Slashdot Mirror


Pakistan Lifts Ban After Facebook Deletes Offending Page

crimeandpunishment writes "Facebook is back in Pakistan today. A day after Bangladesh banned the social networking site, the Pakistani government lifted its ban after officials from Facebook apologized for the 'Everybody Draw Mohammed Day' page and removed it from the site. The page caused outrage and protests among Pakistan's Muslim population, and led to the ban two weeks ago. A spokesman for Pakistan's office of information technology said Facebook assured the government 'nothing of this sort will happen in the future.'"

77 of 677 comments (clear)

  1. pathetic by Lawrence_Bird · · Score: 5, Insightful

    way to cave face book. please move your hq to islamabad.

    1. Re:pathetic by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Exactly.

      We just became a little more Islamic fundamentalist by giving into their way of life, rather than standing up for freedom.

      Facebook, you suck.

      I'm so tired of people bending over for Muslims and their way of life. Muslims will NEVER give us an inch, so we we give up our freedom? What a shit deal.

    2. Re:pathetic by MadKeithV · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Now wouldn't it be fun if the US government blocked Facebook now because they are offended by the violation of the right to free speech....

    3. Re:pathetic by Sir_Lewk · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Of course. However the discussion here is decidedly about MUSLIMS. Does that make you uncomfortable? Why or why not?

      8===> O:

      ^^ That is Muhammad sucking cock. Does that make you uncomfortable? Why or why not?

      I could go on all day you want to be troll.

      --
      "linux is just DOS with a UNIX like syntax" -- Galactic Dominator (944134)
    4. Re:pathetic by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 5, Insightful

      nice try.

      So you're saying that you would call me an intelligent, well educated individual if I just gave up my rights and bowed down to Muhammad?

      Well.. I'll a be an uneducated redneck twat then.

      But I'm not... I'm an American who understands free thought, freedom of expression, and the great American tradition of simply saying "Go fuck yourself".

    5. Re:pathetic by Thanshin · · Score: 4, Funny

      8===> O:

      ^^ That is Muhammad sucking cock. Does that make you uncomfortable? Why or why not?

      It does make me feel uncomfortable. It's wrong.

      The '>' should, obviously be a 'D'.

    6. Re:pathetic by Thanshin · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I have just one question.

      Am I the only one who doesn't give a flying fuck about what facebook censors, as long as it doesn't affect me?

      It's not like it's a fundamental need. If they ever bother me, I'll stop using it.

      I'm not interested in what they do with the info I post, as I consider it about as secure as screaming that info in a train station. I'm not interested in whether they cave in to fundamentalist claims, nor any other kinds of claims; I don't use it as a platform to spread my religious disbeliefs. I'm simply not interested on the politics of Facebook.

      Just as I wouldn't care if gmail decided to write "ISLAM IS THE BEST!!!!1111 lololol" in every mail sent by someone in the middle east. As long as I find it useful I'll use it. As soon as it bothers me, I'll stop using it.

      Would you care if the S of slashdot was actually a picture of a million diminute swasticas?

    7. Re:pathetic by Sir_Lewk · · Score: 3, Funny

      Nah, it's an uncut infidel dick.

      --
      "linux is just DOS with a UNIX like syntax" -- Galactic Dominator (944134)
    8. Re:pathetic by Iamthecheese · · Score: 3, Informative

      No, he's saying you would be an intelligent, well educated individual if you didn't make broad generalizations like "they" want to take away your freedoms.

      --
      If video games influenced behavior the Pac Man generation would be eating pills and running away from their problems.
    9. Re:pathetic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Actually people do this all the time against Christianity and the US, even in Alabama, with nary a peep. We don't kill anyone, burn something down, or attack innocents. In fact, your British art galleries are carrying a crucifx in urine, and you call it "art". It does in fact seem the only religion you can safely insult is Christianity.

      So perhaps you should grow up.

      (Just FYI, it's the Muslims that lynch people now. You can find things like that out by a process we quaintly refer to here in the US as "education". Perhaps you should check into it.)

    10. Re:pathetic by jez9999 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'm a British atheist. What say I go to Alabama, defecate on a bible, wrap it in the US flag and burn the bundle. That's free speech isn't it? That's me exercising the right of a person living in the US isn't it?

      Hell yeah. I'm a British atheist too, and PC attitudes like yours are the reason this country's lost so much freedom under New Labour.

