lwien
Well-Known Member
Hmmmm.........I wonder how long it will take before this thread gets shut down but lets see if we can keep it civil, k? I know I'm opening up a major can of worms here but it is a subject that is important enough to discuss.
Anyway, what started this thread originated with @Farid 's post in this thread http://fuckcombustion.com/threads/the-2016-presidential-candidates-thread.18407/page-128#post-960998
And I'll repeat what I said there:
I don't see Maher as being xenophobic. To me, it seems that he is more, specifically... Islamophobic rather than xenophobic.
But in regards to Islamophobia, and I know this is off topic in this thread so maybe someone should start another but I gotta say what I gotta say.
It doesn't take too much of a stretch of the imagination to see WHY Isalmaphobia exists in this country. Now that doesn't mean that I condone it in the least, but..........I totally understand why it exists.
Bill Maher takes quotes out of the Koran to demonstrate how barbaric it is and slams the Muslim religion because of it, but if you take quotes out of the Old Testament in the Bible, it, in many ways is just as barbaric.
What is true though is that considering what is going on the world today, Islamaphobia is not going to go away and you can't dilute it by simply denouncing it. What CAN be done, however, is for moderate Muslims to unite and with a singular strong, very visible message, stating that they denounce radical fundamentalism and all of it's actions. From what I have seen, the rationale that they use for not doing this is............"Why do we have to?", and my answer to that is, because you DO have to in much the same way as the Black Lives Matter movement has to. If you want to affect change, you have to go out and MAKE it happen. It can't happen with a few Imams stating their views. It has to happen in a large coordinated effort to get the attention of the press and until that happens, nothings going to change for the assumption will continue to be that if you don't denounce it LOUDLY, than you must agree with it. I'm not saying that that assumption is correct. What I am saying is that that assumption will continue to exist.
To clarify, I'm not suggesting for Muslims to denounce Islamaphobia but rather to denounce the catalyst that brought it about in the first place.
Anyway, what started this thread originated with @Farid 's post in this thread http://fuckcombustion.com/threads/the-2016-presidential-candidates-thread.18407/page-128#post-960998
And I'll repeat what I said there:
Maher refuses to acknowledge this because he is to blame for spreading that same xenophobia.
I don't see Maher as being xenophobic. To me, it seems that he is more, specifically... Islamophobic rather than xenophobic.
But in regards to Islamophobia, and I know this is off topic in this thread so maybe someone should start another but I gotta say what I gotta say.
It doesn't take too much of a stretch of the imagination to see WHY Isalmaphobia exists in this country. Now that doesn't mean that I condone it in the least, but..........I totally understand why it exists.
Bill Maher takes quotes out of the Koran to demonstrate how barbaric it is and slams the Muslim religion because of it, but if you take quotes out of the Old Testament in the Bible, it, in many ways is just as barbaric.
What is true though is that considering what is going on the world today, Islamaphobia is not going to go away and you can't dilute it by simply denouncing it. What CAN be done, however, is for moderate Muslims to unite and with a singular strong, very visible message, stating that they denounce radical fundamentalism and all of it's actions. From what I have seen, the rationale that they use for not doing this is............"Why do we have to?", and my answer to that is, because you DO have to in much the same way as the Black Lives Matter movement has to. If you want to affect change, you have to go out and MAKE it happen. It can't happen with a few Imams stating their views. It has to happen in a large coordinated effort to get the attention of the press and until that happens, nothings going to change for the assumption will continue to be that if you don't denounce it LOUDLY, than you must agree with it. I'm not saying that that assumption is correct. What I am saying is that that assumption will continue to exist.
To clarify, I'm not suggesting for Muslims to denounce Islamaphobia but rather to denounce the catalyst that brought it about in the first place.
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