Slashdot Mirror


Holocaust Dropped From Some UK Schools

dteichman2 writes "It appears that some UK schools are ignoring the Holocaust. A government-backed study, funded by the Department for Education and Skills, found that some teachers are reluctant to teach history lessons on the Holocaust for fear of offending Muslim students whose beliefs include Holocaust denial. Additionally, similar problems are being encountered with lessons on the Crusades because these lessons contradict teachings from local mosques."

175 of 1,286 comments (clear)

  1. Interesting by Himring · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I have seen posts violently modded down on /. for evening mentioning the holocaust or holocaust denial. It is interesting that it is now a full story here. I always felt the global usership of /., and differing opinions, had something to do with it....

    --
    "All great things are simple & expressed in a single word: freedom, justice, honor, duty, mercy, hope." --Churchill
    1. Re:Interesting by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 4, Insightful

      have seen posts violently modded down on /. for evening mentioning the holocaust or holocaust denial.

      I think you're inferring emotion, based upon your own preconceptions. Moderation is a numerical system. Things are not "violently" moderated. They might be "quickly" or "repeatedy" moderated. Can you show me an example of a post that mentions the holocaust or holocaust denial and which was not either completely offtopic, or an emotional appeal instead of a logical argument?

      Now don't get me wrong. I'm all in favor of discussion of the holocaust. My grandfather did not like to talk about the war, but he made a point of telling all of us kids that the deniers were full of crap because he saw the furnaces full of bones and the camps. For the most part, however, the topic is not pertinent to subjects being discussed on Slashdot and an impartial audience probably should mod them down, regardless of nationality.

    2. Re:Interesting by NewWorldDan · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Well, I don't recall my own high school history being terribly accurate on the subject. It was presented in the context that 6 million Jews were killed in concentration camps for no reason other than being jewish. There was never any mention that the Nazis also killed 9 million non-jews (including Poles, Russian POWs, Gypsies, other christian sects like Jehovas Witnesses, etc), or that half of those 6 million jews were killed for being Polish as much as any other reason. I'm no scholar on the subject, and this post isn't meant to shed light on anything except that the typical high school education dumbs the whole complicated mess down to 2 things: Concentration camps and 6 million dead Jews. Except that the vast majority of the dead weren't actually killed in concentration camps. Again, let me repeat my point: high school history takes a complex event and dumbs it down to a couple of multiple choice questions. I'm inclined to think that a more accurate and detailed history lesson would draw fewer objections. The above paragraph takes a couple of stats haphazardly lifted from Wikipedia and contains no serious scholarship. No flames please.

    3. Re:Interesting by manifoldronin · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It was presented in the context that 6 million Jews were killed in concentration camps for no reason other than being jewish. There was never any mention that the Nazis also killed 9 million non-jews (including Poles, Russian POWs, Gypsies, other christian sects like Jehovas Witnesses, etc), or that half of those 6 million jews were killed for being Polish as much as any other reason.
      I'm not a scholar on the subject either, but I think you are missing the point. The Nazis killed a lot of other people (even more than the 6 million Jews as you mentioned), but most of those killings weren't made based on their races or whatever general category they happened to fall in. As far as I know, the only groups that the Nazis determined to systematically exterminate were the Jews and the homosexuals. That, instead of the shear numbers of killings themselves or any comparison between them, is what I think fundamentally important as far as teaching the kids is concerned.
      --
      Tyranny isn't the worst enemy of a democracy. Cynicism is.
    4. Re:Interesting by PatrickThomson · · Score: 4, Informative

      I have no sympathy for holocaust deniers. Let me quote a good man:

      Almost all of the survivors, verbally or in their written memoirs, remember a dream which frequently recurred during the nights of imprisonment, varied in its detail but uniform in its substance: they had returned home, and with passion and relief were describing their past sufferings, addressing themselves to a loved person, and were not believed, indeed were not even listened to. In the most typical (and most cruel) form, they interlocutor turned and left in silence. [Primo Levi: The Drowned and the Saved]

      And the diatribe issued by a member of the SS to camp inmates upon arrival:

      However this war may end, we have won the war against you; none of you will be left to bear witness, but even if someone were to survive, the world would not believe him. There will perhaps be suspicions, discussions, research by historians, but there will be no certainties, because we will destroy the evidence together with you. And even if some proof should remain and some of you survive, people will say that the events you describe are too monstrous to be believed: they will say that they are the exaggerations of Allied propoganda and will believe us, who will deny everything, and not you. We will be the ones to dictate the history of the [camps] [Simon Wiesenthal: The murderers are amongst us]

      The nazis had such an effective shredding campaign, we only know the death toll is between 4 and 8 million. Inmates themselves were responsible for furnace operation and ash disposal, teams being regularly disposed of to prevent information leaks. The retreat at the end of the war was accompanied by systematic recall/slaughter of prisoners, and was given more importance than millitary strategy. Holocaust sympathisers are making the holocaust perpetrators win from beyond the noose. And yes, you may invoke godwin's law.

      --
      I am one of many. My idea is not unique, nor do I expect my voice alone to sway you. I speak in a chorus of opinion.
    5. Re:Interesting by Mattintosh · · Score: 5, Informative

      Actually, Hitler was quoted as saying that he was going to exterminate Jehovah's Witnesses, too.

      Oddly enough, JW's were the only group given the opportunity to sign a paper denouncing their faith and walk away. Very few of them did it.

    6. Re:Interesting by Chris+Burke · · Score: 4, Informative

      As far as I know, the only groups that the Nazis determined to systematically exterminate were the Jews and the homosexuals.

      Gypsies were also the target of systematic extermination.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    7. Re:Interesting by happyemoticon · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I know I'm making a mistake attempting to have a rational discussion of this on the internet, but here goes.

      The most prominent primary target of the Nazi's killing spree was indeed the Jewish people, and their story of systematic, legitimized oppression, and how the general German populace went along with it by degrees is the most harrowing. It teaches us that when you start institutionally marginalizing a people or class of persons, even if only slightly at first, you go down a road which may lead to something truly horrific.

      That having been said, the current state of holocaust education effectively denies the deaths of the millions of non-Jews by focusing exclusively on the deaths of the Jews. It invalidates their suffering. You yourself implicitly said it was unimportant. And thus, people grow up thinking that genocide is some kind of rare thing which confines itself to one people at a time, and not only is this not correct, but the message is injured. Think I'm wrong? Ask an average American high school kid about Darfur, or the Armenians, or the purges in the Soviet Union, or Cambodia.

      I would rather teach kids that if they start letting intolerance into their hearts, not only is it going to be the people of x super-vilified minority who go against the wall, it's going to be your little sister with a bum leg, your evangelical uncle, the sad beggars in downtown, those two boys holding hands, anyone who voices a dissident opinion, and everyone you know who's not white, brown, yellow, or whatever the uber-race is supposed to be.

    8. Re:Interesting by Himring · · Score: 5, Interesting

      The retreat at the end of the war was accompanied by systematic recall/slaughter of prisoners, and was given more importance than millitary strategy.

      Indeed. Some estimates calculate that one possible reason Germany lost the war in the east was due to none other than their "cleansing" campaign. It took away men and resources as well as solidified the populace in the east against them. Had they done the opposite, and behaved as the liberators from Russian oppression that there were first hailed as, the outcome could have been drastically different....

      --
      "All great things are simple & expressed in a single word: freedom, justice, honor, duty, mercy, hope." --Churchill
  2. Well by $RANDOMLUSER · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I guess if your "beliefs" include Holocaust denial, then you're excactly the person who needs a history lesson.

    --
    No folly is more costly than the folly of intolerant idealism. - Winston Churchill
    1. Re:Well by LS1+Brains · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Amen, the Muslims can deny anything they want, it doesn't change the truth. Kinda like how they say they're peace loving, and not a barbaric people. Last I checked, peace loving people weren't strapping bombs to themselves, women, and children and sending them into areas populated with civilians. *Note: This is a stereotype. I understand not *EVERY* Muslim is part of the problem. However, stereotypes exist because a large portion of the target population exhibits a certain quality, character, or characteristic. In other words, "if the shoe fits..." If you're Muslim and upset by my comments, it's time to introspect and reflect on WHY you're upset.

    2. Re:Well by Nerdfest · · Score: 5, Insightful

      A recent study in the US showed that 80% of Muslims were opposed to using suicide bombing as a tactic to defend Islam. I was shocked about the remaining 20%.

    3. Re:Well by anagama · · Score: 2, Informative

      Because everyone is too afraid of suicide bombers. The methods and philosophies of the dark ages are apparently working.

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    4. Re:Well by TheMeuge · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I believe it was Bill Maher who said a couple of years ago:

      "Let us not become so tolerant that we tolerate intolerance".

      I think this is that kind of a scenario. And, as always, complacency will only lead further into oblivion. If this is what is happening, then it really is time for the UK to wake up. Really, that time has already come and gone, but if they finally do realize what is happening, we can forget that they're late to the party, and embrace the fact that they showed up at all.

      However, the hard question is what is there to be done about this. Frankly, I am hard-pressed to see a solution to this crisis. As the percentage of the people who espouse these beliefs rises within the UK population, they are going to feel increasingly empowered, both by the virtue of their numbers, as well as due to the apparent utter impotence of the British in the face of their assault.

    5. Re:Well by MMC+Monster · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Doesn't have to be a large majority. Just a vocal minority that causes the problems. There are a lot of peace-loving muslims around the world.

      (FWIW, I am not a muslim.)

      --
      Help! I'm a slashdot refugee.
    6. Re:Well by evil_aar0n · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yes, every Muslim _is_ part of the problem. If they're not doing anything to stop their fellow Muslims from doing things like this, or "honor killings," or genitalia mutilation, or... then they're part of the problem. Something about, "No man is an island."

      --
      Truth, Justice. Or the American Way.
    7. Re:Well by Mateo_LeFou · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This kind of thing comes from the misguided view that tolerance means all beliefs have close to the same value. That is simply not true. Tolerance means leaving people alone as long as their beliefs are not hurting others. It's an essentially libertarian principle.

      Ignoring the scientifically-confirmable, historical reality of the holocaust hurts others. Lots of others. I don't think it's going too far to say that a pedagogical approach like this is *catastrophic to any society that implements it. You could end up with an entire generation that doesn't know where fascism tends, and what the real human cost of demagoguery is.

      --
      My turnips listen for the soft cry of your love
    8. Re:Well by AndersOSU · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I agree with you, but why limit yourself to Muslims? Maybe every inhabitant of the middle east _is_ part of the problem, maybe every member of a Abrahamic religion _is_ part of the problem, or maybe every human being on the face of the earth _is_ part of the problem. After all, _no_ man is an island.

    9. Re:Well by interstellar_donkey · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "Let us not become so tolerant that we tolerate intolerance".

      I think that's a perfect statement here. To me, this situation is unbelievable.

      "The report said teachers feared confronting 'anti-Semitic sentiment and Holocaust denial among some Muslim pupils'."

      By that logic, schools in the US shouldn't teach about slavery, fearing a confrontation of an 'anti-black' sentiment among racist hicks.

      I don't think any reasonable person could argue that the holocaust didn't happen. If there's a strong anti-Semitic view in the mosques of England, I suppose there's nothing we can do about that. But that doesn't erase the fact that the holocaust happened and school children should learn about it.

      --
      The Internet is generally stupid
    10. Re:Well by cudiaco · · Score: 2, Informative

      I come from Oman, which is a majority muslim country. The majority of these muslims form the Ibadhi sect, which is unheard of anywhere in the world except for Oman and some places in Africa.

      I don't ever recall teachers and educators telling us that there was no holocaust. If there were some that denied it, chances are they were uneducated, or illiterate.

      As a muslim, I would urge the schools in the UK to reconsider their decisions.

    11. Re:Well by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Will you teach the prophet then ? He's long dead, yet here's what he said :

      Allah's Apostle said, "The Hour will not be established until you fight with the Jews, and the stone behind which a Jew will be hiding will say. "O Muslim! There is a Jew hiding behind me, so kill him."

      Obviously muslims teach this to children starting at 4-year-olds.

      Don't forget ... this is slashdot ... this is to be buried deep with the ratings system, and whoever reports this is to be fanatically attacked for shaking up the "all-cultures-are-equal" idea. Even if it means killing the messenger.

      After all there is nothing wrong with islamic ideology, right ? Well, except that they kill dozens of their own children in hopes of wounding a single Jew. Except that they beat everyone into submission, except their complete opposition to free speech, except ... all values that slashdot pretends to defend.

      Maybe it's just that you don't know about repression (english translation of the arabic word "islam"). So here's a message in hopes of making this clear.

      Obviously it won't stop at Jews. They are equally against Christians, just not as public, equally against cripples (because allah punished them for a reason you know), and, God forbid you'd ask what "allah" does to gays (they are to be buried alive on sight, even if some man were to be raped by a gay attacker, he is to be buried alive). That is what the prophet did. That is what every muslim is striving to do.

      Illustrations
      -> gaza/westbank
      -> iraq
      -> afghanistan
      -> mecca (non-muslims are to be killed on sight in mecca in case you didn't know)
      -> cartoon crises
      -> ...

    12. Re:Well by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 4, Funny

      If next month Christian suicide bombers in ten separate incidents killed a lot of non-Christians, I can 100% guarantee you Jerry Falwell would be denouncing them.

      Well I can 100% guarantee that it won't be Jerry Falwell.

    13. Re:Well by endianx · · Score: 2, Funny

      I can 100% guarantee you Jerry Falwell would be denouncing them. I bet you one million dollars he would not.
    14. Re:Well by interstellar_donkey · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Not true. It can hurt people.

      A reason for teaching of history's atrocities is to show people what horrible things can happen. It's so we don't repeat our mistakes, and that the educated citizenry can identify trends that could lead to a repeat and (hopefully) do something about it.

      Could something like the holocaust happen again? Sadly, yes. But the likelihood of it happening is diminished with education.

