TankMan
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So the debate was purely based on semantics - thus it is irrelevant. Everyone knows and understands what the word 'criminal' was intended to imply.When you call someone a 'criminal', the proper context of the word imply the person is UNDER JURISDICTION of an authority. In a region where there are contestant authority figures, such as a civil war situation, and if the contest is severe enough that each side can only exercise physical authority in limited geographies, whatever law previously created or recently created are equally limited. History is filled with these situations, including new countries created like your Pakistan, where previous laws and the legal system no longer apply.
If half the country controlled by A have no laws against being left handed, but the half controlled by B does have such a law, then left handed people under B's jurisdiction would be legally 'criminals'.
This is about temporal laws, not whatever religious version that may or may not exist. Until you prove to me that Allah exist, I will uphold temporal laws as supremacy.
If you do not care then why do you argue over it?So what ? I do not care -- until they finally act. I have to deal with the physical results from an action. Anything prior is purely academic.
Knowing and understanding the problem is very important in 'dealing' with the results of an action and preventing actions from happening at all.
Then don't argue over it, it's that simple. Argue over what you care about and the response will be what you'd care about.I do not care.
I can say the US constitution is the foundation for a brand of anarchism I want to start. It says, in section 2, that ''No Person shall be a Representative''. I will then say that democracy is unconstitutional and you need to burn down Congress quick because it's full of representatives.But that still does not take away from the core issue: That Islam is the foundation for those interpretations.
I conveniently leave out the very next part that says: ''who shall not have attained to the Age of twenty five Years...[etc]''
Does that make my ''interpretation'' of the US constitution valid? Obviously, it does not. Then why is Islam the foundation for those interpretations any more than the US constitution is the foundation for my hypothetical brand of anarchism?
If you change something, anything, it will be different. Islam is not at fault for people changing and twisting it.
I never disagreed with that. Why do you think I have been shouting about it for so long? We have also been up to stuff like protesting, holding seminars, making and distributing pamphlets, writing letters and generally just shouting at the top of our lungs, along with actively fighting them militarily and pushing for a crackdown against terrorist sympathizers, their funding and their hate speech.If an interpretation is a 'misinterpretation', that is YOUR responsibility to sort it out, not ours to determine who is right and who is wrong.
A lot more needs to be done, sure, but we're not exactly sitting idle either. We shouldn't have to 'prove ourselves' like this but I feel it was needed here.
Rest assured we are sorting it out. Slowly but surely.To you, Anjem Choudary is an anomaly. But to him and his kind, YOU are the anomaly. We do not care on the theology, sophistry, and any sort of mental gymnastics you engages in to show us who is the anomaly. Sort it out among yourselves. But if we have to deal with the consequences, then we will form our own perceptions of you.
When did I ever say anything about that? I intentionally chose the word 'people' to signify that this was a general statement and not referring to any specific group. Of course someone as biased as you would see it as ''Islamic supremacism''.No...You cannot dismiss this that easily. From what I am seeing so far, the non-Muslims are stupid but not you ?
I, personally, am not stupid. I could be wrong in things but I always consider by viewpoint carefully. On the other hand, some of the stupidest people I've met and argued with are Muslim. But then, living in a Muslim majority society for most of my life, most of the people I've met are Muslim.
I never said any of that. Anjem Chaudhary's followers are stupid. Unless you follow him, you're not stupid and I never said anything that could imply it.We are stupid because we cannot see YOUR viewpoint that people like Anjem Choudary is wrong
You brought in the facile argument about the West being all good lovely people doing everything out of goodwill while evil Muslims destroyed it - of course you'd ''tune it out'' when that argument was challenged.This argument is done for. No one takes it seriously. The Muslims have their ow countries and filled with oil wealth. They contribute and influence global affairs and they did it for their own interests, no different than any experienced power. They are courted by contestant governments under diametrically opposed ideologies. If you chose to squabble among yourselves over some tribal issues thousands of yrs old, that is your problems, or rather should be your problems. Whenever you cannot settle your differences among yourselves, you blame it on a convenient scapegoat -- colonialism. People are so tired of it that they automatically tuned you out, like turning the knob on a radio, from static to something worthwhile hearing.
Believe what you want to.
The fact that hundreds of such members post things like these (plenty on this very thread, unbanned) shows the contrary. Religious arguments are supposed to be banned in the first place.If this member's ban is motivated by this post, then it shows sheer intolerance of Muslim towards criticism...
Speaking for myself, I'm perfectly fine with criticism. What I despise is a false narrative. The same false narrative that has killed thousands of my people. The exact same narrative is peddled by ''criticisms'' like these ones. And I'm glad people post it, because pounding it gives me satisfaction and is a good pastime.
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