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Internet Censorship's First Death Sentence?

mrogers writes "A journalism student in Afghanistan has been sentenced to death by a Sharia court for downloading and sharing a report criticizing the treatment of women in some Islamic countries. The student was accused of blasphemy and tried without representation. According to Reporters Without Borders, sixty people are currently in jail worldwide for criticizing governments online, fifty of them in China, but this may be the first time someone has been sentenced to death for using the internet. Internet censorship is on the rise worldwide, according to The OpenNet Initiative."

79 of 475 comments (clear)

  1. 1st censorship death sentence by mwasham · · Score: 4, Insightful

    But not the first death sentence due to the idiocy of sharia law.

    1. Re:1st censorship death sentence by Captain+Splendid · · Score: 5, Interesting

      True, but considering the country was recently 'liberated' and democracy was 'brought' to it, it is a little weird.

      --
      Linux, you magnificent bastard, I read the fucking manual!
    2. Re:1st censorship death sentence by Clay+Pigeon+-TPF-VS- · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That is why democracy fails. It is literally two wolves and one lamb voting on what is for dinner. A constitutional republic is a well-armed lamb contesting the vote*.

      *paraphrasing ben franklin

      --
      Viral software licensing is not freedom, it is in fact GNU/Socialism.
    3. Re:1st censorship death sentence by mwasham · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Unfortunately, if you give a bunch of religous zealots democracy they will vote to stone you to death and revert to a dictatorship.

    4. Re:1st censorship death sentence by towsonu2003 · · Score: 5, Funny

      Unfortunately, if you give a bunch of religous zealots democracy they will vote to stone you to death and revert to a dictatorship.
      I am utterly confused. I never expected such anti-Americanism on /. You are talking about the US, right?
    5. Re:1st censorship death sentence by Lewrker · · Score: 2, Insightful

      They have democracy now, no quotation marks. The people of Afghanistan have decided that they want to follow a certain set of laws as a sovereign country, how stupid those laws are is none of our business.
      But please, let's stop letting them into European countries and the USA, because those entities are also democratic, and once people who believe those laws are just are in majority due to low birth rate in most of them and high immigration rate, we will have to let them democratically choose to obey the same set of laws and make us obey them as well.
      You are mistaking "democracy" for "western set of values".
      I'm a very tolerant person, but democracy isn't about tolerance, it's about imposing the will of the majority upon everyone else.

    6. Re:1st censorship death sentence by goldspider · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Just goes to show you that Democracy and Liberty do not necessarily come hand-in-hand.

      --
      "Ask not what your country can do for you." --John F. Kennedy
    7. Re:1st censorship death sentence by snl2587 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Which is why democracy can't just suddenly be implemented. The people have to want it, leaders included (or, at least, the majority of them). The U.S. democracy (or, I should say, democratic republic) only got started because the people at the time didn't want a monarchy or the like and would not have immediately voted to change it back (not like votes matter all that much as it is, they only put people in power to "represent" you).

      In short, this just helps to prove that the neo-con idealogical goal of converting the world to democracy is misguided at best.

    8. Re:1st censorship death sentence by mwasham · · Score: 3, Insightful

      To compare the US with countries that utilize Sharia law shows your ignorance.

    9. Re:1st censorship death sentence by KTheorem · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Unfortunately, if you give a bunch of religous zealots democracy they will vote to stone you to death and revert to a dictatorship.
      I am utterly confused. I never expected such anti-Americanism on /. You are talking about the US, right? The United States in not a democracy, never has been. Democracy is an insanely stupid form of government. What we have is a constitutional republic. As another poster said, perhaps it is our actual system of government we should be exporting, and not the sanctioned mob rule that is democracy.
    10. Re:1st censorship death sentence by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Hah. Pure idiocy. If the nation that is voting is that fractured, it has no business being a nation. The underlying assumption of democracy is that the vote is done by a general public that has some common interest, some common denominator (even if it the lowest).

      Besides, your analogy is completely misleading. What if it's 2 lambs and a wolf voting on what's for dinner? You're implying that the minority has an inherent right to protect itself via violence from the outcome of a vote. Do you really want to open the door to wahabists buying guns and contesting votes via shootouts because in America, they're the lamb in the minority? Didn't think so.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    11. Re:1st censorship death sentence by Original+Replica · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That is one of the things that so many people fail to understand. You cannot give a country democracy. When a critical mass of people in the country are free within their own minds then they will take steps to become free. Then we can jump in and help. If the people are not mentally/culturally ready for democracy then it won't work. They will just vote who they are told to vote for by their imam,priest,televangelist,newscaster,celebrity. We have a different level of the same problem here in the US, people vote based on their emotions and we end up making some really stupid national political decisions as well.

      --
      We are all just people.
    12. Re:1st censorship death sentence by flyingsquid · · Score: 5, Informative
      Unfortunately, if you give a bunch of religous zealots democracy they will vote to stone you to death and revert to a dictatorship.

      Actually, this case is about political censorship; it isn't about religion, or even about the journalism student at all. The student's brother is a journalist who has written pieces critical of one of Afghanistan's political factions, they haven't been able to get him, so they resorted to arresting the journalism student and trumped up some charges. This is about suppressing political dissent; there was a story about this on NPR a few days ago. It's unlikely that the student is in real danger of execution: apparently Karzai has to OK any executions. He doesn't strike me as that kind of a guy, but even assuming he was completely lacking in moral fiber, it's doubtful he would: doing so would cede power to his rivals and piss off his international allies. But I agree that Sharia is an idea whose time came and went in the Dark Ages, along with burning witches and trial by duel. When your court claims to execute God's Will, that gives it power that is difficult to check, and as seen here, that leads to abuses.

    13. Re:1st censorship death sentence by Mike+Micelli · · Score: 4, Funny

      Women shouldn't be allowed to read or use computers, after all they only have one purpose. What purpose is that? Not having sex with you?
    14. Re:1st censorship death sentence by rucs_hack · · Score: 4, Interesting

      If the nation that is voting is that fractured, it has no business being a nation

      Alas if it is left alone, we get a repeat of the same situation that led to the reason we had to 'help' [koff] them in the first place.

      The Taleban used to execute women for, well, pretty much anything. That's not good, but neither is it representative of the entire population.

      The problem is, there are a fair few million people who are Afghans, and they'd rather not leave, what with it being their ancestral home of many tens of thousands of years. What do you think would happen if, say, Utah lost proper government for a while and became a place ruled purely by the whims of religious men with absolute power and no desire to let things change?

      Do you think the normal folk in Utah would all think it was ok to leave and let the state collapse/be fenced off? Or that they might perhaps want a little help to sort things out.

    15. Re:1st censorship death sentence by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 5, Informative

      The United States in not a democracy, never has been. Democracy is an insanely stupid form of government. What we have is a constitutional republic.

      It's a constitutional democratic republic, which is a form of democracy.

