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Old 10-14-2006, 05:51 AM   #41 (permalink)
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seaver, i dont know why you felt that i was directing my comments at you. i wasnt. though i dont agree with everything you say, your reasoning can be understood.

however,

my post was really a complaint with almost any lay person proclaiming that the quran is this or that without any knowledge or back up or evidence to prove their point except for their own literal interpretation of words on a page. as you would surely appreciate the quran has many meanings, and jurists have many opinions on every aspect of it. These jurists are the main schools of thought that you refer to (Maliki, Hanafi, Shafi'i, Hanbali) - though there are a fewer less known ones.

what i was refering to however, as hiredgun pointed out is not the schools of thought but rather the Tafseer of the quran by classical scholars such as Ibn Kathir. Though he followed the shafi'i school, his work is held in high prestige by all schools of thought and they all accept his authority on the subject. Some adherents of some schools of thought wont accept the opinions of other scholars of others math'habs , but ibn kathir is an exception.

i do think that you are wrong in saying that he isnt predominant in the regions in what terrorism originates. Ibn Kathir studied under Ibn Taymiya and ibn Qayyim in Syria in the 1300's, and is regarded by many as a touchstone for the salafi school of thought. the movement followed by binladen himself.


in regards to scholars not coming out against terrorism, this has been covered in previous threads, but there has been many. sometimes its the good things that muslims do that dont get noticed, and only the bad things that get magnified.
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Old 10-16-2006, 11:44 AM   #42 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ustwo

Its not an attraction, its a prediction. I'm not sure it IS a majority who fit the 'Religion of Peace' role, but even if it were say only 10%, that is 179 million for the Jihad. I think its higher.
You aren't far off at all:

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20061015/...esia_poll_dc_1

Quote:
One in 10 Indonesia Muslims back violent jihad: poll

Sun Oct 15, 9:04 AM ET

JAKARTA (Reuters) - Around one in 10 Indonesian Muslims support jihad and justify bomb attacks on Indonesia's tourist island of Bali as defending the faith, a survey released on Sunday showed.
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Indonesia is the world's fourth most populous country, with 220 million people, 85 percent of whom follow Islam, giving the Asian archipelago the largest Muslim population of any nation in the world.

"Jihad that has been understood partially and practiced with violence is justified by around one in 10 Indonesian Muslims," the Indonesian Survey Institute said in a statement.

"They approved the bombings conducted ... in Bali with the excuse of defending Islam," it added, saying the percentage of such support "is very significant."

While the vast majority of Indonesia's Muslims are relatively moderate, there has been an increasingly vocal militant minority and political pressure for more laws that are in line with hardline Muslim teachings.

The poll surveyed a random sample of 1,092 Muslim men and women.

Bombings in Bali in October 2002 blamed on the militant Southeast Asian Jemaah Islamiah network killed 202 people, mostly foreign tourists. Suicide blasts in Bali a year ago killed 20.

The survey found one in five Indonesian Muslims more generally supported the aims of Jemaah Islamiah -- an armed movement backing the creation of an Islamic superstate linking Muslim Indonesia and Malaysia, and Muslim areas in the Philippines and Thailand.

In the past, it has cooperated closely with al Qaeda's global anti-Western campaign, but in recent years many in Jemaah Islamiah have focused more on the regional struggle.

Indonesia has had a major attack against high profile Western-linked targets each year from 2002 through 2005. Authorities tied all the attacks to elements of Jemaah Islamiah.

Indonesia is not officially an Islamic state.
Only 18,700,000 Indonesian muslims are of the "violent extremist kind" Everyone relax, its only a small handful and they don't represent the majority.

edit: for the sake of accuracy, here's some survey statistics: Sample size 1,092, sample population 187,000,000. Confidence level 95%, confidence interval 10.22. 1,092 is a small sample size for such a large population. Based on the study, we can be 95% certain that the actual number of "extremists" in Indonesia is between 16,807,560 and 20,611,140.
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Last edited by stevo; 10-16-2006 at 11:53 AM..
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Old 10-16-2006, 12:11 PM   #43 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by dc_dux
Perhaps for the same reason that although the Pope and most priests believe there shoud be civil laws prohibiting abortion, most Catholics dont (at least in the US)?
I haven't heard of this could you please provide a source? Thanks.
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Old 10-16-2006, 12:17 PM   #44 (permalink)
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Dlk, I will yield to you on this issue, I am not as well versed in Ibn Kathir as you appear to be.
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Old 10-17-2006, 09:42 AM   #45 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by stevo

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20061015/...esia_poll_dc_1

Only 18,700,000 Indonesian muslims are of the "violent extremist kind" Everyone relax, its only a small handful and they don't represent the majority.

edit: for the sake of accuracy, here's some survey statistics: Sample size 1,092, sample population 187,000,000. Confidence level 95%, confidence interval 10.22. 1,092 is a small sample size for such a large population. Based on the study, we can be 95% certain that the actual number of "extremists" in Indonesia is between 16,807,560 and 20,611,140.
I'll take the silence that followed to be an agreement. Finally we're all in agreement. Isn't that just grand?
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Old 10-17-2006, 10:18 AM   #46 (permalink)
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You didn't make a point, stevo. Are those numbers right? Damned if I know. I have a feeling we disagree as to what we (the U.S., whoever) should do about those numbers, but you only left us to assume what you believe those numbers actually imply.
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Old 10-17-2006, 10:21 AM   #47 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Moskie
You didn't make a point, stevo. Are those numbers right? Damned if I know. I have a feeling we disagree as to what we (the U.S., whoever) should do about those numbers, but you only left us to assume what you believe those numbers actually imply.
What do you believe they imply?
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Old 10-17-2006, 10:41 AM   #48 (permalink)
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Well, ok. I see that there is a number of Muslims who support terror from around the globe, I think there was a chart published a few months back about it. There also seems to be a large silent bloc that either doesn't support it and is afrtaid to speak up or is underreported, or they are complicit and in silent agreement and support of the terrorists. Or the large bloc may be mixed.

I do find it odd that not many of the Muslim leadership speak out and denounce terrorism more vocally. Yes I did see the above links on some Muslim leaders that denounce terrorism. That's good, I just wish it was more publicized (probably another thread).

I suppose fear is a pretty big deterrent to speak out against the terrorists. It's like trying to find someone to testify against the local neighborhood gangster. The silence doesn't neccessarily mean that everyone supports the gangsters.

Still, I would like to see more Muslims speak out, hold demonstrations against terrorism and for the press to report that as well.
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Old 10-17-2006, 10:46 AM   #49 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ustwo
What do you believe they imply?
Simply that there's quite a bit of muslim extremists in the world. No doubt.

But in the context of this discussion: Is it because Islam is, by its nature, a violent belief system? Who knows, but you can't deduce anything either way simply based on those numbers. I refuse to let it be proven and assumed so easily.

And, assuming these numbers are "high," this also implies to me that the solution to the problem (whatever that problem is) would require something more intricate than simply declaring that the religion is definitively violent and should be eradicated. It just seems like an oversimplification of the issues.
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Old 10-17-2006, 11:22 AM   #50 (permalink)
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There has to be some correlation attesting to the idea that violence and Islam are related. Otherwise it would have to be one big coincidence that a majority of the worlds issues regarding human rights and conflict are perpetuated or involving of Muslims and/or Sharia law (read: Afghanistan, Pakistan, Kashmir, Iran, Uzbekistan, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Lebanon, Palestine, Jordan, Georgia/Checynia(sp), Sudan, Libya, Nigeria, Somalia, Egypt, Yemen, and now increasingly Western Europe).
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Old 10-17-2006, 11:35 AM   #51 (permalink)
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Hmm...I don't know if there is a correlation. I believe it to be more corruption and manipulation by bad leadership. Perhaps a corruption of Islam for nefarious purposes is more the point. I don't feel like the leaders of many of those countries represent Islam anymore than I feel George Bush represents Christianity. I think the Taleban are about as unIslamic as you can get with their hypocrisy. Allowing the opium crops, etc. I can't remember but didn't they ban music and dancing but were caught listening to Britney Spears?

I also think Islam is used as a political tool further twisting the religion and blurring the lines. So in my view, it's not Islam that is to blame but rather the people who corrupt it, much like any religion.

Sharia law might be a good debate for another thread so it can be more focused.
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Old 10-17-2006, 11:42 AM   #52 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mojo_PeiPei
There has to be some correlation attesting to the idea that violence and Islam are related.....
The same can be said about christian evangelicals in the US government:
Quote:
http://www.sacbee.com/110/story/39198.html
......Doolittle's views on the Iraq war are simply bizarre. The conflict, he said, "leads to what the Bible ultimately says": Armageddon will take place in the Middle East. The Bible mentions the Euphrates River in Iraq as the place of prelude to the final battle of Armageddon that will bring about the world's end.
Why don't you stop posting neocon propagandist nonsense...and let this thread die. It is a gathering place for offensive and illinformed commentary. I am embarrassed for our muslim brothers who happen upon some of the simplistic, ill conceived posts here...... I have no more connection to what Mojo_PeiPei thinks and posts than any of the muslims who he accuses have....to others who claim to be muslim, but promote violence.
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Old 10-17-2006, 11:51 AM   #53 (permalink)
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America doesn't act as a Christian actor. American government doesn't act within a solely christian framework. We didn't act in Iraq for Christian purposes, we operated for geo-political purposes. Evangelical terrorism is so statistically small and insignificant, that it is effectively an abherration of Christians or the American population as a whole.