      --
      The Internet is generally stupid
    15. Re:Well by Hoi+Polloi · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Sorry, my mistake, it was only 30-40%. It was a survey by the Pentagon. Now I feel better.

      --
      It is by the juice of the coffee bean that thoughts acquire speed, the teeth acquire stains. The stains become a warning
    16. Re:Well by dewke · · Score: 5, Insightful
      --
      Oderint dum metuant
    17. Re:Well by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Well, I think what uspets people is that they don't hear condemnation of this kind of thing *from Muslims*.

      Do most people in the US talk to muslims? I hear condemnation of suicide bombings from muslims all the time.

      If next month Christian suicide bombers in ten separate incidents killed a lot of non-Christians, I can 100% guarantee you Jerry Falwell would be denouncing them.

      As I'm sure you're figured out by now, Falwell died last week. I think your argument is for more muslim televangelists. Sure, there are very vocal TV personalities who refer to themselves as christians and loudly proclaim all sorts of things. Sure televangelists would go on TV and and denounce people who set off bombs, but I bet they would not refer to them as "radical christian bombers" and neither would the papers. Did you hear anyone call the unibomber a "christian radical bomber?" What about the oklahoma bombers? Most of the suicide bombers are not acting for religious reasons so much as political reasons. It is just that religion and politics are as tied together there as they are in the US, but there they admit it.

      Why don't you learn to speak arabic and get a satellite dish. Then start watching religious and political programs from the middle east and report back as to how many christians there are on said TV denouncing the actions of the US military in the middle east.

    18. Re:Well by TheMeuge · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Yeah, god forbid an underpaid teacher decides to concentrate on education and makes a hard to swallow decision to promote a little equilibrium.


      Equilibrium?!

      This is called appeasement... or better yet - catering to the demands of terrorists. Yes, you heard me. If a teacher is afraid to teach the [i]history[/i] of the Holocaust (and let us not kid ourselves - it's not a P.C. kind of fear, but fear of disruptive behaviour and violence), then this is terrorism by definition.

      Remember - "Beware of he who would deny you access to information, for in his heart he dreams himself your master."
    19. Re:Well by Homr+Zodyssey · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Actually, revisionist history is often taught in US schools. I attended public schools in rural southern Georgia. We were taught that the American Civil War (a.k.a. The War of Northern Aggression) was a struggle for "States Rights". We were told that the issue of slavery was just trotted out by the north as propaganda to make the southern states look bad.

      Decades later, I realize that although there is probably some truth to that, continuing to teach it that way does nothing but foster racial and geographic resentments within the nation. (e.g. "Damned Yankees!")

    20. Re:Well by pluther · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yeah, god forbid an underpaid teacher decides to concentrate on education and makes a hard to swallow decision to promote a little equilibrium.

      How exactly do you consider NOT teaching a subject specifically because a teacher is afraid of offending the ignorant to be concentrating on education?

      "Equilibrium"? What? Giving equal time to the uninformed? That's the role of TV news and radio talk shows, not of a teacher.

      This is just like the whole nonsense with creationism in the U.S. So, 40% of people in the United States think that creationism is just as valid a scientific theory as evolution by natural selection. The answer to that is not to pander to them, but to educate them.

      --
      If the masses can keep you down, you're not the Ubermensch.
    21. Re:Well by UbuntuDupe · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Do most people in the US talk to muslims? I hear condemnation of suicide bombings from muslims all the time.

      Do you agree that there's a difference between privately admitting something to friends, and publicly proclaiming it to everyone?

      I think your argument is for more muslim televangelists. ...

      It doesn't have to be televangelists. I would just as much expect Sean Hannity -- as much as I might otherwise disagree with him -- to cleverly mock their claim to being Christian.

      Did you hear anyone call the unibomber a "christian radical bomber?" What about the oklahoma bombers?

      No, because they didn't make their Christianity a defining part of their justification for violence. Now, I'd agree there's some asymmetry in the use of "radical Christian" vs. "radical Muslim", but that wasn't my point. My point was that Christians would be more vocal about getting across the idea that those people aren't following Christianity if it were widely believed otherwise.

    22. Re:Well by Hoi+Polloi · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I do hear it condemmed by my Muslim friend in CA, my old coworker from Turkey, my coworker from Somalia, etc. The only problem is that the media seems to prefer to broadcast ONLY the extremists. You see, interviewing reasonable people doesn't make for exciting news.

      --
      It is by the juice of the coffee bean that thoughts acquire speed, the teeth acquire stains. The stains become a warning
    23. Re:Well by linzeal · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Hence, Islamo-fascism. Islam as a religion is not the issue, the issue at hand with Islam is the way adherents of particular orders within it have been conscripted to fight in reality economic and political wars under the guise of Jihad. The Taleban is far more wealthy than the average Afghani citizen because they deal with so many illegal activities, including slavery, assassination and opium. The leaders lived in opulence when the US invaded Afghanistan and pry are not doing too shabby now either.

      The same type of mentality can be seen in the US with some evangelical groups where they may not be as desperate to commit violent acts in the name of god are equally willing to turn over their life savings for "the cause". These sort of easily deluded people have always existed in poverty and war stricken areas and they are not going to noticeably go away until many generations have passed.

    24. Re:Well by mrpeebles · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yes, but according to this article, 24% of US citizens believe bombing aimed at civilians are justified "often" or "sometimes" and another 27% think it is justified rarely. So yes, that poll is disturbing, but not necessarily more than such a poll of any other group of people would be.

    25. Re:Well by linzeal · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Well didn't Christianity go through these stages as well? I mean lest we forget the Witch burnings in the middle ages that bred fanaticism against not only Jews, Gays and females but saw the schism of the Catholic church turn into a 400 year long war of fantastic barbaric and unspeakable acts against civilians. It was not uncommon for whole towns being raised, fields salted and every last person killed within a mile of it during Phillip II's reign.

      Isn't this what Islam is going through now?

    26. Re:Well by K'Lyre · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yeah, but those people's skin is too dark for anyone to care.

      No, I don't think that way, but that seems to be the only difference.

      Mod me down if you must.

    27. Re:Well by MrNaz · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I think you'll find that Muslims are far more tolerant that you'd think, and that the stereotype of them being otherwise is the result of Fox and other right wing sycophants supporting the need for a bad guy to keep people scared. It never ceases to amaze me that nobody wonders what Muslims were doing through the decades when the Commies where the bad guys of the day.

      Anyways, if you think that Muslims hate Jews "Just Coz", then you may want to consider the fact that the best time in Jewish history (according to most Jewish historians) was actually when Jews lived in a Muslim state. Here's a titbit from the pages of history that also gets skipped in history classes:

      http://www.ataa.org/ataa/ref/jewish/jew-history.ht ml

      Even under Israel, the vast majority of Jews do not have the ideological freedom they used to. If you are willing to have pre-conceived ideas challenged, perhaps you'll find the following interesting:

      http://www.evtv1.com/player.aspx?itemnum=5006&aid= 19
      http://www.notinmyname.org/
      http://www.nkusa.org/
      http://www.jewsagainstzionism.com/zionism/index.cf m
      http://www.whatreallyhappened.com/jews_against_zio nism.html
      http://www.zionism-israel.com/his/jewish_anti_zion ism.htm
      http://www.evtv1.com/player.aspx?itemnum=7887&aid= 19

      DISCLAIMER: I am a Muslim. I have Jewish friends. Lots of them. Jews and Muslims have lived together for centuries, it is just not true that Muslims and Jews hate each other out of some culturally ingrained ideological perception. It is the nationalist incarnation of the Jewish identity in the militant form known as "Zionism" that Muslims and indeed most Jews oppose. Unfortunately, Zionism seems to have the support of the political right in western countries, which is why it *appears* that Muslims oppose the west. We do not. We oppose the occupation being carried out by Israel, in the same say that we oppose any injustice caused by anybody, including other Muslims.

      Another titbit that you won't hear mentioned in school: No real Muslim supports the governments of Saudi Arabia or the other monarchical crackpots currently referred to as "the leaders of the Muslim world". These tinpot dictators were put in power at the end of WWI by the allied powers to secure their interests over middle eastern assets such as the Suez Canal and this new stuff called "oil". This policy of putting puppet regimes is so commonplace I don't understand how people can think that fucktards like the king of Saudi Arabia even remotely represent the attitudes and beliefs of Muslims when they have such an incestuous relationship with with the western neo-nobles like the Bush family.

      Holy crap, I really intended for that to be a short post.

      --
      I hate printers.
    28. Re:Well by Brian+Stretch · · Score: 4, Informative

      And the Armenian Genocide. Of course, that was the Religion of Peace exterminating Christians so don't expect the government education monopoly to mention it.

      And it predates the Holocaust. Actually, Hitler likely viewed it as a successful proof-of-concept.

    29. Re:Well by IPFreely · · Score: 5, Insightful
      How many US schools teach the full history of the US army genocide of native american indians? Do they talk about how the cavilry would ride in to an indian village and shoot anyone they saw, women and children preferably? Burn whole villages? Slaughtering whole nations? Round up the rest and put them in concentration camps (called reservations)?

      The history has been toned down A LOT in most US schools, to the extent that if it is mentioned at all, it's just Custer's last stand.

      Unfortunately, it appears that a lot of americans are uncomfortable with the idea that America has just as bad a history as all those evil-doers out there. And because of that discomfort, the subject is dropped or sevearly watered down.

      The cut has already been made. The only question is was this appeasement or terrorism?

      --
      There is nothing so silly as other peoples traditions, and nothing so sacred as our own.
    30. Re:Well by Rycross · · Score: 5, Interesting

      At the risk of sounding cold, but couldn't it simply be because we are not as closely tied to those parts of Africa and Asia as we are to the rest of Europe? It could just be because its not as culturally relevant to us. It *should* be, but I'm hesitant to whip out the race card at the drop of a hat.

    31. Re:Well by pianophile · · Score: 2, Informative

      Actually, Hitler likely viewed it as a successful proof-of-concept.

      Indeed, apparently he did.

      --

      'Your brain is God.' -- Dr. Timothy Leary
    32. Re:Well by Reziac · · Score: 3, Informative

      I learned my Indian history from an old Indian (born in the late 1800s), who was a noted tribal leader and historian. He contended that the majority of Indian deaths were due not to slaughter by whites, but rather, to tribes practicing genocide on one another:

      The Iroquois were slavers, and had a policy of killing anyone they regarded as surplus. Most of what we think of as "plains Indians" were originally refugees from Iroquois slaughter, dating from shortly before whites made a significant push past the Appalachians. My friend's grandmother (born about 1810) told him tales about the westward migration and its causes, as told to her by *her* grandmother, who was one of the refugees who fled the Iroquois.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    33. Re:Well by Adambomb · · Score: 2, Interesting

      This is something that infuriated my history professor no end when I was taking AP US history back in highschool. I spent my junior and senior year in an american highschool after spending most of my previous schooling here in Canada.

      I was amazed at how such subjects as the Trail of Tears involving the Cherokee and the treatment of apache and sioux nations were barely mentioned, if at all. Subjects such as manifest destiny would come up, but when attempting to discuss such things as the "54 40 or fight" issue or the border conflicts in northern maine, or the burning of a portion of the soon to be whitehouse, our teacher would get frustrated with the fact that they were even brought up.

      Such things were never involved in the testing or assignments, which would obviously mean such details would not imprint as forcefully in our minds, and thus is not truely taught.

      I found this especially sad and alarming, but wrote most of it off to the fact that our history teacher was a mccarthyist freakjob, but it sounds a lot more standard that i would have liked to think.

      --
      Ice Cream has no bones.
    34. Re:Well by neomunk · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Look, now you've gone so far as to get a registered to Democrat tell you to get of your big D high horse.

      "Off the table" Pelosi and the rest of her DLC following Dempublicans are playing political patty-cake while this travesty of a revenge act against the completely wrong party goes on full swing. The big media-hogging "mainstream" (*snicker*) Democrats are doing they're best to do nothing as furiously and noisily as possible to end this... End this what? War? No. Police Action? Maybe. Disarmament? Heh. Regime Change? Oops, that didn't work out so well... Well, whatever the hell it is, it's failed (by any sane measure) and the Pelosi crew are to busy milking it politically to stop it.

      If you really want to support democratic ideals, you're going to have to look a bit deeper into the party to find them. Kucinich is probably the most well known example.

      Oh, and here is how mainstream Pelosi is in her thought process...
      http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/10562904/

      Off the table.

    35. Re:Well by Vicissidude · · Score: 3, Interesting

      It is interesting that Europeans also attempted colonizing Africa, Australia, and Asia. Outside of the Americas, they were really only successful in Australia. The native populations of every place was able to fight back except for the Americas and Australia. There is a reason for that.

      The fact is that most of the Indian deaths were from disease and infection. There were a whole host of diseases brought from Europe with which the native Americans had no resistance due to geographic isolation. Without a land connection to tropical locations in Africa and Asia where disease breeds even today, those diseases were unable to travel to locations in Australia and especially the Americas. Prior to the arrival of the Europeans, the Americas was a relatively disease-free paradise. However, the native Americans ended up paying once the Europeans did arrive.

      Every single European expedition that went through resulted in mass deaths of natives in that area. That's why when British colonists landed in North America there were large areas already cleared and ready for farming. The native people had recently lived there, but had died from mass disease.

      And before anyone thinks the Europeans did this on purpose, let me remind everyone that germ theory came about hundreds of years later. The Europeans certainly did not know that merely coming in contact with the native Americans would end in mass death.

    36. Re:Well by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Now, I'd agree there's some asymmetry in the use of "radical Christian" vs. "radical Muslim"

      The term "radical" means that you and your group are in the practice of killing people who don't follow your beliefs. The only "radical Christians" that I can think of are abortion-doctor murders. There hasn't been a whole lot of this; they target individuals; and they don't target random people in the general public. OTOH, radical Muslims murder about 50,000 people a year and are actively pursuing nuclear weapons. Radical Christians are common criminals, whereas radical Muslims are a significant threat to civilization.

      I'd say there's quite an asymmetry the dangers these groups present.