    11. Re:pathetic by Cyberax · · Score: 3, Informative

      "If you've got a really good reason to draw a picture of the prophet, other than something along the lines of "I have a misguided idea of what free speech means, and I want to be offensive for a laugh" then I'd love to hear it. "

      Like: "I want to show support for those who receive death threats over trivial matters"? Free speech also means that you have to live with something you don't like. Deal with it.

    12. Re:pathetic by mibe · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You think it would be "right" to lynch someone for being an offensive dick? That's horrifying.

    13. Re:pathetic by gsslay · · Score: 5, Informative

      I'd be more in favour of the US Government blocking those who do not understand what their right to free speech is, so that we are not bothered with the thoughts of those who haven't a clue.

      Right to free speech in the United States is as protected by the First Amendment to the United States Constitution. This says that the government cannot limit freedom of expression. Facebook is not the government. Facebook can decide what it will permit people to say on its website and what it will not. The right to free speech does not extend to obliging others to promote your opinions. There is no free speech violation here.

    14. Re:pathetic by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 3, Insightful

      And you would be an intelligent well educated individual to know that obviously I'm NOT speaking about every Muslim. But you instead proclaim its intelligent to point that out at every turn?

      I mean I thought intelligent people already knew all Muslims weren't bad. Do we have to have this politically correct disclaimer every time we speak? Dont we all know this by now?

      "This Broccoli taste like shit... but not all broccoli is bad..."

      Fuck this PC shit. I'm a progressive independent politically, and I'm even tired of it. Its just fucking dumb to end every god damn statement with a fucking disclaimer.

      Arent we smart enough to know that there are no absolutes?

      But you go right on pointing it out at every opportunity. Use that to win your arguments. Hell point it out so i dont have to point it out every fucking time.

    15. Re:pathetic by poity · · Score: 4, Funny

      >I'd get lynched, and rightly so.

      Well, it took you a while to discredit yourself, but you managed it at the end. Congrats.

      --
      your thin skin doesn't make me a troll
    16. Re:pathetic by corbettw · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Fuck you, you pathetic piece of shit. You do not have a right not to be offended. No one does. That's one of the cornerstones of our democracy. Every time someone whines and bitches about how something or other offended them and forces other people to conform to their notions of decency, a little bit of our culture dies.

      I'm a British atheist. What say I go to Alabama, defecate on a bible, wrap it in the US flag and burn the bundle. That's free speech isn't it? That's me exercising the right of a person living in the US isn't it?

      And I think most people in Alabama would just ignore you if you did that. I'm thinking you've never actually been to Alabama or else you'd know that already.

      --
      God invented whiskey so the Irish would not rule the world.
    17. Re:pathetic by LordLimecat · · Score: 4, Informative

      Youre right that its offensive, and youre right that we arent really loosing rights... but NOT for the reason you gave. We havent lost a right because Facebook is a private enterprise and we are free to not use it if this offends us. You seem to be implying that, for example, it would be OK to have a law mandating the death penalty for being offensive; I disagree.

      Im not sure you are aware of this, but burning a US flag is protected speech. If you were lynched in your example, there would be a murder investigation; it is certainly NOT ok to lynch people for what you described.

    18. Re:pathetic by bbbaldie · · Score: 3, Insightful

      What the world needs is more people with thick skins.

    19. Re:pathetic by theheadlessrabbit · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Hell yeah! Free speech doesn't just mean you can speak out against real injustice, it means you should be intentionally abusive of other people's cultures and religions! As often as possible!

      This attitude utterly disgusts me. You people are pathetic. "Not drawing pictures of Mohammed" (PBUH) takes away precisely one "right" of yours, the right to be an idiot with no sense of tact or respect. ...
      I'm a British atheist. What say I go to Alabama, defecate on a bible, wrap it in the US flag and burn the bundle. That's free speech isn't it? That's me exercising the right of a person living in the US isn't it?

      No, it's me being an offensive dick for the sake of it. I'd get lynched, and rightly so. Grow up, the lot of you.

      No, it is free speech.

      During protests, Muslims will often protest by desecrating or burning flags, and openly uttering death threats. All of these are actions that are intentionally offensive. Media outlets will routinely insult Christianity, especially Catholicism, Judaism and other belief systems, as well as insulting atheism, certain nationalities, etc. without ever receiving a threat of violence. Everything we hold dear to us in this culture is open to offence.
      Only Islam is magically off limits and unable to be criticized. People who insult Islam fear a very real possibility of a violent death, including the South Park creators, who were threatened, sent pictures of another filmmaker who was murdered for criticizing Islam, along with having their home addresses published on an Islamic fundamentalist website.