Where is any neo-con propaganda btw? I mean unless of course you consider reality and facts to constitute propaganda.
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Old 10-17-2006, 12:00 PM   #54 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mojo_PeiPei
Where is any neo-con propaganda btw? I mean unless of course you consider reality and facts to constitute propaganda.
I posted it so its neo-con propaganda by default.
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Old 10-17-2006, 12:23 PM   #55 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by host
The same can be said about christian evangelicals in the US government:
One in ten christian evangelicals advocate jihad?

Quote:
Originally Posted by host
Why don't you stop posting neocon propagandist nonsense...and let this thread die.
Is the poll I posted above neocon propaganda?
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Old 10-17-2006, 01:26 PM   #56 (permalink)
 
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no ustwo--you posted a sequence of quotes from famous dead guys whose ignorance about islam made you feel as though yours was legitimate. and you bit it from a far right blog that you did not cite.

what was surprising is that while the thread was twitching its way toward oblivion, an interesting discussion happened between hiredgun, dlishguy and seaver. so even here you can see that discussions between opposing political viewpoints concerning islam are possible without degenerating into the idiocy of the present one----where you now have arguments that i take to have been made seriously---though frankly have trouble imagining it possible--that "a percentage" of the world's muslim population "supports" this ridiculous construct you call "terrorism" therefore islam as a whole has some kind of proclivity toward violence.

here is this brilliant logic in another context: only people who drive cars have strapped a bomb to the undercarriage and driven into a building.
therefore everyone who drives a car may strap a bomb to the undercarriage and drive into a building.
to make this appear legitimate, the qualifier gets tossed in that a certain (arbitrary) percentage of car drivers support such actions.

the usual pattern from here would be to generate a whole series of meaningless generalizations about people who drive cars----all of which would be further qualified--sooner or later--with "i know a couple of car drivers and they are nice people.....they are not like the rest. therefore i have no particular problem with car drivers."

the argument now being tossed about with reference to islam is, if anything, even more stupid.
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Old 10-17-2006, 01:55 PM   #57 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by stevo
One in ten christian evangelicals advocate jihad?
Here's a twist to that: I'm inclined to believe that a perspective where one is resigned to being at war with the entire culture of Islam is, in a sense, advocating a jihad scenario. Otherwise, these people would be doing everything in their power to avoid it. Instead, we see views such as the quotes in the OP spread around, creating more and more hate between cultures, thus aiding the notion that a jihad is on its way. It serves no purpose but make the chances of war greater, does it not?

That's the impression I'm getting from the convesative side of this discussion, at least. I sense that you guys have abandoned all hope that a war with Islam could be avoided, and are now of the belief that the only outcome must and will be all out war. Perhaps that is the key difference in the perspectives in this thread.
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Old 10-17-2006, 03:49 PM   #58 (permalink)
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These quotes would be even more of a riot!

Quote:
Originally Posted by John Adams, letter to FA Van der Kamp, December 27, 1816
As I understand the Christian religion, it was, and is, a revelation. But how has it happened that millions of fables, tales, legends, have been blended with both Jewish and Christian revelation that have made them the most bloody religion that ever existed?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Treaty of Tripoli (1797), carried unanimously by the Senate and signed into law by John Adams (the original language is by Joel Barlow, US Consul)
"As the government of the United States is not, in any sense, founded on the Christian religion; as it has in itself no character of enmity against the laws, religion or tranquility of Musselmen [Muslims] ... it is declared ... that no pretext arising from religious opinion shall ever product an interruption of the harmony existing between the two countries....
"The United States is not a Christian nation any more than it is a Jewish or a Mohammedan nation."
Quote:
Originally Posted by Winston Churchill
All the horrors of all the ages were brought together, and not only armies but whole populations were thrust into the midst of them. The mighty educated States involved conceived – not without reason – that their very existence was at stake. Neither peoples nor rulers drew the line at any deed which they thought could help them to win. Germany, having let hell loose, kept well in the van of terror; but she was followed step by step by the desperate and ultimately avenging nations she had assailed. … When it was all over, Torture and Cannibalism were the only two expedients that the civilized, scientific, Christian States had been able to deny themselves: and they were of doubtful utility.
. . . . . . . . . . . .

Quote:
Originally Posted by Mojo_PeiPei
There has to be some correlation attesting to the idea that violence and Islam are related.
host was right, this thread is embarrasing.

Last edited by Ch'i; 10-17-2006 at 04:09 PM..
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Old 10-17-2006, 04:17 PM   #59 (permalink)
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I have a challenge to the tilted left, or those of you that view the Islamic world as a mystical land with enchanted chocolate rivers and yummy rainbow gum drops.

Refute what I put forward, and if possible (here's the tricky part) do it without bringing in Christian culpability (also I don't how the Treaty of Tripoli relates as it was ratified with different versions, some without the tenth clause, and was allowed to die after few years time) or the playing of the following two cards: It must be the leaders/corruption or this as all mere "neo-con propaganda". Do yourselves a favor and open your minds on this one, it will be a stretch for some of you, but I have a feeling that some of you are at least reasonable enough to acknowledge the fact that there is a major problem in Islam, that it is not limited to a small minority on some dark continent far away, and it is not getting any better.
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Old 10-17-2006, 04:22 PM   #60 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by roachboy
though frankly have trouble imagining it possible--that "a percentage" of the world's muslim population "supports" this ridiculous construct you call "terrorism" therefore islam as a whole has some kind of proclivity toward violence.
'terrorism' is a ridiculous construct...

Before I'd even touch the rest of your post, you must expound on this facinating idea.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Mojo_PeiPei
I have a feeling that some of you are at least reasonable enough to acknowledge the fact that there is a major problem in Islam, that it is not limited to a small minority on some dark continent far away, and it is not getting any better.
You sir are an optimist of the highest order.
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Last edited by Ustwo; 10-17-2006 at 04:25 PM.. Reason: Automerged Doublepost
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Old 10-17-2006, 07:21 PM   #61 (permalink)
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mojo_PeiPei
I have a challenge to the tilted left, or those of you that view the Islamic world as a mystical land with enchanted chocolate rivers and yummy rainbow gum drops.

Refute what I put forward, and if possible (here's the tricky part) do it without bringing in Christian culpability (also I don't how the Treaty of Tripoli relates as it was ratified with different versions, some without the tenth clause, and was allowed to die after few years time) or the playing of the following two cards: It must be the leaders/corruption or this as all mere "neo-con propaganda". Do yourselves a favor and open your minds on this one, it will be a stretch for some of you, but I have a feeling that some of you are at least reasonable enough to acknowledge the fact that there is a major problem in Islam, that it is not limited to a small minority on some dark continent far away, and it is not getting any better.
I think most on the "tilted left" (or your insulting enchanted candyland) agree that there are many followers of Islam who have hijacked the religion for their own ideological goals, as followers of other religions have done throughout history (sorry Mojo..I dont see why Islam should be viewed in a vacuum).

I think the point that many here have made is that a policy to fight terrorism would be more effective if it were to focus on how to respond to the extemists rather than to continue to attack the religion, which will only result in more anti-west sentiments and ultimately more moderate muslims who feel attacked and may be moved to the extemist beliefs themselves.
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Old 10-17-2006, 08:01 PM   #62 (permalink)
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How does our policy attack the religion? Does acknowledging the fact that they are muslims perpetuating an idealogy spawned from the Islamic tradition make it an attack on the religion? I guess so. Confounding.
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Old 10-17-2006, 08:05 PM   #63 (permalink)
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thank you, dc, that's my opinion as well.

Has any of the left here claimed that Islam has a spotless reputation? Of course not. Our contention has been that problems do exist, but the solution is not to make blanket statements and policies regarding Islam. We've seen people in this thread (hiredgun) and friends of people in this thread (Ustwo's lunch date) that represent a level-headed, reasonable side of Islam. We're not sure whether that group represents the majority of Muslims, but we need to make sure those people become the ones in power of the Islamic people, and not the extremists that are currently causing all this trouble around the world.

Another reason we are against the notion of being against Islam as a whole, is that it takes us down a road that has no winners. Here's the only set of events I see that starts with the ideals put forth in the OP:

1. Islam is inherently evil and violent.
2. In order for the world to be safe, Islam must then be destroyed, since it's mere presence brings evil and violence.
3. Declare war (in some form or another) against all followers of Islam, since they are, by definition, evil and violent.
4. Partake in said war, causing mass international instability, and countless casualties.

If there's another set of events that I'm not seeing, please let me know. Because I, for one, find that to be an unacceptable situation. One that needs to be avoided at all costs. My idea for avoiding this is to reject the first statement, then work to get moderate Muslims who are not evil and violent into control of the Islamic community.

Is that so unreasonable?
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Old 10-17-2006, 08:15 PM   #64 (permalink)
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How are you going to get the moderate muslims to stand up? They don't seem to be willing to do it by themselves, repression and Sharian rule is growning in the (Islamic) world, not declining.