      Our puppet government in Afghanistan is also a constitutional republic, the "Islamic Republic of Afghanistan", with a constitution adopted in 2004. Instead of being in the name of "We, the people", theirs is in the name of "In the name of Allah, the Most Beneficient, the Most Merciful".

      Article Thirty-Four of said constitution states:

      Freedom of expression shall be inviolable. Every Afghan shall have the right to express thoughts through speech, writing, illustrations as well as other means in accordance with provisions of this constitution. Every Afghan shall have the right, according to provisions of law, to print and publish on subjects without prior submission to state authorities. Directives related to the press, radio and television as well as publications and other mass media shall be regulated by law.

      So I see they're doing as good of job of following their constitution as our government is of following ours.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    16. Re:1st censorship death sentence by c6gunner · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You're implying that the minority has an inherent right to protect itself via violence from the outcome of a vote.
      That's absolutely correct. I don't much care if the whole nation votes unanimously to kill me, I'm still going to defend myself until I run out of ammo.
    17. Re:1st censorship death sentence by nutshell42 · · Score: 4, Insightful
      That is why democracy fails. It is literally two wolves and one lamb voting on what is for dinner. A constitutional republic is a well-armed lamb contesting the vote*.

      Completely ignoring the fact that wolves are likely to be well armed too and much better trained and more ready to use violence.

      "Between the weak and the strong one it is the freedom which oppresses and the law that liberates" --Jean-Baptiste Henri Lacordaire

      Our rights are based on the insight that everyone's in some kind of minority and that it's important to protect the rights of everyone instead of just the will of the majority.

      In other words: We should have written the constitution and the law books as the US did in Japan after WWII, with some minor input by the Afghanis, to prevent stuff like this from happening. Yes, that would have alienated a lot of them but they don't love us now either. And if we have to go through an insurgency that will probably last for another decade we should at least make sure that we do it for a new order that's actually worth fighting for, not for a slight variation of the old one that's almost as oppressive but a tad less ready to export terrorism.

      Another problem's of course that too many people in the West are ready to throw out 200 years of lessons learned the hard way to protect themselves against terrorism, the 456th leading cause of death in the western world.

      --
      Don't think of it as a flame---it's more like an argument that does 3d6 fire damage
    18. Re:1st censorship death sentence by The+Breeze · · Score: 4, Insightful

      With respect,in response your statement that democracy can't suddenly be implemented, I would submit that General Douglas MacArthur and postwar Japan would prove your argument to be false.

      A more correct argument would be that "Democracy can't just suddenly be implemented without extreme skill and a firm hand in control during the transition."

      Alas, extreme skill - or, indeed, skill of any sort - seems to be lacking in our "nation-building" efforts of late.

    19. Re:1st censorship death sentence by Adambomb · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The issue here is a group maintaining its power, that just happens to be making use of the local religion to do it. Sharia law is NOT uniform in all islamic countries, or even amongst different sects in the same nation in some cases. The clergy in afghanistan ARE NOT the ones who are considered the be all end all for interpretation of sharia law.

      To polarize this by religion is ridiculous when its a governing body making the judgement to begin with. Yes, they are the clergy in afghanistan, but they're just humans maintaining their positions of power not widely accepted views from the entire world of islam. If I were to use the same tactic in reverse, i'd be spouting things like
      "What part of "Thou shall not kill" is so hard to understand?" like the onion, or perhaps suggesting one contemplate when it was that executing the mentally challenged was finally banned in texas....part of the proverbial bible belt yes?

      Course its always a lot easier to spout a knee jerk response and feel righteous about it. I suppose thats why springer existed to begin with. Look at it this way, culturally a blanket statement of "blasphemy" tends to have other people look the other way when someone is sentenced to death in that country, so that is the bent the officials used to silence their critic.

      In north america, we call it "witchcraft" "communism" or "terrorism" and replace death with life without parole, economic destruction, or character assassination...except for certain states of course. We also have a culture of questioning blanket statements concerning freedom of speech, and went through our own embarrassing period with Salem and such.

      Granted, I prefer here to there based on this, but i've lived in this system all my life so I cannot really compare at all. The arrogant attitude that the US is somehow of a "superior class" and shouldn't be compared with other governments is just racism enhanced by jingoism in the end though.

      If we want to be angry, be angry with Hamid Karzai for not demanding a pardon. He's been dealing with western diplomats long enough to know what kind of outrage this would cause, even if he isn't humanitarian enough to do so on his own. And if he somehow doesn't have the balls to step up to the clergy, then who is REALLY in power in afghanistan currently?

      --
      Ice Cream has no bones.
    20. Re:1st censorship death sentence by kylben · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Every Afghan shall have the right to express thoughts through speech, writing, illustrations as well as other means in accordance with provisions of this constitution. Directives related to the press, radio and television as well as publications and other mass media shall be regulated by law. They're following the same way the US is, alright. Using the loopholes that allow the government to do whatever it wants to do... well whatever it wants. In the US, the weasel clause is "without due process". In the Afghan constitution, I'm sure there's a clause about not blaspheming Allah, and so "in accordance with this Constitution" means that free speech is inviolable unless it blasphemes Allah - which is whatever the government says it is.
      --
      Insightful and funny are really the same thing, except one has a punch line.
    21. Re:1st censorship death sentence by Anonymous+Cowpat · · Score: 3, Insightful

      concur - people lead themselves into tyranny when they get themselves into the mindset that personal self-defence is not the single most important; fundamental; inalienable and absolute right that exists for all.

      --
      FGD 135
    22. Re:1st censorship death sentence by DaggertipX · · Score: 2

      The "vision" he's speaking of would not prohibit men of religion from holding office, it would prohibit those men implementing their religion into our government.

      Some day christianity will be taught next to greek mythology - and the great men who were a part of it will still be great for the things they did, not the beliefs they held.

    23. Re:1st censorship death sentence by plover · · Score: 4, Insightful
      I agree that it took both tremendous skill and discipline to restore Germany and Japan to the world, and the success is incredible.

      But there are a lot of significant differences between them and the nations following sharia law, and nobody has yet figured out how to bridge them.

      In both Germany and Japan, there was a central figure of extreme authority, a small group of insiders hoping to be next in line, a larger group of thugs willing to do their bidding because they enjoy hurting people, and a large percent of the populace that was willing to believe that their crappy lot in life was the result of "population X" (fill in the X with Jews, Poles, gypsies, westerners, Chinese, blacks, Arabs, homosexuals, or whoever is a convenient target.) All forms of tyranny essentially use this same model. And defeating them is also quite well understood: destroy the head, remove the insiders, and the movement dies. But in those cases, it was the national government that was responsible for the war. They were well known, easy to identify, and easy to physically locate. The fact that our politicians were willing to sacrifice a lot of innocent civilians with our bombing campaigns made it that much easier.

