Brad Sallows
Army.ca Legend
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Religion and culture can not really be separated. Each drives and provides excuses for the shortcomings of the other.
E.R. Campbell said:I promised myself to stay out of this discussion, but I do need to comment on two of your points, the ones I highlighted:
First ~ I agree with both; and
Second ~ I think you're the one who is missing the point.
I have said many times and over many years in these fora that the problem with the Islamic Crescent is cultural, not religious. I have little knowledge of and no brief for or against Islam ... I simply regard it as wholly inconsequential, on about a par with, say, Shinto or Sikhism but with more adherents. What I have spoken about, at some length, is that culture matters.
My assessment based on 70+ years of living, working, visiting in too many countries to count on five or six continents and several island regions is that people, regardless of race, creed or sex, are all roughly alike: smart and stupid, honest and venal, brave and cowardly in pretty much the same proportions everywhere. So why do some "cultures" dominate others? The answer is in the question: culture matters. In my opinion the cultures of Africa, all of it, the Middle East and West Asia and of the pre Columbian Americas were ~ and still are ~ weak, even retarded, in the sense of lagging "behind" others. My simplest definition of cultural retardation is the notion of people as property. If your culture treats women, for example, as inferior to men, for whatever reason, then it is a retarded culture and it will not succeed in and beyond the 21st century. If your culture condones or, worse, practices slavery then it, too, is retarded, or worse, and, perhaps, should be put out of its misery if it will not reform itself. Those markers are not, in themselves, overly "cultural" they are, in fact, measures of societal "efficiency," efficient societies make the best possible use of all their human resources and that means that men and women must be treated as equally valuable resource elements and we all know, from economics 101, that slavery is an inefficient use of resources. Many, many smart people in the Islamic Crescent and in other regions know that to be true and they are trying to make changes but the cultural weight is too heavy and, in some cases, religion reinforces or, more often, simply conforms to cultural norms.
(One of the first things Zhou Enlai needed to do in 1949 was to (temporarily) suppress Confucianism while he forced equality on to China... Confucianism adapted and returned,
accepting, as has most of Christianity and much of Judaism, the basic principle of equality.)
So I am with Brad: the problem is that we need to protect and promote our strong, "right" cultural norms here at home ... and that may mean insisting that people who come here adapt their beliefs to suit our environment. After all, we didn't conscript anyone from Indonesia, Pakistan, Eqypt or Algeria and force them to come to Canada, they all wanted to be here rather than there, for whatever reason, and it is not unreasonable to expect, even demand that they contribute to our ways rather than to try and change them holus-bolus. I do not believe that Islam, per se, is a problem ... it's just another superstition, one amongst many. I do not believe that Muslims are, inherently, less able or less law abiding or less (or more) anything. I do believe that Muslims in Canada must adapt themselves and Islam in Canada to suit Canada, not try to make Canada fit Saudi Arabian cultural norms. That, in my opinion, is the point.
Good points (if some folks don't like country X exporting their values to country Y, then kindly keep Y values out of country Z, please, and if you don't like whazzup in country Z, take it up with Z's government), if a bit harshly put. That said ...Brad Sallows said:Therefore, benighted peoples, as a reciprocal favour stop coming here to f*ck up our institutions by bringing in selected bits and pieces of your medieval ways. We can't tell in advance which ones are going to erode whatever it is that makes our society so desirable to live in, so either stay in the Old Country or leave all of your customs and practices in the Old Country.
Furthermore, to all the self-aggrandizing religious and cultural triumphalists citing laundry lists of grievances in half the countries most people don't even know exist, take up your grievances with the governments of those countries. If you envy our prosperity and freedom, emulate us rather than trying to drag us down into your cesspool of misery.
... we can do better than this, too, in our discussions here. AbdullahD, we appreciate your useful input, but others have fallen on their sword for having a less-than-ideal "how they share" in spite of having sometimes-decent "what they share".AbdullahD said:... Now Brad, your ignorant and narrow view of the world is why I pity you. You seem to only think a half dozen Islamic countries exist or are worth citing, which is quite pathetic. There are many Islamic countries in the world and they range from Progressive to regressive, from liberal to conservative, from rich to poor. Most people know and understand this, which makes a lot of people shake their head at your arguements. Quickly google up Islamic countries in the world and realize that we are contributing a lot to this world. Take a look at how Muslims helped shape your so called western world. Whenever you make general statements about billions of people, you tend to look the fool ...
Jarnhamar said:As a parent what would you do if your daughter told you she was a christian or atheist?
AbdullahD said:I have no need, nor desire to discuss what I would do in hypothetical situations with you. In fact I am not sure why you would even bring this up in a thread were we are discussing general Sharia matters, but each to their own.
Abdullah
E.R. Campbell said:I promised myself to stay out of this discussion, but I do need to comment on two of your points, the ones I highlighted:
First ~ I agree with both; and
Second ~ I think you're the one who is missing the point.