Also, I must ask this question, Hiredgun if you'd be so kind, where are you from originally? Being left to assumptions, it seems apperent to me that you are problem from America/Canada. As such you are not representative of the global Islamic culture; Hiredgun to me would be a dasterdly "westerner" one who lives within the Judeo-Christian realm of the infidels.
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Last edited by Mojo_PeiPei; 10-17-2006 at 08:20 PM..
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Old 10-17-2006, 08:15 PM   #65 (permalink)
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"I think the point that many here have made is that a policy to fight terrorism would be more effective if it were to focus on how to respond to the extemists rather than to continue to attack the religion, which will only result in more anti-west sentiments and ultimately more moderate muslims who feel attacked and may be moved to the extemist beliefs themselves."

And how would you respond to islamic extremism without offending these moderates that you speak of, who at our reaction to this extremism, would become extremists themselves?

It seems to me your acknowledging that "moderate", which I would guess is what you think is the majority, of muslims are ready to start flying planes into buildings and setting up roadside bombs at the drop of a hat.

You're such a racist...
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Old 10-17-2006, 08:31 PM   #66 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mojo_PeiPei
How are you going to get the moderate muslims to stand up?
That's a problem for statesmen smarter than myself to figure out. I cannot provide specifics.

I'm inclined to believe that it would be a more desirable task to accomplish than any vague war against what could be the majority of the Islamic community, though.
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Old 10-17-2006, 08:35 PM   #67 (permalink)
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mojo_PeiPei
How are you going to get the moderate muslims to stand up? They don't seem to be willing to do it by themselves, repression and Sharian rule is growning in the (Islamic) world, not declining.
Mojo......Where is repression and sharia law growing...putting aside the fact that sharia law should not be equated with support of terrorists with different ideologcal goals? The new Iraq constitution which the US proclaims as such a victory for the Iraqi people is based, in part, on sharia law.

Moderate muslims are in power in most of the top 10 muslim countries and are standing up, with the exception of Iran, which doesnt have the support of the people. The goverments of Indonesia, Pakistan, India (not a muslim government), Turkey, Egypt, Algeria (not moderate, but cracking down on suspected terrorists), Morroco are all working with the US to some extent to fight terrorism, as are the smaller muslim nations of Jordon, Kuwait, and others.

And Mathew, your "racist" comment is not worthy of response.
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Old 10-17-2006, 09:03 PM   #68 (permalink)
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"Moderate" is the word eh?

Familiar, this is, I have seen this before... Ustwo addressed that here http://www.tfproject.org/tfp/showthr...ight=Indonesia, but for arguments sake....
Quote:
Persecution of Christians in Sudan

There is an abundance of evidence since the early 1990s of oppression and persecution of Christians, including by Sudan's own Sudan Human Rights Organization, which in mid-1992 reported on forcible closure of churches, expulsion of priests, forced displacement of populations, forced Islamisation and Arabisation, and other repressive measures of the Government. In 1994 it also reported on widespread torture, ethnic cleansing and crucifixion of pastors. Pax Christi has also reported on detailed cases in 1994, as has Africa Watch. Roman Catholic bishop Macram Max Gassis, Bishop of El Obeid, also reported to the Fiftieth Session of the UN Commission on Human Rights, in Geneva, in February 1994 on accounts of widespread destrucution of hundreds of churches, forced conversions of Christians to Islam, concentration camps, genocide of the Nuba people, systematic rape of women, enslavement of children, torture of priests and clerics, burning alive of pastors and catechists, crucifixion and mutiliation of priests. The foregoing therefore serve to indict the Sudanese Government itself for flagrant violations of human rights and religious freedom.

In addition, it is estimated that over 1.5 million Christians have been killed by the Sudanese army, the Janjaweed, and even suspected Islamists in northern Sudan since 1984.

It should also be noted that Sudan's several so-called civil wars (which often take the form of genocidal campaigns) are often not only or purely religious in nature, but also ethnic, as many black Muslims, as well as Muslim Arab tribesmen, have also been killed in the conflicts. It is difficult to ascertain how many deaths are due to the conflict and how many are due to the numerous famines which have affected Sudan, costing thousands of lives.
[edit]

Persecution of Christians in Pakistan
[edit]

Blasphemy Laws

In Pakistan, 1.5% of the population are Christian. Pakistani law mandates that any "blasphemies" of the Quran are to be met with punishment. On July 28, 1994, Amnesty International urged Pakistan's Prime Minister, Benazir Bhutto to change the law because it was being used to terrorize religious minorities. She tried but was unsuccessful. However, she modified the laws to make them more moderate. Her changes were reversed by the Nawaz Sharif administration which was backed by Islamic Fundamentalists.

Ayub Masih, a Christian, was convicted of blasphemy and sentenced to death in 1998. He was accused by a neighbor of stating that he supported British writer, Salman Rushdie, author of The Satanic Verses. Lower appeals courts upheld the conviction. However, before the Pakistan Supreme Court, his lawyer was able to prove that the accuser had used the conviction to force Mashi's family off their land and then acquired control of the property. Masih has been released [5].

On September 22, 2006, a Pakistani Christian named Shahid Masih was arrested and jailed for allegedly violating Islamic "blasphemy laws" in Pakistan. He is presently held in confinement and has expressed fear of reprisals by Islamic Fundamentalists[6].
[edit]

Attacks on Pakistani Christians by Islamists

On October 28, 2001 in Lahore, Pakistan, Islamic militants killed 15 Christians at a church. On September 25, 2002 two terrorists entered the "Peace and Justice Institute", Karachi, where they separated Muslims from the Christians, and then executed eight Christians by shooting them in the head.[citation needed]

On September 25, 2002, unidentified gunmen shot dead seven people at a Christian charity in Karachi's central business district. They entered the third-floor offices of the Institute for Peace and Justice (IPJ) and shot their victims in the head. All of the victims were Pakistani Christians. Karachi police chief Tariq Jamil said the victims had their hands tied and their mouths had been covered with tape. Pakistani Christians have alleged that they have "become increasingly victimised since the launch of the US-led international war on terror."[7]

In November 2005, 3,000 militant Islamists attacked Christians in Sangla Hill in Pakistan and destroyed Roman Catholic, Salvation Army and United Presbyterian churches. The attack was over allegations of violation of blasphemy laws by a Pakistani Christian named Yousaf Masih. The attacks were widely condemned by some political parties in Pakistan[8]. However, Pakistani Christians have expressed disappointment that they have not received justice. Samson Dilawar, a parish priest in Sangla Hill, has said that the police have not committed to trial any of the people who were arrested for committing the assaults, and that the Pakistani government did not inform the Christian community that a judicial inquiry was underway by a local judge. He continued to say that Muslim clerics "make hateful speeches about Christians" and "continue insulting Christians and our faith".[9].

In February 2006, churches and Christian schools were targeted in protests over the publications of the Jyllands-Posten cartoons in Denmark, leaving two elderly women injured and many homes and properties destroyed. Some of the mobs were stopped by police[10].

In August 2006, a church and Christian homes were attacked in a village outside of Lahore, Pakistan in a land dispute. Three Christians were seriously injured and one missing after some 35 Muslims burned buildings, desecrated Bibles and attacked Christians[11].

Based, in part, on such incidents, Pakistan was recommended by the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) in May 2006 to be designated as a "Country of Particular Concern" (CPC) by the Department of State.[12].
[edit]

Attacks on Christians by Islamists in Indonesia

Religious conflicts have typically occurred in western New Guinea, Maluku (particularly Ambon), and Sulawesi. The presence of Muslims in these regions is largely due to Suharto's transmigrasi plan of population re-distribution. Conflicts have often occurred because of the aims of radical Islamist organisations such as Jemaah Islamiah or Laskar Jihad to impose Sharia. The following list is far from comprehensive:

1998 - 500 Christian churches burned down in Java.

November, 1998 - 22 churches in Jakarta are burned down. 13 Christians killed.

Christmas Day 1998 - 180 homes and stores owned by Christians are destroyed in Poso, Central Sulawesi.

Easter 2000 - 800 homes and stores owned by Christians are destroyed in Poso, Central Sulawesi.

May 23, 2000 - Christians fight back against a Muslim mob. 700 people die.

June, 2001 - the Laskar Jihad declares Jihad against Christians. Muslim citizens are recruited by the thousands to exterminate Christians.

May 28, 2005 - A bomb is exploded in a crowded market in Tentena, killing 28. This marks the highest death toll due to bombing after the devastating attacks in Bali.[13]

On October 29, 2005 three school girls were found beheaded near Poso. The girls, students at Central Sulawesi Christian Church, were killed by six unidentified assailants while on their way to class.
Again Pakistan's cooperation is only due to the regime's preference, a defacto dictator, who has been the victim of 3 assassination attempts, who has entirely to many problems with Islamists in the military, who exerts little to no control in the Taliban sympathetic/controlled Pushtan region. This is a country that was blowning up churches after erroneous news stories about Quran desecration at Gitmo. Musareff is only as moderate and helpful as it suits him, on that note, I wonder where Bin Laden is???

India- Historical reference fact, where have the bloodiest religious wars ever been fought? When? What religions? Case in point India/Pakistan, four wars this century 47', 65', 71', 98', Moslems and Hindu's. Building off that seems to me problems and Kashmir still exist, also this doesn't take into account the problems in Bangladesh's formation. I wonder why they might want to fight in our war on terror? because they have been dealing with Islamic extremists for 60+ years!

Turkey- let's ask the Kurds what they think, also I am a little disconcerted about their whole reaction to the Pope's comments awhile back. They've seem to been dealing with their own inner problems with terrorism, some destructive acts, I wonder if it is not a discontent population or Al Qaeda?

