02-10-2006, 09:11 AM | #41 (permalink) | |
Kiss of Death
Location: Perpetual wind and sorrow
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To win a war you must serve no master but your ambition. |
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02-10-2006, 11:40 AM | #42 (permalink) | |
42, baby!
Location: The Netherlands
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By the way, I very much doubt that a boycot from the Muslim world will "cripple" the Danish economy. I also doubt that the EU will allow one of their member states to be bullied into submission. As EU officials have already stated: a boycot of Danish goods is in fact a boycot of EU goods. |
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02-10-2006, 01:14 PM | #43 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: Fort Worth, TX
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Until Europe wakes up, they're a lame duck with their head stuck in the sand hoping the hunter won't shoot because they're minding their own business. |
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02-13-2006, 08:59 PM | #44 (permalink) | |
whosoever
Location: New England
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Which i suppose is a self-protecting rhetoric and stratagy. But it clearly displays some striking parallels to the disregard of civilian status in those groups that we call terrorists. What else is terror, but shock and awe?
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For God so loved creation, that God sent God's only Son that whosoever believed should not perish, but have everlasting life. -John 3:16 |
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02-13-2006, 09:21 PM | #45 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: Fort Worth, TX
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02-14-2006, 08:31 PM | #46 (permalink) | |
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this is great...
Jews To Iran: We Can and Will Make Better Anti-Semitic Cartoons Than You http://www.boomka.org/ Quote:
Last edited by trickyy; 02-14-2006 at 08:38 PM.. Reason: + pic |
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02-14-2006, 08:48 PM | #47 (permalink) | |
whosoever
Location: New England
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__________________
For God so loved creation, that God sent God's only Son that whosoever believed should not perish, but have everlasting life. -John 3:16 |
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02-14-2006, 10:45 PM | #48 (permalink) | |
Kiss of Death
Location: Perpetual wind and sorrow
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Al Qaeda is based off centuries based humiliation, the sick man most relevantly( by my texts). Historically, the sole purpose of a government is to form protection for a sovereign group... Read that, Shrub swears an oath to the constitution to uphold and protect our laws, he holds no feality to some Arabs or some global powers, he is beholden to the American people. Where is this disconnection? Since when is Osama, Al Zarqawi, Al- Zarwhirwi- any fundamentalist Islamist close to the reality we have? Seriously I think the majority of the people here have no idea about Al Qaeda, they equate it with the Soviet resistance, the fact that Americans funded the Pakistani ISI, to them the evil Taliban. I am sensing some serious ignorance. Some cut your nose to spite the face type shit. America is always teh bad guye we are teh evile^ empire!!!~ iT'S always about the politic!
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To win a war you must serve no master but your ambition. |
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02-14-2006, 11:00 PM | #49 (permalink) | |
Pissing in the cornflakes
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This is a level of moral relativism that has reached a height I can not even see the top. Honestly....if you can not see a difference....ummm....
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Agents of the enemies who hold office in our own government, who attempt to eliminate our "freedoms" and our "right to know" are posting among us, I fear.....on this very forum. - host Obama - Know a Man by the friends he keeps. |
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02-15-2006, 04:42 AM | #50 (permalink) | |
whosoever
Location: New England
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But there is an odd level of congruence. And i don't think it's a stunning hieght of anything to point it out. As i said, i'm not evaluating these rhetorics. I'm just taking them at face value, and setting them up against one another. I'm not postulating that because there are some congruences that these things are morally equivalent in all areas, or that they are equally persuasive as claims to existance. I'm not asking anything about those evaluations...they don't interest me much. What i'm saying is why they may be particularlly illsuited at dealing with each other. We're going to have a devil of a time trying to marginalize a group that earnestly beleives it's formed for the defense of "civilization as they know it." Especially when our conduct is primarily regulated by concern for our continued existance, and is based on force. Pontificate all ya like, but for the average civilian in a combat zone, they're going to experience war/terrorism in pretty similar ways. "Centuries of Humiliation" or not...they have an idea of civilization and have offered several ways of defending it in the global arena. Based on the power differential in the current situation...it's not going to be a head to head competition. The question isn't: Which claim is morally superior? The moral high ground and 2.50 gets you the happy meal. The question is how to make our claims more persuasive. Yes, you'd be right to point out that force can be awfully persuasive. But it has failure points as well. We didn't surrender when NYC got hit. They aren't surrendering now.
