Net Llama! wrote:
> On Mon, 9 Oct 2006, Michael Hipp wrote:
>> Net Llama! wrote:
>>> On Mon, 9 Oct 2006, Michael Hipp wrote:
>>>>> On Mon, 9 Oct 2006, Michael Hipp wrote:
>>>> I could go on, of course. That's certainly not to say that every
>>>> adherent to or tenet of Islam is "ridiculous", but those particular
>>>> signals seem buried in the noise.
>>> Or you're pulling out the signals that fit your argument.  Making the
>>> radical minority of any group into representitives for the entire group
>>> doesn't lend itself to a strong argument or example.
>> Your assertion that such are a "radical minority" is an oft-repeated
>> mantra and entirely unproven. This radical minority rules several
>> countries and has strong influence on several others. One of those
>> "radical minority" countries will likely have deliverable nuclear
>> weapons in the next few years.
> 
> As I'm sure you are well aware, there are many different factions of Islam 
> radicalism, all with differeing beliefs & goals.  Lumping them all 
> together might be convenient, but its not accurate.

But it is accurate in that they all have the same aim and methods. They 
understand and apply Sun-Tzu's "the enemy of my enemy is my friend" very well, 
if sometimes by accident.

>  As for countries with 
> nuclear weapons, there are quite a few non-radical-Islamic nations with 
> them as well (DPRK comes to mind, not to mention the US, India & Israel).

You're changing the subject. We're talking about religions, not countries. As 
you said, every religion has its radical minority. But how many of those rule 
entire countries or have countries that give them extensive support? How many 
of the radicals in *any* other world religion have access to nukes?

>> For there to be a "radical minority" implies there also exists a
>> "non-radical majority". I submit there is little evidence of their
>> existence, or, if they do exist that they have somehow been rendered
>> impotent or irrelevant in the face of that radical minority. Whatever
>> the case, it appears they have few reservations about allowing the
>> radical minority to act as "representatives for the entire group".
> 
> He who screams the loudest tends to get noticed.  The non-radicals are the 
> ordinary folk that no one notices.  And in the case of Islamists, they 
> live all over the world, including the US.  I don't like the way my govt 
> is representing me, yet to those outside this country (and especially 
> outside of N. America), all they see & hear is what the Bush 
> administration says & does.  I can scream from the top of a tall building 
> how much I detest what the US govt is currently doing, but unless I do 
> something truly shocking (blowing myself up, blowing up others, buildings, 
> etc), no one outside this country is going to hear about it.  Same applies 
> to those who are not radical extremists in any other 
> country/religion/group.

Bad analogy. (As much as I tend to agree.) President Bush, for better or 
worse, *does* speak for the US and thereby you and me. (Mostly worse.)

And your continued assertion that there is this great majority of peaceful 
Muslims out there who are trying just as hard to promote peace as that 
minority are promoting violence is just not factual. (That is, what you're 
asserting? If not, please correct me).

If you'd like to get the cold hard facts, here's some long but *very 
worthwhile* reading material from someone probably a lot more aligned with 
your own world view than mine (he doesn't think much of my beloved 
Christianity, for instance). Science fiction author Dan Simmons.

The first is a fictional short story. Start here:
http://www.dansimmons.com/news/message/2006_04.htm

Here's the follow up:
http://www.dansimmons.com/news/message/2006_05.htm

If you don't find those a thought-provoking read, I'll definitely owe you an 
apology for wasting your time. I believe you will.

Here's a spoiler of one point (out of a great many equally important others)...
A Pew poll was done of Muslims (all Muslims, not just radical ones) in a dozen 
countries. In half of the countries more than 50% of the Muslim population 
said suicide bombing and other forms of violence against innocent civilians 
was justified. In only 1 country did support fall below 38% (Turkey, not 
surprisingly).

In short, the Muslims who support those who blow things up, target women and 
children and generally use violence whenever it suits them is far from being 
any kind of minority. They're mainstream.

>>> There are extremist
>>> nutjob factions in nearly every religion, yet we're not claiming that all
>>> the rest are 'pseudo-religions'.
>> The existence of extremist nutjob factions in other groups proves
>> nothing. Linux has them, so what?
>>
>> More questions:
>> - Do these nutjob groups in other world religions commit acts of
>> large-scale violence around the globe?
> 
> No, but that certainly doesn't make the religion as a whole ridiculous. 
> Just because the nutjobs in one religion happen to be far more extreme in 
> their actions than the nutjobs in other religions doesn't make the 
> religion at fault.

Yes it does. As their actions are specifically allowed, condoned, and 
commanded by their own Prophet and his writings in the Quran as well as the 
commentary hadith as well as essentially all of the current worldwide 
leadership.

>> - Do they govern a number of countries?
> N. Korea.  Nuff said.
>> - Do they have nuclear weapons?
> Again, North korea.