      But the current situation with violent Islamists is very different. First and foremost, their battle is based on religion, rather than politics. Despite the occasional memo coming from Osama bin Laden, there is no official head, no single "pope" of Islam dictating the violence -- mullahs all over the place are free to interpret the Qu'ran however they wish and issue fatwas of their own. Many are corrupt, seeking only to establish or maintain a power base for themselves, and the Westerners|Su'unis|Shi'a are easy and convenient targets for raising the ire of the populous. But being heads of religions, they have elevated themselves to being "above" questioning -- indeed, TFA is about the impending death of one such questioner. And the blanket of religion protects them all -- an attack by the U.S. on even a minor but corrupt mullah would rally much of ordinary non-violent Islam against the Americans. And each corrupt mullah has built himself up as a mini-tyrant, and is surrounded by a small group of insiders plus a wider group of thugs, making each individual sect almost as hard to clean up as a whole nation.

      The historical example would suggest a strategy such as the simultaneous assassinations of all the corrupt mullahs and their circles. And that is so heinous and illegitimate as to be unthinkable, even to our current violence-prone government, not to mention impossible to coordinate. And who would decide their guilt? Who would do the investigating? Where would the trials be held? We'd essentially be using both a Gestapo AND a schutstaffel to pull it off. It would require an absolutely corrupt process, bringing new corrupt people and a new horrible set of problems into the mix.

      We in the West know very little about Islam, or how to influence it. I'm sure we're trying to find ways to convince the honorable mullahs to discredit the corrupt ones, but they already have a huge base of well-deserved mistrust for us. New meddling in their business will not endear us to them, either.

      MacArthur had it easy, by comparison.

      --
      John
    24. Re:1st censorship death sentence by amorsen · · Score: 2, Insightful

      We should have written the constitution and the law books as the US did in Japan after WWII, with some minor input by the Afghanis The Japanese knew that they were beaten in a war they started themselves. They knew they'd have to do as the victors demanded. This mindset is completely different from that of the Afghani people.
      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
    25. Re:1st censorship death sentence by rcw-home · · Score: 4, Funny

      What do you think would happen if, say, Utah lost proper government for a while and became a place ruled purely by the whims of religious men with absolute power and no desire to let things change?

      Fifty states and you picked that one as an example? :)

    26. Re:1st censorship death sentence by Captain+Splendid · · Score: 3, Interesting

      people lead themselves into tyranny when they get themselves into the mindset that personal self-defence is not the single most important; fundamental; inalienable and absolute right that exists for all.

      Totally agreed.

      However, accept that you're going to get royally fucked unless you're in the majority. Your rights are great and all, but the herd hates a mutant.

      --
      Linux, you magnificent bastard, I read the fucking manual!
    27. Re:1st censorship death sentence by pmdkh · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think that you have good points, and I agree that the local clergy is abusing their power, which would be a problem even if there were no religion.

      However, religion, and ultimately irrational belief, is definitely part of the problem here. The man has been sentenced to death under Islamic law, so obviously religion has a role to play here. (I know that there are irrational secular reasons to put someone to death, but the reason was religious in this case.)

      You also say that the actions of the Islamic clergy in Afghanistan are not indicative of Islam as a whole, but has there been outrage from other Islamic countries concerning this? I have been looking but I don't see any. The article mentions "international protests" but doesn't say from which countries.

      I'm not sure if the GP was trying to say that the United States is in a "superior class" but I think, that when it comes to ensuring personal freedoms, Islamic law and our (U.S.) system of government are at just about opposite ends of the spectrum. So, if ensuring personal freedoms is your metric, it is possible to objectively determine if one system of government is better than another.

      --

      "Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will."

      --Frederick Douglass

    28. Re:1st censorship death sentence by eloki · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It is literally two wolves and one lamb

      My pet peeve - something being "literally" true means that there is no exaggeration or metaphor going on, the words mean exactly what they say at face value. So you're saying there were some real wolves and a lamb voting about dinner... I'm skeptical :)

      People try to use the word "literally" for emphasis nowadays for some reason, but if you'd simply said "it is no better than two wolves and one lamb..." that would be clearer and just as rhetorically strong.
    29. Re:1st censorship death sentence by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 2, Informative

      No, they didn't all vote. Their reps were installed, and controlled by their priests. Afghanistan hasn't had a popular election of its government. It's all been installed by the US, and the factions the US patronizes.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    30. Re:1st censorship death sentence by wiredlogic · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Japan had already walked down the path toward democratization in the Meiji era. It's also worth pointing out what Japan has today is something of a sham democracy (not that the US isn't either). There are multitudes of battling special interests that work in the classical mold of Japanese clan society. The only thing that prevents them from bursting apart, Kenya-style, is their tendency to patiently wait while consensus building.

      --
      I am becoming gerund, destroyer of verbs.
    31. Re:1st censorship death sentence by TwistedOne151 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'd also add on the fact that during the military campaign we not only dropped two nuclear weapons (killing mostly civilians), but performed the single largest conventional bombing attack in history against their capital city. We thus demoralized not only the government and military, but the civilian populations as well. (In this vein, I'd also point out the bombing of Dresden in Germany).
      Contrast with these our modern, pinpoint strikes and massive restraint seeking to minimize civilian casualties.
      To sum up, you cannot build up a new system until you've fully torn down the old one.

    32. Re:1st censorship death sentence by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Hope!?

      That was one of the saddest and depressing posts ever, bereft of any hope for humankind's future whatsoever!

      What are the basic implications of his stance? That there shall be always majorities voting to kill minorities? That the way to go forward is a landscape of bunkers with deranged, rabid, paranoid occupants eyeing each other's "neighbours" through squinted eyes and the sights of the ever bigger guns in their formidable arsenals while looking for a slightest sign of "aggression" so that they can open up with their canons, rockets, nukes and what not on each other, "until they run out of ammo"? That the societal structure be based on the size of one's armory?

      And this is hope?! Me thinks you should look under the heading of "nightmare" in the dictionary and you will find the definition much more fitting.

      The sad, pathetic and wholly uninspiring assumption of that post is that humans will never be able to dis-entangle themselves from their evolutionary reptilian brain baggage and will forever remain snarling, greedy, short-sighted, delusional, unreasoning and completely despicable creatures they are now, forever clawing each other eyes out over some pathetic plastic trinkets or incomprehensible ramblings of long-dead senile imbeciles enshrined in some "holy" book.

      And what is even more depressing, is that some here seem to gleefully and impatiently look towards their dream of some sort of apocalyptic shootout coming true, where the last man standing with the biggest gun and the longest dick swinging "wins".

      "Hope" he says...

    33. Re:1st censorship death sentence by c6gunner · · Score: 3, Interesting

      His hope springs from the fact that there are others in this world who are aware that the only way to keep tyranny at bay is to be prepared to fight it. "Si vis Pacem? Parabellum!".

      Your Orwellian rant is the speech of a man who expects always to be in the majority, and expects others to protect him if he's not. While your attitude may serve you in a pluralist democracy, it hinges on the existence of the men whom you despise - men who understand that vigilance is not just a necessary evil, but a way of life.

