It's a term used far too often for my liking...often by muslims who don't understand the questions that non muslims ask of their faith.
The main question I have is why can't I, as a non-believer in any faith not entertain a muslim female?
The answer is I just can't....because I'm not a muslim.
However, If a muslim male was to court a female it would be OK if she was a believer in any other sort of religion??
This is the most basic and blatant form of "non-integration" possible yet it isn't questioned by anyone.
Can anyone explain how this can happen in a so called "multi-cultural" society?..I though that meant we were all meant to mix as exuals.
I know for a fact that such issues are a crux of the problem in places like Oldham and bradford....You don't touch a muslim woman if you don't believe...or else!
Is it not time islam to grow up and accept others...regardless of belief?
This is a large part of the problem.
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Thread: "Islamaphobia" explained.
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03-10-2009 02:08 AM #1
"Islamaphobia" explained.
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03-10-2009 07:47 AM #2
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03-10-2009 07:59 AM #3
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Too many Catholics and Protestants believe exactly the same!
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03-10-2009 08:19 AM #4
I can't say I can speak with much knowledge about Islam. I do know that, like Christianity, it has many different sects, with some having more literal interpretations of the religion than others.
I get the impression that in places like Iran (don't believe everything you see on TV) the rank and file are more liberal and allow a greater degree of fraternisation with other religions. Is it possible that the fundamentalism in places like Bradford is as much about certain people maintaining their power by drawing very clear lines?
Surrounded by followers of another religion, I would think some would want to make a point about their diversity. I am not saying it is right, but you see similair things from Irish and Italian communities throughout the world. The further they are from their base, the more they maintain the differential.
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03-10-2009 08:31 AM #5This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
The OP is talking about Islamophobia which is about a generalised, irrational fear. If you admit to Islamophobia, you're admitting to being illogical at the same time.
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03-10-2009 08:44 AM #6This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
The missus is going to visit a friend in one of these "white settler" developments in Spain. It even has a branch of Iceland!
An interesting development over there is that some companies are now setting up care homes for Brits to end their days.
Does phobia not just mean fear? It could be rational or irrational. I also think that the OP might be highlighting the fear that some people within Islam have for outsiders.Last edited by Phil D. Rolls; 03-10-2009 at 08:46 AM.
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03-10-2009 09:43 AM #7This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I don't know how many of the Costa Brits left because of fear of Islam in Britain, I guess most of them just fancied a bit of sunshine. A bit ironic if they did, since theyve moved to the historic centre of Islamic Spain. They should check the Alhambra out (a bit offtopic)Last edited by hibsbollah; 03-10-2009 at 09:46 AM.
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03-10-2009 11:22 AM #8
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In my experience in Edinburgh I have seen no real desire for muslims to integrate with others in the community. I'm not saying it doesn't happen but that's my experience.
There are a lot more people on here that are more knowledgable on Islam that I am. However, my understanding is that Islamic people think there should only be one religion and that it should be spread across the world.
I watched a documentry on youtube that stated by the middle of this century that some western countries will be primarily of the muslim faith. I believe that the German PM (don't know if it was new or old) stated that by 2050 IIRC that traditional Germany will almost be a thing of the past due to birth rates e.g traditional Germans have on average 1.4 kids whilst muslim families will average 2/3/4 meaning that by another generation or two Germany as we know it will be gone.
I don't have any issue with muslims if they live their life they way they want to. However, if we end up in situation where their values and thoughts are pressed onto the existing socities I think it is wrong.
I'm not convinced that all muslims think that men are allowed to have partners of whatever faith. My aunt was engaged to a muslim guy (they have 2 kids together) and his family wrote them out of their will (they are millionaires) because he was with a white girl.
They had their first kid who was a girl. They showed no interest in her whatsoever. They had another kid, a boy, suddenly they wanted to play happy families. Their culture states that boys are more precious than girls and it's pathetic.
My aunt and him split up after 6/7 years together and now he's back with a muslim girl living in Glasgow and is back in the will.
