If the shoe fits, wear it.
And if you have to stoop to calling someone a racist for criticising an
idea then you've just lost the argument.
"Islam" is not some monolithic thing. You should know better than that. Religions are made up of people, and we're talking about hundreds of millions of people here, with a wide diversity of cultures, opinions, theologies, etc. "Islam" doesn't want to do anything, since it's an abstract concept. Yes, there are some Muslims who would kill me, sure. I'm not defending them and it's mostly other Muslims who are fighting against them in the first place. The situation with jihadism is more complicated than just pinning it down as a religious issue in the first place. That's part of it, but hardly the entire picture.
Never said it was. The problem is the fanatical, intolerant elements are hidden within the more tolerant aspects of the faith in a Trojan Horse-esque fashion. In fact, the lines are more blurred than you think because, as you rightly say, Islam is not some monolithic thing. There have been accusations that Glasgow Central Mosque has been
perpetuating anti-Ahmadi attitudes in Scotland. How many people who agree with these sentiments are fringe extremists? How many are normal, mainstream Muslims? How many have to hold a belief before it stops becoming a fringe, extremist belief and becomes mainstream & normal?
"Islam" doesn't want to do anything, since it's an abstract concept.
Well we can't be 'racist' or 'phobic' for criticising it then, can we?
Islam is nothing without Muslims. So you are saying that Muslims are a threat.
No, I'm not. We've actually said multiple times that we're not talking about Muslims so I'm close to reaching the point where I think you're deliberately misrepresenting our arguments like so many others because you can't be bothered changing your narrative. It's really old, Frank.
The difference between criticising Islam and attacking Muslims is the same difference between criticising tobacco companies and attacking smokers. I don't think
Muslims smokers are inherently more
dangerous selfish than the rest of us; I
do think that
Islam smoking companies should be stopped because
it they perpetuate
s intolerance ill-health and because they're supplying a destructive vice that increases the risk of
violent intolerance getting cancer. That not all
Muslims smokers actually
are violently intolerant get cancer doesn't change the fact that
Islam smoking is the main contributor of
Islamic intolerance getting cancer.
I don't know why you're trying to separate the two. It's like the morons who say they "hate the sin but love the sinner". It's a passive aggressive cop-out way of saying "I ****ing hate you and you're beneath me" but are too chicken **** to come out and say it.
Because Islam can,
must be critiqued in a way that doesn't radicalise or alienate Muslims. Your position is actually self-defeating because you argue criticism must,
must, must be an attack on Muslims therefore it is acceptable for Muslims to end up radicalised as a result - therefore we can't ever criticise a bad idea because someone will inevitably be offended, pick up a gun and kill someone over it.
I don't hold the position I do because I think Islam's foreignness makes it 'icky' (hello, I worship foreign gods!) - that sort of thinking would justify last Tuesday's
attack on a Muslim woman on Oxford Street. It's inexcusable and speaks to an irrational fear of Muslims which I don't possess (the fear, I mean, not whether its irrational or not). I think Islam's intolerance for other ideas combined with the fact it is very difficult to keep such a totalitarian ideology in check using the power of the State makes it 'icky'.
Your position is actually perpetuating an unwritten blasphemy law moonlighting as a social taboo which makes criticising or mocking an idea as bad as racism which is completely asinine. Not to mention it's soooo stupid to tell me I have an irrational fear of a belief system that wouldn't protect our right to worship freely and would advocate for my (and your) death if we ever ventured into a Muslim country and people found out we're polytheists - as well as one that refuses to protect the rights of minorities to equality under the law.
Has it ever occurred to you that maybe I argue the position I do because I don't actually hate Muslims? It doesn't sound like it. It sounds like you're presupposing my intent and criticising my position based on that erroneous assumption.