(no subject)
Sep. 30th, 2008 06:37 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I shouldn't be surprised, but I am saddened, that the reaction of someone Jon and I know to the Dayton mosque gassing was to complain that moderate Muslims don't condemn extremist Muslims loudly enough. Putting aside the obvious responses - a moment's Googling will find roughly a bajillion examples of Muslims condemning terrorism, poisoning sleeping children is not much of an anti-terrorism strategy, collective punishment is not justice, quit blaming the victims - something struck me about this line of argument that I'd never thought of before. Why assume that the opinions of "moderate Muslims" would have any effect on "extremist Muslims" anyway? This seems to assume that Muslims are a single group of people, all of whom have a say in any action one of them takes. We wouldn't expect, say, US Pentecostalist Jimmy Swaggart to take any notice of Australian Jesuit Frank Brennan, so why would we expect, say, a radical cleric in Islamabad to take any notice of an Iraqi refugee in Ohio?
no subject
Date: 2008-09-30 10:58 am (UTC)And I don't believe that anything justifies an attack on a place of worship, whatever your own beliefs or lack thereof.
(no subject)
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Date: 2008-09-30 01:27 pm (UTC)Ugh, fail. Surely this friend of yours can see past this rationale and hate the hate that throws a CS canister into a daycare - no matter who perpetrates it on whom?
And there are moderate Muslims working on turning around the extremists. One such was described in "From Our Own Correspondent" (here (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/from_our_own_correspondent/7623097.stm)) as pointing out the flaws in the beliefs of a particularly conservative extremist organization and persuading away the leader of one particular band...
no subject
Date: 2008-09-30 02:38 pm (UTC)We're so focused on the threat of muslim extremism to the West that we completely forget the thousands of moderate muslims killed by suicide bombers in Iraq, Pakistan and Afghanistan. Most of the people repressed by the Taliban were moderate muslims.
Many non-muslims simply don't think it counts when an act of terrorism is perpetrated against muslims.
(no subject)
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Date: 2008-09-30 10:22 pm (UTC)It is meaningless, of course. Bigotry relies on the assumption of the homogenous whole, making it easier to attack or dismiss a group all at once. The reality is, of course, that you might be able to group some people together because of some shared affiliation, but that commonality is probably outweighed mightily by the DIFFERENCES between the different members.
Ed (Chaotic-Neutral Atheist)
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Date: 2008-10-01 04:36 am (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2008-10-01 07:37 pm (UTC)*Applause*
During 7/7/2005 in the UK when the news finally came through about the bombs, a guy in my office sadly asked why it was all Moslems condoned such violence. I told him, calmly (colleagues were missing at the time; one was injured, but not badly, the others unscathed) that would be the same as thinking that all Christians supported IRA terrorism and anti-abortion bombings. He understood the point I made; he just hadn't thought of it that way.
In a linked thing, I heard something on the BBC radio that infuriated me the other day: a report about US 'missions' flown over the North West Frontier Province of Pakistan, and the danger - politically - should a Pakistani soldier get killed or injured. To translate, or fill in the gaps: these missions drop bombs on villages and towns full of people who happen to be Pashtuns. People are getting killed, but the BBC in this interview obliterated them from existence.
(no subject)
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Date: 2008-10-05 10:23 am (UTC)(no subject)
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