Saya udah bilang: agama Islam itu kayak lukah..

Masuknya gampang, tapi jalan keluar hanya satu: maut.


--- In [email protected], itemabu2 <itemabu2@...> wrote:
>
> > As Muslim Brotherhood leader Sheikh Yusuf al-Qaradawi stated this winter
> on Egyptian television, "without the 'Death for Apostasy' laws, apostasy
> laws, Islam would have failed with the death of Mohamed, as people would
> never stay in this religion otherwise."
> 
> Hehehe... si Yusuf Qaradawi aj ngaku bhw kl Islam ga maksa orang dgn
> kekerasan dan pembantaian, maka orang akan keluar dr Islam.
> 
> Orang2 yg terus jadi Islam biarpun mereka bebas keluar dr Islam kalo mau
> setelah tau Islam itu kayak apa itu sebenarnya emang bajingan keparat yg
> suka dgn ajaran Islam yg bajingan tsb.
> 
> 
> http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/3841/egypt-revolutions
> 
> The Problem at the Heart of Egypt's Revolutions
> 
> * by Nonie Darwish <http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/author/Nonie+Darwish>
> July 9, 2013 at 4:00 am*
> 
> 
> 
> This is the central problem in most Muslim countries: the difficult choice
> between a man-made, civilian, military, "infidel" government, and a
> totalitarian Islamic theocracy.
> 
> This latest revolution in Egypt, the second in the last two years, is a
> symptom of a deep-rooted problem at the heart of Islam itself: Egypt is on
> the verge of a civil war to bring a resolution to the never-ending tension
> between what Islam demands versus what the people really want.
> 
> This is the central problem in most Muslim countries: the difficult choice
> between a civilian, military "infidel" government, and a totalitarian
> Islamic theocracy. The problem is compounded when most Egyptians consider
> themselves both Muslim and lovers of democracy, but refuse to see that
> Islam and freedom cannot co-exist. How can Islam anywhere produce a
> democracy when freedom of speech and religion are outlawed, where there is
> no free and independent judiciary, and equal rights for women, minorities
> and non-Muslims are legally suppressed?
> 
> Islam also cannot let go of government control: since its inception, Islam
> has lacked the confidence in its own survival without government
> enforcement. As Muslim Brotherhood leader Sheikh Yusuf al-Qaradawi stated
> this winter on Egyptian television, "without the 'Death for Apostasy' laws,
> apostasy laws, Islam would have failed with the death of Mohamed, as people
> would never stay in this religion otherwise." It is no coincidence
> therefore that Islamic law
> dictates<http://www.memri.org/report/en/print6007.htm>that all Muslims
> must be ruled by Sharia, and declares that all secular
> governments, made by man, not by Allah, are heresy and an abomination.
> 
> While mosques are busy teaching Muslims how to carry out jihad, hate Jews
> and mistreat Christians, their imams allocate no time to preach the values
> of peace and trust as a foundation for an orderly society or civilization.
> As a result of such an Islamic education, Muslims who know they want
> freedom are unable to build the value system on which to achieve it.
> 
> Egypt's dilemma is nothing new, but the good news today is that finally
> there is an awakening in Egypt regarding the tyranny that Sharia law
> brings, especially if it is made the basis of a constitution. Despite this
> awakening, however, not one rebel in Tahrir Square was able openly to carry
> a sign saying, "Sharia must become null and void." The majority of
> Egyptians still believe that to say that would be an act of apostasy,
> punishable by death.
> 
> All current surveys still show that the overwhelming majority of Egyptians
> still support Sharia law, or at least say they do. This is where the
> problem lies: the laws of a society are the mirror of its morality.
> Egyptians cannot make believe that they can have both Sharia and freedom,
> or that their laws do not have to match their style of government and what
> they can feel comfortable with. According to Sharia, a Muslim head of state
> must rule by Islamic law, and must preserve Islam in its original form, or
> he must be removed from office. Islamic law leaves no choice for any Muslim
> leader but to accept, at least officially, that Sharia is the law of the
> land, or else be ousted from office. Sharia also commands Muslims to remove
> any leader who is not a Muslim. Because of that command, Muslim leaders
> must play a game of appearing Islamic and anti-West while trying to get
> along with the rest of the world. It is a game with life and death
> consequences for them.
> 
> That stricture is the reason many Egyptians today agree to keep Sharia in
> the constitution, even if only symbolically. But how can Egyptians be so
> naïve to believe they can ignore the laws of their constitution? As long as
> Sharia is on the books, even if it is ignored, the country can never have
> true stability and freedom. Even with revolutions, Egyptians can only
> achieve cosmetic changes with no substance; changes such as, the name of
> the country, its flag, national anthem, or even putting on or taking off
> women's hijabs.
> 
> Although Egyptians were always exuberant about the removal of a regime or a
> dictator, they never were about a change in the religious, cultural and
> moral foundations of the country. Whether it is the Egyptian revolution of
> 1919, 1952 or 2011, the change achieved has always been superficial, or for
> the worse. Somehow whenever the Muslim mind comes to the underlying
> religious ideology that is the foundation upon which its systems are
> erected, it freezes.
> 
> The result is a majority of confused citizens whose trust is shattered;
> moral standards in conflict, and laws and the concept of reality distorted.
> But how long can this warped existence last undetected? So far it has
> succeeded for 1,400 years without collapsing, but can this latest
> revolution be the crack in the stranglehold of Sharia?
> 
> Egyptian secularists have achieved a great step against the Muslim
> Brotherhood, but will they be able to sustain it? The Muslim Brotherhood
> has powerful roots in the Egyptian psyche, and the Brotherhood has vowed a
> bloodbath against any secular government.
> 
> For any secular government to remain in power, it needs to turn tyrannical
> and put in jail members of the Muslim Brotherhood. This has already begun;
> arrest warrants against leaders and 300 members of the Brotherhood were
> issued within hours of the removal of Morsi.
> 
> Egypt is now back to square one; a military dictatorship is, for the moment
> at least, the only solution that can preserve and sustain a certain level
> of secularism in the face of the constant Islamic assault that human
> rights, freedom of religion and democracy. The assault has also been on the
> United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which, on August 5,
> 1990, was repudiated and superseded by the Organization of Islamic
> Conference [OIC] in favor of the Cairo Declaration on Human Rights in
> Islam<http://www1.umn.edu/humanrts/instree/cairodeclaration.html>,
> which, in article 24, in its entirety, concludes that "All the rights and
> freedoms stipulated in this Declaration are subject to the Islamic
> Shari'ah." Article 19(d) also posits that, "There shall be no crime or
> punishment except as provided for in the Shari'ah."
> 
> One can only hope that this military dictatorship will not be like others,
> which promise elections and freedom, but remain as autocracies for decades.
> 
> *Nonie Darwish is the author of "The Devil We Don't Know".*
> 
> 
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>




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