      Vigilance and self defence do not mean having a private arsenal in a concrete bunker, and being paranoid of anyone who comes near you. They DO mean keeping informed of the world around you, being ready to defend yourself and others, and seeking to cultivate similar attitudes in those around you. It can be as simple as starting a neighbourhood watch, or as complex as organizing an armed neighbourhood militia to defend your streets, as some of your fellow citizens had to do recently in Louisiana. Ask yourself, how well could you provide for your family tomorrow if a New Orleans scale disaster hit your city? Only fools and sheep depend on others for their defence. It's YOUR life! Protect it!

    34. Re:1st censorship death sentence by plover · · Score: 2, Insightful
      There's a lot of difference between Shinto and Islam, and I bet you know it. It's all about the central authority figure versus the quarreling clerics. When Hirohito surrendered and later issued the ningen-sengen, all the hard work of "defeating" the religion was over. The mullahs haven't surrendered to anyone, and Islam is so decentralized that the Mahdi Army itself is fragmenting; intelligence suggests that Moktada al-Sadr himself may have lost control of up to a third of his army at this point. It's suspected that much of that loss of control is that he's not active enough in fighting the Americans.

      And I stand by my statement that MacArthur had it easy "by comparison". The actual, factual god of Japan's religion/state told them to lay down their arms, and then told everyone that maybe he wasn't really their god. In contrast, Allah is not present in human form today, and his prophet Mohammed is no longer alive making claims or raising armies. With nobody in control of Islam, nobody has the authority to even say such a thing.

      MacArthur had an entire compliant, beaten, and headless nation handed to him. Not to take anything away from his many great accomplishments, but it wasn't even close to the same kind of situation we're facing in the Middle East.

      So sure, I misspoke in saying that Japan wasn't driven to war using religion. That changes very little of the differences between then and now.

      --
      John
    35. Re:1st censorship death sentence by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 3, Insightful

      His hope springs from the fact that there are others in this world who are aware that the only way to keep tyranny at bay is to be prepared to fight it. "Si vis Pacem? Parabellum!".

      Wolves at each other's throats, forever then! Would-be tyrants clawing their way to the top to replace the ones being "kept at bay" via bullet holes in their skulls by "patriots" sporting portable tactical nuclear missiles, then anti-matter, than some kind of planet-busting time-space continuum weapons, until the end of time! (or the premature end of the unfortunate planet Earth having given birth to such a hopeless flock of pathetic trogloditic morons)

      Your Orwellian rant is the speech of a man who expects always to be in the majority, and expects others to protect him if he's not.

      Huh? Wha? Orwellian? In minority? Protect?!! Do you have any clue what Orwell's distopia was actually about?

      While your attitude may serve you in a pluralist democracy, it hinges on the existence of the men whom you despise - men who understand that vigilance is not just a necessary evil, but a way of life.

      Nice try. But no cigar. These supposed vigilant "defenders" exist solely because of those of their own kind ON THE OTHER SIDE. If it weren't for macho, gonad-thinking, greedy, power-hungry, religious lunacy infested and heavily armed imbeciles elsewhere, enlightened societies would not need to tolerate their own pet zoos of macho, gonad-thinking, greedy, power-hungry, religious lunacy infested or other kinds of armed imbeciles as a counter-measure to unleash on the other idiots if needed.

      And that is the fact so very uncomfortable to all these would-be "defenders" of our "freedoms" (who usually congregate in some sort of new True-blue Patriotic Neighbourhood, Homeland or Motherland Security organizations, usually complete with demands for everyone else to "temporarily" relinquishing their freedoms so that they could be "vigilanty" defended).

      All of this shit is pure base animal "logic". The stuff that fills reptile brains. Kill or be killed! Eat or be eaten! Rat-think. Far below what the so-called "technologically advanced" and "civilized" society should strive for. The very fact that so many here cannot seem to raise above the level of thought processes of a snake, is a sad testimony indeed as to how far humanity is from any sort of hopeful future.

      They DO mean keeping informed of the world around you, being ready to defend yourself and others, and seeking to cultivate similar attitudes in those around you.

      Indeed! Informed out of the pages of Der-Sturmer, being ready do defend yourself from the taxman (or the mailman) and to cultivate similar attitudes in those around in your Montana "militia", while on patrol for them "illigul immigrunts", around the still.

      It can be as simple as starting a neighbourhood watch, or as complex as organizing an armed neighbourhood militia to defend your streets, as some of your fellow citizens had to do recently in Louisiana.

      The moment the citizens if my country need an "armed militia" "defending the streets", the country would be done for. There indeed would not need to be a point to a such a country anymore as it would have by then devolved to an anarchy of roaming bands of self-appointed thuggish banditry calling themselves "militias" and final rule by the barrel of a gun. Usually at first by the upper-class trigger happy "militiamen" "defending" their God-given hoards of stuff against them "unwashed thieving lazies", only, given enough time, to be followed by a swift reversal when the "unwashed ones" figure out that they have 10:1 numerical advantage.

      Ask yourself, how well could you provide for your family tomorrow if a New Orleans scale disaster hit your city?

      There is a world of a difference between living in a c

    36. Re:1st censorship death sentence by Plutonite · · Score: 2, Insightful

      We in the West know very little about Islam, or how to influence it. I'm sorry to say this is quite true, even in your own post above. Religious figures do not have much influence over the "violence" in most parts of the muslim world. Osama bin Laden is not a religious figure, he has no formal religious training and does not have any association (nor do his lieutenants) with the major scholarly institutions of religion (which are the only authority in Muslim matters in places that do implement shariah). In fact, most religious figures have been declared by the extremists as infidels who themselves have to be eliminated and fought.

      That doesn't mean religion isn't the source of the the problem - it still is - it's just that this "militancy" issue you seem to be talking about is actually very rare (Pakistan tribal areas for e.g)and constrained by the fact that the majority of muslim land is ruled by secular dictatorship. As for shariah implementation, this is again very rare except in places like Saudi where the historical circumstance lead to a religious revolution (ditto afghanistan). The nations that hate us the most are those that have the most active nationalist state propaganda, which inspires the evangelists as it does here in the US of A. It is literally a mirror image.

      Religious "leaders" in the muslim world are largely non-threatening. They have little say over governance, though religious evangelism tends to be depressing in any case. It is the nationalist dictators that are the main culprit. They are the ones with everything to lose, so they try to rally the public against any external threat and behind any unifiying blanket - like you said, religion makes for a good blanket.

      We should not try to influence Islam. Islam was handed down in a very definitive manner and its jurisprudence is based on a historiography relying on extreme methods of preservation. What we should do is try to get people to move on, to open their eyes, to show them that life is quite possible without the emphasis on religion, and that only happens through education and the normal advance of civilization.
    37. Re:1st censorship death sentence by Al+Dimond · · Score: 2, Funny

      Dude, your sig.