Egypt- Ustwo made a good point in the linked above thread... they are the second biggest recipent of America aid. Similar to other countries they also have serious internal problems with Islamic extremists, seems to me a certain leader of theirs was assassinated a few decades back...

Also your point about Iraq and Sharian law bring up its own plethora of issues to deal with. Namely that Iran is starting to excert massive influnence in Iraq, don't know if you know but Iran is Shiite, so is majority of Iraq, there was a war that killed a million people, Saddam was secular ran off the clerics to Iran, they are back, there are ones like Al- Sadr one of the biggest problems we are facing. That's a lazy detailed commentary. I think most people monitoring the situation in Iraq, see it has a problem that Sharia law is being adapted, especially because of the situation with Iran.
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Old 10-17-2006, 09:38 PM   #69 (permalink)
 
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I'm not ignorant of the internal killings and the unrest stirred up by the extemists in these countries, but the fact is that these governments are moderate (as are the majority of their muslim population) and are working with the international community and particlulary the west, to strengthen their response to these internal extremists and to institute political and judicial reforms, albeit not as quickly or as succesfully as we would like.

If we want them to continue, its in our interest not to inflame their more moderate muslim populations with policies like attacking a sovereign muslim country that did not pose a direct threat to us and where our actions killed thousands of innocent muslim civilians, locking up (some for years at a time now with no outside contact) and torturing "suspected" muslim terrorists with no opportunity to prove their innocence, making references to islamofacists, etc.

Edit:
I agree with you on Iraq/Iran connection . The result of our invasion was to create a scenario where SCIRI and Dawa (the two shia sectarian political groups with connections to Iran) would be in control of the government and would strengthen ties to Iran.

Iran, Iraq to strengthen security, intelligence ties


I think it was Howard Dean who predicted this before the war
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Old 10-17-2006, 09:49 PM   #70 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mojo_PeiPei
I have a challenge to the tilted left, or those of you that view the Islamic world as a mystical land with enchanted chocolate rivers and yummy rainbow gum drops.
Indeed you are an optimist. I would love to engage in such a challenge, but such an answer would fall upon deaf ears. No matter what is said, aside from supporting the right, it will be either ignored (thanks Ustwo), or viewed through bias. A majority of the right holds its views as incontrovertible, and will not listen to our "leftist drivel", or anything sharing an inclination towards that view's favor. If care towards incessantly being right (in literal meaning of the word) was shunned, then I'd be willing. Unfortunately this is not the case.

Edit: Screw it. I'll give it a try.

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Old 10-17-2006, 09:57 PM   #71 (permalink)
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You would engage in such a challenge but you would loose. Any answer I ever encounter comes down to me being a bigoted xenophobe and not once addresses the issue at hand. Don't think that I have a monopoly on excluding perspective. Please give me your leftist drivel by the way, I would welcome it, you might find I am not so unreasonable when presented with facts and basis, as opposed to condescension and pomp.
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Old 10-17-2006, 10:02 PM   #72 (permalink)
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I wasn't talking about yo.... *sigh* nevermind. Let's start.

The accusation is that Islam is directly linked to, and causes, violence. I disagree. Let's start by taking a look at the top 59 populations of Islam in the modern world.
______________________________________________________________

Sunni (green) and Shi'a (blue). (based on the CIA factbook)
Rank) Country, Muslim Population, % Muslim
1) Indonesia, 213,469,356, 88.22%

2) India, 174,862,240, 16.2%

3) Pakistan, 162,487,489, 98%

4) Bangladesh, 129,681,509, 88%

5) Egypt, 70,530,237, 91%

6) Turkey, 68,963,953, 99.8%

7) Iran, 67,337,681, 99%

8) Nigeria, 64,385,994, 50%

9) China, 39,189,414, 3%

10) Morocco, 32,300,410, 98.7%

11) Algeria, 32,206,534, 99%

12) Afghanistan, 29,629,697, 99%

13) Sudan, 26,121,865, 65%

14) Iraq , 25,292,658, 97%

15) Saudi Arabia, 26,417,599, 99.9%

16) Ethiopia, 24,622,000, 32.8%

17) Uzbekistan, 23,897,563, 89%

18) Russia, 21,513,046, 15%

19) Yemen, 20,519,792, 99%

20) Syria, 16,234,901, 88%

21) Malaysia, 14,467,694, 60.4%

22) Tanzania, 12,868,224, 35%

23) Mali, 11,062,376, 90%

24) Niger, 10,499,343 90%

25) Senegal, 10459222, 94%

26) Tunisia, 9,974,201, 99%

27) Somalia, 8,548,670, 95%

28) Guinea, 8,047,686, 85%

29) Burkina Faso, 7,658,922, 55%

30) Azerbaijan, 7,389,783, 93.4%

31) Kazakhstan, 7,137,346, 47%

32) Tajikistan, 6,805,330, 95%

33) Côte d'Ivoire, 6,677,043, 38.6%

34) Congo (Kinshasa), 6,008,500, 10%

35) Libya, 5,592,596, 97%

36) Jordan, 5,471,745, 95%

37) Chad, 5,306,266, 54%

38) France, 4,549,213, 7.5%

39) Turkmenistan, 4,407,352, 89%

40) Philippines, 4,392,873, 5%

41) United States, 4,558,068, 1.5%

42) Kyrgyzstan, 4,117,024, 80%

43) Uganda, 4,090,422, 15%

44) Mozambique, 3,881,340, 20%

45) Sierra Leone, 3,610,585, 60%

46) Ghana, 3,364,776, 16%

47) Cameroon, 3,276,001, 20%

48) Thailand, 3,272,218, 5%

49) Mauritania, 3,083,772, 99.9%

50) Germany, 3,049,961, 3.7%

51) Oman, 2,971,567, 99%

52) Albania, 2,494,178, 70%

53) Malawi, 2,431,784, 20%

54) Kenya, 2,368,071, 7%

55) Eritrea, 2,280,799, 50%

56) Serbia and Montenegro, 2,274,126, 21%

57) Lebanon, 2,257,351, 85%

58) Kuait, 1,985,300, 59%

59) United Arb Emirates, 1,948,041, 76%
____________________________________________________________
Indonesia, India, Turkey, Nigeria, China and Morroco take the majority of the top ten largest Muslim populations. Yet these countries are not consistently engulfed in jihad, or Islam based violence. Most of the conflict in these countries are out of political coups, political disagreement on some level, or religous persecution (not to be confused with religion-based-violence). Somalia is a great example of this.


Sources: US State Department's International Religious Freedom Report 2004, CIA FactBook, census.gov, www.conflicttransform.net

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Old 10-17-2006, 11:49 PM   #73 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mojo_PeiPei
You would engage in such a challenge but you would loose. Any answer I ever encounter comes down to me being a bigoted xenophobe and not once addresses the issue at hand. Don't think that I have a monopoly on excluding perspective. Please give me your leftist drivel by the way, I would welcome it, you might find I am not so unreasonable when presented with facts and basis, as opposed to condescension and pomp.
I can't reach you, Mojo...you "know what you know".... my ambition with the effort in this post is to provoke the suspicions of others who might read this thread, that you, and other folks who "know what you know", are heavily influenced by neocon propagandists:

<b>I begin with Islamophobe, Daniel Pipes, writing in David Horowitz's neocon propaganda "rag", "FrontpageMag:</b>
Quote:
http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles...e.asp?ID=17828
<h1 style="margin-bottom:10px;">Washington Finally Gets It on Radical Islam</h1>

<p style="margin-top:10px;font-size:110%;">by Daniel Pipes<br>
<i>FrontPageMagazine.com</i><br>
April 25, 2005</p>

<P>Does the Bush administration really believe, as its leadership has kept repeating <A href="http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2001/09/20010919-2.html">since right after 9/11</A>, that Islam is a "religion of peace" not connected to the problem of terrorism? <A href="http://www.danielpipes.org/article/2021">Plenty of indications suggested that it knew better</A>, but year after year the official line remained the same. From the outside, it seemed that officialdom was engaged in active self-delusion.
<P>In fact, things were better than they seemed, as David E. Kaplan establishes in an important investigation in <I>U.S. News &amp; World Report</I>, based on over 100 interviews and the review of a dozen internal documents. Earlier arguments over the nature of the enemy – terrorism vs. radical Islam – have been resolved: America's highest officials widely agree that the country's "greatest ideological foe is a highly politicized form of radical Islam and that Washington and its allies cannot afford to stand by" as it gains in strength. To fight this ideology, the U.S. government now promotes a non-radical interpretation of Islam.</P>

