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  1. #1
    Quote Originally Posted by MadMojoMonkey View Post
    Being opposed to and speaking out against people whom perpetrate atrocities is A-OK.
    Being opposed to and speaking out against people whom remind you of other people whom perpetrate atrocities is bigotry.
    How many of the first group does it take before it becomes incumbent on the second group to stop them? Is hundreds of millions enough?

    And what does it say about the second group if they are indifferent to the first group?
  2. #2
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    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    And what does it say about the second group if they are indifferent to the first group?
    Are they?

    As gesture of solidarity with the country's Coptic Christian minority, Egyptian Muslims showed up at churches on the eve of the Coptic Christmas on 6 January 2011 during mass service forming a "human shield" against any possible further attacks. In the days before the mass, Muslims and Copts joined together in a show of solidarity that included street protests, rallies, and widespread Facebook unity campaigns calling for an "Egypt for All". In Lebanon, separate condemnations came from the Sunni Mufti of the Republic Mohammad Qabbani and Deputy Head of the Shiite Supreme Council Abdul Amir Qabalan. Hamas has also condemned the bombing in Alexandria, assigning the blame to hidden hands that do not wish well for Egypt and its Muslim and Christian people and seek to inflame sectarian strife. Hamas in its statement sent condolences to Egypt and the victims' families, and hoped that facts would be disclosed the soonest and that those responsible would be brought to justice.
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  3. #3
    Quote Originally Posted by Jack Sawyer View Post
    Are they?
    Yes. I'm not falling for your smokescreen.

    sure, it's nice that some muslims stopped some christians from being bullied. But ask those exact same muslims what should happen to any one of them who deigns to leave the muslim faith.....and two thirds of them will tell you "death".

    That's a problem. It kinda debunks the idea that there are 'moderate' muslims outside of the west.
  4. #4
    MadMojoMonkey's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    Yes. I'm not falling for your smokescreen data illustrating that this oppression is from only some Muslims whom interpret Islam in such a way as to promote violence.
    FYP

    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    sure, it's nice that some muslims stopped some christians from being bullied. But ask those exact same muslims what should happen to any one of them who deigns to leave the muslim faith.....and two thirds of them will tell you "death".
    There's no -ism to believe someone should die. It's bigotry to deny them rights and access to services while they're alive.
    No one's saying you have to like people.
    What you believe is not a problem. How you act on what you believe is potentially the problem.

    There is a professor on campus whom openly says things like he thinks women don't make as good of scientists as men do. He's open in this belief. That's not sexism. Sexism would be if he treated his female students or colleagues in a manner which is different to the way he treats the males. He's whip smart, kinda like you sometimes show, and he knows exactly where that line is. He seems to get some perverse pleasure over rubbing it people's faces that he's free to say women are less than men, so long as his actions don't show his bias.

    That's the line. Saying you hate Islam is fine. Saying that it's therefore appropriate to treat Muslims with a different level of human dignity is a totally different issue.


    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    That's a problem. It kinda debunks the idea that there are 'moderate' muslims outside of the west.
    It's not a problem except that you can't seem to understand that if a Missourian commits a crime, that is not a condemnation of all Missourians.
  5. #5
    Quote Originally Posted by MadMojoMonkey View Post
    There's no -ism to believe someone should die.
    Pew research polls indicate that two thirds of muslims in Egypt believe that execution is the appropriate punishment for an apostate.

    Is that not alarming to you?

    What about the frequency with which so-called 'moderate' muslims support death penalties for adulterers and homosexuals? Go google the polls man. Find out how many peace-loving muslims feel that deadly attacks against civilians (e.g. bombs) are an acceptable form of political speech.

    A shitload of people hold some really fucking dangerous beliefs. That's a problem, is it not?

    You seem to be suggesting that Islam, the institution, is somehow totally in the clear because the frequency of these beliefs is less than 100%.
    Last edited by BananaStand; 09-05-2018 at 02:14 PM.
  6. #6
    Quote Originally Posted by MadMojoMonkey View Post
    It's not a problem except that you can't seem to understand that if a Missourian commits a crime, that is not a condemnation of all Missourians.
    Inappropriate analogy. Here's a better one....

    Imagine a series of letter bombs are found or go off 25 cities nationwide. All of the bombs have post marks originating from Missouri.

    Where should you start looking for the bomber?
  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    Inappropriate analogy. Here's a better one....

    Imagine a series of letter bombs are found or go off 25 cities nationwide. All of the bombs have post marks originating from Missouri.

    Where should you start looking for the bomber?
    This is a non-sequitur.
    Looking for the individual(s) responsible in a place where you have reason to believe they may be found is a totally different thing than assigning guilt to everyone whom meets some similarity to the letter-bomber, in this case all Missourians.
  8. #8
    Quote Originally Posted by MadMojoMonkey View Post
    This is a non-sequitur.
    Looking for the individual(s) responsible in a place where you have reason to believe they may be found is a totally different thing than assigning guilt to everyone whom meets some similarity to the letter-bomber, in this case all Missourians.
    Actually it's totally sequitur.

