one cannot make fun of faith," he said. "There is a limit. Every religion has its dignity ... in freedom of expression there are limits."
http://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/paris-magazine-attack/pope-francis-freedom-speech-one-cannot-make-fun-faith-n286631
Indeed, the Catholic church has sued CH many times over the years. Although I am surprised by Pope Francis's words. What about turning the other cheek?
The men who murdered all of the cartoonists were not Catholic. Did you forget?
I am not surprised at all, the Catholic church has a very long history of strict control of the press and total intolerance toward anything that goes against the teaching of the church or that it may be considered blasphemous. in the middle ages the death penalty was normally administered. Galileo had to recount his scientific publication on heliocentrism after being tried for heresy and then spent the rest of his life under house arrest. if he did not recanted, he would have been executed (and for a scientific paper). the Church State (the area of Italy under control of the Pope) had the death penalty until around1860, when it was conquered by Italy's king and the Pope lost control of the land except for the Vatican, and offending the Church was a crime. Changes on the Church have been forced from the outside society. The Church certainly does not advocate the execution of somebody for blasphemy (although it happily did it in the past), but on the limitation to the freedom of speech and expression as far as religion is concerned, it is fully aligned with Islam
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Billy Graham blocks muslim call to prayer at Duke.
http://www.dukechronicle.com/articles/2015/01/15/duke-reverses-decision-hold-muslim-call-prayer-chapel-bell-tower#.VLhBppY8LCQ
He called for a donor boycott and the school caved.
He hasn't blocked it. They're discussing. No decision made.
The Chronicle reported that they are not doing it.
Not according to the Duke spokesman on NPR.
Duke gets creepier by the day
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Billy Graham blocks muslim call to prayer at Duke.
http://www.dukechronicle.com/articles/2015/01/15/duke-reverses-decision-hold-muslim-call-prayer-chapel-bell-tower#.VLhBppY8LCQ
He called for a donor boycott and the school caved.
He hasn't blocked it. They're discussing. No decision made.
The Chronicle reported that they are not doing it.
Not according to the Duke spokesman on NPR.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Billy Graham blocks muslim call to prayer at Duke.
http://www.dukechronicle.com/articles/2015/01/15/duke-reverses-decision-hold-muslim-call-prayer-chapel-bell-tower#.VLhBppY8LCQ
He called for a donor boycott and the school caved.
He hasn't blocked it. They're discussing. No decision made.
The Chronicle reported that they are not doing it.
Not according to the Duke spokesman on NPR.
Anonymous wrote:Muslima wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find it very odd how we're totally elided the categories of what should be legal versus what we think is moral. I don't see the Pope saying that blasphemous speech should be illegal. But that he thinks it's immoral. Fine. I don't care. And I don't care if Muslims say that blasphemous speech is immoral. Fine. But NO ONE IS ENTITLED TO KILL OTHER PEOPLE FOR IT. That's all.
The rest of this discussion is nothing but apologist, liberal-guilt-ridden, hand wringing. And I am a liberal! But come on.
I say "Je suis Charlie" not because I like their cartoons. Not because I ever have had a desire or impulse to mock another person's religion. I'm a person who doesn't even make fun of other people much at all, much less about something they really care about. But because once they are targeted for execution based on their words and ideas, I will align with them. Because the extremists have been very clear: they want an Islamic State. They want me, you, and everyone else, to have to bow to THEIR version of THEIR religion. And the penalty for not doing so will be death.
So, my answer (and a lot of people's answer) is: No. No. We are all apostates from that point of view. I am definitely an affront to their view of Islam. Because I believe in free speech. Because I believe in equal rights for men and women. Because I believe in equal rights for homosexuals. And because I would rather die than live in a society where we have state-mandated religion. Like many before me, I would fight for that.
We have a lot of problems. But lack of empathy for those who would kill cartoonists is not one of them.
I don't think anyone is disagreeing with you on that one.....
Maybe, but what I hear from you, and others, is mostly about how awful the cartoons are, and how it's so very wrong to blaspheme. It's analogous to a situation where a man kills his wife, and all you did is talk about how she shouldn't be surprised that this would happen since she cheated on him or some such nonsense. It's simply irrelevant. IT should just be blatant, unequivocal condemnation. THat's it. Because make no mistake, they aren't stopping with killing blasphemous cartoonists. They're killing girls for going to school. These people aren't people I need to understand. These are just people I need to stop. And part of stopping them is showing them that there will be a strong, fearless, united opposition to their goals.
Muslima wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find it very odd how we're totally elided the categories of what should be legal versus what we think is moral. I don't see the Pope saying that blasphemous speech should be illegal. But that he thinks it's immoral. Fine. I don't care. And I don't care if Muslims say that blasphemous speech is immoral. Fine. But NO ONE IS ENTITLED TO KILL OTHER PEOPLE FOR IT. That's all.
The rest of this discussion is nothing but apologist, liberal-guilt-ridden, hand wringing. And I am a liberal! But come on.
I say "Je suis Charlie" not because I like their cartoons. Not because I ever have had a desire or impulse to mock another person's religion. I'm a person who doesn't even make fun of other people much at all, much less about something they really care about. But because once they are targeted for execution based on their words and ideas, I will align with them. Because the extremists have been very clear: they want an Islamic State. They want me, you, and everyone else, to have to bow to THEIR version of THEIR religion. And the penalty for not doing so will be death.