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For God so loved creation, that God sent God's only Son that whosoever believed should not perish, but have everlasting life. -John 3:16 |
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02-15-2006, 05:26 AM | #51 (permalink) | |
Psycho
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"I am the wrath of God. The earth I pass will see me and tremble." -Klaus Kinski as Don Lope de Aguirre |
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02-15-2006, 06:35 AM | #52 (permalink) | |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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this edito is from today's guardian:
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this article poses some interesting questions about a context that has, curiously enough, dropped away in the conversations about this cartoon cartoon controversy. i would be curious to hear what nancy makes of it (or someone else who is in situ)---for myself, my close-ish acquaintance with things danish starts and stops with kierkegaard, so.... but it does point to an important matter that was discussed at length in the general discussion thread on this, but which has not reappeared in this thread--which i took to be in part motivated in order to make this topic safe against for extreme rightwing views to be circulated. so it has gone. the issue is the drift into neofascist discursive terrain that so many folk above, and in the other thread, simply undertook without seeming to be aware of it. the problem is that this terrain is unmarked in the u.s.: it is an aspect of mainstream conservative ideology, this repellent discourse that redefines a national community along racial and religious lines on the basis of caricatures of the muslim Other. i feel no need to go through the entire demonstration again--suffice it to say that the interpretations being run out of this controversy, and the views of islam that one sees elaborated as a function of it, are as much if not more a problem than are the actions in response to the cartoons that this thread is set up to complain about. all the arguments presented in the general discussion thread about the basically racist character of much conservative "understanding" of islam obtains here as well--switching forums does not obviate the critiques it is curious, the extent to which this thread has so far functioned as if the other one did not happen. but this edito raises many of the same questions.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
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02-15-2006, 07:08 AM | #53 (permalink) | |||
Junkie
Location: Fort Worth, TX
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The fact that European countries have more terrorist organizations in their own countries than exist in Afghanistan. For example 60% of Muslims in England freely admit to admiring Bin Laden. The fact that said Bin Laden-loving Muslims are soon to control the European countries, and instead of trying to incorporate them, they're locking them up in ghettos making the problem worse. The fact that they think that ignoring the problems, compounding the problems by racism, then tapping themselves on the back for being "multicultural". If they wake up and file charges against these Imams that openly cry for Jihad they might be able to shake off the Lame-Duck description. Quote:
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02-15-2006, 08:09 AM | #54 (permalink) | |
whosoever
Location: New England
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I'm at least nominally an American, a member of the lucky sperm club born into relative prosperity in the first world. But i'm enough of a cultural outsider to see that it's that luck that's primary to me having an American ID, and not some ontological difference between me and others. So yes, i understand that our nation has a different national mythos (a term i use as a non-perjorative description of the world-view and sense of history and kinship that produces ethnic or national idenity) and historical character than al-queda does. But they both form in reaction to imperial power...the difference is that we do so by usurpation, the redefining of primarily British values as now "American" values. We look fairly similar, and later become allies, etc. They too are reacting to imperial presenece, but do not do so from within, and so have a very different vocabulary and appearance. But functionally, they still have to mediate the process of being on the outs with the major world power of the day. So how do we respond? I don't think the answer is to say there's no difference between us...and that it's all basically the same. I don't think that. But there's a claim that seems to be substrate to our discussion here that they will understand violence. I don't know that they will. As i tried to say, we didn't "understand" their violence on 9/11. We reacted against it. They didn't "understand" our actions previously, and they do not "understand" our actions in Iraq now. Violence, like other forms of communication, is proving to be fairly unintelligible. War alledges that it provides a resolution to dispute, whose authority is not external to it's nature...namely that war really decides things in a way that other dispute resolutions cannot. But the failure of war to provide this irrefutable resolution to the cultural conflicts between western nationalism and Arab unrest seems to me to be rather damning of it as a authoritative tactic. I'm asking...what does work? We have these cartoons being used by both sides to reinforce the boundaries of both groups. Is that desirable? Are we content to fire back at one another? Because the promise of violence and escalation to relieve the tension is an empty one.
