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Originally Posted by Professor S
On a side not, I'm more than a little offended that you would think so little of me to be simply basing an opinion on ignorance an racsim. By jumping to that conclusion and adding the irrelevant example of the Rodney King riots, it is you that is guilt of lazy thinking. Not me.
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Well, you have to admit that when you say something like, "Islam reacts to problems with the sword instead of the pen. That is all the comparison I need," it certainly sounds like reductionism taken to an ignorant degree. I understand your position a lot better now even if I still don't agree with it, and I appreciate that you took the time to clarify instead of just flaming (that much I have come to normally expect from you).
Given our discussion, I have the feeling that 10-15 years from now we will see something rather in between extremes. Not an apocalyptic outbreak of violence engulfing a continent but not exactly a movement that would do Gandhi proud either.
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Because prominent political and religious figures quickly spoke out against the violence and there was a large rebuking of it by the people at large.
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Well,
the riots were condemned in Lebanon by religious leaders although I agree that other countries were more quiet about it.
By the way,
what do you make of this? I'm not asking rhetorically. I really want to know whether you think Forbes and Oxford Analytica have any idea what they're talking about (I've been leery of Forbes ever since they made asses of themselves multiple times talking about the videogame industry).
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All the West sees is the bad side of Islam. I know there is good Islam and modern thinkers in Islam. My problem is that I think those people also let themselves be ruled by fear of fanatical Islamic factions. If Islam wants to revamp its image and promote a peaceful version of itself, its members must stand up and take control of their belief, and not let the violent minority keep the majority under its thumb. The silent many are as damaging as the violent few, a violent few that appear to be growing in number with each passing day.
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Certainly there are peaceful and modern Muslims out in the world, but I think calling the majority "good" is a bit too simple. I mean this in the same sense that people usually mean when they say calling someone "evil" is simplistic. On the one hand, the majority of Muslims all over the world and even in the Middle East don't support blowing up innocent children. On the other hand, life sucks for a lot of them and thanks to failures in education and public discourse, they don't see that the root of their misery has just as much to do with the corrupt people in positions of power and influence in their society as it does with any (real or perceived) abuses by the West. Just as an example, school textbooks in Palestine don't acknowledge Israel's existence as a state. It's not too much of a stretch that they elected a terrorist group into Parliament, then.
I guess what I'm saying is that rather than fault a silent majority, I fault a system that's been built to perpetuate violence in order to keep the ruling class in power. It's well and good to say that Muslims need to reclaim their religion from the extremists, but what if they don't even know they've been taken hostage by corrupt leaders? Unfortunately, what Mahmoud Abbas and Ariel Sharon have demonstrated to me is that the best (and perhaps only) hope for peace is to have two courageous leaders meeting in the middle. A grass roots kind of movement won't do it.
P.S. Are we really that scary? Seems like everybody else suddenly stops having an opinion as soon as you and I have a conversation.
P.P.S. Swarthmore's swim team defeated Ursinus. So nyah and stuff.