    37. Re:Well by PixelScuba · · Score: 2, Informative

      If there be found among you, within any of thy gates which the LORD thy God giveth thee, man or woman, that hath wrought wickedness in the sight of the LORD thy God, in transgressing his covenant, And hath gone and served other gods, and worshipped them, either the sun, or moon, or any of the host of heaven, which I have not commanded; ... Then shalt thou bring forth that man or that woman, which have committed that wicked thing, unto thy gates, even that man or that woman, and shalt stone them with stones, till they die. -- Deuteronomy, Chapter 17:2-3,5
      I certainly don't think your comment should be hidden, and it provides a great comment. However, it's not like the Christian Bible is any better. Here, anyone who believes in anyone but god is to be stoned to death.
    38. Re:Well by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The term "radical" means that you and your group are in the practice of killing people who don't follow your beliefs.

      A man is upset by something a powerful government is doing. Eventually he feels so strongly about the politics and international ramifications of it, that he straps a bomb to himself and walks into a crowd of the people he feels is responsible.

      Now, would you call that man a "radical christian?" Would you call him a "radical muslim?" Does the person's religion have a lot bearing on the matter if the politics are not directly related to religion, only to ethical/moral beliefs and political opinions?

      The important point I think is that in the US if the person happened to be muslim, would be branded a "radical muslim" whereas if they happened to be a christian they would not be branded a "radical christian" in the media. I'm sure the opposite holds true, to some degree, in areas where christians are a minority and muslims or jews a majority. It isn't that a person is more likely to be violent in expressing their beliefs because they are of a given religion. Just look at the numbers.

      The only "radical Christians" that I can think of are abortion-doctor murders.

      The KKK calls themselves a Christian organization. The fundamentalists running the US government who ordered the bombing of Iraq and who have killed a lot more innocent women and children than Iraqi retaliation, also call themselves christians. Why are you not apply the "radical christian" label to them? Most of the people in Iraq who blow themselves up aren't doing it because they hate christianity. They're doing it because they hate the fact that their country has been occupied by a foreign army who has killed a great many of their friends and family and looted their country for resources, selling all the local industry to foreign investors and emptying the national treasury, while building dozens of permanent military bases. If roles were reversed, they'd probably be watching news about how some radical christians were murdering their troops stationed in the northern US, because I'd be shooting the invaders. And ignorant people would assume, based upon that reporting, it is because I'm one of those radical christians (even though I'm more of an agnostic/zen buddhist in reality).

    39. Re:Well by meringuoid · · Score: 2, Insightful
      And before anyone thinks the Europeans did this on purpose, let me remind everyone that germ theory came about hundreds of years later. The Europeans certainly did not know that merely coming in contact with the native Americans would end in mass death.

      We caught on pretty damn quick, though. Hey, guys, let's end this war. Here, have some blankets as a peace offering. No, no, we didn't get them from a smallpox hospital...

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
  3. urgh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    Disgusting if true, but the Daily Mail is the UK's equivalent of Fox News...

    1. Re:urgh by ronadams · · Score: 5, Informative
      --
      Appended to the end of comments you post. 120 chars.
    2. Re:urgh by aslate · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I believe when i last saw this pop up it was a single school somewhere, and i believe it was a single Muslim school.

      I came out of education a few years ago and we got plenty of education about the Holocaust, GCSE level History was two years mostly spent on the German history between WWI and WWII. Infact, i remember hearing that the German ambassador (or somesuch) was unhappy about how much our history lessons centred on this.

      I clicked the link and laughed as soon as i saw the URL: http://www.dailymail.co.uk./ They make no references to the number of schools or anything else.

    3. Re:urgh by iainl · · Score: 5, Informative
      Thanks for the link, which rather proves the point. Unlike the Daily Hate, the Guardian story shows that the real news here is that the Government's Department for Education and Skills have found that teachers have been avoiding this particular optional component of the History Curriculum, on account of it being challenging when you've got children arguing with it.

      So it's being made compulsory:

      A DfES spokesman said: "It's up to schools to make a judgment on non-compulsory parts of the national curriculum. It is a broad framework and there is scope for schools to make their own decisions."

      Teaching of the Holocaust is expected to become compulsory under the new national curriculum from next year.
      --
      "I Know You Are But What Am I?"
  4. Old news. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful


    We already have schools ignoring real science to avoid offending radical Christians.

    1. Re:Old news. by dasimms · · Score: 2, Insightful

      True. And now when I argue with ID'ers/Creationists, I can no longer use the good old "you don't see people clamoring to hear both sides of the Holocaust". Drat!

    2. Re:Old news. by goldspider · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I don't think presenting creationism as an alternative theory to evolution is morally equivalent to denying the well-documented extermination of 6 million people.

      Not saying creationism is valid science by any stretch, but the ethcical comparison simply does not exist.

      --
      "Ask not what your country can do for you." --John F. Kennedy
    3. Re:Old news. by ednopantz · · Score: 3, Informative

      Voters let Christian Right move against evolution because they didn't know what they stood for. The same voters threw the creationists out in the next election.

  5. Accomodating religion by MECC · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why does accommodating religion nearly always harm society?

    --
    "We are all geniuses when we dream"
    - E.M. Cioran
    1. Re:Accomodating religion by grub · · Score: 2, Insightful


      Why does accommodating religion nearly always harm society?

      Because most (all?) religions are intransigent in their core beliefs, even in the face of overwhelming contradictory evidence. Society pays the price for bending over backwards to appease fairy tales.

      --
      Trolling is a art,
    2. Re:Accomodating religion by UncleTogie · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Why does accommodating religious fanatics nearly always harm society?
      Fixed with a reminder: Allowing someone to practice their beliefs is good. Insisting everyone switch to yours is not.
      --
      Don't tell me to get a life. I'm a gamer; I have LOTS of lives!
    3. Re:Accomodating religion by tenchiken · · Score: 3, Informative

      Sorry. You are very much wrong. Hitler was raised a Catholic, but expressed nothing but contempt for Christianity later in life. (Strangly enough, he once mentioned that it would be better for Germany if they had Muslim faith, as it was more appropriate for their race). Hitler in fact ordered both the disolution of the party that represented the Catholic faith in Germany (the Centre party) as well as the persecution of the protestant Church. Hitler attacked the basic premise of Christianity - grace and charity to the down trodden - as being essentially week. In this way he very much parroted Nietzsche's arguments against Christianity.

      With one exception, none of the other leaders of Germany at the time said anything about Christian belief. They used the language in speeches now and then, but they overwhelmingly fell into one of three categories: A cult-ish series of beliefs around the divinity of nature (strangely not all that different from more modern new age beliefs), or "German Christian" basically Christianity with Christ replaced with German figures including Hitler himself or in science and in particular, Social Darwinism.

    4. Re:Accomodating religion by tenchiken · · Score: 3, Informative


      The Party, as such, stands for positive Christianity, but does not commit itself to any particular denomination


      You are aware that "Positive Christianity" was a code word for German Christian yes? And you do know what exactly the German Christians believed yes? If the answers to either of those questions was no, you need to go do some more homework. If the answers to the two questions were yes, you clearly have no interest in factual discussion just a misguided sense of personal hatred and vitriol that apparently supersedes your knowledge of Historical fact.

      And again, your post fails to address some points that were raised. Namely that Hitler forced the Church to allow him to directly appoint bishops, ended the political party that was affiliated with the church, tried to destroy the confessing church, and threw in jail the leadership of both the catholic and the protest church. Moreover they forced as many churches as possible into the German Church movement (which created the confessing church in the first place), forced a pact onto Rome, etc.

      You can dig up a single speech, and completely miss the context of it to make your point. I can dig up a lifetime of animosity towards the Church, Hitler putting to death it's leaders, and his statement that he would destroy the Protestent Church because it would not support him.

      For anyone else interested in honest research:
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Positive_Christianity
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazi_Mysticism

      Private statements

      Hitler's private statements are more mixed. There are negative statements about Christianity reported by Hitler's intimates, Goebbels, Speer, and Bormann.[10] Joseph Goebbels, for example, notes in a diary entry in 1939: "The Führer is deeply religious, but deeply anti-Christian. He regards Christianity as a symptom of decay." Albert Speer reports a similar statement: "You see, it's been our misfortune to have the wrong religion. Why didn't we have the religion of the Japanese, who regard sacrifice for the Fatherland as the highest good? The Mohammedan religion too would have been much more compatible to us than Christianity. Why did it have to be Christianity with its meekness and flabbiness?"[11] In the Hossbach Memorandum Hitler is recorded as saying that "only the disintegrating effect of Christianity, and the symptoms of age" were responsible for the demise of the Roman empire.[12]

  6. Why is this a problem? by Hognoxious · · Score: 4, Insightful

    some teachers are reluctant to teach history lessons on the Holocaust for fear of offending Muslim students whose beliefs include Holocaust denial.
    Britian has several airports from where it is possible to book [one way] flights to countries where these students might find their surroundings more in harmony with their delusions.
    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    1. Re:Why is this a problem? by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Sounds good to me. In fact, let's amend that

      X: love it or leave it, for any nation X.

  7. You have *got* to be sh!tt!ng me. by TripMaster+Monkey · · Score: 4, Insightful

    And I thought American schools were bad for "teaching the controversy" of Intelligent Design.

    What happened to "lest we forget"???

    You know, there's verifiable evidence of the Holocaust. Photos. Movies. Graveyards. Camps. Survivors.

    This is a dark day for the human race.

    --
    ____

    ~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey

    1. Re:You have *got* to be sh!tt!ng me. by barzok · · Score: 2, Informative

      You know, there's verifiable evidence of the Holocaust. Photos. Movies. Graveyards. Camps. Survivors.
      There's verifiable evidence of the moon landings too. Doesn't stop people from claiming that's a hoax.
  8. The source.... by ben0207 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ...is the Daily Mail. The most hate-filled right-wing rag we have here (it's referred to locally as the Daily Hatemail).

    This is the sort of "journalism*" wiling to blame paedophilia for rising house prices, and frankly I would never believe a single thing they say, nor anything their readers say unless it was backed up by at least 3 independent sources.

    And even then, I'd still take it with a metric ton of salt

    *Any good editor would call it an opinion piece, and any good editor would bin it and sack the writer responsible.

    --
    cmd-q.co.uk - some sort of stupid fucking internet bullshit
    1. Re:The source.... by ControversialMatt · · Score: 2, Insightful

      http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/education/6517359.stm BBC Article on the same topic, on the same date. Good call there skippy.

  9. So what about the Jewish people? by svendsen · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So we don't want to talk about the killing for 6 million (mainly Jews but of course we have gypsies, POWs, political prisoners, etc) because we will offend some radical Muslims. So by NOT talking about it we have offended the Jewish people, the Jewish faith, and anyone who thinks not talking about the mass murder is a bad idea.

    I am sure I can see the reasoning though (being serious now): If we piss of the Jews they will complain vs. if we piss off the Muslims the radicals will riot, burn things, etc.

    The day we stop discussing facts/history because somebody may be offended is the day we are all screwed.

    1. Re:So what about the Jewish people? by Lehk228 · · Score: 2, Informative

      it was 6 million Jews and 5-6 million non-Jews.(I don't have the ethnic breakdown jfgi if you want)

      so, despite being a small minority in europe they made up over half those killed in Hitler's death camps.

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    2. Re:So what about the Jewish people? by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You know why they don't get complaints from Jews? Because in the past century, the Jewish population of Europe (including England) shrank by an order of magnitude. You know why? Anti-Semitism and the Holocaust.

      They don't get complaints from Jews because there are barely any Jews left there to complain!

  10. Revisionism by Ngarrang · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Those who do not learn from history are doomed to repeat it. But, they must first be taught that history.

    --
    Bearded Dragon
  11. LOOK AT THE DATE OF THE ARTICLE by ronanbear · · Score: 5, Informative

    It was an April Fool's joke. And it was done in bad taste (what do you expect from the Mail).

    It's a pretty notorious one. Cmon editors.

    --
    the more they over-think the plumbing the easier it is to stop up the pipe
    1. Re:LOOK AT THE DATE OF THE ARTICLE by TripMaster+Monkey · · Score: 2, Informative

      ronanbear, I'm not seeing any corroboration that this was an April Fool's joke.

      If you have evidence of this, could you please share it with the class?

      --
      ____

      ~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey

    2. Re:LOOK AT THE DATE OF THE ARTICLE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative
  12. Nothing to see here... by spungo · · Score: 2, Insightful

    TFA comes from the Daily Mail -- anyone who's from (or has been to) the UK will know what a filthy right-wing propagandist rag this so-called newspaper is. No over-hyped alarmist knee-jerk fabrication is too low for these people and their neo-nazi readership.

  13. Re:Deny everything by ArchdukeChocula · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Corollary to Godwin's Law: As political correctness increases the chances of ignoring the holocaust approach one.

  14. Not true, according to the government by BabyDave · · Score: 5, Informative

    Not true. The example given is that allegedly one school didn't choose it as GCSE (Key Stage 4 - 14-16 year olds) coursework, for that reason. However it's still compulsory to teach the Holocaust in Key Stage 3 (11-14 year olds).

    1. Re:Not true, according to the government by noldrin · · Score: 3, Informative
      yup, this story has been long discredited by snopes

      http://www.snopes.com/politics/religion/holocaust. asp

  15. Re:teach both.. by tenchiken · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Sorry. History occurred one way. It's not a relative thing. You can argue the ifs and why, but at some point you have to look at the pure documented evidence and make a judgment. The mountain of evidence on the Holocaust can't not be washed away just because people think that people ought to decide for themselves if something occured or didn't. It did occur, and any belief otherwise can not be justified by the facts.

  16. Questions you shouldn't have to ask. by Control+Group · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I honestly don't know which is worse; teaching "Intelligent Design" as science, or ignoring the Holocaust as history.

    On the one hand, you're denying the validity of the very scientific method itself, which can't possibly be a benefit to the future of your society. On the other, though, you're denying the atrocities societies are capable of, even in our "enlightened" era. If you don't know it happened and don't know it can happen, that has to make it more likely for it to happen again.