I have said many times and over many years in these fora that the problem with the Islamic Crescent is cultural, not religious. I have little knowledge of and no brief for or against Islam ... I simply regard it as wholly inconsequential, on about a par with, say, Shinto or Sikhism but with more adherents. What I have spoken about, at some length, is that culture matters.
My assessment based on 70+ years of living, working, visiting in too many countries to count on five or six continents and several island regions is that people, regardless of race, creed or sex, are all roughly alike: smart and stupid, honest and venal, brave and cowardly in pretty much the same proportions everywhere. So why do some "cultures" dominate others? The answer is in the question: culture matters. In my opinion the cultures of Africa, all of it, the Middle East and West Asia and of the pre Columbian Americas were ~ and still are ~ weak, even retarded, in the sense of lagging "behind" others. My simplest definition of cultural retardation is the notion of people as property. If your culture treats women, for example, as inferior to men, for whatever reason, then it is a retarded culture and it will not succeed in and beyond the 21st century. If your culture condones or, worse, practices slavery then it, too, is retarded, or worse, and, perhaps, should be put out of its misery if it will not reform itself. Those markers are not, in themselves, overly "cultural" they are, in fact, measures of societal "efficiency," efficient societies make the best possible use of all their human resources and that means that men and women must be treated as equally valuable resource elements and we all know, from economics 101, that slavery is an inefficient use of resources. Many, many smart people in the Islamic Crescent and in other regions know that to be true and they are trying to make changes but the cultural weight is too heavy and, in some cases, religion reinforces or, more often, simply conforms to cultural norms.
(One of the first things Zhou Enlai needed to do in 1949 was to (temporarily) suppress Confucianism while he forced equality on to China... Confucianism adapted and returned,
accepting, as has most of Christianity and much of Judaism, the basic principle of equality.)
So I am with Brad: the problem is that we need to protect and promote our strong, "right" cultural norms here at home ... and that may mean insisting that people who come here adapt their beliefs to suit our environment. After all, we didn't conscript anyone from Indonesia, Pakistan, Eqypt or Algeria and force them to come to Canada, they all wanted to be here rather than there, for whatever reason, and it is not unreasonable to expect, even demand that they contribute to our ways rather than to try and change them holus-bolus. I do not believe that Islam, per se, is a problem ... it's just another superstition, one amongst many. I do not believe that Muslims are, inherently, less able or less law abiding or less (or more) anything. I do believe that Muslims in Canada must adapt themselves and Islam in Canada to suit Canada, not try to make Canada fit Saudi Arabian cultural norms. That, in my opinion, is the point.
jollyjacktar said:You must be joking. Of course the witch burning etc can be placed fairly at the feet of Christianity. The Inquisition and Salem trials were under their watch.
AbdullahD said:In my view Judaism, Christianity and Islam are all peace loving religions.
Bruce Monkhouse said:EDIT
PS: I have no idea if my 2 Daughters go to church or not.
Bruce Monkhouse said:I'm curious to as to what you would do AbdullahD.
My parents made us go to church [Sunday school] until we were around 13 and then we got to choose.......came up with 2 believers and 2 nons.
It never, ever came up again.
If family doesn't top religion/culture then I would not have the time of day and ................well, lets just stop there I shall.
EDIT
PS: I have no idea if my 2 Daughters go to church or not.
Oldgateboatdriver said:Well, lets see, just for a quick start:
Quran (2:217) (4:89) (9:11-12) (9:73-74);
Bukhari (52:260) (83:37) (89:271);
Abu Dawud (4346);
Imam Malik (36.18.15).
The "there is no compulsion in religion..." surah, which is one of the most abused of them all, is an early saying of the prophet, from his beginning in Mecca when he held little to no power and was trying to start to convert people to his revelation. He simply did not carry the power to impose anything then. If you look at the later surah and hadith from after his flight to Medina - when he became much more established and powerful - they are more radical and definitive in their contradiction of that earlier surah. And Muslim know that one concept of Islamic jurisprudence is that the earlier surah and hadith are abrogated by the later ones - thus apostasy's penalty is the later one.
BTW, the very fact that "earlier" revelations have to be "abrogated" by "later" revelations is a sure sign that the whole thing is a human fabrication. But even if it was to be believed that it is the word of god, the very fact that there are contradictions and that a human must develop a rule to figure out which one to follow is a sure sign that something other than god guides humans in making such determination. And that is exactly what happened to the Jews and Christian: modern interpretations pass over the very nasty bits found in the torah and the bible, which used to be given literal interpretation and application, to retain the more palatable ones as they relate to our modern world's morals. But if it is human's that chose the bits and pieces of the "sacred" texts that are to be skipped and those that are to be applied, then the moral guidance to make such calls cannot come from the sacred text themselves - so they must come from a "current" moral zeitgeist where the interpreter lives.
jollyjacktar said:Abdullah, your rebuttal, to my understanding of, only seems to cement what OGBD stated. It's all made and managed by mortal men. Which makes me scratch my head as to who's really in charge of setting policy. The Divine, or multiple individuals as they see fit.