OK, I think I see the problem now.  What it boils down to for old man Paul
is that he is essentially clueless  about what the Qur'an says and even why
the Qur'an is a crucial text   --because all Muslims believe it
not only "contains" the words of  Allah, but in a real sense,
IS Allah on Earth. So, when the  Qur'an says kill anyone who
resists Islam during a jihad, any  serious Muslim who is able,
does so and thinks it is holy to do  so.
 
The elder Paul is, about Islam,  seriously uninformed.
 
I kinda get the idea, especially  considering his age, that Paul only
takes law and economic issues  seriously because , in the Cold War,
that was pretty much the ball game.  The problem is, "how do you
teach old dogs now tricks  ?"
 
This still leaves one other issue of  consequence ( for me, for someone else
there may be 5 others ), namely open  borders. You know how much
I think that is such a hot idea,  viz, about as hot as Antarctica in Winter.
 
Billy
 
 
 
 
message dated 12/21/2010 9:32:48 P.M. Pacific Standard Time,  
[email protected] writes:

The obvious answer is number 2. 

Geller and  Paul are operating under the umbrella of Libertarianism, but 
both got there  from very different paths. 

Pamela Geller is a Jewess, if I remember  right, so all of the inflammatory 
verses in the Koran towards her race leads  her to the rather obvious 
conclusion that they cannot be reasoned with and are  bent on the destruction 
of 
Jews. She proceeds accordingly, knowing that since  they will not leave her 
alone, she cannot reasonably leave them alone, either.  

Ron Paul is a problem. For whatever reason, he sees the Ground Zero  
Mosque, for one thing, as a case of property rights. The owners of the  
property 
should be able to do with it as they see fit so long as the end use  of the 
building is not criminal in nature (and he's not going to go around  
criminalizing a religion due to "slippery slope" issues and his reading of the  
First Amendment). His son, incoming Senator Rand Paul, disagrees with his  
father. 

You could compare this to two people who came to the pro-life  side of the 
abortion problem with one coming through the standard religion  argument and 
the other coming to realize that infants being born at 5 months  gestation 
are now surviving, so that maybe the old Roe standard of abortion  being OK 
in the second trimester is indeed murder after all. One is based on  
religion and the other on a more scientific basis. Geller is acting on the  
"leave 
me alone" principle and knows that they will not leave her alone, and  she 
is therefore free to agitate. Paul is acting on the principle that one  ought 
to be able to do with ones property whatever he wishes unless it is  
illegal. 

That being said, there are other things that Ron Paul has  written (and 
that his supporters have written) that are problematic concerning  Islam, and 
I'm not staying up all night to find them and determining why he  thinks the 
way he does.

David  

  _   
 
"There  is no virtue in compulsory government charity, and there is no 
virtue in  advocating it. A politician who portrays himself as "caring" and 
"sensitive"  because he wants to expand the government's charitable programs is 
merely  saying that he's willing to try to do good with other people's 
money. Well,  who isn't? And a voter who takes pride in supporting such 
programs 
is telling  us that he'll do good with his own money -- if a gun is held to 
his  head."--P. J.  O'Rourke


On 12/21/2010 7:45 PM, [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])  wrote:  

When a football team is losing  at half time what does the coach say ? Pick 
one  :
( 1 ) the other team is rotten  and bad and horrible, or
( 2 ) here is what our mistakes  have been, and here are my ideas
for fixing the  problems
 
Seems to me if the Republicans  are to stop being wimps in congress they
need to fix the problems they  have.
 
It also seems to me that there  are at least two kinds of Libertarians.
Actually there may be more like  22 kinds, but to keep it simple--
 
Not exactly a secret that I  think Very Highly of the work Pamela Geller
is doing on her site, Atlas  Shrugs, which I regard as one of the top
3 or 4 sites which are critical  of Islam. Can't exactly deny that
her viewpoint is Libertarian.  OK, she also is a Randist, but
Randism is a version of  Libertarianism. Anyway, whatever kind
of Libertarian she is,  Libertarianism motivates her in the best possible
way to stand up against  Islam.
 
About Ron Paul, his approach to  Islam is 180 degrees the opposite.
This would not matter if the  issue was, say, Theosophy, which may be
wrong about X, Y, and Z, but is  no threat to anyone.
 
Islam, however, IS a major  threat and you can even argue that we either
already are at war with Islam,  or we soon will be, that this is 1940
even if it isn't quite  1941.
 
Yet Paul is not concerned about  Islam except insofar as some individual 
Muslims
are naughty characters and blow  people up now and then. Certainly he isn't
concerned enough to actually  study much of anything about Islam to find 
out,
as Geller knows in spades from  a helluva lot of research, that the Qur'an 
itself
promotes violence and  aggression. All of that flies over Paul's head.
 
But Geller, alas, is  pro-homosexual. She is all in favor or degenerate 
rights.
She makes a big issue out of  this every once in a while. On purely 
Libertarian grounds.
I don't know what Paul's views  on this issue are, so for now I cannot 
comment,
but here we have a Libertarian  arguing that homosexuality is perfectly OK.
 
How can a Christian, or a  Buddhist for that matter but letting Buddhism 
pass for now,
agree with Libertarianism on  this issue ?  How is it remotely possible ? 
The Biblical\
view is completely different,  and it is for Jews also, not just Christians.
 
I really don't see how the  Mormons reconcile their moral views with 
Libertarianism
and I now wonder how actual  Christians can do so .
 
These are  the cruxes of  the matter.
First, how to make sense of two  diametrically opposite approaches to Islam
by two outspoken Libertarians,  and
Second, how can Christian  faith be reconciled with Libertarianism when
on moral issues it takes an  altogether different stand ?
 
perplexed
Billy
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 




 

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