    38. Re:1st censorship death sentence by teh+kurisu · · Score: 2, Informative

      Even just a single murder is unlikely to get you the death sentence - you have to kill, rape, and/or mutilate multiple people to even be considered for that particular "award".

      Kenny Richey was convicted of arson that led to the death of a child, and was sentenced to death for it. Despite weak, circumstantial evidence the Ohio public prosecutor still hounded him for his life after his retrial was ordered. Ironically, he secured his release not by fighting back but by plea bargaining - his sentence was reduced to jail time that he had already served on the understanding that he plead 'No Contest'.

    39. Re:1st censorship death sentence by nospam007 · · Score: 2, Informative

      The problem is, there are a fair few million people who are Afghans,....

      The problem is, there's no such thing as Afghans, they are:
              * Pashtun: 42%
              * Tajik: 27%
              * Hazara: 9%
              * Uzbek: 9%
              * Aimak: 4%
              * Turkmen: 3%
              * Baloch: 2%
              * Other: 4%

      and they speak different languages too

                50% Dari
                35% Pashto
                  8% Uzbek
                  3% Turkmen
                  4% Balochi
                  2% other (Nuristani, Pashai, Brahui, etc.)

    40. Re:1st censorship death sentence by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You mention several times about "the primitive heritage of our reptilian mind", but you seem to overlook the fact that it wouldn't have evolved that way if it didn't work. "Taking advantage of other people" is a successful strategy in some cases, and even a colony of perfectly logical, individualistic robots would have a few that would take advantage of the others.

      So was wacking your chosen "mate" over the head with your club and dragging her to your cave also a "successful" strategy for reproduction. As long as you did not club too hard.

      Could you explain however what does this have to do with a society of beings capable of unleashing the energy of atomic bonds and travelling into space?

      Your assumption is that if something "worked" for the primordial slime, therefore it is a valid and fully justifiable strategy for sentient beings purporting to have developed concepts such as "morality" or "science". I contend that the notion is absurd, and at some point of time humans must face the music and detach themselves from these knuckle-headed animalistic instincts or make themselves extinct in one of a miriad of a very creative, painful and gory ends. Either this or some progeny of humanity, be it biological or bio-mechanical will decide that their troglodyte "parents" are just too stupid to be allowed to keep anything more meaningful then plastic forks (which at present is sadly true) and will solve that problem for us.

      You also strike me as the sort of person who, when being mugged, would willing give up rather than defend oneself in even the slightest way, thus ironically making mugging people a profitable occupation.

      This of course is nonsense. The fact that I do not see getting a sniper rifle and organizing some ridiculous "militia" as something a sane person should be doing in one of the most advanced countries in the 21st century does not mean that I would not put up (a reasonable) fight when someone tries to mug me.

      Remember however that the entire point of this sub-thread, started by my original post was about "hope" and "future", not about some wacky notions of cape-clad vigilante "militiamen" swooping to the rescue of the distressed damsels of the "western" (as in White Anglo-Saxon, Christian, upper-middle-class) society from the clutches of unpure (Middle-Eastern, African or Asiatic) dstardly (most likely "illigal alien") muggers. Which is what that nut from Alberta in the other posting was really all about.

      This is simply changing the topics.

    41. Re:1st censorship death sentence by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 2, Insightful

      An epithaph for a "society" of hopeless, brainless cavemen.

      Oh and you did forget the "I love the smell of Napalm in the morning ... it smells like ... Victory!"

      May all the self-appointed "defenders" in search of a foe to "defend" themselves from choke on their own self-aggrandising, counter-productive "logic" and croak promptly. The world would be a much better place for it. For should an actual, legitimate defense of our lives become a neccessity there will be no need for retarded authoritarian jerks to make speeches as to how they "do not give a fuck about what anyone thinks" and how you better do what they tell you or they kill you, thus putting into question as to who the actual enemy of ours was in the first place. In such times the cause is obvious and unambiguous and practical necessities swiftly take precedence to any phillosophical discussions. Last such time being WWII where no one had to explain to anyone why the foe was deadly and the threat imminnent and entire nations abandoned all their ordinary pursuits to convert their entire economies to war production. Never you mind the all-encompassing draft.

      That is the key fallacy of these squeaking chicken-hawk "defenders" of ours these days: they have been reduced to manufacturing their own patheric "doomsday" boogeymen out of their terrible fear of perishing in obscurity and not in power or in positions of authority.

      And so to our would-be Col. Jessep wannabe I say: "Sir, Fuck You Sir up your ass with the butt of your own rifle, Sir!". And no do not come back whining for "emergency expandnded defense budget ammendment for 'defense' operations suppressing the unruly natives around them gold mines in Congo", or some such 'defense' you witless dorks have been all about for the last 50 years.

  2. Opportunity knocks by Perp+Atuitie · · Score: 4, Funny

    I guess the RIAA will be moving its headquarters to Kabul.

  3. Nope by BertieBaggio · · Score: 4, Informative

    The Afghan Senate decided to go back on it's original decision

    But the first story / headline is much more likely to bring in people from the RSS readers / aggregators etc. Not that internet censorship isn't a topic worth discussing; but the latest information is more useful than this misleading summary.

    Sheesh.

    --
    If all you have is a grenade, pretty soon every problem looks like a foxhole -- MightyYar
  4. Patriotic Slogan by Ethanol-fueled · · Score: 3, Funny

    *=* America: At least it's not the Middle East *=*

  5. Re:Thank god the USA invaded that country by Kandenshi · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I to am gratified to know that the billions of dollars borrowed, and that will have be repaid by my children, were so well spent. Your children will be paying the interest on that loan. It's unlikely they'll be able to afford to pay the whole thing right off.
    Now your grandchildren... MAYBE they might pay it off.
  6. Re:nice religion ya got there, guys by brezel · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I think the NATO forces need to broaden the scope of their guns.

    Your religion sucks. Why are you so afraid of women, of criticissm, of your own damn shadows? thank god no-one was ever killed on behalf of christianity...
  7. Re:nice religion ya got there, guys by Dun+Malg · · Score: 3, Insightful

    thank god no-one was ever killed on behalf of christianity... Who said Christianity doesn't suck too? You really think that's a fucking defense of the bullshit that is Sharia?
    --
    If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
  8. Re:Didn't we invade to stop this? by JustOK · · Score: 2, Insightful

    and poppies. Lest we forget the poppies.

    --
    rewriting history since 2109
  9. This is OUR fault. WE did this. by foreverdisillusioned · · Score: 2, Interesting

    In case you've forgotten, we invaded this country first, because they were supposedly harboring Osama bin Laden. Remember him? He had something to do with 9/11, if my memory serves me. He was the guy who HATED Saddam Hussein and actually OFFERED HIS SOLDIERS TO HELP SAUDI ARABIA FIGHT IRAQ. The royal family of Saudi Arabia laughed at him, preferring instead to rely on American troops. He got pissed, and has been an anti-American nutjob ever since.