    I suppose, upon further review, that if I had to choose, I'd rather skip the Holocaust than teach ID. The Holocaust could probably be replaced with the Khmer Rouge, Stalin's purges, and Darfur to accomplish the same goals of warning. You lose a bit of connection, since all those examples are "somewhere else" in a way that Germany in the early 20th century isn't, but they're still perfectly good examples of what can happen.

    Moreover, ID is certainly more widespread in this country than Holocaust denial is in the UK, so it's certainly a more immediate threat.

    Still and all, the fact that I even have to think about this is ridiculous.

    --

    Reality has a conservative bias: it conserves mass, energy, momentum...
    1. Re:Questions you shouldn't have to ask. by ronadams · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I would like you to do something for me: find a Holocaust survivor, look into their aging eyes, full of more painful, horrific memories than you can ever imagine, and tell them that you believe the propagation of evolution and arguing of scientifically unprovable points is more important than countering the blatant lies of anyone that would deny the Holocaust.

      --
      Appended to the end of comments you post. 120 chars.
    2. Re:Questions you shouldn't have to ask. by t0rkm3 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I disagree. ID can be easily disproven and life goes on. The people that will embrace ID and completely disregard scientific method and evidence wouldn't necessarily be involved in the professions that would be responsible for the design and/or manufacture of a product.

      However, the consequences of infringing on one's liberty can and should be taught and reinforced whenever possible, to enable acceptable mores and a healthy paranoia toward an overreaching gov't.

  17. Don't change history for convenience by Psmylie · · Score: 3, Insightful
    You shouldn't change what you teach because someone may be offended. You should only change it if it is wrong. I'm all for historical accuracy. Get the facts right, make sure you can prove it if challenged, and teach to that. If someone gets offended by that... well, they're idiots. Let them be angry, rant and rave. If they want to pull their kids out of class, then fine.

    That said, I am always amazed when I watch the History channel and see how much was left out of or glossed over in the US history textbooks, especially regarding the Revolution. I'm sure that its to give kids the idea that America is great, noble, etc. etc. but I don't think that ignoring our own history (especially the mistakes we've made) does anyone any good.

    --

    psmylie's dictionary: Godzillion (noun) Any number large enough to destroy Tokyo

  18. LIes, damned lies and the Daily Mail by Oxygen99 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I read something insightful on Slashdot recently that suggested whenever you read something so inflammatory that you just have to comment, then you're only hearing half the story. When you click the link in the summary, please bear in mind that the Daily Mail, or The Daily Heil as its often referred to, is the most rabid of Britain's unpleasant right wing press with a history of making up and exaggerating facts in order to appease the xenophobic, homophobic, narrow-minded, bigoted, evil little people that make up their core audience.

    Plus the story is dated the 2nd of April so I'm not sure what the submitter was trying to achieve other than to provoke the flamefest that will inevitably ensue.

    --
    I had a dream, bright and carefree, but now there's doubt and gravity
  19. Re:Deny everything by Himring · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The single, best argument to the contrary I have ever heard is that not one defendant at the Nuremburg trials stated, in defense, that the holocaust never happened....

    --
    "All great things are simple & expressed in a single word: freedom, justice, honor, duty, mercy, hope." --Churchill
  20. The importance of the memory by andreabondi · · Score: 2, Informative

    I've recently been in Mauthausen , for an international meeting. The worst thing have been to see the castle of Harteim (where nazism made his experiments for the "selection of the specie") restructured as a Disney's castle. Nothing of what who lived and died there have seen has been maintained.

    We can't forget what happened and the cruelty human can express. We must remember and study the story not to hate but to see what hate can do.

  21. Re:Denying holocaust? by zappepcs · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Holocaust denial is generally an antisemitic point of view. The Muslims, Jews, and Christians all believe in the same deity... apparently, but that doesn't stop them from hating one another. Other famous holocaust deniers are good friends of the KKK.

    It is AFAIK a religious belief. There are many arguments for or against it, but the simple fact that it happened is the strongest argument for it. There is no reason to believe that it wouldn't happen. Genocide is one of humankind's hobbies... if you will. There was Pol Pot, Husein, Chechin?, and other examples like what the Europeans in general did to the new world. The Japanese have their history, as do many other countries on this planet. There are several really good examples in the South American continent.

    In fact, I think if you read the book, the Jews may have been promises the 'promised land' but they committed genocide in the process of claiming it.

    Not to get on a rant, but genocide does seem to be rather common. There is no reason to think that the Germans weren't trying a bit of it on their own.

  22. Re:teach both.. by Timesprout · · Score: 2, Insightful

    History occurred one way. It's not a relative thing. You can argue the ifs and why, but at some point you have to look at the pure documented evidence
    You are overlooking the fact that history is not actually awash with verifably pure documented evidence, said documentation was written by the victor and often 'altered' to suit later generations. A lot of history is open to interpretation and best guess scenarios.
    --
    Do not try to read the dupe, thats impossible. Instead, only try to realize the truth
    What truth?
    There is no dupe
  23. Re:Politically correct garbage by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 2, Funny

    The correct spelling is Ahmedinutjob.

  24. Scaremongering by CmdrGravy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    From the looks of it they are really talking about 1 school, out of the thousands in the UK that has decided not to teach, what are, optional subjects. From next year teaching the holocaust will apparently become compulsory. I wasn't taught about the crusades at school either but I don't think that had anything to do with offending the 2 muslims in the class and was more about their being other things to teach.

    I wasn't aware that holocaust denial was a part of the Muslim religion, especially since their holy books etc were written long before it actually happened and I'm not sure exactly what teaching about the Crusades goes on inside mosques but if this teaching is correct then teaching it in schools as well will just re-enforce the lessons and lead to better exam grades for Muslims.

  25. Not True by pinkocommie · · Score: 2, Insightful

    There is no such 'belief' about holocaust denial in Islam. I grew up as a muslim (Don't believe in religion per se at the moment) but the holocaust denial is a reaction to Israel and the resulting growing anti semitism in the muslim world. Linking it with the faith is a tad unfair

  26. Religion and Education by Psx29 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I'm not sure which is worse, having evangelical Christians in the United States trying to discredit evolution as a valid scientific theory, or denying the holocaust because it will offend certain Muslims. The purpose of public school teachers should be to teach the facts to the best of their ability, it should not be about bending and twisting historical events, or science. If a child's parents do not want their child to learn about these things then send them to a private school(and no I don't believe in government backed school vouchers, I don't want _my_ tax dollars to fund your fundamentalists). It's time for public school educators to stop shirking their responsibility of teaching and start trying to break down the ignorance and dogma that has filled some of these students heads.

    1. Re:Religion and Education by Glothar · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Let's be fair about this. I haven't met a science teacher who actually believed in ID-anti-science. I guess I assume they have to exist. Similarly, I haven't met any history teacher who actually doubts the Holocaust occurred. That said, I do know of schools where Evolution is not taught (neither is ID) and where the Holocaust is mentioned but not really focussed on.

      In neither case is it the teacher who made that decision. I know of science teachers who hate ID, but cannot teach Evolution because if they do, their children's Right-Wing-Nutjob parents will complain to the school board and have the teacher fired. That is the source of the problem. The ignorance and dogma comes from parents. Don't blame the teachers for doing what administrators and school boards order them to do. Do you honestly expect them to stick their necks out when they are being paid crap wages already? Do you have any idea what happens when a teacher gets fired for something like this? There are two options: Go back to school and get a new career or move to a school so crappy that they are willing to explain to the parents why they hired a teacher who was fired. No one cares that they were fired for having principles and fighting a war that you should have been fighting for them.

      If you want to fix this problem, don't blame teachers. They're already on your side. Blame yourself. What have you done to stop the nutjob parents of the other children from robbing your child of the good education the teacher wants to give them?

  27. This is Bullshit by shma · · Score: 4, Informative

    Not only is this 'story' over a month old, but it is 95% bullshit. Snopes, though, has you covered.

    Quoting: 'There are no plans to stop teaching the Holocaust. Indeed, the education department's plan seems to be ensuring that it is taught everywhere. A spokesman for the Department of Education and Skills (DES) maintained that "The Adjegbo report on citizenship [a different report authored by Sir Keith Adjegbo and released in January 2007] said key British historical events must be taught" and that while "the national curriculum is a broad framework and there is scope for schools to make their own decisions, teaching elements including the Holocaust and key British events will be compulsory."'

    --
    I came here for a good argument
  28. That Is Pathetic. by saudadelinux · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Did their clue bag get cut? Are they friends with Mahmoud Ahmadinejad or David Duke or something? By avoiding teaching about one of the worst examples of intolerance and hatred in human history, they contribute to the problem. And let's face it, there are a lot of reports of Muslims in the UK becoming increasingly radicalized, because they are learning hatred and distorted history in the mosques. The Brits are cutting their own throats.

    --
    I didn't think the house band in Hell would play this badly.
    1. Re:That Is Pathetic. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      And let's face it, there are a lot of reports of Muslims in the UK becoming increasingly radicalized, because they are learning hatred and distorted history in the mosques. The Brits are cutting their own throats

      Or at least thay would be if it were true.

      Here's a hint for you left-ponders -- the Daily Mail is the UK
      equivalent of Fox: a racist rag which will print anything which puts
      muslims, women, gays, trades-unionists or the working class in a
      bad light. Check snopes before posting a story from them.

    2. Re:That Is Pathetic. by homey+of+my+owney · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Not sure why this was submitted anonymously. It certainly is right on the money though. Of course the troubling part is, that even one school would choose to drop the lesson.

    3. Re:That Is Pathetic. by ATMosby · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Good to see that that ever effective plan of appeasement is still in use by the UK folks.

    4. Re:That Is Pathetic. by K'Lyre · · Score: 5, Funny

      I still think there should be a Godwin's Law counterpart for invoking the name of Fox News.

      I call it K`Lyre's Law.

    5. Re:That Is Pathetic. by ATMD · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Who modded this flamebait?

      This deserves +5 informative - I read the summary, became briefly angry, and then thought, "wait - I bet that link is to the Daily Mail". A quick mouseover later and I am smiling a wry smile.

      The Daily Mail will blow any story out of proportion, and put the most sensationalist spin on it possible, because it knows that if a story makes someone angry, they're more likely to buy the paper to find out more about it.

      For the record, if I thought the story was true then I would be just as angry as any other reasonable-minded person. But because of its source, I'm strongly inclined to disbelieve it's anywhere near as bad as the summary makes it out to be. Also, I'm not going to RTFA as I don't want to give the bigots advertising revenue.

      --
      Nobody else has this sig.
    6. Re:That Is Pathetic. by looseSpark · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If you did read the article you would have seen that half of it was quoting the government report.

      (SARCASM ALERT!)

      They could, of course, have completely made up a fake government report.

    7. Re:That Is Pathetic. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Snopes says that it is true that one history department in northern UK did stop teaching it for that exact reason.

    8. Re:That Is Pathetic. by Dogtanian · · Score: 4, Informative

      They could, of course, have completely made up a fake government report. Or they could have quoted selectively from it to make a better story, like they do with quotes and facts in general.

      I wouldn't dismiss this issue altogether simply because it came from the Daily Mail; if their slant on it could be taken at face value I would consider it cause for serious concern. Unfortunately, the Mail in itself is not trustworthy; I prefer to read these things via a less potentially biased source before passing judgement.
      --
      "Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
    9. Re:That Is Pathetic. by jedidiah · · Score: 2, Informative

      You see there was a bit of a spat a few years ago. It involved rocket bombardments of British towns, a little invasion in France, some tank battles in Egypt and some really nasty carpet bombing of German cities. Perhaps you heard of it?

      I have relatives that have seen those camps firsthand.

      So yes I would expect schools in my country (who participated in the spat) to be aware of this not trivial aspect of the whole conflict.

      I would expect to hear about Stalin's escapades for similar reasons.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    10. Re:That Is Pathetic. by ravenshrike · · Score: 2, Informative
      That's because the study the article was referencing didn't give out that info dipshit. RTFA

      The study, funded by the Department for Education and Skills, looked into 'emotive and controversial' history teaching in primary and secondary schools.

      It found some teachers are dropping courses covering the Holocaust at the earliest opportunity over fears Muslim pupils might express anti-Semitic and anti-Israel reactions in class.

      The researchers gave the example of a secondary school in an unnamed northern city, which dropped the Holocaust as a subject for GCSE coursework.
    11. Re:That Is Pathetic. by Kwami · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'd say it's more of an issue than you seem to believe. This winter, the leader of a mosque was arrested for preaching that all Muslims serving in the British military should be killed because they were traitors. It's not a non-issue, though it probably isn't anything worth getting worried over either.

    12. Re:That Is Pathetic. by MightyMartian · · Score: 4, Insightful

      A helluva lot of people died during the Second World War. What sets the Holocaust is that it wasn't casualties, it was a government machine of murder. The Jews weren't unlucky people who got in the way of bombs, or who starved because they were forced off their lands due to invading forces. They weren't victims of the fog of war. They were the victims of a systematic and bureaucratic engine of mass-murder of the like not really seen before. The Nazis set up a government bureaucracy responsible for seizing property, imprisoning and taking Jews to what can only be described as factories of death. That's what makes the Holocaust the most chilling aspect of the war.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    13. Re:That Is Pathetic. by colonslashslash · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Exactly the same here. I was about to post a reply to the parent, then saw you had already done the exact thing I was about to do...

      It's the Daily Mail effect. If you see a horribly twisted and obviously sensationalistic story in the UK about any person or group of people that are not white, British and middle-class, chances are good that shower of utterly shameless bastards are the ones pimping it out. Although it's a bit of an apples and oranges comparison to line them up next to Fox News in the US, they are probably even worse.

      --
      She's built like a steak house, but she handles like a bistro....
    14. Re:That Is Pathetic. by KwKSilver · · Score: 3, Informative

      And one of the Nazi's greatest assistants and cheerleaders was the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, see here. The French, Yugoslavs, and, I think ,the Soviets wanted to try him for war crimes at Nuremburg. The Brits had a tizzy and refused, threatening to withdraw from the Nuremburg trials altogether.