    The bad actors have a motive for their bad actions. That motivation is responsible for their bad actions. The motivation is always the same, and always comes from the same ideology. So it's totally sequitur to look for the harmful motivation in a place where I have reason to believe that it may be found. That is....within the ideology that motivated the bad actions.
  9. #9
    Quote Originally Posted by MadMojoMonkey View Post
    That's the line. Saying you hate Islam is fine. Saying that it's therefore appropriate to treat Muslims with a different level of human dignity is a totally different issue.
    I'm not sure if we agree here.

    Do you consider treating someone like a dangerous enemy as being "a different level of human dignity".
  10. #10
    Another example of the low IQ person ignoring the crux of the argument.

    dumbana, his point is that you can't hold the group responsible for the behaviour of members of the group.

    It's like when Trump goes to jail, should all of his Kool-Aid followers go to jail too?

    It's really that simple.
  11. #11
    Quote Originally Posted by Poopadoop View Post
    dumbana, his point is that you can't hold the group responsible for the behaviour of members of the group.
    His point is WRONG. You absolutely can hold the group responsible.

    There are three kinds of muslims
    A) the kind that bomb civilians
    B) The kind that don't bomb civilians but think it's fine if someone else does
    C) The kind that don't bomb civilians because they think it's wrong every single time.

    Group B is by far the largest. Groups A and B combined represent a STAGGERING majority of muslims worldwide. Group C, outside of the US and Britain, are squarely in the minority.

    I hold group B responsible for group A's actions. By tolerating bad actors, they enable their behavior. And that's how I feel it's appropriate to hold the entire group responsible for the actions of group A
  12. #12
    MadMojoMonkey's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    Do you consider treating someone like a dangerous enemy as being "a different level of human dignity".
    Depends on what you mean by that, and what they did.

    Treating criminals like criminals is the whole purpose of the judicial system. I'm OK with that except in the cases where it screws up, which happens in any human system.
    Treating people whom aren't accused of any crime by any legal agency as though they are criminals is a problem.
  13. #13
    Quote Originally Posted by MadMojoMonkey View Post
    Depends on what you mean by that, and what they did
    Why do they have to DO something?

    Isn't enough to say "that ideology explicitly states its intention to purge my culture from the face of the earth based on nothing more than my disinterest in converting to their religion"
  14. #14
    MadMojoMonkey's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    How many of the first group does it take before it becomes incumbent on the second group to stop them?
    There is never a justified reason to blame someone for something they did not do, no matter how much they remind you of the people whom do blame-worthy things.


    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    Is hundreds of millions enough?
    Nope.

    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    And what does it say about the second group if they are indifferent to the first group?
    Nothing more than that they share some, but not all, of the beliefs of the offending group.

    I am not responsible for the things other people do. No matter how much I remind you of them, I am not them.
  15. #15
    Quote Originally Posted by MadMojoMonkey View Post
    Nothing more than that they share some, but not all, of the beliefs of the offending group.

    I am not responsible for the things other people do. No matter how much I remind you of them, I am not them.
    You seem to be shockingly ignorant of the threat posed by a dangerous ideology.

    That's concerning.

    EDIT: It's also really concerning that you're a scientist and you referred to an anecdote, one that contained a press release from fucking HAMAS, as "data".
    Last edited by BananaStand; 09-05-2018 at 02:30 PM.
  16. #16
    MadMojoMonkey's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by BananaStand View Post
    EDIT: It's also really concerning that you're a scientist and you referred to an anecdote, one that contained a press release from fucking HAMAS, as "data".
    Pure ad hominem.
    You're denying the veracity of the data based on the source, not the data.
  17. #17
    Quote Originally Posted by MadMojoMonkey View Post
    Pure ad hominem.
    You're denying the veracity of the data based on the source, not the data.
    You keep saying data....which is a plural noun. You should be using the singular form of the word, which is "anecdote"

    Also, if the source is a known source of propaganda (cuz data), then how are you differentiating between data and propaganda?

    I mean, don't you think it's a little odd that Hamas is so sure that the crime was caused by "hidden hands", and also seems to know an awful lot about the agenda and motives of the perpetrators? They could have just said "Sorry this happened, but we didn't do it".
  18. #18
    Serendipity

    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/09/05...t-muslims.html

    The posters are clearly targeting Group A.

    Groups B & C are not participating in the denouncement of Group A. Instead, they think that Group A should be left alone because whatever they are doing is apparently far less dangerous than what might happen if someone in Group B/C gets a bad rap.

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