    Oh, but I'm sorry... I'm sure I'm not telling you anything new. After all, everyone in America knows that Osama hated Saddam and that the latter had nothing to do with 9/11! Everyone knows that al-Qaeda was originally led by Osama to be an anti-Iraq and anti-Saddam milita!

    ...sorry, but I don't think I can keep up the Colbert-esque routine any longer:

    http://www.harrisinteractive.com/harris_poll/index.asp?PID=544 quote: [in 2005] 64 percent believe that Saddam Hussein had strong links to Al Qaeda (up slightly from 62% in November).

    How is it FUCKING possible that this has happened? Osama is the one responsible for 9/11, and yet trillions spent on Iraq, a country that Osama was actively trying to fight. But, you know, despite the fact that Iraq has been an unending clusterfuck, I at least assumed that things in Afghanistan--the only that actually openly supported Osama--were going semi-decently. Ok yeah, so opium production has been on the rise since we invaded--shit happens, shit happens, plus I'm not exactly a huge fan of the war on drugs anyway so it's no biggie.

    But this... What the FUCK. We destroy the Taliban, and then install THIS sharia-based bullshit? Or, at the very least, we allowed this government to take power after the Taliban fell? We're busy JAMMING democracy and freedom down the throat of Iraq, but we're allowing Afghanistan to descend into the dark ages again? We're allowing them to become a breeding ground for the successor to Osama bin Laden?

    I don't know what to say. Sounds like the beginning of a Lewis Black routine, but for the life of me I think of a punch line.

    I don't understand. Being mindlessly pro-war is one thing. Being mindlessly pro-war vs. a country that had nothing to do with 9/11, while allowing the country that harbored and nurtured the mastermind behind 9/11 to DESCEND INTO A FUCKING TOTALITARIANISM AGAIN is just... just...

    What is WRONG with you people--you jingoists, you untiring flag-wavers, you twin-tower-tattooing rednecks, you support-the-war-or-you-aren't-a-patriot fucks? Why aren't you screaming at our president for allowing Osama to get away with it? Why aren't you screaming at him to bring 'freedom' to Afghanistan, a country we originally invaded six and a half years ago, a country that was and apparently still is much more oppressive and totalitarian than Iraq ever was?

    I don't understand.

  10. Still disturbing as fuck by foreverdisillusioned · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The fact that they made this "original" decision at all shows what kind of government we've installed/allowed to rise to power in Afghanistan.

    1. Re:Still disturbing as fuck by JustASlashDotGuy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The fact that they made this "original" decision at all shows what kind of government we've installed/allowed to rise to power in Afghanistan. I am torn. Half of me agrees with you, while the other half is in conflict. As sad as it is, this government is much better than what they had before. In the past, the Taliban would have just killed you and then gone about their day. There would no time for an appeal by the international community nor local population.

      The government isn't the problem, it's the politicians that are currently making up the government. The framework is in place for the elected officials to lose their standing as soon as the next election comes up. It would not necessarily be a bad thing in my eyes for an entirely new senate to be elected. One side may claim its a failure of the government 'we set up', however I would see it as a beneficial option given to the citizens as a result of the government 'we set up'.

      We didn't select their leaders. They selected their own leaders. The US cannot be blamed because the citizens didn't choose wisely nor know how their elected representatives would act. Picking candidates wisely comes with time and experience; many of us in the US still haven't learned how to look past the flashy smear commercials during our election time.

      They are still a very young democracy with new ideals being forced upon them. There will be many more examples of this in the future. When/If Iraq's democracy takes hold, I guarantee you will see the same stories from there as well. It's up to all of us an in international community to tactfully and politically inform them that they are being idiots when they do something as idiotic as this.
    2. Re:Still disturbing as fuck by rhakka · · Score: 2, Insightful

      who says they didn't choose wisely?

      you?

      Me?

      Who are we to say who the afghans should have running their country?

      Who is to say that their elected representatives are not acting in accordance with their peoples' wishes?

      This is the whole problem with our "nation building" bullshit. We only think it's cool, when the people elect people we agree are good leaders.

      News flash everyone... THE MIDDLE EAST IS ISLAMIC, AND IF LEFT TO DEMOCRACY, ARE LIKELY TO VOTE IN ISLAMIC REPRESENTATION.

      Personally, I don't like it either. But I don't pretend it's a bad choice simply because I don't share their values.

  11. Re:Thank god the USA invaded that country by FlatEric521 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I suppose this helps prove that you cannot force people to change their beliefs regardless of the political system they operate under. Sure, the US invaded and changed the government in Afghanistan, but you can't change the religious beliefs of the the people living there. For many of the followers of Islam in the Middle East, things like blasphemy are punishable by death. Those beliefs are reflected in how government responded, since even "democratically" elected leaders hold the same beliefs.

    What I consider the bigger concern in this article is that the separation of Church and State as it is understood in the US is not being practiced in this newly started democracy. Here we have an instance where a religion calls for death to blasphemers. The government, showing that it is clearly backing a specific religion, was going along with it. That was what the Taliban represented in the first place. They ruled the country according to what they understood their religion dictated. The US may have changed the way that people achieve power in the country, but it seems that elements of the Taliban are still alive and well in this non-Taliban government.

  12. EVERY religion sucks! by mangu · · Score: 4, Interesting

    thank god no-one was ever killed on behalf of christianity...

    No, let's say thank "god" no one was ever killed on behalf of religious skepticism, or agnosticism, or whatever you call it.


    Any kind of blind belief, where faith never bends to reason, is evil, no matter if it's faith in Islam or Jesus Christ.


    Robert Heinlein said it best, in "If This Goes On -":


    "Yet you are willing to assert your own religious convictions and to use them as a touchstone to judge my conduct. So I repeat: who told you? What hill were you standing on when the lightning came down from heaven and illuminated you? Which archangel carried the message?"


    "I believe that a man has an obligation to be merciful to the weak ... patient with the stupid ... generous with the poor. I think he is obliged to lay down his life for his brothers, should it be required of him. But I don't propose to prove any of these things; they are beyond proof. And I don't demand that you believe as I do."


    "I believe very strongly in freedom of religion - but I think that that freedom is best expressed as freedom to keep quiet. From my point of view, a great deal of openly expressed piety is insufferable conceit."

  13. Re: Follow your own advice by Dannonman · · Score: 2, Informative

    Er...why don't you read your own article (obviously, you were too busy to read the /. summary to note which governmental body is involved)? FYI, in the Afghan system, there is a difference between a sharia court and the Senate. The Senate voted to support the sentence, and in the article you link to, then reversed its support. The guy still has a death sentence awaiting him until a higher court reverses it.

  14. Re:nice religion ya got there, guys by goldspider · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Right, because it seems almost every day, these days, that someone is executed for challenging Christian dogma.

    --
    "Ask not what your country can do for you." --John F. Kennedy
  15. Re:Don't tell the RIAA they can do this... by florescent_beige · · Score: 5, Funny

    Shariaa law?

