Augustus
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what's the definition of "radicalized" that you used to make this assessment?
Any standard usage of of the term.
What definition do you use for it to make sense?
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what's the definition of "radicalized" that you used to make this assessment?
What Sharia-related errors did he make?
A Christian should be the last one to use that argument against another religion. Every time Christianity is not kept in place by the law, you guys go nuts with your discrimination, persecution, genocide, murderous moral panics, hysteria, etc. That nuttiness was the biggest part of the reason why Enlightenment secularism came about in the first place.No doubt in my mind that this is true. Islam is absolutely anti secularism, and anti human rights.
Your belief is factually incorrect.No, you are completely wrong. The cultural differences between the Jews and Hitler were too much for Hitler to take, and so he took it upon himself to extinguish the Jewish people from this planet.
He stated that according to one poll, nearly 50% of Indonesian Muslims support strict Sharia Law - or about 100 million Indonesians.I stopped at 143 million Indonesians are "radicalised" which was the first stat he quoted.
Do you understand why this figure is ludicrous to anybody utilising the slightest amount of critical thinking?
Any standard usage of of the term.
What definition do you use for it to make sense?
cause (someone) to become an advocate of radical political or social reform.
As far as I watched, he did not talk about the Sharia.
But to saying "muslims who are in support of applying sharia law in the Islamic countries are radicals" is a very ignorant statement.
He stated that according to one poll, nearly 50% of Indonesian Muslims support strict Sharia Law - or about 100 million Indonesians.
And that 70% blame Israel, the United States or somebody else for 9/11, which is where he gets his 143 million figure as "radicalized."
Which part don't you like? The numbers? Or the idea that over 100 million Indonesian Muslims who believe in the application of very strict Sharia and/or believe that Muslims did NOT commit 9/11 should be consider "radicalized?"
If you don't like radicalized, what term would you use to describe these Indonesian Muslims?
first google hit for me:
Let me ask this, are there aspects of Sharia that you think would represent radical departures from western secularism?
I don't understand.As I mentioned before, 70+% of Indonesians voted for secular political parties.
This is a very strange way to choose to voice your support for "strict Sharia law".
What Sharia law means to Muslims is often pretty different from what it means to non Muslims.
Also looking at polls regarding countries you are totally unfamiliar with can give you a very misleading picture. Ever been there?
There are radicals in Indonesia, but there certainly aren't 140 million of them.
It's hyperbolic tabloid journalism, not a serious attempt at critical insight.
I don't understand.
Do you believe that there is NO description to describe Muslim Indonesians who do not believe that Muslims committed 9/11?
Wait, in post #99 you said he didn't know what Sharia was? So, you don't think the basic tenets of Sharia are radical?
Augustus,
You're treating Sharia as if it's another religious shell game, for which no definitions can be made. This is a common tactic and I think it's counter-productive. Can we at least agree that the foundational idea of Sharia is fundamentally counter to the idea of secularism?
When you say radical, what definition is in your mind ?
radicalize: to cause (someone) to become an advocate of radical political or social reform.
Can you explain why radicalised Sharia supporters voted for secular parties first?
Remember that voting is mostly orthogonal to Sharia vs. secularism.Almost 50% of Indonesians support strict Sharia.
I'm going on the assumption that you're discussing Indonesia at this point? If so, at around 1:50 of the video he says (more or less) :
Remember that voting is mostly orthogonal to Sharia vs. secularism.
As I said back in post #106:
Sharia law supports stoning of women for consensual sex, it supports the cutting off of hands for theft, it supports the killing of homosexuals, and I believe it is not unreasonable to suggest many Muslims in countries practicing Sharia law also support these things. In my books this makes them radical Islamists. Certainly these are medieval practices that have been brought into the modern age. Any country supporting these practices is backward, and any people or culture supporting these practices is backward. All of this needs to be outlawed. Do you agree?As far as I watched, he did not talk about the Sharia.
But to saying "muslims who are in support of applying sharia law in the Islamic countries are radicals" is a very ignorant statement.
The problem of persecution by religious groups is always at its worst anytime those groups gain political power. Currently, in our present age, it is Islam that has political power and it is abusing that power by subverting human rights. The examples are legion.A Christian should be the last one to use that argument against another religion. Every time Christianity is not kept in place by the law, you guys go nuts with your discrimination, persecution, genocide, murderous moral panics, hysteria, etc. That nuttiness was the biggest part of the reason why Enlightenment secularism came about in the first place.