I think font color is critical at times.I think there is much to be learned from Islam about the proper role of women in society and the proper treatment of LGBTQ folks. Anyone who disagrees is a racist.
I think there is much to be learned from Islam about the proper role of women in society and the proper treatment of LGBTQ folks. Anyone who disagrees is a racist.
How CNN — and Others — Could Make the National Conversation About Islam Less Dumb
Since 9/11, Americans love to talk Islam. Unfortunately, this has not tended to be an intelligent debate, and Bill Maher is often one of the worst offenders when it comes to sweeping over-generalizations and misunderstandings of the complicated ways religious membership, belief, and behavior interact.
On Monday, CNN Tonight chimed in on this conversation in what was seemingly the correct way: The producers invited on Reza Aslan, a bona fide religion scholar, to respond to some of Maher’s recent comments and discuss the broader issues. Unfortunately, what followed wasn’t the intelligent conversation it should have been, but rather a stale regurgitation of the same silly loaded questions hosts have been asking for more than a decade:
Perhaps the most telling moment comes at 4:50, when, following Aslan’s eloquent points about how silly it is to broadly generalize about 1.5 billion people given that Bangladesh is not Turkey is not Saudi Arabia, Don Lemon — perhaps sensing the conversation is getting slightly too nuanced — asks Aslan point-blank to respond to the question on the screen: Does Islam promote violence? (Aslan responds, smartly, that Islam doesn’t inherently “promote” anything — “Like every religion in the world, it depends on what you bring to it.”)
It’s not worth rehashing the rest of the segment. Instead, it should be seen as an opportunity to point out the sorts of interesting, productive questions hosts should be asking the Reza Aslans (Rezas Aslan?) of the world.
Here are some questions the hosts could have asked to make the segment a bit more intelligent and watchable:
1. If female genital mutilation is about local cultural practices rather than Islam, why do some fringe Muslim figures defend it?
2. What do we know about why people join ISIS and how they differ from other Muslims with similar levels of religiosity?
3. In the age of ISIS, how do efforts to sway vulnerable young Muslims away from violence vary from country to country, given the huge cultural differences at work?
4. What are some specific examples of local efforts — successful and unsuccessful alike — to do so?
5. Maher is harsh on religious fundamentalism, but there are other forms of ideological extremism too. Do we have firm evidence on whether religious extremism is more likely to lead to violence than other forms of it?
The silver lining here is that Americans are curious about Islam, both for obvious reasons pertaining to the news and because Muslims are an increasingly visible part of American civic life. CNN and other outlets should use this curiosity to illuminate useful questions, which certainly isn't what happened Monday night.
How to Make the Islam Conversation Less Dumb -- Science of Us
Opinions are like @ss holes. Everybodies got one.
I highly doubt it. I bet it smells like roses, or turkish delight. Maybe even crabapple jelly. Yummm, crabapple jelly....and yours stinks.
84% of Egyptians polled by Pew in in 2010 agreed with a death penalty for apostasy, 86% of Jordanians agreed, and 76% of Pakistanis agreed. In Turkey, only 5% agree. How is Turkey different? For one, it's laws are integrated with the European Union, that is to say, a Western liberal society.
If anyone disagrees with Maher's statement that our society is better, I'd like to know why.
If Pakistanis think that death is an appropriate punishment for apostasy, then I could see why they would prefer Pakistan to America.
If Pakistanis think that death is an appropriate punishment for apostasy, then I could see why they would prefer Pakistan to America. "Better" is a pretty subjective term. Some people clearly want to live under sharia law. It used to absolutely baffle the Greeks--perhspas one of the first civilizations with any concept of humanitariansm--why the Jews would mutilate their own children, would starve rather than let a statue of Zeus appear in their town and would kill their own before compromising their faith. Strangely enough, from a historical persepctive, we sympathize more with the Jews than the Romans. And yet the Jews at the time of Christ were pretty similar to the Muslims of today--nothing but trouble. Clearly it was better to be Roman--educated, well fed, sophisticated.
That said, the evidence is that there's a heck of a lot more Muslims heading to Europe and America than vice versa. I hope I'm not arrogant enough to go around telling everyone I'm better than they are. But I will say I'm pretty happy with my lot and don't want People telling me that I should be livining under sharia law. The problem is once the Muslims reach a certain demographic, they want to take over. The Jews, like the Muslims, have never really integrated. Indeed, they have retained their culture through some 40 centuries of written human history. They seem to prefer to be governd by others though; at least they have been throughout most of their history.
Reading The Source by James Michener right now, which is a fictionalized history of the Jews from 10,000 BC to the present. Excellent, excellent book. Up to the time of King Herod right now. Anyways that whole post was a bit of a brainfart but there you have it.
...and yours stinks.
I highly doubt it. I bet it smells like roses, or turkish delight. Maybe even crabapple jelly. Yummm, crabapple jelly.
Is muslim a race? are they trying to be like the jewish people...be both a people and a religion? Cause that was quite the shtick. they got lots of chutzpah
I highly doubt it. I bet it smells like roses, or turkish delight. Maybe even crabapple jelly. Yummm, crabapple jelly.
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This has taken a turn for the weird...I lurv weird.