- Apr 12, 2009
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I passed by the Place de La République in Paris yesterday, and I was happy to see that when some guys started to tear up a Koran, they were booed by the rest of the crowd.
Buffalo Soldier said:I passed by the Place de La République in Paris yesterday, and I was happy to see that when some guys started to tear up a Koran, they were booed by the rest of the crowd.
ScienceIsCool said:Hitch, I apologize. I misattributed Glenn_Wilsons' comments on "religion of peace", etc to you. I was wrong. I'll leave my original post unedited unless you want it deleted, in which case I will re-write it (essentially the same content) in response to Glenn Wilson.
John Swanson
Maaaaaaaarten said:Obviously nobody in this topic is suggesting anything remotely close to this.
But there's two simple facts which prompts one to ask the questions hrotha and sniper are asking.
1) Mainstream Islam doesn't support these types of terrorist actions. For all that might be wrong with mainstream Islam, the average Muslim walking around in Europe doesn't support terrorism.
2) Increasingly, young Muslims in Europe are attracted away from traditional mainstream Islam to forms of Islam that do promote terrorism.
Nobody is questioning the heinous nature of Islamic terrorism. But the question remains; why do Muslim youths who grow up in the West radicalize and support terrorism? There is a real problem, but the problem isn't with mainstream Islam, but with specific jihadist forms of Islam which are unfortunately becoming more prominent and appear to be appealing to young European muslims.
Just ranting about Islam in general will only cause polarization and increase the hostilities between Islam and the West. So I fully agree with hrotha; if our response to these types of heinous acts is antagonizing all of Islam, it only furthers the cause of the terrorists.
blackcat said:nah Glen, you misinterpreted the analogy/metaphor.
was, taking the West to war in Mesopotamia = War Crime, the criminals in Paris who committed colded blooded mass murder = debased criminals.
the post was about ciminal action.
The cartoonists, they were just unwitting victims. Tho, they may have considered they were invoking some press freedom, when another interpretation may have been they were invoking samuel huntington's debunked thesis on Clash. Like those in Cophenhagen. Yes, you can do satire. But satire in context when George W talks about a crusade, and the conflagration in Mesopotamia.
rhubroma said:Secondly, the cartoonists weren't "unwitting victims." They, as unrepentent provocateurs, were all to aware that they were at the front battle lines in the war between France's and the West's freedom of expression and Islamic fundamentalisms' calling to expunge any "offence" to their creed in the name of intolerance, which "officially" began in 1989 with the fatwa against Rushdie. Satire, contemplated in terms of "human law," is necessary and valid (as we have been taught since Juvenal) as much when it is directed at George Bush, as it is when His Prophet (or Christ, or Yaweh) is the target. Otherwise we allow in our society "freedom of expression" to exist, only when it doesn't offend the sensibilities of fanatics and religious totalitarianism.
ScienceIsCool said:Hitch, I apologize. I misattributed Glenn_Wilsons' comments on "religion of peace", etc to you. I was wrong. I'll leave my original post unedited unless you want it deleted, in which case I will re-write it (essentially the same content) in response to Glenn Wilson.
John Swanson
blutto said:...good point....and something that is becoming the basis of quite a swirl of activity on the internets ( some parts interesting along the lines of your comment and others bordering on despicable and beyond when it is being claimed something along the lines of "they had it coming" because they put themselves directly in harm's way...).....
...and articles such as below...comments most welcome yay or nay...
http://johnhilley.blogspot.ca/
http://www.vineyardsaker.blogspot.ca/2015/01/i-am-not-charlie.html
Cheers
Echoes said:A pub in Villefranche sur Saone exploded, closed to a mosk. The mosk was the target.
Gunshots against a mosk in Port-la-Nouvelle (Aude, Southern France) and in Le Mans.
tags full of hatred on the mosk of Poitiers.
http://www.leparisien.fr/faits-dive...bab-pres-d-une-mosquee-08-01-2015-4428491.php
Only the beginning, I guess. French equivalents to Brown one one one are waking up and got what they wanted probably.
rhubroma said:For anyone condemning their type of satire in our culture, I'd recomend taking a good look into Giordano Bruno's case in the late XVI century. If you are happy to not have to even be remotely at risk at suffering his same fate today in our state of laws, then no satire, however radical, can for one instance be viewed as a "they had it coming to them" in regards to their own executions.
Echoes said:For 456,421 times, Galileo has never been a martyr of science, in anyway. There was no reason for it because the Church has never had any veto on the heliocentric model. They had never claimed the Sun revolved around the earth. Purely made-up by atheists.
He's been arrested because he published his book in Florence despite the promise he gave the Pope to publish it in Rome. The mistake is his. Beside he tried to interpret the Bible his own way while he was not a theologian but a scientist.
Besides, he never could prove that the earth revolved around the sun, he just made assumptions. In order to prove that the earth was turning, he used the tide movement as argument, which we know today is wrong.