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03-10-2009 11:44 AM #9This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
People seem completely oblivious to the same old racist tropes, imagery and mantras being applied to the new group that we are all supposed to be fearful of as a 'threat to our way of life'. Echoes of Enoch Powell, no?
"In this country in 15 or 20 years' time the black man will have the whip hand over the white man."
Except now we're not supposed to be fearful of black people - it's shifted onto Muslim's and has become (along with hatred of Travellers and the Roma) the last acceptable form of racism. All the same language that was used against black immigrants and before that against European Jewish population have been transferred onto Muslims.
The parallels with the treatment of, and attitudes towards, Jews in the 18th/19th/20th is really amazingly striking. They're supposedly hell-bent on domination of the entire world and the complete subversion of Western liberal values through engaging in secretive and seditious acts, a value system that is supposedly diametrically opposed and incompatible with our own, refusal to integrate into an (extremely unwelcoming) populace. So to a large extent you can argue that the 'return' of the Jewish diaspora to the Holy Land left a vacuum which needed to be filled; first by Carribean immigrants (and also Bolshevism) and more recently by Arab and Muslim immigrants.
There's also the same 'Clash of Civilisation' racist rhetoric that comes up again and again, in that we're meant to see Islam as a homogenous, united block juxtaposed to 'our values' which is both a racist (Orientalist) idea in itself and used as justification for holding racist Islamophobic views.
And no-one group has been more complicit in this than wet, middle-class liberals.
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03-10-2009 12:06 PM #10
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The specific one I watched stated that there were x million muslims in Germany around the time of the war which has seen the muslim population grow. I believe that part was accurate.
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03-10-2009 12:14 PM #11This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Far and away the largest non-German ethnic group in Germany is the Turkish. Out of a national population of 82+ million people they number c. 1.7 million...
It's another interesting bit of this sort of thing that people invariably believe there are far, far more of the 'threat ethnicity' than there actually are.
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03-10-2009 12:21 PM #12
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I think that part of the arguement that was stated as that a large amount of Turks moved to Germany during the WW and have since grown at a much larger rate that the traditional German population.
Need to go for a shower and get ready to leave for the game... Will be back on tomorrow.
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03-10-2009 08:33 PM #14This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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03-10-2009 09:07 PM #15This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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03-10-2009 09:08 PM #16This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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03-10-2009 09:18 PM #17This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
They might not have "suicide-planed an occupied building", however they blew up an occupied hotel. the King David leading to the death of 91 people, I suspect to "proclaim the correctness of their religious beliefs". Zionist groups such as the Irgun and Stern Gang were involved in many acts of terrorism. as were the Hagana, just don't expect any Hollywood films to highlight any of their operations. Doddie knows a lot about the bombing of the King David and Jewish acts of terror, maybe he could add to this.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NVglLsYkoHg
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03-10-2009 09:31 PM #18This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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03-10-2009 10:21 PM #19This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
The martyrdom thing you mention makes it even more understandable. The bit about the 72 waiting virgins, if that's not just made up by the Daily Mail, makes it even more understandable. If it is the case that one religion can be more stupid than another, islam shirley beats judaism imho. Cf also the fatwa against that beardy author chappie a few years ago for writing a book. Plenty good reasons for westerners to be suspicious of islamism, and not hard for suspicion to spill over into phobia.
Originally Posted by Tazio
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03-10-2009 10:30 PM #20This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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03-10-2009 10:31 PM #21This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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03-10-2009 10:35 PM #22This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Plenty good reasons for everyone to be suspicious of Christianity, since generalisation seems to be the modus operandiThere's only one thing better than a Hibs calendar and that's two Hibs calendars
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03-10-2009 10:59 PM #23
not to mention the Olympic Park Bomber of 1996
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eric_Robert_Rudolph
---------- Post added at 11:59 PM ---------- Previous post was at 11:57 PM ----------
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04-10-2009 09:12 AM #24This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Though I hope you're not hinting that generalisation is always bad
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04-10-2009 09:46 AM #25This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
the Arab community in Palestine, supported by the Arab League, rejected the UN proposal and vowed to oppose it by armed struggle
Perhaps the Wiki entry is biased, or whoever has refereed it is part of some wider conspiracy?