<P>In "<A href="http://www.usnews.com/usnews/news/articles/050425/25roots.htm">Hearts, Minds, and Dollars: In an Unseen Front in the War on Terrorism, America is Spending Millions to Change the Very Face of Islam</A>," dated today, Kaplan explains that Washington recognizes it has a security interest not just within the Muslim world but within Islam. Therefore, it must engage in shaping the very religion of Islam. Washington has focused on the root causes of terrorism – not poverty or U.S. foreign policy, but a compelling political ideology.</P>
<P>A key document in reaching this conclusion was the <I><A href="http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2003/02/counter_terrorism/counter_terrorism_strategy.pdf">National Strategy for Combating Terrorism</A></I>, issued by the White House in February 2003, which served as the basis for the bolder, more detailed, <I>Muslim World Outreach</I>, completed in mid-2004 and now the authoritative guide. (A government discussion of this topic, dating from August 2004, is <A href="http://www.usaid.gov/policy/cdie/session10.html">available online</A>.) The U.S. government, being a secular and predominantly non-Muslim institution, faces many limitations in what is at base a religious dispute, so it turns to Muslim organizations that share its goals, including governments, foundations, and nonprofit groups.</P>
<P>The tactics for fighting radical Islam and promoting moderate Islam vary from one government department to another: it's covert operations at the CIA, psyops at the Pentagon, and public diplomacy at the State Department. Whatever the name and approach, the common element is to encourage the benign evolution of Islam. Toward this end, the U.S. government, Kaplan writes, "has embarked on a campaign of political warfare unmatched since the height of the Cold War." The goal is:</P>
<BLOCKQUOTE>
<P>to influence not only Muslim societies but Islam itself…Although U.S. officials say they are wary of being drawn into a theological battle, many have concluded that America can no longer sit on the sidelines as radicals and moderates fight over the future of a politicized religion with over a billion followers. The result has been an extraordinary—and growing—effort to influence what officials describe as an Islamic reformation.</P></BLOCKQUOTE>

<P>In at least two dozen countries, Kaplan writes:</P>
<BLOCKQUOTE>
<P>Washington has quietly funded Islamic radio and TV shows, coursework in Muslim schools, Muslim think tanks, political workshops, or other programs that promote moderate Islam. Federal aid is going to restore mosques, save ancient Korans, even build Islamic schools…individual CIA stations overseas are making some gutsy and innovative moves. Among them: pouring money into neutralizing militant, anti-U.S. preachers and recruiters. "If you found out that Mullah Omar is on one street corner doing this, you set up Mullah Bradley on the other street corner to counter it," explains one recently retired official. In more-serious cases, he says, recruiters would be captured and "interrogated." Intelligence operatives have set up bogus jihad websites and targeted the Arab news media.</P></BLOCKQUOTE>
<P>In all, various agencies of the U.S. government are active in this Islamic activity in at least 24 countries. Projects include:</P>
<BLOCKQUOTE>
<P>the restoration of historic mosques in Egypt, Pakistan, and Turkmenistan. In Kirgizstan, embassy funding helped restore a major Sufi shrine. In Uzbekistan, money has gone to preserve antique Islamic manuscripts, including 20 Korans, some dating to the 11<SUP>th</SUP> century. In Bangladesh, USAID is training mosque leaders on development issues. In Madagascar, the embassy even sponsored an intermosque sports tournament. Also being funded: Islamic media of all sorts, from book translations to radio and TV in at least a half-dozen nations.</P></BLOCKQUOTE>
<P>Madrassahs, or Islamic schools, are a particular concern, for these train the next generation of <I>jihadis</I> and terrorists. Washington deploys several tactics to counter their influence:</P>

<UL>
<LI>
<P>In Pakistan, U.S. funds go discreetly to third parties to train madrassah teachers to add practical subjects (math, science, and health) to their curriculum, as well as civics classes. A "model madrassah" program that may eventually include more than a thousand schools is also now underway.</P></LI>
<LI>
<P>In the Horn of Africa (defined by the Pentagon as Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia, Sudan, and Yemen), the U.S. military finds out where Islamists plan to start a madrassah, then builds a public school in direct competition with it.</P></LI>
<LI>
<P>In Uganda, the U.S. embassy has <A href="http://www.manahijj.com/Artical_3849.htm">signed three grant awards</A> to fund the construction of three elementary-level madrassahs.</P></LI></UL>
<P>Kaplan quotes one American terrorism analyst saying, "We're in the madrassah business." But not all aid has an explicit Islamic theme. American money is partially funding a satellite version of the Sesame Street in Arabic stressing the need for religious tolerance.</P>
<P>Funds for the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) has nearly tripled, to more than $21 billion; and of this, more than half goes to the Muslim world. In addition to the familiar economic development programs, political projects involving Islamic groups, such as political training and media funding, are moving to the forefront. Spending on public diplomacy by the State Department has risen by nearly half since 9/11, to nearly $1.3 billion, with more expected. This largess has funded, among other programs, the Arabic-language Radio Sawa and Alhurra Television. Despite many complaints, Kaplan says they are showing signs of success. Plans ahead include making Alhurra available in Europe, and expanding programming in Persian and other key languages.</P>

<P><B>Comments:</B></P>
<P><B>1.</B> Working to change how Muslims understand their religion, of course, raises some difficult implications. It is one thing to want to help moderate Muslims and quite another to locate them. As I noted in "<A href="http://www.danielpipes.org/article/2226">Identifying Moderate Muslims</A>," there is great confusion over who really is a moderate Muslim and <A href="http://www.danielpipes.org/blog/227">the U.S. government so far has a terrible record</A> in this regard. I sure hope those implementing the <I>Muslim World Outreach</I> agenda are engaging in the necessary research to get it right.</P>
<P><B>2.</B> The possibility exists that U.S. taxpayer dollars funding Islamic media, schools, and mosques will beef up their capabilities, for <I>influencing</I> Islam and <I>promoting</I> Islam are easily melded, especially given <A href="http://www.danielpipes.org/article/90">the pro-Islamic attitudes of American political leaders</A>. (For this reason I have <A href="http://www.danielpipes.org/blog/183">criticized</A> the building of a mosque in Iraq and madrassahs in Indonesia.) To promote Islam contravenes the First Amendment ("Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion") and one constitutional expert, Herman Schwartz, deems the sponsorship of Islamic institutions to be "probably unconstitutional." This again points to the need for extreme care.</P>

<P><B>3.</B> I heartily endorse the <I>Muslim World Outreach</I> approach; this is hardly surprising, for it closely aligns with my own recommendations. Here are excerpts from my January 2002 article, "<A href="http://www.danielpipes.org/article/103">Who Is the Enemy?</A>":</P>
<BLOCKQUOTE>
<P>The United States, an overwhelmingly non-Muslim country, obviously cannot fix the problems of the Muslim world. … But outsiders, and the United States in particular, can critically help in precipitating the battle and in influencing its outcome. They can do so both by weakening the militant side and by helping the moderate one…Weakening militant Islam will require an imaginative and assertive policy, one tailored to the needs of each country.</P>
<P>But let us not delude ourselves. If the United States has over 100 million Islamist enemies (not to speak of an even larger number of Muslims who wish us ill on assorted other grounds), they cannot all be incapacitated. Instead, the goal must be to deter and contain them…That is where the moderate Muslims come in. If roughly half the population across the Muslim world hates America, the other half does not. Unfortunately, they are disarmed, in disarray, and nearly voiceless. But the United States does not need them for their power. It needs them for their ideas and for the legitimacy they confer, and in these respects their strengths exactly complement Washington's.…</P>
<P>[T]he U.S. role is less to offer its own views than to help those Muslims with compatible views, especially on such issues as relations with non-Muslims, modernization, and the rights of women and minorities. This means helping moderates get their ideas out on U.S.-funded radio stations like the newly-created Radio Free Afghanistan and, as Paula Dobriansky, the Undersecretary of State for global affairs, has suggested, making sure that tolerant Islamic figures—scholars, imams, and others—are included in U.S.-funded academic- and cultural-exchange programs.</P></BLOCKQUOTE>
<P><B>4.</B> It is very good that David Kaplan has made available the outlines of Washington's efforts to fix Islam. This is a project too large for the government alone to work on; the body politic as a whole needs to argue it out.</P><p><b>From <i>www.danielpipes.org</i> | <nobr>Original article available at: <i>www.danielpipes.org/article/2546</nobr></i></b></p>
The 2002 "presentaion" by Murawiec is of interest, in addition to it's warped content, because of the slate.com article that follows this WaPo piece, and links Murawiec to Richard Perle, "top ten" neocon !
Quote:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp...nguage=printer
Briefing Depicted Saudis as Enemies
Ultimatum Urged To Pentagon Board

By Thomas E. Ricks
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, August 6, 2002; Page A01

A briefing given last month to a top Pentagon advisory board described Saudi Arabia as an enemy of the United States, and recommended that U.S. officials give it an ultimatum to stop backing terrorism or face seizure of its oil fields and its financial assets invested in the United States.

"The Saudis are active at every level of the terror chain, from planners to financiers, from cadre to foot-soldier, from ideologist to cheerleader," stated the explosive briefing. It was presented on July 10 to the Defense Policy Board, a group of prominent intellectuals and former senior officials that advises the Pentagon on defense policy.

"Saudi Arabia supports our enemies and attacks our allies," said the briefing prepared by Laurent Murawiec, a Rand Corp. analyst. A talking point attached to the last of 24 briefing slides went even further, describing Saudi Arabia as "the kernel of evil, the prime mover, the most dangerous opponent" in the Middle East.

The briefing did not represent the views of the board or official government policy, and in fact runs counter to the present stance of the U.S. government that Saudi Arabia is a major ally in the region. Yet it also represents a point of view that has growing currency within the Bush administration -- especially on the staff of Vice President Cheney and in the Pentagon's civilian leadership -- and among neoconservative writers and thinkers closely allied with administration policymakers.

One administration official said opinion about Saudi Arabia is changing rapidly within the U.S. government. "People used to rationalize Saudi behavior," he said. "You don't hear that anymore. There's no doubt that people are recognizing reality and recognizing that Saudi Arabia is a problem."