The evidence only came with Newton and even experimental proof came after him (18th century).
Galileo was much too arrogant. He claim to have proven something he never could.
Copernicus never got any thread from the Church for his similar assumptions. Kepler found shelter within the Catholic Church, for similar assumption, while persecuted in protestant areas.
The atheistic re-writing of history is more and more ludicrous. The worst thing is that they not only lie but they also know that they lie. It's pathetic (Putin mode).
Who knows what he scrupulous historical research on the Bruno trial might reveal? I personally don't know. But since he's defended by the same liars, of course, the story cannot be trusted.
as unwitting victims, I used in unwilling victims. Ok, the Editor was willing to do the Salman Rushdie putative martyr thing for his Satanic Verses and fatwa list. however you spell fatwa, it aint that common in ones lexicon.rhubroma said:The one situation has nothing to do with the behavior of the "debased crimminals" in the other. Its like saying Russian repression in Chechenia lessens the barbarism of the Belson school hostage attack in North Ossetia.
Secondly, the cartoonists weren't "unwitting victims." They, as unrepentent provocateurs, were all too aware that they were at the front battle lines in the war between France's and the West's freedom of expression and Islamic fundamentalisms' calling to expunge any "offence" to their creed in the name of intolerance, which "officially" began in 1989 with the fatwa against Rushdie. Satire, contemplated in terms of "human law," is necessary and valid (as we have been taught since Juvenal) as much when it is directed at George Bush, as it is when His Prophet (or Christ, or Yaweh) is the target. Otherwise we allow in our society "freedom of expression" to exist, only when it doesn't offend the sensibilities of fanatics and religious totalitarianism.
just perhaps, she managed to make up alot of her backstory, and confected a tale for refugee status. There was some issue with her refugee approval half a dozen years after she had her Dutch citizenship.del1962 said:Wasnt he the one that did a film with Ayaan Hirsi Ali
Now there is a woman badly let down by the Netherlands establishment
they were all nuts too. But these nuts were our nuts, and not divorced from the conflagration raging in mesopotamia when they wished to throw metaphorical grenades at the islamic gettos in their cities.theyoungest said:What's with them? Fortuyn was killed by a leftist nut, Van Gogh by an Islamic nut, and Wilders is still alive.
BTW Van Gogh wasn't a politician, but a film director.
it has less to do with the fatwa that was rescinded by the shia ayatollah in iran, (on rushdie), than the salafi wahhabi organisations that are the vanguard of the terrorist asymmetrical strike.blutto said:...good point....and something that is becoming the basis of quite a swirl of activity on the internets ( some parts interesting along the lines of your comment and others bordering on despicable and beyond when it is being claimed something along the lines of "they had it coming" because they put themselves directly in harm's way...).....
...and articles such as below...comments most welcome yay or nay...
http://johnhilley.blogspot.ca/
http://www.vineyardsaker.blogspot.ca/2015/01/i-am-not-charlie.html
Cheers
but you cant divorce "Shock and Awe" from this confected battle. The provocation has context. The US and their allies in central asia and the middle east.blutto said:...good point....and something that is becoming the basis of quite a swirl of activity on the internets ( some parts interesting along the lines of your comment and others bordering on despicable and beyond when it is being claimed something along the lines of "they had it coming" because they put themselves directly in harm's way...).....
...and articles such as below...comments most welcome yay or nay...
http://johnhilley.blogspot.ca/
http://www.vineyardsaker.blogspot.ca/2015/01/i-am-not-charlie.html
Cheers
blutto said:...so please pray tell who do you rely upon for your insight in these matters?...
Cheers
blackcat said:Mock the prophet now, I will approve of the right to cartoon the image of the prophet, but i wont allow you to whitewash the context as tabula rasa. uhah, no its not tabula rasa.
Echoes said:For 456,421 times, Galileo has never been a martyr of science, in anyway. There was no reason for it because the Church has never had any veto on the heliocentric model. They had never claimed the Sun revolved around the earth. Purely made-up by atheists.
He's been arrested because he published his book in Florence despite the promise he gave the Pope to publish it in Rome. The mistake is his. Beside he tried to interpret the Bible his own way while he was not a theologian but a scientist.
Besides, he never could prove that the earth revolved around the sun, he just made assumptions. In order to prove that the earth was turning, he used the tide movement as argument, which we know today is wrong.
The evidence only came with Newton and even experimental proof came after him (18th century).
Galileo was much too arrogant. He claim to have proven something he never could.
Copernicus never got any thread from the Church for his similar assumptions. Kepler found shelter within the Catholic Church, for similar assumption, while persecuted in protestant areas.
The atheistic re-writing of history is more and more ludicrous. The worst thing is that they not only lie but they also know that they lie. It's pathetic (Putin mode).
Who knows what he scrupulous historical research on the Bruno trial might reveal? I personally don't know. But since he's defended by the same liars, of course, the story cannot be trusted.