    --
    Equine Mammals Are Considerably Smaller
  16. Re:nice religion ya got there, guys by clarkkent09 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Your religion sucks too (assuming you are a Christian). Living under Islamic law is not so different from living under Christian law (see most of European history from 5th to about 15th century). In Bible "god" explicitly demands killing people for worshiping other gods and other silly things like adultery and working on Sabbath.

    The only reason we don't have a similar situation to Afghanistan in the West today is that we (including those calling themselves "Christian") ignore most of what Bible says and choose not to live according to its rules. If we didn't, we would still have daily stoning sessions for blasphemy, adultery, homosexuality etc

    --
    Negative moral value of force outweighs the positive value of good intentions.
  17. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  18. Sharia == Smokescreen by Ricin · · Score: 5, Informative

    From what I read here and there (google) this is really about this guy's older brother who's also a journalist and who has written about one or more of the tribal chiefs aka warlords (and since they're our "friends" now they have moved up into all sorts of higher positions). One thing that stung was apparently his reporting how this tribal chief and others (apparently it's an old custom) enjoy capturing and abusing teenage boys. Maybe before being sold and shipped to Guantanamo, who knows.

    I think, but am not sure that's in the Uruzgan province where our dear Dutch soldiers are protecting such scumbags while spreading freedom and democracy.

    And there are persistent rumors that Karzai (mayor of Kabul)'s brother is opium chief number one in that lovely place. Well I reckon something has to pay for weaponry and the squanders of war and newfound power. And they can cheerfully dump the heroin into countries such as Iran. You know, to stop the terrorists there.

    BTW, in Iraq they now HAVE sharia law. Officially. It's only a few pages away from the oil privatizing clauses in their new and illegal constitution brought to them by the benevolent US of A. Gays are killed. Single women (and there are MANY widows there) are targeted. The whole shebang. So they get death from above, death from starvation, death from disease, and death from their own governments militia (and the madhi). Almost makes death by M16 a mercy killing, doesn't it.

  19. Re:This is OUR fault. WE did this. by schon · · Score: 2, Informative

    in 2005] 64 percent believe that Saddam Hussein had strong links to Al Qaeda How is it FUCKING possible that this has happened? Simple - because that's what the US Government wants them to believe.
  20. Re:Thank god the USA invaded that country by ScrewMaster · · Score: 4, Funny

    Now tell me how narrow-minded I am..

    You're so narrowminded that you could peer through a keyhole with both eyes!

    (Sorry ... I just wanted to use that line.)

    --
    The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
  21. Re:This is OUR fault. WE did this. by goldspider · · Score: 2, Insightful

    No it was probably modded offtopic because, among many other reasons, this probably would have happened regardless of whether or not we invaded Afghanistan or Iraq.

    If anything, the increased media presence in Afghanistan brought about by our invasion is probably the only reason we even know about this case.

    --
    "Ask not what your country can do for you." --John F. Kennedy
  22. Re:Thank god the USA invaded that country by RiotingPacifist · · Score: 2, Informative

    It's similar to the refounding of japan that kept the emperor: it was reconized that it simply would not be doable without that because there was universal opposition. In this case the thing they had to compromise on was to allow religious law to be part of government justice. Failure to do so would have lead to what happened to the Russians. what you mean the US would pay osama bin laden and a bunch of fundamentalists to fight against the current regime?
    plane tickets are free, he had to get his money somewhere, and that somewhere was pretty much US citizens pockets!

    It's hardly the fault of the United States. Afghanistan is such a backward country Well apart from putting a regime in power just so the Russians didn't get the oil.

    assuming the kid gets to spend some time on death row, the US could simply pull out and then pay some group to invade on thier behalf, then invade them, he'd only need about 20 years on death row!
    --
    IranAir Flight 655 never forget!
  23. Re:its things like these... by Yaztromo · · Score: 2, Informative

    This a a new theory to me. How did the discovery the world was round lead to any attempted genocides?

    Well, if you hold onto the Amero-centric view that nobody had posited the spheroid nature of the Earth before Columbus sailed to the Americas, I suppose one could point out to you the fact that the Aztec empire just isn't what it used to be.

    Yaz.

  24. We had a choice. We could have stopped it. by foreverdisillusioned · · Score: 4, Insightful

    We didn't select their leaders. They selected their own leaders. The US cannot be blamed because the citizens didn't choose wisely nor know how their elected representatives would act.

    That didn't stop us from setting policies in Iraq unilaterally, like banning anyone who was ever a member of the Baath party from holding any position in the new government. We installed the Coalition Provisional Authority, which ruled for over a year in Iraq. After that, a non-elected interim government ruled for (about) another year. I don't know offhand how that compares to our efforts in Afghanistan, but my point is this: we didn't relinquish control of Iraq until we were sure that relatively secular, pro-western leaders were going to take over.

    And we damn sure should have done the same thing in Afghanistan, especially if we cared about the potential for them to become future terrorist producers/trainers/harborers.

  25. Re:Thank god the USA invaded that country by Original+Replica · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It's quite possible to be Islamic and not follow Sharia

    Now that really depends on which Muslims you ask. Unfortunately the Muslims who feel that proper Islam requires Sharia Law are also much more prone to enforcing their religious views with physical force. They may even be in the minority in many places, but they are the vocal, violent minority. So yes, "it's possible to be Jewish and not follow all 613 laws in the Torah" but it is also possible to do so in Israel without being beaten, maimed, or executed.

    --
    We are all just people.
  26. Re:But it is a peaceful religion!!! by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 2, Informative

    take a page from General Pershing and do what he did. Line up about 50 of them. Dip bullets in pig blood. Execute all but one. Take the bodies, toss then into a common grave, pour pig blood & pig body parts on them, cover them up (while the one you let live watches). Let the only survivor go......they did that in the late 1919's era.......NOT ONE more act of terrorism for a long time.

    Except that there's no evidence that Pershing did such a thing, and in fact was careful not to take actions that would turn people into "Mohammedan fanatics"; and similar defilement of the corpses of suicide bombers in Israel has been done recently and didn't stop terrorist attacks; and commiting terrorist acts of mass execution to discourage others from doing terrorist acts is a stupid idea.

    We should not look to American war crimes in the Philippines as a model of how to behave.

    --
    Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
    You cannot wash away blood with blood
  27. Re:Thank god the USA invaded that country by TheRaven64 · · Score: 3, Funny
    Heh. Morons.

    (It is Pennsylvania, right?)

    --
    I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  28. Clarification, please by ggvaidya · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Hi,

    All the other posters replying to your post seem to be of the opinion that the point of the analogy you drew was that armed lambs will be able to defend themselves against attack by the wolves. A naive interpretation, such as mine, of this analogy would instead be that in a constitutional republic, the constitution acts as the guns of the lamb - both figuratively and, through its agent the Executive, literally - to protect it from assault by the wolves, despite them being in the majority. This could be representative of, for instance, the arguments for and against slavery in the mid-1800s (i.e. should slavery be allowed to exist, because the majority wish it so? Or should the US Constitution's assumption that "all men are created equal" act to protect those who would be enslaved against their wolfish enslavers? Thankfully, wisdom prevailed, and emancipation proclaimed). Is the intended point really the first one? And if so, are my co-posters aware that Afghanistan is in a bit of a mess at the moment because too many people have guns?