The decision to bring the anti-Saudi analysis before the Defense Policy Board also appears tied to the growing debate over whether to launch a U.S. military attack to remove Saddam Hussein from power in Iraq. The chairman of the board is former Pentagon official Richard N. Perle, one of the most prominent advocates in Washington of just such an invasion. The briefing argued that removing Hussein would spur change in Saudi Arabia -- which, it maintained, is the larger problem because of its role in financing and supporting radical Islamic movements.

Perle did not return calls to comment. A Rand spokesman said Murawiec, a former adviser to the French Ministry of Defense who now analyzes international security affairs for Rand, would not be available to comment.

"Neither the presentations nor the Defense Policy Board members' comments reflect the official views of the Department of Defense," Pentagon spokeswoman Victoria Clarke said in a written statement issued last night. "Saudi Arabia is a long-standing friend and ally of the United States. The Saudis cooperate fully in the global war on terrorism and have the Department's and the Administration's deep appreciation."

Murawiec said in his briefing that the United States should demand that Riyadh stop funding fundamentalist Islamic outlets around the world, stop all anti-U.S. and anti-Israeli statements in the country, and "prosecute or isolate those involved in the terror chain, including in the Saudi intelligence services."

If the Saudis refused to comply, the briefing continued, Saudi oil fields and overseas financial assets should be "targeted," although exactly how was not specified.

The report concludes by linking regime change in Iraq to altering Saudi behavior. This view, popular among some neoconservative thinkers, is that once a U.S. invasion has removed Hussein from power, a friendly successor regime would become a major exporter of oil to the West. That oil would diminish U.S. dependence on Saudi energy exports, and so -- in this view -- permit the U.S. government finally to confront the House of Saud for supporting terrorism.

"The road to the entire Middle East goes through Baghdad," said the administration official, who is hawkish on Iraq. "Once you have a democratic regime in Iraq, like the ones we helped establish in Germany and Japan after World War II, there are a lot of possibilities."

Of the two dozen people who attended the Defense Policy Board meeting, only one, former secretary of state Henry A. Kissinger, spoke up to object to the anti-Saudi conclusions of the briefing, according to sources who were there. Some members of the board clearly agreed with Kissinger's dismissal of the briefing and others did not.

One source summarized Kissinger's remarks as, "The Saudis are pro-American, they have to operate in a difficult region, and ultimately we can manage them."

Kissinger declined to comment on the meeting. He said his consulting business does not advise the Saudi government and has no clients that do large amounts of business in Saudi Arabia.

"I don't consider Saudi Arabia to be a strategic adversary of the United States," Kissinger said. "They are doing some things I don't approve of, but I don't consider them a strategic adversary."

Other members of the board include former vice president Dan Quayle; former defense secretaries James Schlesinger and Harold Brown; former House speakers Newt Gingrich and Thomas Foley; and several retired senior military officers, including two former vice chairmen of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, retired admirals David Jeremiah and William Owens.

Asked for reaction, Prince Bandar bin Sultan, the Saudi ambassador to the United States, said he did not take the briefing seriously. "I think that it is a misguided effort that is shallow, and not honest about the facts," he said. "Repeating lies will never make them facts."

"I think this view defies reality," added Adel al-Jubeir, a foreign policy adviser to Saudi leader Crown Prince Abdullah ibn Abdulaziz. "The two countries have been friends and allies for over 60 years. Their relationship has seen the coming and breaking of many storms in the region, and if anything it goes from strength to strength."

In the 1980s, the United States and Saudi Arabia played major roles in supporting the Afghan resistance to the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, pouring billions of dollars into procuring weapons and other logistical support for the mujaheddin.

At the end of the decade, the relationship became even closer when the U.S. military stationed a half-million troops on Saudi territory to repel Hussein's invasions of Kuwait and Saudi Arabia. Several thousand U.S. troops have remained on Saudi soil, mainly to run air operations in the region. Their presence has been cited by Osama bin Laden as a major reason for his attacks on the United States.

The anti-Saudi views expressed in the briefing appear especially popular among neoconservative foreign policy thinkers, which is a relatively small but influential group within the Bush administration.

"I think it is a mistake to consider Saudi Arabia a friendly country," said Kenneth Adelman, a former aide to Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, who is a member of the Defense Policy Board but didn't attend the July 10 meeting. He said the view that Saudi Arabia is an adversary of the United States "is certainly a more prevalent view that it was a year ago."

In recent weeks, two neoconservative magazines have run articles similar in tone to the Pentagon briefing. The July 15 issue of the Weekly Standard, which is edited by William Kristol, a former chief of staff to Quayle, predicted "The Coming Saudi Showdown." The current issue of Commentary, which is published by the American Jewish Committee, contains an article titled, "Our Enemies, the Saudis."

"More and more people are making parts of this argument, and a few all of it," said Eliot Cohen, a Johns Hopkins University expert on military strategy. "Saudi Arabia used to have lots of apologists in this country. . . . Now there are very few, and most of those with substantial economic interests or long-standing ties there."

Cohen, a member of the Defense Policy Board, declined to discuss its deliberations. But he did say that he views Saudi Arabia more as a problem than an enemy. "The deal that they cut with fundamentalism is most definitely a threat, [so] I would say that Saudi Arabia is a huge problem for us," he said.

But that view is far from dominant in the U.S. government, others said. "The drums are beginning to beat on Saudi Arabia," said Robert Oakley, a former U.S. ambassador to Pakistan who consults frequently with the U.S. military.

He said the best approach isn't to confront Saudi Arabia but to support its reform efforts. "Our best hope is change through reform, and that can only come from within," he said.
background:
Quote:
http://www.slate.com/?id=2069119
The PowerPoint That Rocked the PentagonThe LaRouchie defector who's advising the defense establishment on Saudi Arabia.
By Jack Shafer
Posted Wednesday, Aug. 7, 2002, at 7:49 PM ET

......According to Newsday, Defense Policy Board Chairman Richard N. Perle, a former Pentagon official and full-time invade-Iraq hawk, invited Murawiec to brief the group, so Perle can't exactly distance himself from the presentation. But he can do the next best thing—duck reporters' questions. Murawiec also declined reporters' inquiries, including one from Slate.....

.....When he spoke on panel with Richard Perle at the American Enterprise Institute on Dec. 1, 1999, Murawiec was introduced as having just moved to the United States after "a dozen years" of working as managing director of GeoPol in Geneva, "a service that supplies advice to European clients, similar to what Kissinger Associates offers from New York, except without the accent." That is a bit of an overstatement. A Google search of "Murawiec and GeoPol" produces 12 hits. Compare that to the 10,300 hits on Google for "Kissinger Associates."

Murawiec's résumé would predict many Nexis hits, but a search of his name reveals just five bylines: Twice already this year, Murawiec has contributed to the neocon publication the National Interest, on the subject of Russia. [Correction: Murawiec wrote for the National Interest once in 2000 and once in 2002. The topic both times was Russia.] In 1999 he wrote for the Post's "Outlook" section on "internationalism," and in 1996 he contributed a piece to the Journal of Commerce on Russia. His only other Nexis-able byline is a dusty one from the Jan. 23, 1985, edition of the Financial Times, which describes Murawiec as "the European Economics Editor of the New York-based Executive Intelligence Review weekly magazine."

Executive Intelligence Review, as scholars of parapolitics know, is a publication of the political fantasist, convicted felon, and perpetual presidential candidate Lyndon H. LaRouche Jr. It's not clear exactly when Murawiec left the LaRouche orbit. An article by LaRouche that appeared last year in Executive Intelligence Review calls Murawiec "a real-life 'Beetlebaum' of the legendary mythical horse-race, and a hand-me-down political carcass, currently in the possession of institutions of a peculiar odor." In 1997, LaRouche's wife Helga Zupp LaRouche wrote in Executive Intelligence Review (republished in the LaRouche-affiliated AboutSudan.com Web site) that Murawiec "was once part of our organization and is now on the side of organized crime." The truth value of that statement surely ranks up there with LaRouche's claim that the Queen of England controls the crack trade. To say, zero.

When Murawiec departed LaRouche's company is unclear, but Dennis King, author of 1989's Lyndon LaRouche and the New American Fascism, thinks it came when many followers split as LaRouche's legal problems grew and climaxed with a 1988 conviction for conspiracy and mail fraud. "[Murawiec] was not a political leader," says King, "but a follower who did intelligence-gathering."

Now that Murawiec has assumed such a vocal place in the policy debate, the man who gave him the lectern owes us the complete back-story. Over to you, Richard Perle.
<b>Paul Reynolds of the BBC reports on the money flow to the Rand Corp., and then the Rand Corp. report, "Civil Democratic Islam: partners, resources and strategies" by Cheryl Bernard is examined.... following that is a Wapo report that tells us that Ms. Bernard is married to Zalmay Khalilzad, protege of Bush admin. insider, Thomas E. Gouttierre, director of the Center for Afghanistan Studies at the University of Nebraska at Omaha......</b>
Quote:
http://web.archive.org/web/200407061...as/3578429.stm
or http://newsvote.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world...as/3578429.stm
Preventing a 'clash of civilisations'

By Paul Reynolds
BBC News Online world affairs correspondent

A strategy for the West to counter Islamic extremism by supporting Islamic moderates has been put forward in a report funded in part by a conservative American foundation.

