Again, this is the topic of this thread, which you have derailed:
Peak Australian Islamic groups seek to whitewash religion of religiously motivated terrorism in my view.
I made a short reply to another poster based on something they said as normally happens on forums.
You jumped into the conversation with irrelevant nonsense. If you think it is “detailing” why did you bother initiating and continuing a conversation largely unconnected to anything I actually said only to whine about the conversation you started?
If you want to understand the link to the OP as you can;t make it yourself, the OP says
"A spokesperson for ASIO said the overarching descriptors of "ideologically motivated violent extremism" and "religiously motivated violent extremism" allowed accurate categorisation of security threats on the basis of their primary driver."
For me if you put Islamic terrorism into the category of "ideologically motivated terrorism" it is not whitewashing anything. You are still calling it the same thing. People can still identify the ideology responsible.
As terrorism is rarely caused by a single factor, ideologically motivated is more accurate, and better helps people understand human psychology. Terrorism motivated by beliefs and values is simply that, it matters not if they are held for 'religious' reasons or 'secular' reasons, what matters is the belief and its impact on behaviour.
Other than via arbitrary classification, there is no fundamental difference between religiously motivated and ideologically motivated violence.
Again, this wouldn't prevent you from your diatribes against Islam and Muhammad and how much you hate them and think they are really nasty and bad and mean.
You don't have to think there is a fundamental difference between religion and ideology in order to hate Islam as an ideology.
Your entire argument boils down to equating 'spiritual' with 'religious'. It's also a non sequitur.
No it
really doesn’t. Again your powers of comprehension fail you badly.
Definition of Religion
3.2
Australian case law has recognised the difficulty in attempting to exhaustively define “religion”. In the Jehovah’s Witnesses case, discussed further in Chapter Four, Latham CJ said in this regard:
It would be difficult, if not impossible, to devise a definition of religion which would satisfy the adherents of all the many and various religions which exist, or have existed in the world.1
3.3
The members of the Court in the Scientology case, also discussed in Chapter Four, concurred with this view.
2 They nevertheless went on to point out certain indicia of religion. Mason ACJ and Brennan J held that:
… for the purposes of the law, the criteria of religion are twofold: first, belief in a supernatural Being, Thing or Principle; and second, the acceptance of canons of conduct in order to give effect to that belief, though canons of conduct which offend against the ordinary laws are outside the area of any immunity, privilege or right conferred on the grounds of religion.
Unsurprisingly, religion is defined by its resemblance to Christianity, and in a manner that defines many people who would self identify as belonging to a religion as not being not religious. Lots of 'religions' are very borderline on these criteria, at least for some adherents.
Numerous 'secular' ideologies would qualify as a Marxist sense of Historical teleology, Hitler's sense of providential millenarian nationalism, etc. are 'supernatural' in that they function to explain a (completely fictitious) purpose in the universe that certainly not reflected in the laws of nature. They also have canons of conduct to effect that belief (which some religions don't).
Honestly, I think pretty much all ideologies hold to tenets that are patently untrue.
For me if people want to have a category of 'religious' that is distinct from 'ideological', just be honest that this is based on somewhat arbitrarily grandfathering in certain religions as being religions and rule out everything else.