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For God so loved creation, that God sent God's only Son that whosoever believed should not perish, but have everlasting life. -John 3:16 |
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02-16-2006, 12:44 AM | #55 (permalink) | |
Psycho
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02-16-2006, 12:58 AM | #56 (permalink) | |
Psycho
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There are a number of other issues here that need to be considered: 1. Why were there no protests when the cartoons were originally published in September 2005? Why did things only heat up once the cartoons were republished in January 2006? Why were they republished? 2. Why did the same newspaper refuse to publish cartoons satirising Jesus in 2003? What happened to 'freedom of speech' then? 3. Why has the editor of Jyllands-Posten who originally published the cartoons been ordered on a 'leave of absence' after saying he would publish the Iranian cartoons satirising the Holocaust? Last edited by DJ Happy; 02-16-2006 at 01:01 AM.. |
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02-16-2006, 08:01 AM | #57 (permalink) | |
Kiss of Death
Location: Perpetual wind and sorrow
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Quote:
__________________
To win a war you must serve no master but your ambition. |
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02-16-2006, 08:38 AM | #58 (permalink) |
Getting it.
Super Moderator
Location: Lion City
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Iran is not as cut and dry as many here would like to believe.
Those who are in power right now are in the minority in a big way. The vast majority of the population is under 30 and a good portion of that is under 22. This young group don't know or even want to know about the revolution (the overthrow of the Shah). They are mostly concerned with music and partying. They barely register in the vote... and yet they are the majority. Give it 10 to 15 years and these young, materialistic party-goers are going to grow up, have jobs and still want the freedoms they currently enjoy. They will bring about the change. Currently, the vast majority of those who are protesting in the streets are connected with the current corrupt government that resides in power. The protests are not a natural grassroots thing. They are organized political propaganda (for lack of a better word). Just another way of thumbing their nose at the west. Ten to fifteen years and time is ticking.
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"My hands are on fire. Hands are on fire. Ain't got no more time for all you charlatans and liars." - Old Man Luedecke |
02-16-2006, 03:51 PM | #59 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: Melbourne, Australia
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I'm with Charlatan I believe on this.
First up, I'm not keen on some of the teachings that I hear from Islam. I'm unimpressed also by the behaviour of many of it's followers. Having said that, I feel that we need to put this in context. The countries in which much of this unrest is occuring seem to have - high levels of poverty and/or - non-democratic government (and associated media ownership issues) and/or - lower levels literacy and exposure to science/philosophy etc. than we have in the west These people have not seen the same debates as us. Their experience, knowledge and culture is different - they are unlikely to have effective access/understanding of English news sites for example. At the same time, they are physically closer to the Palestine-Israel conflict. They see the more questionable aspects of "western" policy and military interventions first-hand. Even then, we are still seeing riots carried out by a minority. There are groups of people in all countries who are capable of bad behaviour. Look at the situation during Katrina, during LA riots, the mini riots here in Au (Cronulla beach). It seems to me that a key factor behind the current situation is that communication networks have made local messages global in reach - but there has not been an equivalent interplay, averaging effect or balancing of beliefs at this time. |
02-17-2006, 05:41 PM | #60 (permalink) | |
Crazy
Location: buckle of the snow belt
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More from those crazy cats in the religion of pieces...
Cleric Offers $1 Million to Kill 'Cursed Man'
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10th sig ~> "How many a dispute could have been deflated into a single paragraph if the disputants had dared to define their terms?" -- Aristotle |
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