      --
      If you want your life to be different, live it differently.
  29. Fear of Islam by TheSciBoy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is one of the reasons why I changed my mind on the Danish cartoons that enraged the muslim world so much.

    Fear cannot be allowed to dictate what we say or teach.

    If you say what you think and someone threatens your life for saying it, they have broken the law in most civilized countries. Send them to jail.

    In this case it's not even a matter of belief. It's a matter of fact. The Holocaust happened and denying it is in itself illegal in some countries. Rewriting history is a very serious thing, even though it's being done on a daily basis. History is there for us to learn from so we do not repeat it. We better learn our lessons or we're bound to make the same mistakes over and over.

    --
    Badgers, we don't need no stinking badgers! - UHF
    1. Re:Fear of Islam by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "If you say what you think and someone threatens your life for saying it, they have broken the law in most civilized countries."

      Name 1 (ONE) muslim country where this exists about islam. There is none. In most muslim countries it is punishable by death. Examples of countries where criticism of islam is punishable with death :
      -> Saudi Arabia
      -> Pakistan
      -> Iran
      -> Afghanistan (even now)
      -> Tunisia
      -> Libya
      -> ...

      Renouncing islam is also punishable by death in most of these countries.

    2. Re:Fear of Islam by Vicissidude · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The whole Danish cartoon reaction in the US didn't appear as fear of reprisal. Maybe some of it was, but certainly not all of it. The lack of printing appeared as a capitulation to diversity. If the press was afraid of anything, it wasn't that Muslims would attack, but that the press would look bad by appearing intolerant.

      Nevermind the fact that the press couldn't accurately and objectively tell the Danish cartoon story without showing the cartoons. No reader or viewer had any idea what the problem was about without viewing the materials themselves. In today's day and age, accurately and objectively telling the news is a secondary objective for news stations. Their primary goals are diversity and inclusiveness in order to keep their viewers and advertisers happy and the money rolling in.

  30. It's the Daily Mail by Peregr1n · · Score: 5, Informative

    I'm British. I'm guessing most of the readers here are not. PLEASE don't assume that the Daily Mail is representative of, or in touch with, any part of British culture. They are a populist tabloid who don't shy from publishing any old headline-grabbing bollocks without the slightest grain of truth. It was the Daily Mail, as I recall, who published a list of paedophiles, most of whom turned out to be paedotricians. Without even checking the source, I can reliably recommend that the Slashdot editors pull this story; there won't be an ounce of truth in it. Believe me, if there was, it would be all over the mainstream press, not just one particular tabloid.

  31. Re:UK Schools?!!? by shotgunsaint · · Score: 5, Funny

    If there were no schools in the UK, Roger Waters would have written every song about his mother.

    --
    The future isn't here until I can type "car keys" into Google and have it say "You left them in your pants last night."
  32. Reality vs opinion by jmorris42 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    > ...it's their right to believe what they choose.

    No. Everyone is entitled to their own beliefs, not their own reality. You get to to have your own ideas about what facts mean but you don't get your own facts. 2+2=4 no matter how hard you believe otherwise.

    Reality is that which doesn't change no matter how hard you wish it otherwise. The Holocost is objective reality. The fact the whole Middle East was on the Axis side is also objective reality. The fact they LOST WWII is objective reality. And in the end that last fact is the heart of the matter. Because if all three of the facts I just stated are reality their own worldview can't exist, so they collectively went into denial. Because it all comes down to their objection of the Western powers setting up Israel. Here in Reality winning WWII gave the victors the right to remake the defeated enemies territories including, granting Israel to the surviving Jews, splitting up Germany, tearing apart Japanese society and remaking it in our own image, etc.

    The difference is we didn't occupy the Middle East and force their backwards asses into the 20th Century, mostly because before oil was discovered nobody cared enough. That was a mistake, but hindsight is always better than foresight. What is happening now with appeasing the crazies is obviously stupid to anyone outside government and the far left. If we won't stand up and defend the teaching of objective REALITY how is the West supposed to muster the courage to defend it's BELIEFS?

    --
    Democrat delenda est
    1. Re:Reality vs opinion by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Unfortunately it's also "objective reality" that the founder of the muslim religion, the "prophet" muhammad, was a

      -> genocidal murderer
      -> (incestuous) paedophile
      -> thief
      -> plunderer
      -> gave his soldiers orders to rape captive women
      -> a terrorist

      http://www.faithfreedom.org/challenge.htm

  33. The Islamist response by Loundry · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The single, best argument to the contrary I have ever heard is that not one defendant at the Nuremburg trials stated, in defense, that the holocaust never happened....

    The Islamist repsonse to that is to claim that the "Europeans" (Nazis) were actually Zionists who fabricated the Holocaust in order to carve out a homeland for the Jews land that belonged to the ummah. So naturally the defendants at the Nuremburg trials wouldn't have denied such a thing: the Nazis were hard-core Zionists (the worst stripe of Evil(TM)) and went to their grave to defend their Jewish masters.

    Muslim hatred for Jewish people is stronger than that of Klan hatred for Jewish people: the hate is not merely cultural, it's theologically-justified. It's a big problem for those of us who believe in freedom of conscience and tolerance for other people.

    --
    I don't make the rules. I just make fun of them.
  34. Thought Police by cyberkahn · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Nice try at re-writing history.Well, personally I have met two survivors, so I know there is no convincing me that it didn't happen. My next door neighbor being one of them was the sole survivor from her family. When her train arrived at Auschwitz she was separated into the "other line" from her family. Her family went right to the gas chambers. She obviously survived until they were liberated. It's sad, but very true.

    In addition, I also met someone who was expelled from Austria via forced emigration, who in fact had her papers signed by Adolph Eichmann himself.

    To me the Holocaust is more than just the persecution of Jews, although they were the largest number. It is an admonition of what can happen under a police state and that said state determines you are an enemy of it. Not only were Jews killed in the Holocaust, but also gypsies, Slavs, Christian dissenters, disabled, mentally ill, and anyone who was against their ideology.

  35. Daily Mail by Steauengeglase · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Am I the only person who sees this story coming from the Daily Mail as just a little odd, given their support for the Nazis during the pre-WWII era? I tend to take their views with a grain of salt (for example are the schools who decline to teach the Holocaust publicly or privately funded?).

    With all of that said I find the concept of "balanced treatment" in an educational environment revolting. Plurality's sake shouldn't lend itself to falsehoods, lies and distortions and if a fact hurts someone's feeling I'm sorry, but maybe they should just accept that the Earth is round, not flat.

  36. Show some perspective. by IPFreely · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Teaching ID in the US is something on a slightly different level. The article says that the british schools mearly dropped the subject of the holocost, not that they introduced an opposing concept in its place.

    For comparison, there are plenty of equally devistating topics that have never even been included in school curriculums, genocides all over the world, including in the US by the US army. If mearly dropping a topic out of history class is reason for such an uproar, then how much more stuff is out there to cry about because it was never included in the first place? And how long would history class have to be to include it all?

    There is much more to consider than which side you are on concerning this one event.

    --
    There is nothing so silly as other peoples traditions, and nothing so sacred as our own.
  37. Sunshine and ridicule would work wonders by jmorris42 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    > If there's a strong anti-Semitic view in the mosques of England, I suppose there's nothing we can do about that.

    Yes there is. No the government should not pass more useless asshattery like 'hate crimes' laws. No the government should not establish a commission to regulate the contents of religious teachings. Yes the rest of society can and should hold those mosques that teach evil and stupid things up to public inspection and yes even ridicule. They get away with what they do because everyone is afraid to even object, and that is BEFORE the worries that the 'Religion of Peace(tm)' will KILL you for offending their insensibilities. Yes we can and MUST expose the terrorist supporting portion of Islam within Western societies, put protesters outside their door, regular dosings of media exposes and long well researched and 100% factual newpaper and magazine articles, etc.

    The second thing we can do is FORCE them to integrate into our society instead of this politically correct multiculturalism that teaches that anything that isn't Western is superior so we have no right to object, even when leftist loons are forced to defend 7th Century misogeny like honor killings, forced weddings and female genital mutilation. Step one, force imigrants to know the dominate language and customs before granting Citizenship. That gets em out of their media and cultural ghetto.

    --
    Democrat delenda est
    1. Re:Sunshine and ridicule would work wonders by AGMW · · Score: 5, Insightful
      ... if we start exposing religions for being racist, sexist, and overflowing with evil anti-social ideologies, they will all crumble, not just extremist Islam.

      ... and that would be a bad thing because ... ?

      --
      Eclectic beats from Leeds, UK
      handmadehands.co.uk
    2. Re:Sunshine and ridicule would work wonders by Darby · · Score: 4, Insightful


      Should we have protesters outside of christian churches every time there is a sermon on 1 Timothy (it is blatantly sexist)? Should we chant and jeer outside churches that teach the parts of the bible about male genital manipulation (circumcision)?


      Sure, why not?

      Idiotic delusional nonsense is just that regardless of what the particular trivial details that are the only distinctions between these various "absolute truths", so they should be ridiculed mercilessly until people are just too fucking embarrassed to be associated with such idiocy.

      Where's the problem exactly?

    3. Re:Sunshine and ridicule would work wonders by jmorris42 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      > Have news cameras in the mosques every day recording the bad teachings? Have non-muslims attending the mosque sermons

      If that is what it takes. Listen up Citizen, we are in a battle for the survival of our civilization, not just a single nation state. One side is going to win and one lose.. or in the words of Ming the Merciless, "be willing to settle for less." I'm as simplistic as Reagan, "We win, they lose." is the only outcome I plan on accepting.

      > Face it: if we start exposing religions for being racist, sexist, and overflowing with evil anti-social ideologies, they will all crumble, not just extremist Islam.

      Yea, if carried to the extreme. But it wouldn't. Assume we (we being followers of what could broadly be called Western Civilivation) grew a pair and started holding the Religion of Peace(tm) to account for their more dangerous notions. Well it is safe to assume that under the scrutiny there would be a trend to moderate in some while others decided their host country was no longer hospitable and return to somewhere where Sharia prevails. As Islam (at least as taught and practiced in the West) moderated there being less to poke fun at, we would be less motivated to poke fun at em. Eventually a balance would be reached, much like Christian churches and the Enlightenment reached a stable relationship by moderating some of it's more antiquated notions.

      Much like the Spanish Inquisition isn't likely to come knocking anymore, Islam has to give up a few of it's more uncivilized traditions if it is to be permitted to live in civilized lands.

      --
      Democrat delenda est
    4. Re:Sunshine and ridicule would work wonders by Lord+Ender · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If such a religion exist, it sure has never taken hold in the West.

      Personally, I think it would do society good to raise children to value a moral philosophy which has absolutely no connection to magic or superstition. Of course, that that point, it wouldn't be a religion.

      --
      A slashdotter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber.
  38. Actually... by Rachel+Lucid · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Reform Jews have no problem with intermarriage. We just insist you raise the kids Jewish, which isn't that hard of a step (and it doesn't mean they have to end UP Jewish, but raisin' em so ain't asking much).

    1. Re:Actually... by estarriol · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "raisin' em so ain't asking much" Is it not? I think it's asking a great deal. What would you think if your potential spouse insisted that your children be raised as, say, Greek Orthodox? Would you accept? If not, and it's something that would prevent your marriage, how can it not be asking much?

    2. Re:Actually... by wiredlogic · · Score: 4, Insightful

      but raisin' em so ain't asking much
      Indeed. Mutilating infant boys without their consent isn't much at all.

      --
      I am becoming gerund, destroyer of verbs.
    3. Re:Actually... by Rachel+Lucid · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Whole other can of worms, especially since over half of new parents in the United States circumcise their kid ANYWAY.

      And hell, let's forget all about the health benefits and relative (lack of) impact on the kid's life otherwise here...

    4. Re:Actually... by my+$anity++0 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Mutilating? Ok, so it might have been painful, but I can't exactly say I remember it. It can reduce the incidence of many sexually transmitted diseases, perhaps even HIV. And we've been doing it for years upon years. We know how to do it well now.

    5. Re:Actually... by heinousjay · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think it might be this part:

      (and it doesn't mean they have to end UP Jewish, but raisin' em so ain't asking much).

      That's a lot to ask. Forcing children to believe in imaginary bullshit to keep them in line is approximately the most evil thing the human race has to offer. The nice part is that we wrap it up in virtue. Tricksy.

      --
      Slashdot - where whining about luck is the new way to make the world you want.
    6. Re:Actually... by eli+pabst · · Score: 2, Interesting

      1) THERE ARE ABSOLUTELY NO HEALTH BENEFITS TO CIRCUMCISION

      Wrong. There have been a number of studies showing that it can significantly reduce the risk of contracting sexual transmitted diseases, including HIV. The WHO is now recommending it in Africa and projecting that if it was implemented, over 3 million people could avoid dying of AIDS.

      http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/6502855.stm
      http://www.scielosp.org/scielo.php?script=sci_artt ext&pid=S0042-96862004000500023

  39. It's just coherent behaviour by OpenSourced · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Let's be real. The "history" we learn is nothing more than the history we like to learn. That's always been so, and UK teachers just adapt to new circumstances with new pupils that won't like the old history. There are many facts that are either ignored or twisted to fit the needs of the political whim of the moment.

    The Nazis were defeated mainly by the USSR, not by the USA, even if that's not what you learn. The Japanese _were_ defeated by the USA, but the way of doing it, killing and maiming hundreds of thousands of civilians in an atomic inferno is presented as rather the right thing to do, or, at the very least, as a great technical achievement. The holocaust is much remembered, and special laws passed to forbid the denial of the fact, but other much bigger killings go as footnotes in history books. Japanese don't teach about "comfort" women. The paper of England in the slave trade is usually hushed in the classrooms. Spain is indignant when Ben-Laden speaks about it being part of Al-Andalus, because in its history books, it's defined as a re-conquering, even if the people that re-conquered it had nothing to do with the people that lost it in the first place. France prefers not to speak too much about torture in Alger. Israelis will tell you that it's all right if they took the land from Palestinian people after WW2, because it "belonged" to them, somehow. I doubt they would return the land to some previous inhabitants of it, if the situation ever came up.