It says that the West should help religious "modernists" in the Islamic world in order to prevent a "clash of civilisations."

It states: "It seems judicious to encourage the elements within the Islamic mix that are most compatible with global peace and the international community and that are friendly to democracy and modernity."

The report, called "Civil Democratic Islam: partners, resources and strategies", was drawn up by the Rand Corporation with financial help from the Smith Richardson Foundation, a conservative trust fund which hands out more than $120 million a year to universities and other research organisations.

It is a sign perhaps that some American conservatives, many of whom want to press democratic reform in Muslim countries, realize that a focused approach is needed.

Suspicions

It is a contribution to a debate well under way in the West. The latest manifestation of this debate was a recent speech by the former Archbishop of Canterbury Dr George Carey, who wondered why Islam was "associated with violence throughout the world." His conclusion is not dissimilar to that of this report.

"Is extremism so ineluctably bound up with its faith that we are at last seeing its true character? Or could it be that a fight for the soul of Islam is going on that requires another great faith, Christianity, to support and encourage the vast majority of Muslims who resist this identification of their faith with terrorism?" he asked.

<h3>The United States and its allies need to be more discriminating in the way they perceive and interact with groups who call themselves Islamic
Cheryl Benard, Rand Corp</h3>

The recommendations have also come as the Bush administration is proposing to use the G8 summit in the American state of Georgia in June to push the issue of democratic and social reform in the Middle East. The summit will coincide with the handover of power in Iraq to an interim Iraqi government.

The Bush initiative has raised suspicions in Arab countries and among some of America's European allies who do not want anything imposed from the outside.

Islam's crisis

The report's writer, Cheryl Benard, said: "The United States and its allies need to be more discriminating in the way they perceive and interact with groups who call themselves Islamic.

"The term is too vague, and it doesn't really help us when we are looking to encourage progress and democratic principles, while being supportive of religious beliefs."

The report states: "Islam's current crisis has two main components: a failure to thrive and a loss of connection to the global mainstream. The Islamic world has been marked by a long period of backwardness and comparative powerlessness."

It says that Muslims disagree on what to do about this and identifies four essential positions in Muslim societies:
# Fundamentalists who "reject democratic values and contemporary Western culture."

# Traditionalists who "are suspicious of modernity, innovation and change."

# Modernists who "want the Islamic world to become part of global modernity."

# Secularists who "want the Islamic world to accept a division of religion and state."

The report says that the modernists and secularists are closest to the West but are general in a weaker position than the other groups, lacking money, infrastructure and a public platform.

Education

It suggests a strategy of supporting the modernists first. This would be done by, for example, publishing and distributing their works at subsidised cost, encouraging them to write for mass audiences and for youth, getting their views into the Islamic curriculum and helping them in the new media world which is dominated by fundamentalist and traditionalists.

It goes onto the say that traditionalists should be supported against the fundamentalists by publicising the traditionalist criticism of extremism and by" encouraging disagreements" between the two positions. It says that "in such places as Central Asia, they (traditionalists) may need to be educated and trained in orthodox Islam to be able to stand their ground."

A third strategy would be "to confront and oppose the fundamentalists" by, among other things, challenging their interpretation of Islam and revealing their links with illegal groups and activities.

Support for the secularists would be cautious and very selective, for example by encouraging "recognition of fundamentalism as a shared enemy."

The latest draft of the US government's own proposals are reported to include the promotion of parliamentary exchanges, the offering of advice on legislation, support for literacy campaigns, and the promotion of more access to personal and development finance.

The Rand approach is more overtly political and has definite diplomatic gains in mind.
I posted an article on 11/19.2005, about Zalmay Khalilzad, husband of Cheryl Bernard, who is the author of the Rand Corp. article:
http://www.tfproject.org/tfp/showpos...77&postcount=4
in this TFP thread:
<a href="http://www.tfproject.org/tfp/showthread.php?p=1941577#post1941577"> Why Have Dems & Repubs Sold Out To Chalabi & How Do We Take Back the Government?</a>

Quote:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp...3401-2001Nov22
Afghan Roots Keep Adviser Firmly in the Inner Circle
Consultant's Policy Influence Goes Back to the Reagan Era

By Joe Stephens and David B. Ottaway
Washington Post Staff Writers
Friday, November 23, 2001; Page A41

Four years ago at a luxury Houston hotel, oil company adviser Zalmay Khalilzad was chatting pleasantly over dinner with leaders of Afghanistan's Taliban regime about their shared enthusiasm for a proposed multibillion-dollar pipeline deal.

Today, Khalilzad works steps from the White House, helping President Bush and his closest advisers in attempts to annihilate those same Afghan officials.

From his perch as a member of the National Security Council and special assistant to the president, the Afghanistan native is one of the most influential voices on Afghan policy.

He is the only White House official to have lived in Afghanistan, and he has a visceral feel for the region's tensions and history. His long-term influence on matters pertaining to Central Asia is made apparent by a photo in his office in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building. Snapped next door at the White House, it shows President Ronald Reagan and Khalilzad huddled in discussion with an Afghan leader, who at the time was battling to oust the Soviets.

"Zalmay is the ideal man for Afghanistan, because he is an Afghan himself and he's grown up there and knows the country," said Richard Dekmejian, a specialist in Islamic fundamentalism at the University of Southern California and an acquaintance for more than a decade. "He brings firsthand knowledge of the country together with the perspective of a policy expert. He's at the right place."

Since the 1980s -- as a Reagan administration policy planner, a consultant, a Pentagon strategist and a Rand Corp. scholar -- Khalilzad, a U.S. citizen, has been in contact with myriad squabbling Afghan warlords and political leaders.

Over the decades, he has evolved from a Cold War activist, celebrating the retreat of Soviet forces from his homeland, to a more moderate voice, calling for friendly persuasion with the Taliban. Now, he is a hawk urging the Taliban's destruction.

His evolving views are evident in a long string of journal articles, position papers and newspaper columns.

"The Taliban does not practice the anti-U.S. style of fundamentalism practiced by Iran," Khalilzad wrote four years ago in The Washington Post. "We should . . . be willing to offer recognition and humanitarian assistance and to promote international economic reconstruction. . . . It is time for the United States to reengage" the Taliban.

More recently, though, he began stressing that action against the Taliban "now is essential."

"The danger is growing," he wrote late last year with Daniel Byman of the Rand Corp. in Washington Quarterly, a policy magazine. "Soon the movement will be too strong to turn away from rogue behavior. It will gain more influence with insurgents, terrorists and narcotics traffickers and spread its abusive ideology throughout the region. . . . Alternatives to confrontation have little promise."

Khalilzad was born 50 years ago in the northern Afghan city of Mazar-e Sharif, 70 miles south of the Soviet border. While still young, his family moved to the regional capital of Kabul, where his Pashtun father worked in the government, which was then a monarchy.

"They certainly would have been people among the intellectual elite of the time," said Thomas E. Gouttierre, director of the Center for Afghanistan Studies at the University of Nebraska at Omaha. "They became Kabuli, the Parisians of Afghanistan: urbane, urbanized people."

Khalilzad's first glimpse of the United States came as a teenager, when he visited this country in a student exchange program run by the American Friends Service Committee, a Quaker charitable organization, Gouttierre recalled. Khalilzad went home with a passion for American culture, including basketball.

"He saw and played basketball while in the U.S.," said Gouttierre, who coached Khalilzad on a student team. "As it turned out, he was not a great player. I knew then he would be a better intellectual than a basketball player."

After completing high school in Kabul, Khalilzad earned an undergraduate degree from the American University in Beirut, followed by a doctorate in political science from the University of Chicago in 1979 -- the same year the Soviets invaded his homeland.

For the next decade, Khalilzad was an assistant professor of political science at Columbia University, also serving as executive director of the Friends of Afghanistan, a support group for the Afghan mujaheddin then battling the Soviets.

From 1985 to 1989, Khalilzad worked at the State Department as a special adviser to the undersecretary of state, consulting on the Iran-Iraq War and on the Soviet war in Afghanistan. He belonged to a small group of policymakers who successfully pressed the Reagan administration to provide arms -- including shoulder-fired Stinger missiles -- to anti-Soviet resistance fighters in Afghanistan.

He then served as undersecretary of defense in the first Bush administration while it waged war against Iraq. Later, he worked as a senior political scientist at Rand, a consulting company that performs policy studies for the U.S. military. He directed strategy for Rand's Project Air Force and founded the corporation's Center for Middle Eastern Studies.

He also joined the board of the Washington-based Afghanistan Foundation, a nonprofit corporation dedicated to raising interest in the country. He became the primary author of a foundation position paper that urged U.S. officials to prod the Taliban and its opposition toward joining forces in a new, broad-based government.

During the mid 1990s, while at the for-profit Cambridge Energy Research Associates, Khalilzad conducted risk analyses for Unocal Corp., a U.S. oil company that hoped to construct gas and oil pipelines across Afghanistan. At the time, Unocal held signed business agreements with the Taliban.

In December 1997, Unocal brought top Taliban leaders to the United States to view its operations in Houston. Khalilzad joined Unocal officials at a reception for the visiting Taliban delegation. Over dinner, Khalilzad challenged the leaders on their treatment of women, whom the Taliban jailed for failing to cover their faces with veils. His debate with Amir Khan Muttaqi, Taliban minister of culture and information, escalated into a spirited dissection of the precise language of the Koran.