    Sorry for my odd english; it's 6am here right now and I desperately need some sleep.

    Yours sincerely, etc.

  29. Re:literally two wolves? by mybadluck22 · · Score: 2, Informative

    idiom
    noun
    1 a group of words established by usage as having a meaning not deducible from those of the individual words (e.g., rain cats and dogs, see the light).
      a form of expression natural to a language, person, or group of people : he had a feeling for phrase and idiom.
      the dialect of a people or part of a country.
    2 a characteristic mode of expression in music or art : they were both working in a neo-Impressionist idiom.

    literally
    adverb
    in a literal manner or sense; exactly : the driver took it literally when asked to go straight across the traffic circle | tiramisu, literally translated "pick me up."
      informal used for emphasis or to express strong feeling while not being literally true : I have received literally thousands of letters.
    USAGE In its standard use, literally means 'in a literal sense, as opposed to a nonliteral or exaggerated sense,': : I told him I never wanted to see him again, but I didn't expect him to take it literally . In recent years, an extended use of literally (and also literal) has become very common, where literally (or literal) is used deliberately in nonliteral contexts, for added effect: : they bought the car and literally ran it into the ground. This use can lead to unintentional humorous effects ( : we were literally killing ourselves laughing) and is not acceptable in formal English.

    While you could make the case that this is not formal English, you can't use a word like literally to mean exactly the opposite of what it means, unless you're being sarcastic, which you're not. Raining cats and dogs is a pretty silly phrase, word for word, but that's what makes it an idiom. Calling something an idiom doesn't make incorrect English into correct English.

    I mean really, look up literal in a thesaurus. It will show "figurative" as an (possibly the only) antonym. You can use a word to mean its antonym if you're being sarcastic, but that is not what you were being.

    --
    If I could rearrange the keyboard, I'd put U and I together.
  30. Re:nice religion ya got there, guys by Howitzer86 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Get rid of it? How? Are you going to stick a gun to my head and tell me what to believe and what not to believe?

    Would you... dare I say... sentence me to death for criticizing an Atheist government?

    Religion isn't the problem, blowing shit out of proportion is. Atheists can be just as bad as Christians or Muslims or Scientologists, they are after all - people.

  31. Re:This is OUR fault. WE did this. by Vellmont · · Score: 4, Interesting


    What is WRONG with you people--you jingoists, you untiring flag-wavers, you twin-tower-tattooing rednecks, you support-the-war-or-you-aren't-a-patriot fucks?

    There's a certain segment of the population that just likes things to be simple. They don't understand the world, and they don't want to. They rely on the President or Bill O'Reilly, or hell, even Susan Sarandon to tell them what's right. If the leadership tells them something simple like "we gotta get them terrorists" they'll defend that forever. Questioning that would be going down the path of trying to understand something they don't want to.

    Everyone does that to SOME degree with some topic. If my mechanic started talking about how bad Chevy transmissions are compared to Ford transmissions, and how Chevy was a rotten company for making bad transmissions, my eyes would glaze over, especially if I heard all the time how great Chevy transmissions are from my friends, family, etc. Obviously I think international politics are more important than transmissions... but my point is there's a certain amount of willful disengagement with the populace.

    Your message is right, but your approach is wrong. You sound like Ron Paul (in the sanest thing he's ever said) talking about Iraq at the Republican debate the other night. People, at least in the US, don't like to listen to ranting and raving people. It doesn't matter what they're saying, it's just an automatic "this guy sounds crazy, whatever he's saying is crazy".

    --
    AccountKiller
  32. Re:We had a choice. We could have stopped it. by amorsen · · Score: 2, Interesting

    we didn't relinquish control of Iraq until we were sure that relatively secular, pro-western leaders were going to take over. You are speaking in the past tense of something that may or not happen in the future.

    And we damn sure should have done the same thing in Afghanistan, especially if we cared about the potential for them to become future terrorist producers/trainers/harborers. How? Iraq apparently can't be ruled even with more than 100,000 troops. It's mostly nice and flat, with few places to hide. How are you going to impose something on Afghanistan with far fewer troops in a much more difficult area?
    --
    Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
  33. Re:nice religion ya got there, guys by Tack · · Score: 2, Insightful

    A good start would be complete eradication of tax exemption and shelters for religious institutions.

  34. I am crying by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I am a muslim (barely posting .. due to the cut cables)

    I have read the Quraan many times, I know every part of Sunnah.
    I know the goals of what is called "Shariaa law", be it far or near.
    I have lived and identified with the moral values that this religion calls for (which I presume .. reading the above comments- that many of you don't know) and strives for, which if every human can embrace -even if they do not believe in the religion itself, this is not the issue- the world can become a better place.

    But I have never ever witnessed such hatred, ignorance, cruelty, absurdity, hypocrisy in my life .. called as if originating from the depths of that same religion I am committed to!
    I call all people
    to pray with me (even atheists will agree with me, this time)..

    that these people may burn in hell
    ... forever!!

    Amen

    Quran [16:116] But say not - for any false thing that your tongues may put forth,- "This is lawful, and this is forbidden," so as to ascribe false things to Allah. For those who ascribe false things to Allah, will never prosper.
    Quran [4:50] "Behold! how they invent a lie against Allah. but that by itself is a manifest sin!"
    Quran [3:94] "If any, after this, invent a lie and attribute it to Allah, they are indeed unjust wrong-doers."
    Quran [9:107] "They will indeed swear that their intention is nothing but good; But Allah doth declare that they are certainly liars."
    Quran [10:69] Say: "Those who invent a lie against Allah will never prosper."
    Quran [58:16] "They have made their oaths a screen (for their misdeeds): thus they obstruct (men) from the Path of Allah. therefore shall they have a humiliating Penalty."

  35. Canonical meaning by Jaxoreth · · Score: 2, Insightful

    deranged, rabid, paranoid occupants eyeing each other's "neighbours" through squinted eyes... while looking for a slightest sign of "aggression" so that they can open up with their canons Oh, they already do that. They're called 'fundamentalists'.
    --
    In general, it is safe and legal to kill your children. -- POSIX Programmer's Guide
  36. make that atleast 150 people in grief! by freaker_TuC · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Those 60 people probably got relatives expecting them back in their family.
    If these 60 people had one friend and one relative there would be already 150 people waiting in grief.

    It's not as small as it appears like, it's just a number, although a number with numbers attached to it.
    Which people tend to forget is the outcome of one individual towards many....

    --
    --- I am known for the ones who want to find me on the net. Is that a privacy risk or a privilege? One might wonder..