    And so on. There is not such thing as "objective" history, and those teachers are just recognizing it. After all, we must remember that George Orwell, who came up with the idea of automatic history rewriting, was British.

    --
    Rome taught me patience and assiduous application to detail. Virtues which temper the boldness of great, general views.
  40. Islam vs. Western Civilization by ProteusQ · · Score: 2, Funny

    Imam: And before we detonate the explosives that we carry on our bodies and destroy all of Western Civilization, I ask you: what have they ever offered us? Ahmed: Hot and cold running water? Imam: What? Ahmed: I said, 'Hot and cold running water'. Imam: Oh yeah, yeah there is that. Suicide Bomber: And sanitation! Ibrahim: Oh yes... sanitation, Blessed Imam, you remember how their cities smell compared to this old dump. Imam: All right, I'll grant you that running water and the sanitation are two things that Western Civilization could offer... Sadiq: And the roads... Imam: (sharply) Well yes obviously the roads... the roads go without saying. But apart from the running water, the sanitation and the roads... Another Suicide Bomber: Irrigation... Other Suicide Bombers: Medicine... Education... Health... Imam: Yes... all right... Suicide Bomber Near Front: And the booze... Ahkbar: Oh yes! Good one! Abdul: Yeah. That's something we'd really miss if we destroy Western Civilization, O Blessed Imam. Suicide Bomber at Back: Don't forget soap! Ibrahim: And it would be safe to walk in the streets at night. Abdul: Yes, they certainly want law and order... (general nodding)... let's face it, they're the only ones who do in a world like this. (more general murmurs of agreement) Imam: All right... all right... but apart from booze, hot and cold running water, sanitation and medicine, education, irrigation, roads, soap and the rule of law... what has the Western Civilization to offer us? Ahmed: What about peace? Imam: Oh, peace!... shut up!

  41. Re:Denying holocaust? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    In fact, I think if you read the book, the Jews may have been promises the 'promised land' but they committed genocide in the process of claiming it.

    Really? Could you show us all the extermination camps? Where the victims were tossed into ovens, or babies tossed into the air and impaled upon bayonettes, or the poison gas showers?

    Reading your post, that line came straight out of the arab narrative. They love to claim genocide, holocaust, war crimes, and so forth. In the process, they denigrate those terms, the real victims of those actions, and impede progress at a resolution. This also presumes the objective truth of the arab narrative, which, history has not been kind to. It appears that numerous fictions were invented purely to continue and prolong this conflict. One of those fictions are the `palestinian' people. They were invented in the 1964 time line. Not in 1948.

    What happened in 1948 was the founding of one country and the immediate launching of a war to eradicate said country by angry arabs that didn't get their way. The arabs were given over 80% of the region that was supposed be divided, Jordan or Trans-Jordan was part of what the Balfour declaration had provided as part of the Jewish national homeland. Churchill wanted to provide a place for his hashemite buddies to hole up after being kicked out of the arabian peninsula by the wahabbis, who we know as the `modern' house of Saud. So Churchill sliced off everything west of the Jordan river and created Jordan. The Jews were supposed to live with the rest. All during this time, from 1900 onwards, well, 1880 if you read other histories, the arabs behaved there about the same as they behave today. Killings, bombings, kidnappings, property destruction. You should note that in 1948 a new arab state was proposed, along side of, and slightly larger than Israel. Israelis accepted this. The arabs didn't. The arabs had demanded that arabs in Israel leave right before the 48 war started, this is well documented, and only revisionists for whom this is an inconvenient reality complain otherwise. After Israel was founded and survived, jews in the arab states were expelled forcefully, without possessions, compensation, usually at the point of a gun. A population transfer, not unlike the pakistan india transfer occurred. But the arabs could never accept this. So the UNRWA was formed to perpetuate the crisis (this is what they have done, they have solved nothing). Compare this to *every* other conflict mediated by the UN where the high commissioner for refugees handles this. The other conflicts get settled within about a decade. UNRWA has been perpetuating this conflict for about 6 decades.

    Most of what existed prior to 1967 was a construction entirely of the arabs own making. Jordan annexed the west bank, and no one apart from the UK acknowledged and accepted this. Egypt annexed Gaza. Both Jordan and Egypt avoided all out war, but largely failed to comply with terms of the armistice. In 67, with Pan-Arabist Nassar in charge in Egypt, things were brought to a head again. Straights of Tiran and other cassus belli against Israel. Left it with no choice. After the smoke cleared, Israel had gaza and the west bank.

    Notice how there are no execution camps in this story. None existed in Israel.

    There has not been a genocide against the arabs. The arabs have launched or at least tried to launch genocides against the jews, many times. In Hebron in 1929, every jew who lived there (several thousand, with a multi-thousand year history there) was killed by arab mobs after friday prayers. Now why would that be? There were no "occupied territories"? In 1936-1939 the arabs rioted thoughout the area, killing jews left and right. Again why was this? In WWII the arabs mufti in Israel was directly and overtly allied with Hitler (yeah, invoke Godwin's law).

    The jews did not line up the arabs against walls and machine gun them. They did not gas them. They did not spear them, experiment on th

  42. Re:Denying holocaust? by alexhs · · Score: 4, Informative
    It's not informative, it's just plain wrong.

    I found a rebuttal of that theory in one of the first google links for "allah moon god"

    Last paragraph :

    Finally, Jesus Christ and many of his disciples spoke Aramaic. In the Aramaic language the word for the Almighty God is 'Allaha' and the name of Jesus is 'Iessa'. There are records of Jesus praying in Aramaic to his God 'Allaha". Also I would add that Allah means God in arab (like Dieu means God in French), and it isn't the name of God. See Yahweh, 99 names of God.

    The God is the same as you can find in the Islam article :

    [Muslims] do not regard Muhammad as the founder of a new religion, but as the restorer of the original monotheistic faith of Abraham, Moses, Jesus, and other prophets. Islamic tradition holds that Judaism and Christianity distorted the messages of these prophets over time either in interpretation, in text, or both.
    --
    I have discovered a truly marvelous proof of killer sig, which this margin is too narrow to contain.
  43. I am sick of hearing about "the tiny minority" by JonTurner · · Score: 3, Insightful

    >>Doesn't have to be a large majority. Just a vocal minority that causes the problems.
    Yes, and all the members of Jeffry Dahmer's first-grade class grew up to be law-abiding, upstanding citizens, except for one. Yet there were still many dead victims. What's your point? This line about the "minority" of violent muslims doesn't mean a damned thing, so long as that minority has 1) influence and 2) the ability to project power, which I argue it does.

    >>There are a lot of peace-loving muslims around the world.
    So simply going by the numbers, if only a percentage or two of Muslims worldwide are violent that means there are A LOT, tens of millions(!), of hate-filled Muslims worldwide, ready to erupt into violence. And they do, although you may have to dig deep into the news to find the stories. You see, all but one of the 21 "hot" wars in the world involve Islam as one of the parties. Bet you didn't know that.

    You see, the problem is a culture fueled by religious extremism and fanaticism. The Koran is an instruction manual for waging war and spreading influence. (No, that's not slanderous or "flamebait" -- go read the damned book and see for yourself. Sura after Sura specifies precisely how violence should be applied to spread Islam. You are either in the House Of Islam, or the House of War. There is no other option. And, you should know, all those Suras which are oft-quoted and preach peace with the Infidel, are "overridden" by later Suras which specify violence.
    And, before you go quoting sections of the Christian bible (Old Testament) which proscribe stonings or other violent actions, be aware it's not a fair comparison. You see, there are no Christians ACTUALLY PERFORMING THESE ACTS. Christianity went through The Reformation, wherein it shrugged off many of these proclamations as archaic and incompatible with modernity. Islam has had no such event.

    1. Re:I am sick of hearing about "the tiny minority" by SkunkPussy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "This line about the "minority" of violent muslims doesn't mean a damned thing, so long as that minority has 1) influence and 2) the ability to project power, which I argue it does."

      Who cares what a minority of muslims think and how much influence and power they project, when the MAJORITY of the united states desired to invade an innocent country for no other reason than imperialistic agression.

      That the most militarily advanced country in the world is trigger-happy is a far far far bigger problem. (Don't forget that USA foreign policy - meddling in the middle east - is more or less the entire reason that many of these muslims are vocal).

      "A LOT, tens of millions(!), of hate-filled Muslims worldwide, ready to erupt into violence. "

      an approximation:
      300 million americans, roughly 50% of whom supported GWB's war of agression. That is 150 million americans who vastly threaten the security of the rest of the world.

      Why do you focus so much on these moslems? The problem is a bit closer to home than you think mate.

      --
      SURELY NOT!!!!!
  44. Beating a dead horse by A+nonymous+Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I posted this a few days ago, may as well repost it ..

    The usual pro-confederacy arguments are that they were fighting for states' rights and not for slavery. These are both patently false.

    The southern states were the ones arguing for federal supremacy over states. They wanted the federal government to enforce slavery laws in free states. They argued that a slave owner should retain ownership of those slaves while traveling in free states, and that slaves who escaped to free states should be returned to their owners. Hardly a states rights position!

    The war of 1812 was a disaster, economically, for the New England states which depended so heavily on trade. They spent three years getting up the nerve to send a delegation to Washington to bring up the subject of secession, but the war ended before they could do anything. The southern states were the most vocal in condemning secession as treason. How interesting that when their ox was being gored, they acted immediately, not even trying to negotiate with the federal government. So much for honor!

    As for economics, which is the usual neo-confedrate blame for northern aggression, it was slavery which put the south at a disadvantage, in that it made labor so cheap that industrialization was too expensive. It really hurt the small farmers who had to do their own labor. I have never understood why poor whites, then or now, backed the slavery system which kept them in poverty. No self-employed man can compete with slaves. The expense of overseers doesn't come close to compensating for the cheap maintenance (crowded crappy housing, no elders to take care of) of slaves.

    It was a war for the rich white southerners. Nobody else would have benefited from secession.

  45. Mail's founder admitted formula is "Daily Hate" by Dogtanian · · Score: 5, Informative
    Flamebait? Don't know if that mod was done in (misguided) good faith or not, but I certainly don't agree with the downmod either way.

    To quote one article

    The Mail's founder, Lord Northcliffe said his winning formula was to give his readers "a daily hate" - and it does. It says a *lot* that the first thing that I thought of after reading the summary was to find out whether the story came from the Daily Mail... and that I wasn't remotely surprised when it did. The fact that the Mail's style and biases were obvious even via a secondhand interpretation of the story says a lot about it.

    More here. Can't say whether they're as bad as Fox News or not, because I haven't seen a significant amount of its output (due to living in the UK). However, I personally wouldn't trust the Daily Mail as far as I could throw it.

    Anyway, there is probably some truth in the story, but I expect it's been exaggerated, distorted and "enhanced" by selective reporting. For example, I remember reading a story about ecstasy in New Scientist a few years back. It was all about a study which claimed that there were serious effects of the drug on the brain. However, the story also included plausible-sounding criticism and rebuttal of the study by other equally reputable scientists.

    I saw the same story in the Daily Mail later that day. It also included the details about the study and the possibly dangerous effects of the drug, and was written in a moderately "reputable" manner. However, unlike NS's report, they didn't hint that there was *any* scepticism about the findings, let alone print those views. Result was that the effect of the story was very different, more one-sided and scaremongering. Fact-by-fact, the Daily Mail story was correct, but it lied by omission.

    Mind you, the Daily Mail is full of scaremongering health stories; that's a staple of the front page for them. Along with reports on how something the government has done is going to affect the value of your house, and right-wing political half-truths.
    --
    "Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
    1. Re:Mail's founder admitted formula is "Daily Hate" by Dogtanian · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You are attacking the messenger and not the message. A cute but misleading cliche. The idealised horseback messenger who is the victim of his King's wrath on the receipt of bad news has (we can assume) had no hand in manipulating or massaging the facts, and no reason to lie to his King, but is simply reporting the news.

      That should not be assumed here. If I don't know all the facts of a political story for sure, and read it in a newspaper with a known reputation for right-wing bias and pandering to its readership to sell papers, I'm quite entitled to be sceptical.

      Is the message false? who knows but instead of trying to figure it out you assault the messenger.

      Example: If Hitler said 3+5 is 8, you would say its WRONG because HITLER said it. No, I wouldn't, because I know for a fact that 3 + 5 = 8. Your suggestion that I would is a blatant misrepresentation of my position.

      Please read this comment of mine, which you'll note was posted almost 90 minutes before your comment. Salient points emphasised (here) in bold:-

      I wouldn't dismiss this issue altogether simply because it came from the Daily Mail; if their slant on it could be taken at face value I would consider it cause for serious concern. Unfortunately, the Mail in itself is not trustworthy; I prefer to read these things via a less potentially biased source before passing judgement. Next, you say

      We need a serious look at Logical Thinking in this country. Its a major reason why we are splitting apart in the country that people like Sean Hannity uses Logical Fallacies all the time. If that was supposed to be an attack on me, it's irrelevant, because I don't come from "this" country (i.e. the U.S., where Hannity apparently lives and works).

      And, as I made clear, my message was *not* an "ad hominem" attack against the facts. It's a valid questioning as to whether the facts as presented are accurate. Since you misinterpreted it as such, it may be true that *you* need to look at logical thinking in *your* country- starting with yourself.

      As to the Daily mail, they may do all the things you state and that just means you have to get more to get to the truth but it does not mean its false or even their SLANT on it is false either. No, but since I don't know whether it is or isn't true and/or unbiased, it means I do have a right to be sceptical.

      This isn't denying that 3 + 5 = 8. At best we know that the right-hand side is 8, but we aren't sure what the two numbers on the left are. Am I going to take the word of someone with a vested interest in 3s and 5s? Am I heck! They might be 4 + 4, or 6 + 1, or whatever...