<b>Khalilzad's wife, Cheryl Bernard, is an Austrian writer and feminist whose novels champion women's rights.</b>

Over the years, Khalilzad has written and edited books with such titles as "Strategic Appraisal: The Changing Role of Information in Warfare," "United States and Asia: Toward a New U.S. Strategy and Force Structure" and "Aerospace Power in the 21st Century." He also co-wrote, with his wife, "The Government of God: Iran's Islamic Republic."

After Bush's victory last November, Khalilzad headed the Bush-Cheney transition team for the Defense Department. He also counseled Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld. In his current role, he answers directly to national security adviser Condoleezza Rice.

"He is scholarly, cool. Always a smile. Outgoing," Dekmejian said. "He's not a preacher type, one who goes out there and moves the masses. But he is very good at addressing small groups of people. He is not an arrogant government person. He has an open mind."

Gouttierre said the White House is lucky to have an expert in diplomacy and military affairs who also has a gut-level feel for the politics of Afghanistan.

"He's the right kind of a guy at the right place right now," he said.
<b>If you read my posts on the thread linked here, and above the preceding WaPo article, <a href="http://www.tfproject.org/tfp/showthread.php?p=1941577#post1941577"> Why Have Dems & Repubs Sold Out To Chalabi & How Do We Take Back the Government?</a> ....you might begin to wonder it Mojo, Ustwo, et al, arw correct in their pronouncements about Islam, or whether their opinions are heavily influenced by neocon propagandists, John Rendon, and "the Rand Corporation with financial help from the Smith Richardson Foundation, a conservative trust fund which hands out more than $120 million a year to universities and other research organisations..... As much as anything else, folks, the negative PR intended to divide and conquer Islam, is about control of the oil, and other neocon and corporatist ambitions of global dominance...
"</b>
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Old 10-18-2006, 05:44 AM   #74 (permalink)
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Ch'i do you know whats going on in India, Indonesia, and Nigeria in relation to Islam? China its harder to get reports from due to the nature of its government. Turkey is kept in check by the same system that is keeping Algeria out of the hands of the radicals, which is the military is very secular, and will not allow radicals to come to power or they will overthrow the government. One of the most interesting 'checks and balances' I've seen. This still hasn't saved 150,000 Algerian citizens, or kept radical protests out of Turkey.

If this is your shining example of the peaceful Muslim, you might want to rethink.
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Old 10-18-2006, 05:55 AM   #75 (permalink)
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Location: Tallyfla
Quote:
Originally Posted by host
you might begin to wonder it Mojo, Ustwo, et al, arw correct in their pronouncements about Islam, or whether their opinions are heavily influenced by neocon propagandists, John Rendon, and "the Rand Corporation with financial help from the Smith Richardson Foundation, a conservative trust fund which hands out more than $120 million a year to universities and other research organisations..... As much as anything else, folks, the negative PR intended to divide and conquer Islam, is about control of the oil, and other neocon and corporatist ambitions of global dominance...
"</b>
You, sir, are paranoid. So its all just one big conspiracy to get the oil and the folk on the right are too stupid and blind to notice. There's no such thing as islamofascists and militant islam is only a problem in conservative thought, not in the "real world" where, I assume, you reside.

Arguing, debating, or whatever its called, with a position such as yours is pointless to say the least. I'd much rather prefer to hear what Ch'i and DC_dux have to say, what they think. At least it contains substance. Sure beats hearing "its teh proaganda!!!!11!! you only 'know what you know' because your too stupid to think for yourself" bit I hear from you on any number of issues.

ps. you forgot the reverse vampires.
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Old 10-18-2006, 06:26 AM   #76 (permalink)
 
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Location: Washington DC
If you look at the most recent State Department reports on Turkey and Indonesia, you will certainly see numerous and agregious human rights violations but the reports also cite how these moderate (yes, moderate) civilian elected governments are trying to reform.
Quote:
Turkey:
Turkey, with a population of approximately 69.6 million, is a constitutional republic with a multiparty parliamentary system and a president with limited powers elected by the single‑chamber parliament, the Turkish Grand National Assembly. In the 2002 parliamentary elections, considered generally free and fair, the Justice and Development Party (AKP) won the majority of seats and formed a one‑party government. The civilian authorities generally maintained effective control of the security forces.

The government generally respected the human rights of its citizens; although there were improvements in a number of areas, serious problems remained.

Indonesia:
Indonesia is a multiparty, democratic, presidential republic with a population of approximately 241 million. In October 2004 Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono became the country's first directly elected president as a result of elections that international and domestic observers judged to be free and fair. Voters also chose two national legislative bodies in 2004: the house of representatives (DPR) and the newly created house of regional representatives (DPD). While civilian authorities generally maintained effective control of the security forces, in some instances elements of the security forces acted independently of civilian authority.

There were improvements in the human rights situation during the year and, although significant problems remained particularly in areas of separatist conflict, the end of the country's long‑running internal conflict in Aceh Province was a major step forward. The government faced an intermittent, low intensity guerrilla conflict in Papua and West Irian Jaya provinces; inter‑communal violence in Maluku and Central Sulawesi provinces; and terrorist bombings in various locations. Inadequate resources, poor leadership, and limited accountability contributed to serious violations by security forces. Widespread corruption further degraded an already weak regard for rule of law and contributed to impunity. Poverty, high unemployment, and a weak education system rendered all citizens, particularly children and women, vulnerable to human rights abuses. During the year the government devoted considerable resources and attention to the recovery effort following the devastating December 2004 earthquake and tsunami that left more than 130 thousand persons dead and missing in Aceh and North Sumatra provinces. The country struggled to come to terms with human rights abuses committed by prior governments.

During the year there were significant improvements in the human rights situation. For the first time, citizens directly elected leaders in 149 local elections at the city, regency (county equivalent), and provincial level. On August 15, the government signed a peace agreement with the Free Aceh Movement (GAM), which both sides implemented thereby greatly reducing human rights abuses in that province. In Papua and West Irian Jaya provinces, the government inaugurated the Papuan People's Assembly and took other steps toward fulfilling the 2001 Special Autonomy Law on Papua. Security forces showed increasing restraint in response to nonviolent separatist demonstrations in Papua. The government began an anticorruption campaign that achieved some results, including high profile convictions.
We wont see western style democracies anytime soon, but it seems to me we should work with these moderate muslim governments and encourage and support further reform, rather than alienate them and their citizens and potentially create situations than feed the more radical elements.
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Old 10-18-2006, 06:28 AM   #77 (permalink)
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Mojo_PeiPei: Sure. I'm originally from Pakistan, and I was raised in a very religious household. I'm clearly English-educated, of course, but I'm not even really important here. I know tons of Pakistanis who have never left Pakistan. I've never met one who didn't mourn 9/11, or who condones terrorism in general. Such people exist there, but generally not in the mainstream society. They represent an extreme. The same is true in Egypt, where I recently lived for a year. This is true even among those who would be called Islamists... those who espouse political Islam or push for the enforcement of Islamic law.

Again, let me reiterate that when I say that, I don't mean to entirely marginalize the problem. I acknowledge the problem. There is a problem with Islam in the world today, and it's a problem that Muslims will need to do much more to address. But to say that it's a problem somehow fundamental to Islam, that brutishness and violence somehow form the very essence of Islam, is in the realm of the absurd. It simply doesn't reflect the lived reality of over a billion people on this planet.
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Old 10-18-2006, 06:30 AM   #78 (permalink)
Pissing in the cornflakes
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by stevo
Sure beats hearing "its teh proaganda!!!!11!! you only 'know what you know' because your too stupid to think for yourself" bit I hear from you on any number of issues.

ps. you forgot the reverse vampires.
Yep, Jebbadia Stevo, its about time I fire up this infernal lap top and give my daily dose of neocon propaganda.
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Old 10-18-2006, 06:36 AM   #79 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by hiredgun
Mojo_PeiPei: Sure. I'm originally from Pakistan, and I was raised in a very religious household. I'm clearly English-educated, of course, but I'm not even really important here. I know tons of Pakistanis who have never left Pakistan. I've never met one who didn't mourn 9/11, or who condones terrorism in general. Such people exist there, but generally not in the mainstream society. They represent an extreme. The same is true in Egypt, where I recently lived for a year. This is true even among those who would be called Islamists... those who espouse political Islam or push for the enforcement of Islamic law.

Again, let me reiterate that when I say that, I don't mean to entirely marginalize the problem. I acknowledge the problem. There is a problem with Islam in the world today, and it's a problem that Muslims will need to do much more to address. But to say that it's a problem somehow fundamental to Islam, that brutishness and violence somehow form the very essence of Islam, is in the realm of the absurd. It simply doesn't reflect the lived reality of over a billion people on this planet.
Very well stated and I respect your honesty. However, I will have to take issue with you in regards to how moderate Muslims recognize the problem. If they do indeed recognize it, then they need to take the next step and come out en masse to denounce every act of violence done in the name of Islam. Anything short of that will be as if they have done nothing at all. Sorry, but I speak for a lot of Americans who feel enough time has been given for moderate Muslims to stpe up to the plate and stomp the extremism out of their own religion.
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Old 10-18-2006, 06:36 AM   #80 (permalink)
 
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UStwo....I dont see how that photo contributes to the discussion in any meaningful way.

If you and Host have problems with each other, I suggest you both take it private.
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