So, my answer (and a lot of people's answer) is: No. No. We are all apostates from that point of view. I am definitely an affront to their view of Islam. Because I believe in free speech. Because I believe in equal rights for men and women. Because I believe in equal rights for homosexuals. And because I would rather die than live in a society where we have state-mandated religion. Like many before me, I would fight for that.
We have a lot of problems. But lack of empathy for those who would kill cartoonists is not one of them.
I don't think anyone is disagreeing with you on that one.....
Anonymous wrote:I find it very odd how we're totally elided the categories of what should be legal versus what we think is moral. I don't see the Pope saying that blasphemous speech should be illegal. But that he thinks it's immoral. Fine. I don't care. And I don't care if Muslims say that blasphemous speech is immoral. Fine. But NO ONE IS ENTITLED TO KILL OTHER PEOPLE FOR IT. That's all.
The rest of this discussion is nothing but apologist, liberal-guilt-ridden, hand wringing. And I am a liberal! But come on.
I say "Je suis Charlie" not because I like their cartoons. Not because I ever have had a desire or impulse to mock another person's religion. I'm a person who doesn't even make fun of other people much at all, much less about something they really care about. But because once they are targeted for execution based on their words and ideas, I will align with them. Because the extremists have been very clear: they want an Islamic State. They want me, you, and everyone else, to have to bow to THEIR version of THEIR religion. And the penalty for not doing so will be death.
So, my answer (and a lot of people's answer) is: No. No. We are all apostates from that point of view. I am definitely an affront to their view of Islam. Because I believe in free speech. Because I believe in equal rights for men and women. Because I believe in equal rights for homosexuals. And because I would rather die than live in a society where we have state-mandated religion. Like many before me, I would fight for that.
We have a lot of problems. But lack of empathy for those who would kill cartoonists is not one of them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Billy Graham blocks muslim call to prayer at Duke.
http://www.dukechronicle.com/articles/2015/01/15/duke-reverses-decision-hold-muslim-call-prayer-chapel-bell-tower#.VLhBppY8LCQ
He called for a donor boycott and the school caved.
He hasn't blocked it. They're discussing. No decision made.
The Chronicle reported that they are not doing it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:we have free speech because liberals defend it. The first thing the conservatives did after ratifying the constitution was to pass the alien and sedition acts.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your lack of comprehension is not my problem. I still remember when the first amendment meant nothing to the right.
Right, that must be why we outlawed all speech against Christianity in the United States. And we outlawed flagburning. You're right, we don't have free speech in the United States. Or your wacky.
48 states outlawed flag burning and the conservatives in congress tried to pass an amendment in one or the other house over a dozen times.
We have free speech, no thanks to you.
No thanks to me? I'm not a conservative you ninny. And what great protection of free speech have you accomplished?
So you just jumped in the middle of an exchange with another poster. Thanks for that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Muslima wrote:Pope Francis, a human Pope who understands people's realities and psyches quite well.
Pope Francis suggested there are limits to freedom of expression, saying in response to the Charlie Hebdo terror attack that "one cannot make fun of faith" and that anyone who throws insults can expect a "punch."
The pontiff said that both freedom of faith and freedom of speech were fundamental human rights and that "every religion has its dignity."
"One cannot provoke, one cannot insult other people's faith, one cannot make fun of faith," he said. "There is a limit. Every religion has its dignity ... in freedom of expression there are limits."
http://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/paris-magazine-attack/pope-francis-freedom-speech-one-cannot-make-fun-faith-n286631
Indeed, the Catholic church has sued CH many times over the years. Although I am surprised by Pope Francis's words. What about turning the other cheek?
The men who murdered all of the cartoonists were not Catholic. Did you forget?
I am not surprised at all, the Catholic church has a very long history of strict control of the press and total intolerance toward anything that goes against the teaching of the church or that it may be considered blasphemous. in the middle ages the death penalty was normally administered. Galileo had to recount his scientific publication on heliocentrism after being tried for heresy and then spent the rest of his life under house arrest. if he did not recanted, he would have been executed (and for a scientific paper). the Church State (the area of Italy under control of the Pope) had the death penalty until around1860, when it was conquered by Italy's king and the Pope lost control of the land except for the Vatican, and offending the Church was a crime. Changes on the Church have been forced from the outside society. The Church certainly does not advocate the execution of somebody for blasphemy (although it happily did it in the past), but on the limitation to the freedom of speech and expression as far as religion is concerned, it is fully aligned with Islam
Anonymous wrote:Muslima wrote:Pope Francis, a human Pope who understands people's realities and psyches quite well.
Pope Francis suggested there are limits to freedom of expression, saying in response to the Charlie Hebdo terror attack that "one cannot make fun of faith" and that anyone who throws insults can expect a "punch."
The pontiff said that both freedom of faith and freedom of speech were fundamental human rights and that "every religion has its dignity."
"One cannot provoke, one cannot insult other people's faith, one cannot make fun of faith," he said. "There is a limit. Every religion has its dignity ... in freedom of expression there are limits."
http://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/paris-magazine-attack/pope-francis-freedom-speech-one-cannot-make-fun-faith-n286631
Indeed, the Catholic church has sued CH many times over the years. Although I am surprised by Pope Francis's words. What about turning the other cheek?
The men who murdered all of the cartoonists were not Catholic. Did you forget?