      I am rather conservative myself but its more harmful to lie using logical mindtricks than to just face the truths. And- as demonstrated by my explanation and the linked comment above- I did no such thing.
      --
      "Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
  46. Holocaust denial not part of any 'beliefs' by bulled · · Score: 2, Informative

    Holocaust denial is not nor has it ever been part of Islam. To claim otherwise is FUD and needs to be recognized as such.

  47. Re:That Is Pathetic...There is more by JRGhaddar · · Score: 5, Insightful

    By avoiding teaching about one of the worst examples of intolerance and hatred in human history,
    The denial of Palestinian human rights, their expulsion from their own homes, their denial of basic resources (water), economic strangulation, and the British government's key roll in creating and supporting those problems are also not taught in schools.

    And it won't be for years, and probably never will, because whether people want to openly admit it or not... Arabs are considered animals and there blood is not as valuable as Jewish or Western blood.

    And let's face it, there are a lot of reports of Muslims in the UK becoming increasingly radicalized, because they are learning hatred and distorted history in the mosques.


    ... And let's face it, there are a lot of British children growing up with this mindset about Arabs because they are learning hatred and distorted history from their own schools.
  48. The Roma most definitely were by Prien715 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The Gypsies were persecuted with as much fervor as the Jews. According to Wikipedia, 500k to 1m died. While it's not as large a gross number, proportionately, it's just as high if not higher. Interestingly, the Roma were the original Aryans who had traveled rather than staying in Germany. So the Nazis, in a rare show of coherency, only allowed part-gypsies to be exterminated but allowed full-blood Roma regular status. Later, it was argued that no one could have not become corrupted and the Roma were uniformly exterminated.

    If they weren't victimized as systematically, why so much official propaganda and policies on the subject? See Wikipedia:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Porajmos

    --
    -- Political fascism requires a Fuhrer.
  49. Re:They do have some cause by mhall119 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What I would like to know is why the Muslims don't believe that the holocaust didn't happen.
    Because that would make it harder to hate the Jews for leaving Europe. The reason it is important for us to remember what the Nazis did is to make the thought of doing anything like it so utterly repulsive that nobody will support it. Since most holocaust deniers want to see Israel destroyed and it's Jewish population forcibly relocated, naturally they don't want to see Hitler when they look in the mirror. If they can convince themselves that nobody ever killed 6 million Jews, they can convince themselves that they will also stop before doing the same.
    --
    http://www.mhall119.com
  50. Re:Your Fox post was flamebait. by jnf · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm not really sure how you can say that objectively, I'm a non-republican/non-democrat who regularly watches fox news just because I find the way that they present things somewhat genius, it's kind of like watching Goebbels in action. A good example of their 'slant' is in how they reported the story about the kid who planned on bringing bombs to Falwell's funeral. What I saw on Fox news was that a college student has been arrested after he was caught with bombs in his car, that he intended to bring to Falwell's funeral. With that and other coverage of Falwell's passing it implied that the guy was some left-wing nut who wanted to bomb his funeral, when in actuality the kid was a student of Falwell's university and intended to bring the bombs to 'keep protestors from disturbing the funeral', which makes him a right-wing nut who is obviously totally out of touch with reality. Stuff like that, which an omission of a couple words completely changes the story, puts an incredible slant and spin on the story and honestly borders on outright disinformation.

    Honestly, I think if you paid a little closer attention to what they report, how they report it and what they don't report I think you would find their slant pretty incredible, and as I said, their tactics somewhat genius.

  51. Re:That Is Pathetic...There is more by JRGhaddar · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Ah yes gratious guests.

    These are Palestenian REFUGEES. And where are they refugees from?

    There own homes

    50 years ago those people were kicked out of there homes and forced to leave. They have no identity, no home. They aren't citizens of Lebanon.

    To put this in perspective how would you feel if someone kicked you out of your home with all of your neighbors and you had no place to go but a neighboring country. You and your neighbors and family members have no home no identity no citezenship and have to live in slum camps for 50 years.

    You may not rob a bank, or blow up a building, but your grandson might.

    I am Lebanese, and while I understand that you might not be as educated about these issues as I am, or for that matter even care, but I want you to realize that this is a SERIOUS problem, and it is only getting worse with ignorance and neglect. I'm not trying to start a flamewar, but I believe that ALL people deserve basic human rights.

  52. Re:Zionist Propaganda by Rei · · Score: 3, Interesting

    and how the cease-fires are anything but on the paleoswinian side and how israel is mysteriously the only on ever to "break" the cease fire.

    What world have you been living in? Palestinian deaths tend to go almost completely unreported unless there are dozens at once. My favorite New-Speak-ish phrase is "A period of relative calm", meaning "only Palestinians are dying".

    Of course, thank you for keeping the level of discourse up by your spelling of "Palestinian".

    --
    GIVE US THE CUTTLEFISH!
  53. Re:Zionist Propaganda by IDontAgreeWithYou · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ...Something about history... Doomed to repeat...I don't know.

    --
    Finding other idiots on /. that agree with your opinion doesn't make it any less stupid.
  54. Civilization and barbarism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You can criticize the west as much as you want... But things are much better in the west than in many non-western countries. And, no, these countries aren't fighting each other since centuries because of the U.S. (this coming from a non-american, non-native english speaker).

    For a start, don't even dare to call me "racist": I won't criticize a single race in my post (nor would I ever criticize a single race). This is not a rant about a particular race. It is, however, a rant against a particular view of one monotheist religion. The west shall never bow before a religion that considers women to be inferior beings. The west shall never bow before a religion that considers gay people inferior beings (if you think that it's bad to be gay in the U.S. then cite me one San Fransisco like city in a country populated with a majority of extremist muslims). The west shall never bow before extremists that claim that it is righteous to kill non-believers.

    Muslims living in the west better adapt to western principles for western principles will never allow islam's principles to rule the west.

    One of the biggest problems the muslims faces is that their religion is quite recent compared to the two other major monoteist religions. There's only one historical reality and it is clear that Jerusalem's history doesn't belong to the muslims. Heck, the historical reality of what happened in Jerusalem predates islam by more than one millenium and a half. They know that very well and it pisses them off in a way you can't imagine.

    Once you realize that you understand why the muslims have always hated the jews so much.

    The time where we tolerate intolerance is coming to a halt. The recently elected french president made it clear in its campaign that if you want to come live in France you'd better learn and adapt to the western civilization. Barbarism has no place here. Jews hatred has no place here. Turkey is now in wild turmoil due to islamists taking over power. France is now against Turkey joining Europe. People in the western world simply do not want to be ruled by extremists muslims. And they never will. The americas will never turn to a majority of muslims. Russia neither. China neither. Europe and the UK are now waking up.

    Recently in germany a judge tried to free some man who beated his wife for "it was normal in his religion". Major fiasco. Overruled. In the UK the parliament will vote law to make teaching of history mandatory wether it displeases some people's little fantasical beliefs or not.

    So if islam's views are incompatible with the west muslims living in the west better adapt their islam... For it's not the west that is going to adapt. There's no place for extremists here. Note that apparently there's no much place in Turkey neither, nor in Lebanon (where the regular is fighting extremists as I type this).

    No I'm not a woman, no I'm not gay and, no, I'm not a jew. But, yes, members of my family died fighting nazis exterminating jews and gypsies and, yes, if it comes to that, I'll fight to protect women's right, gay people's right, gypsies's right and jews' right.

    There's no future for religious extremists. And they know it, which pisses them off even more.

  55. Re:Zionist Propaganda by MightyMartian · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There's nothing like a rabid racist lunatic trying to justify himself in this manner.

    The mass murder of the large bulk of European Jewry, which happened during the lifetime of many people still living, is of tantamount importance if you take the teaching of history to be an exercise in educating us as to deeds done and how they can be avoided.

    For instance, blaming everything on Zionists was precisely the kind of monstrous ideology that allowed the Nazis to kill so many Jews. By recreating a group of individuals into some sort of dark shadow cult out to take over the world, the Nazis were able to more easily demonize Jews. It's sad that there are still evil little monsters like yourself so happy to ape the discredited notions of Nazi anti-semitism. You do, through your hate, make it clear that teaching about the Holocaust is still of the utmost importance.

    --
    The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
  56. Re:Your Fox post was flamebait. by Rei · · Score: 4, Informative

    Yeah -- Fox News, Fair and Balanced.

    You are aware that they do things like assessing reporters politcal loyalties during the interview process and giving regular memos directing their newscasters to do things to support Republicans, right? You aware that even the CEO admits using it as a propaganda mouthpiece to sell the Iraq War, right?

    If you can't tell that sort of stuff by watching them, then they're succeeding.

    --
    GIVE US THE CUTTLEFISH!
  57. Re:Zionist Propaganda by Rei · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There is a difference between Judaism and Zionism. If you don't realize this, you're part of the problem.

    There are legitimate complaints about the very concept of Zionism (the argument that Jews should immigrate to the Middle East to form a homeland, even if it means displacing the locals).

    There is a legitimate argument to be made that Zionism has, quite contrary to its intent, encouraged a new round of antisemitism and made the world less safe for the Jewish people, not more safe.

    There are legitimate complaints to be made about how the Israeli government is currently running its foreign policy.

    By treating anyone who has any problem with the concept of Zionism or the policies of the state of Israel as being inherently anti-semitic, you're part of the problem, just like those who deny the Holocaust are part of the problem from the other side.

    --
    GIVE US THE CUTTLEFISH!
  58. Re:Are you aware of the situation in Israel? by Detritus · · Score: 2, Informative

    I'm a Jew, and I can say that you have absolutely no idea about what you are talking about. A convert is just as much of a Jew as someone who was born a Jew.

    --
    Mea navis aericumbens anguillis abundat
  59. When allowance is NOT good by Loundry · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Fixed with a reminder: Allowing someone to practice their beliefs is good.

    That's not always true. Consider Koran 4:34, for instance:

    "Men are meant to be righteous and kind guardians of women because God has favored some more than others and because they [men] spend out of their wealth. In their turn righteous women are meant to be devoted and to guard what God has willed to be guarded even though out of sight of the husband. As for those women on whose part you fear ill-will and nasty conduct, admonish them first, next separate them in beds and last beat them. But if they obey you, then seek nothing against them. Behold, God is most high and great."

    Should we allow a muslim man to practice his belief that men are allowed to beat women who do not obey?

    What is more important: protecting others' freedom of religion, or protecting women's right to life?

    By the way, many millions of Muslim women, in addition to being humiliated by being forced to veil themselves, are beaten by their husbands. It is all completely justified by the Koran. Sad is the plight of the Muslim woman who lives at the mercy of a cruel and misogynistic religion.

    --
    I don't make the rules. I just make fun of them.
  60. Re:Zionist Propaganda by dan828 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    There is a legitimate argument to be made that Zionism has, quite contrary to its intent, encouraged a new round of antisemitism and made the world less safe for the Jewish people, not more safe.

    A new round of antisemitism? What fucking planet do you live on? Would you care to point out a gap between the "old" antisemitism and the "new" antisemitism? Antizionism is, much of the time, merely antisemitism attempting to be respectable. The "antizionist" propaganda coming from the left wingers is identical to that of the skinheads and neo-nazis, and pretty much looks exactly the same as what was produced by Goebbels.
  61. Re:That Is Pathetic...There is more by Rei · · Score: 2

    Gracious "guests" in the tiny fragments that remain of their original homeland, most of them forced into squallid camps.

    Oh, that and being killed.

    Snippet:

    More than 320 civilians were among a threefold increase in the number of Palestinians killed by Israeli security forces last year, according to Amnesty International. The human rights group's 2007 report says that over half of the more than 650 Palestinians killed in 2006 were civilians, 120 of them children and young people under 18. Amnesty defines civilians, "as people that are reasonably supposed never to have been involved in armed operations".

    While Amnesty said that dozens of Palestinians were killed in the West Bank it pointed out that most of the increase resulted from aerial and artillery bombardments in Gaza after the abduction of the Israeli corporal Gilad Shalit in late June and in response to increased Qassam rocket fire on Israel. These included, for example, the shelling of a house in the northern town of Beit Hanoun which killed 17 members of the Athamneh family.

    The report said 21 Israeli civilians were killed by Palestinians militants in the same year, the lowest figure since the beginning of the second intifada in 2000.

    --
    GIVE US THE CUTTLEFISH!
  62. Re:Zionist Propaganda by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    A new round of antisemitism?

    The difference being the people involved. The old antisemitics largely had no evidence other than racism. Antizionists on the other hand have friends and family, or themselves, who have been kicked out of their homes and regulated to ghetto life in the West Bank, Golan Heights, or the Gaza Strip. Some of them aren't even Muslims, but Christians- it's amazing the zionist racism that has gone on in Bethleham of all places.

    --
    SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  63. Re:Zionist Propaganda by Rei · · Score: 4, Informative

    Read up on history. Nowadays, you see a person protesting in front of a synagogue (we got one here recently), and it's like, "what cave did you crawl out of?" Yet, antisemitism used to be completely mainstream. Remember Henry Ford, who published a book, "The International Jew: The Worlds Foremost Problem"? And he was widely respected! Yet, he was hardly the only one. Around America and across Europe, anti-semitism was the de-facto standard. It's a sad part of the reason why the increasing violence against Jews in Germany wasn't taken very seriously, and why "Save the Jews" was never a rallying cry for the war, to say the least.

    You see the opposite thing in the Middle East. Some of the world's oldest Jewish populations exist in the Middle East, where they, while being a minority and occasionally suffered for it, but only rarely got the same sort of persecution that middle ages, European Jews had to suffer. It remained this way largely up until the 1930s, when the influx of foreign Jews into Palestine and the spawning of Jewish terror groups and militias, culminating in al-Nakhba, led to a violent level of antisemitism in the Middle East. This, in turn, led to most Arab countries likewise pressuring their Jewish populations out, turning a slow Zionist trickle into a major exodus. Many of these Jews migrated to Israel, which increased the strains with Israel's neighbors, and so forth.

