I'm reminded of something Ian raised quite a long time ago.  In short
the Islamisation of the Labour Party.  One really wants to be
influenced by other cultures.  Yet not in moving backwards to
religious law or the maltreatment of women and so on.  In many ways I
want to see more celebration of the Enlightenment, but feel we have
ended up with a very drab version.  The hold of organised religion is
something I would only ever want to break, yet we need something to
organise society, at least at a level of structuring individual
freedom.  What doesn't work is that kind of 'tolerant relativism' in
which any interests go.
Einstein's work can be seen as a radical restructuring of the
kinematics underlying the whole of physics.  By metaphor, I think of
secular society like this - as the essential component in the working
freedom of daily living.  The 'democracy of the vote' seems a poor
enabling model of this.  We can rig votes.  If we were to believe the
Daily Mail (god forbid!), the Labour Party have gerrymandered the
whole constituency through immigration and multi-culturalism. One
doesn't need to go that far to see problems with the way we vote and
what influences it.

There have been religions, like the Shakers and the Cathars who sought
to limit population (and there are many examples in anthropology) and
at some point we have to recognise freedom is not unlimited and that
some choices we have need to be in stark relief.  I find it very
distasteful even to think of having to tell people I don't approve of
their religions or religious buildings - yet the silencing of this
through political and other forms of mannered correctness is worse.
There are slippery slopes, but I think we have to ski on them.

I'm not sure that Islam has changed less than Xtianity.  It may be
that Xtian populations have been better educated to see through the
nonsense.  Interpretations of Islam vary massively - most Muslims are
Sunni and not at all Arabic.  There are very peaceful versions,
singing versions (apologies to Sufis - but their hospitality was
awesome) and break aways like the B'hai.  Much of what we see as
Muslim in the West is tribal.  Many in the places Ian mentions above
have told me they want more modernisation but fear the grass roots and
Mullah-power.  There is plenty of scholarly talk of this.  Francis
will know a great deal more, I would guess.

Most political reaction I've seen in the UK (Question Time and other
holy programmes) has been politically correct.  The whole idea of
plebiscites scares such people to death.  I think all this merely
indicates how little democracy we have.  We may quickly think the
banning of minarets is bad (or churches), but we give little thought
to why we are so anxious to stop the BNP expressing its views and do
not see this as very similar.

I will be in an Islamic home later this week discussing police
failures to protect them from racism.  The children attend mainstream
schools, there is a drink problem in the family and all in all they
are more 'English' than I would want to be.  I've been a guest at the
Mosque, but although I was treated with courtesy, Sue was not
invited.  Some of the teaching going on there is dreadful - not
terrorism but sexism.  I tend towards thoughts that we lack a secular
equivalent of some of the better things on other and the collectivism.

On 7 Dec, 08:51, Ian Pollard <[email protected]> wrote:
> 2009/12/6 Chris Jenkins <[email protected]>
>
> > And it continues...we will find out very soon if there can be peaceful
> > coexistence.
>
> >http://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/world/men-sought-to-kill-woman-for-a...
>
> > There will have to either be a "Great Schism" in the Muslim Society at
> > large, or it may very likely end up as the secular world vs. the government
> > world. I'm pulling for a Muslim Reformation.
>
> Sadly, I see a Reformation as pretty unlikely. Compared to Christianity and
> its many forms, Islam is fairly unchanged throughout the centuries; even to
> the extent that the Qu'ran can, they say, only truly be understood in its
> original Arabic. That's really part of Islam's strength.
>
> Instead of a Reformation, I think we'll continue to see a steady and
> increasing apostasy and cultural liberalisation like that seen in the Gulf
> states of Bahrain, Dubai, Qatar, etc. These places, in order to do global
> business, have become somewhat westernised. Although, we should definitely
> stress the relativeness. A friend of mine who lives in Dubai needed to prove
> she had her husband's permission to get a driving license, for example.
>
> Ian

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