What I take from the celebration of al-Nakba, since before the creation of Israel it was used to refer to a completely different event in 1920, is that members of religious groupings often like to perpetuate the perception of injustice as a means of solidarity with each other. Over time, the actual nature of the event becomes less and less relevant, and the commemoration becomes a celebration of group membership. Cf Gazza endearing himself to the hunnery by playing an imaginary flute as a way of saying "I amma peepul".
Not claiming in any way to be any sort of expert whatsoever on Arab Israeli conflicts, or their history. Though celebrating injustice doesn't in general seem to me like a productive long-term strategy.
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04-10-2009 12:22 PM #26This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Setting aside the fact that Israel was established and is maintained by state and extrajudicial terrorism...
There's the Brit HaKanaim and the Gush Emunim for starters.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nakba_day
Rather than this wikipedia entry...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Nakba
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04-10-2009 02:44 PM #27This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
It's the most obvious thing in the world that Palestinian arabs in the 1940s were victims. I do genuinely wonder whether in 2009 to look at things that way is a help or a hindrance. Sixty years is just the thickness of a postage stamp stuck on the top of the Empire State Building of history, but so is human lifespan. I can't at the moment see much difference between commemorating al-Nakba and the Battle of the Boyne.
I will need to find out more about how and why the UN thought setting up a jewish state was ever going to work before trying to comment further.
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04-10-2009 04:36 PM #28This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
The number of deaths on sept 11 has been meted out a hundred fold since. All in the name of western cultural hegemony. The imposition of western ideology by bloody brutal force.
The christian west has for centuries used terror, overtly and covertly, in the parts of the world it has attempted to control/westernise(christianise), puppet regimes and divide and rule being a considerable tactic when mass murder didn't have the desired result.
The taliban have been used as an example of 'backward' or 'uncivilised brutality, yet in the equivelant 5/6 years of their control of afghanistan (prior to the war in iraq/afghanistan). Yet there had been far more people murdered by the state in Texas alone than in the whole of afghanistan(including a few who were under 16 when they commited their crime).
When it comes to 'enforcing beliefs' none of these other religions can compare with christianity, THE most brutal religion that has ever existed.
Still today the usa has the highest pro rata and raw number of religious fundamentalists in the world by far.
They 'poke us in the eye' by way of retaliation, we claim to be the victim and flatten their families/villages/towns/cities.
The west cant take lessons from anyone in the bloodlust stakes.
Islamic fundamentalists may shout 'allah akbar' when launching missiles or detonating bombs. In the usa the state proclaims its fundamentalism on the money, 'in god we trust'.
Being an openly atheist politician in the usa is electoral suicide.
p.s. and in terms of sectarianism, being a catholic in the uk would appear to prevent being pm - ask tony.Last edited by sadtom; 04-10-2009 at 05:02 PM.
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05-10-2009 11:39 AM #29This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
You stop being a freedom fighter and become a terrorist as soon as you cause the death of an innocent.
Quite simple really.
Religion is the cause for so many problems (and is used as an excuse to do wrong time and time again)
The sad thing is that chances are, these ass holes are never going to be punished for their crimes and when they die they'll never know that they were wrong because that'll be it.
Religion taken too literally is a sure path back to the dark ages imo. It can give people great strength to get through difficult times but it can also fuel you into doing something evil like crashing a two planes into the previously tallest sky scrapers in the world........
I'm not an Atheist, I believe in something but I have no idea what that is and I've great doubts about whether any of us will ever truely know how we were created etc etc etc etc.....
So I see no point in taking religion too seriously
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05-10-2009 02:25 PM #30This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
? Does make you wonder though: if "youtube" or you "Woody1985" gets a major aspect like this completely wrong, what can be relied on in any so-called report on a topic such as this?
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