    I can go into more detail with more modern history if you'd like, but you're probably well aware of the world (outside America)'s increasing dissatisfaction with Israel's foreign policy.

    --
    GIVE US THE CUTTLEFISH!
  64. Re:Are you aware of the situation in Israel? by belmolis · · Score: 2, Informative

    Agreed, with one exception. A kahen (cohen) may not marry a woman who is a convert. That is the only way in which a convert is different from someone born Jewish.

  65. Re:Your Fox post was flamebait. by Rei · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's a whole network being told to steer the straight and narrow and not let their own personal biases muddle the story vs. the titular *head* of a network, their primary and most respected spokesman/reporter, who gets 30 minutes each evening to spread his own personal view of the world.

    Oh, that's bloody hilarious! Forcing your network to try and sell the American public on things like the Iraq War is "steering the straight and narrow and not letting their own personal biases muddle the story", while a journalist who gets 30 minutes a day, who was *forced out* for getting a single story wrong, is the "titular head of the network", controlling all of its content.

    Get me some of whatever you're smoking. It must be good stuff.

    --
    GIVE US THE CUTTLEFISH!
  66. Re:Your Fox post was flamebait. by Rei · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What part of Murdoch's statement that they tried to shape the agenda on the war on Iraq, supported Bush's policies, and criticized it in cases where wasn't carried out the way they wanted, wasn't clear to you? After all, this is the *publicly admitted statements* of the *network's chair* that we're talking about, versus a single reporter (that you seem to be obsessed with, granting him silly powers to boot) who was fired when he got a story critical of Bush wrong (and yes, that case *was* "fake but accurate"; here's a nice summary of the available evidence; it's been hotly fought back and forth between both sides for years, so you'll find ample references from all sides)

    --
    GIVE US THE CUTTLEFISH!
  67. A brief discourse by hey! · · Score: 2, Insightful

    on various forms of ad hominen fallacies.

    All of the various forms of ad hominem fallacies are fallacies of distraction. So if the Daily Mail says "Muslim girls should not be allowed to wear head scarves," it would be a distraction to reply, "Well, that's just a hate mongering, right wing rag." Because the hate mongering, right wing nature of the Daily Mail has nothing whatsoever to do with the issue of whether muslim girls should, or should not wear the hejab.

    On the other hand, if we are evaluating the credibilty of a factual assertion made by the Daily Mail, the character of that source is in fact relevant. If the source has a demonstrable bias, or as in this case a stated intention to present information in a biased manner, then this is highly relevant to the question.

    So, to sum up:
    (1) It is invalid thinking to dismiss a conclusion based on the character of some person holding it, but
    (2) It is prefectly valid to question facts or evidence cited by a source with a known bias.

    --
    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  68. Re:Denying holocaust? by Trillian_1138 · · Score: 2, Insightful
    This is probably getting posted too late to be noticed, but I wanted to chime in with a few responses. Getting all possible disclaimers out of the way: I live in the US, identify as culturally but not religiously Jewish, and would consider myself a anti-Zionist but not particularly emphatic about it (which still probably makes me a 'bad' Jew). Finally, I was born after Israel was established.

    One of those fictions are the `palestinian' people. They were invented in the 1964 time line. Not in 1948.

    Well, Palestine was used as a geographic name for what's now Israel (and some of the surrounding area) for most of the 20th Century prior to Israel's creation. I would agree that its use as a cultural or ethnic title is rather new, but people living in the area under the British Mandate of Palestine prior to 1948 had some legitimate cause to call themselves Palestinians and to be less than thrilled that all these Jews were coming to the area following WWII. Note I'm not defending how many decided to express their displeasure (violence) just saying I can understand why they didn't want this population influx. (This is ignoring any antisemitism on top of that, an attitude I would obviously disagree with.)

    You should note that in 1948 a new arab state was proposed, along side of, and slightly larger than Israel. Israelis accepted this. The arabs didn't. The arabs had demanded that arabs in Israel leave right before the 48 war started,

    I also want to point out that the original UN partition plan split both the Jewish the Arab states into two parts (almost three). See the map and more info on the partion plan at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1947_UN_Partition_Pla n

    While I completely agree that sitting back down at the negotiating table would have been the better choice than launching a war, and it's entirely possible the Arab nations would have launched a war no matter what, Arabs did have good cause to be unhappy with the UN's decision. With the exception of keeping Jerusalem as a UN-controlled city, which I think would have been a fantastic decision, the original UN plan seems rather shortsighted in its devision of territory.

    Some day, in the distant future, when the arabs finally understand that all israel wants is peace, they may sit down and finally do what they should have done 60 years ago.


    There is something to that which I think we can both agree on. However, I would argue that Israel hasn't been completely without wrongdoing - I think nothing will get accomplished until A) the Arabs concede Israel does want peace (as you said) and B) the Israel concedes that Palestinians do have legitimate issues with how the creation of Israel was handled 60 years ago and how it has conducted itself since (which it sounds like you might disagree with).

    I am not trying to say which side is 'worse' or excuse the suicide bombing (or any violent act). All I'm saying is that each side, from their point of view has solid reasons for saying the other side "started it first" and that neither of those points of view are completely without merit.

    I'd be interested to hear your thoughts.
    -Trillian
  69. Re:That Is Pathetic...There is more by myowntrueself · · Score: 2

    They weren't kickout out of their homes, you ignoramus. They left of their own accord because they couldn't stand the thought of living in a Jewish state.

    Slightly disengenuous...

    Had they stayed in Israel they would have had to give up any claim to being a people -- officially (in Israel) the line goes something like this:

    "There is no such thing as a Palestinian; they are *Arabs* and should be happy to live anywhere in the Arab world. Since Israel isn't part of the Arab world they arn't happy to live there..."

    There are no Palestinians living legally in Israel as citizens -- only Israeli *Arabs*.

    Its a very subtle and insidious form of genocide; pretend that an entire people simply does not exist.

    --
    In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
  70. Re:Zionist Propaganda by ninjagin · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Herzl actually never made any assertions that Jews had to establish a homeland in the middle east. When he first discussed the idea of a Jewish homeland, in a pamphlet (if recollection serves, it was "The Jewish Sate"), he was thinking about South America (thought it was Argentina, but I could be wrong), and that the land should be purchased, legitimately, so that no assertions of thievery could be made.

    The problem is that in the early part of the 20th century, a number of movements (some linked with socialism) adopted Herzl's zionism as the cause for the re-establishment of the biblical Jewish homeland in what was then called Palestine. There's a bunch of Jewish theological commentaries and arguments about the notion of returning to the holy land, and some traditions in burial and at passover time to symbolically create the link to the biblical homeland. Different Jewish sects see the call to return to the biblical homeland differently, and have different traditions for it. These differences are the sources of endless, bitter controversy among the worldwide Jewish community

    What gets lost on the enemies of zionism as we know it today (and you sum it up pretty well, even though you distort it a little bit with the "displacement" assertion), is that the Jewish people are, and have almost always been, a people of the diaspora -- without a religious home. The people that come to Israel (planeloads every day), come because they are shunned and persecuted where they lived elsewhere in the world, for the most part. Sure, there are spiritual zionists that come not to flee persecution but to fulfill the spiritual mission of returning to the holy land, but for the most part, these spiritual zionists do not come to stay in Israel for the rest of their lives. Some do come to stay, though.

    As to "displacement"... when Great Britain ceded Palestine to become the Jewish state of Israel, the Arab and Palestinian inhabitants were pretty much glad to be rid of the British, and there have always been Jewish communities in Palestine, so Israel wasn't seen so much as a threat. It was cautious, and even skeptical, optimism on their part that allowed the state to be created. The Jewish government in Israel didn't do a very good job of making good on their promise to include Palestinian tribes and ethnic groups as they took the reins of power. The "displacement" that is at the core of many Palestinian complaints came as a result of the 6 day war, when Palestinians in Israel and what are now the occupied territories deserted their lands and fled as they saw Nasser's armies (and Syria's and Jordan's) poised to sweep though Israel. The Israeli army occupied all the lands that Syria and Jordan and Egypt had been using to threaten Israel.

    Honestly, I understand the Israeli perspective -- that is, if the people who threaten you either flee their lands when you attack or host foreign armies to threaten you, they lose their land. That's it. No give-backs. If a people does not have the courage to stay and fight for their land, then the land must not mean much to them. At the same time, I think that Palestinians got a really sucky deal from Israel from the time it was created. Sure, the rhetoric at the time was "we can all live together peacefully", but the practice of Israeli rule really gave Palestinians the short shrift -- they didn't get the same level of access to government services & contracting opportunities, the courts were stacked against them, water rights were not honored, and the Israeli army defended the taking of land by Israeli settlers when they should not have.

    Personally, as a Jew, I hope one day to visit Israel before I die. At the same time, I've met a lot of Arabs and Muslims and Druse who have a mixed story to tell of their time in Israel and of being second-class citizens, not very much unlike black folks here in the states, and I have great sympathy for that. I've never been a fan of the occupation, but I also see the unilateral pullout from Gaza as having been a disaster. The war

    --
    .. pa-ra-bo-la, pa-ra-bo-la, 2 pi R, 2 pi R, where's your latus rectum, where's your latus rectum, 2 pi R
  71. Re:Zionist Propaganda by greenbird · · Score: 2, Interesting

    According to zionists, the uniqueness of the European holocaust must not be considered - and is the defining, central theme of the Second World War.

    Yeah, because we all know there has never been another period or place where Jews were oppressed even to the point of advocated murder. I don't know, but in my humble opinion the attempted systematic slaughter of an entire race of people whether unique or not is a pretty important theme. It's even more so since this objective was taken up by a modern industrialize nation in a period of time in which this kind of thing is frowned upon as rather barbaric at best.

    Israeli colonial oppression today?

    You know, I read a recent Reuters article on the latest Israeli incursion into the Golan. It was a three page article explaining in minute detail the actions of the Israeli and consequences to the Golan Palestinians. It wasn't until the second to the last paragraph on the third page that there was one sentence explaining that the incursion was in response to dozens of rockets fired at Israeli settlements that had injured several Israelis. What do you think France's response would be to a group in Luxemburg continuously firing rockets at Thionville and injuring several French citizens (I know, I know surrender, ha, ha) and not only will the Luxemburg government not stop them but it actually supports them? Somehow I don't think negotiations wouldn't high on the list for long and a few collateral casualties incurred wouldn't be much of a deterrent to France using force to stop them.

    --
    Who is John Galt?
  72. Re:That Is Pathetic...There is more by spuzzzzzzz · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Calling people names will never do anything to advance your argument. Furthermore, your view of history is clearly unbalanced. There is evidence that Palestinian Arabs were driven from their homes (and also evidence that many left of their own accord). Your statement "They left of their own accord because they couldn't stand the thought of living in a Jewish state" implies that 100% of the Palestinian population left for racist reasons rather than, for example, to ensure the security of their families. That sort of blanket statement does nothing to improve the quality of a debate.

    --

    Don't you hate meta-sigs?
  73. This is old new already by Yamagami · · Score: 2, Informative

    This is old news already. And the UK government has already issued a statement that this will not be possible/allowed for schools to drop. They might get freedom to choose their subject, but certain subjects cannot be dropped. I live in the UK. I'm Jewish. It kinda got my interest when this item was 'current' news.

  74. Re:That Is Pathetic...There is more by myowntrueself · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Does the Mossad break down their doors if they do?

    You know, from what I've heard, if you are a non-Jewish semite living in Israel, yes you can expect Mossad to break down your doors for pretty much anything at all.

    I've known many Israelis who talk in a way that I'd have expected from some fanatical blonde, blue-eyed member of a certain self-declared 'master race' from Germany of the 1930s/40s. Seriously.

    --
    In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
  75. Re:My grandfather was, and we're not refugees now. by JRGhaddar · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Yes well your grandfather is Pontian Greek and not Palestinian. Palestinians DON'T want to be Lebanese citizens. At least a prevailing majority of them don't. They want to be Palestinians in Palestine. That is what they are fighting for. And they will never stop until they get it.

    Greece is a great country but it didn't repatriate the decendants of the 130,000 greeks who fled the greek civil war of 47-49 until 1982. 33 years these people lived in exhile, and actually the total granted citizenship was 30k 1/5th of the original refugees. I applaud greece for talking the necessary steps to right social injustices, and on an unrelated note for being awesome hosts for the champions league cup.

    I just looked at Trabzon. Wow that is an amazing part of the world.

    The issue stems from this key point.

    If Jew's are allowed a homeland Why is it at the expense of the Palestinians?

    and why do they not have a homeland?

    To force them to assimilate into neighboring countries is forcing them to erase there history, erase there identity and concede that Jews are more deserving than Palestinians. That is something they will never do. and they shouldn't have to.

    I am dedicating my life to facilitating a solution, and probably this conflict will go on longer than I will live, but I can't stand by and do nothing. I am not Palestinian, but just a person who believes that they are just as deserving as Israeli's. I believe in a dual state state solution, however Israel must make concessions, and they never will unless they are pressured by the U.S. and Britain to do so. It really is in the best interest of everyone. But no ones wants to give up land for peace.

  76. Re:With regard to being real, a real question by OpenSourced · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Interesting. Never gave much thought to that question. I suppose that, in my view of things, the best possible course would be to teach History more like Literature. You should teach the "History according to Gibson" one day, the next teach the same historic passage according to other source. In fact, you shouldn't "teach" it at all, but give books to read to the students, and let them draw their own conclusions. That way it would be clear that History is basically a kind of story-telling, based on some facts, many assumptions, and lots of bias. The topic should be re-branded "Comparative History" (That already exists in Universities, but make it the only way of teaching it), and make the students try to ascertain what are most likely facts and what not.

    Not that it's going to happen, we like too much to impose our view of things on our next generation. We like to tell them that we are the descendants of heroes, not of bandits. And they like to be told that, too. You never go far trying to go against strong inclinations of the rest of the people.

    --
    Rome taught me patience and assiduous application to detail. Virtues which temper the boldness of great, general views.