N. Korea is not a religion. I believe it would be officially categorized as an 
atheistic communist country.

>> - Are they the cause of or directly involved in almost every war going
>> on around the globe at this moment?
> 
> Broad, sweeping generalizations come to mind here.  Ignoring the fact that 
> we haven't even defined 'war', there are hundreds, if not thousands of 
> military conflicts occuring across this planet right now.  I'd submit that 
> a very small number involve Islam or Islamic states.  See much of 
> sub-Saharan Africa for alot of fine examples.

It's not a broad sweeping generalization. The vast majority of those 
wars/conflicts are either directly caused by or participated in by Muslims. 
And sub-Saharan Africa supports my assertion, not yours. See Ivory Coast for 
example.

>> - Do they have (indirect) censorship capability over the media in
>> progressive western countries?
> 
> The US govt does that already.  See FOX News and their concept of 'fair & 
> balanced' which skews heavily in favor of the Republican party.

The US govt is not a world religion.

OT: And if you don't like FOX's slant, then just consume NBC, CBS, ABC, NYT, 
CNN, or most of the major metro dailies to get plenty of *very* liberal (aka 
Democratic party) slant. FOX can at least be said to have provided variety 
where very little existed before.

>> - Do they have state support for their extremist nutjob plans?
> 
> Sudan & North Korea are fine examples of non-Islamic regimes where there 
> is state supported terrorism.  There are others.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sudan#Politics
"Sudan has had a troubled relationship with many of its neighbors and much of 
the international community due to what is viewed as its aggressively Islamic 
stance."

Sudan is not purely an Islamic regime to be sure, but using it as a 
counterexample of non-Islamic regimes is a stretch. Christians are routinely 
killed by Muslims in Sudan.

But again, there is no terrorist group other than Islam that can claim the 
number of state sponsors, the depth of military and financial resources 
offered, and the global reach. All the others combined quickly disappear into 
the noise. Their major handicap has been the lack of technological 
sophistication available to them in the form of weaponry, but this is rapidly 
changing. And we continue to fund it year by year through our gas tanks.

>> - Have they called for the death of my children and yours (and would the
>> threat be credible if they did)?
> 
> North Korea.  Technically Saddam Hussein voiced similar threats, and his 
> regime was rather secular (he certainly didn't like Al Queda).

N. Korea and Saddam's Iraq are not world religions. And the threat is not 
credible (that could change in NK's case.) Have the Hindu's called for your 
death? How about the Buddhists? How about the Christians?

>> I call them a 'pseudo-religion' because their aims are almost entirely
>> political and military in nature.
> 
> The extremists are, sure.  But again, that doesn't mean that they speak 
> for all followers of Islam across the globe (or even their own citizens, 
> in the rather small number of cases where they are running a nation).

They are a billion strong and their aim of a world ruled by Islam is not a 
secret. Nor are their methods. And those aims (and the aims that support it, 
like the death of Israel, the death of the US and so forth) and methods are 
supported by a vast majority of the leadership of that religion. And their 
goal appears to be advancing year by year. Witness the recent elections in the 
Netherlands, for example. And the number of 3rd world countries now largely 
ruled (if not always directly) by Islam.

>>>> BTW, I refer to it as a pseudo-religion because it is actually more a
>>>> system of government that (mis) uses religion as a source of legitimacy
>>>> and power. As such it deserves to be condemned along with all the other
>>>> oppressive types of government that have been tried (monarchy,
>>>> communism, nazism, socialism, theocracy, democracy, etc.).
>>> Sure, but that really has little to do with your original statement.
>> On the contrary. Has everything to do with it. I consider it ridiculous
>> that any thinking person would want to live under communism. Similarly
>> for all the others (if perhaps in varying degrees).
> 
> When I did I say that I thought someone wanted to live under communism? 
> And for what its worth, there are alot of (aging) "thinking" people in 
> many of the former Soviet republics who wish that communism would come 
> back.  These aging people are now living in poverity without their 
> substantial state funded pensions.

And you can probably find no shortage of seemingly sane people who evidently 
want to live under Sharia. And, again, the word "ridiculous" is not the word I 
would have chosen, it came from the context. The word "Evil" would better fit 
Islam. Or perhaps just murderous and oppressive.

If Islam became an actual religion I'd gladly admit my error. But it isn't and 
it won't. We in the west will eventually have to throw off our PC taboos and 
admit that we're in a battle for survival against an ambitious, powerful and 
utterly ruthless enemy (Islam).

> I dunno, the domain name was reason enough for me to doubt its 
> authenticity.  Perhaps I'm just used to seeing real right wing whacknuts 
> in this country make asses of themselves (with loyal followers in tow), 
> that I can easily separate them from the piece of satire that started 
> thread.  *shrug*

Yes, similarly for the left wing whacknuts who are also in plentiful supply. 
It's for those reasons that looking for it to be satire didn't occur to me. 
double shrug

Michael

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