      This specific act of causing offence to Muslims in this situation had a very important function. The South Park guys had their lives threatened for daring to present images of Muhammad. The idea behind "Everybody Draw Muhammad Day" was to present the world with so many offending images that the South Park guys would be flooded out. Their would simply be too many offending images out their for the Islamic fundamentalists to murder everyone who had drawn one.

      As soon as certain topics are declared forbidden, freedom of speech dies, and a dangerous precedent is set.
      "If that topic is forbidden, then surly it's ok to ban this topic, too" "well, since those topics are banned, we can also ban this list of topics."
      Freedom of speech makes certain undesirable things possible -offence, hate speech, pornography, evangelicals, etc. but developed countries are based on the idea that free speech is a greater good than all those negative side effects combined. One slashdotter's sig sums it up nicely "The act of censorship is always worse than what is being censored. Always."

      Offence is a necessary part of free speech for the simple reason that not every shares the same views and opinions, and the way to handle this difference of opinion in an open and civilized country is not by censoring one side of the debate, driving it underground, or brutally murder your opponents, the way to deal with it is to have an open debate, and discuss the issue, knowing that no matter how offensive some may find the topic, it is still safe to discuss.

      --
      -I only code in BASIC.-
    20. Re:pathetic by ultranova · · Score: 5, Interesting

      This attitude utterly disgusts me. You people are pathetic. "Not drawing pictures of Mohammed" (PBUH) takes away precisely one "right" of yours, the right to be an idiot with no sense of tact or respect.

      Not being allowed to draw pictures of Mohammed takes away the right to say anything anyone might find offensive - unless, of course, you are suggesting that Muslims should have special privileges in this regard?

      If you've got a really good reason to draw a picture of the prophet, other than something along the lines of "I have a misguided idea of what free speech means, and I want to be offensive for a laugh" then I'd love to hear it.

      Free speech means that neither I nor anyone else need to justify us drawing pictures of Muhammed, nor any other expression, to you or anyone else. That is what "freedom" means: I can do what I want, not what you graciously allow me to.

      I'm a British atheist. What say I go to Alabama, defecate on a bible, wrap it in the US flag and burn the bundle. That's free speech isn't it? That's me exercising the right of a person living in the US isn't it?

      No, it's me being an offensive dick for the sake of it. I'd get lynched, and rightly so. Grow up, the lot of you.

      No, you wouldn't be lynched. You would be told you are an offensive dick, and possibly sued if you did this in public for the defecating in public part. If some mentally disturbed individuals were to take violent action against you, they would then face charges for their criminal behavior.

      It is you who needs to grow up, and realize that murdering someone because he offends you is not acceptable.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

  2. Beard stroke by somersault · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'm turning my face into a caricature of the Prophet.

    --
    which is totally what she said
  3. Why, why, why? by DogDude · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Why do all of you Facebook bitches still use it? It's like Facebook is an abusive husband, and y'all just keep going back again and again.

    --
    I don't respond to AC's.
    1. Re:Why, why, why? by couchslug · · Score: 4, Funny

      "It's like Facebook is an abusive husband, and y'all just keep going back again and again."

      They really love me and the sex is great, you insensitive clod!

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
  4. The right thing? No. Profit! by Jawnn · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So as soon as the furor has died down, and the controversy is no longer driving as much traffic to Facebook as Pakistan's ban reduced it, Facebook decides to "do the right thing". The right thing, that is, to make the numbers.
    I rather enjoyed deluding myself that Facebook was standing up for free expression, denouncing idiotic religious extremism, etc., but I now realize the folly of that thinking. Thank you, Facebook, for restoring my faith in the utterly amoral nature of American business.

    1. Re:The right thing? No. Profit! by drinkypoo · · Score: 3, Informative

      So as soon as the furor has died down, and the controversy is no longer driving as much traffic to Facebook as Pakistan's ban reduced it, Facebook decides to "do the right thing". The right thing, that is, to make the numbers.

      Yes, Facebook sure has done all they can to eliminate the group.

      I rather enjoyed deluding myself that Facebook was standing up for free expression, denouncing idiotic religious extremism, etc., but I now realize the folly of that thinking.

      That was pretty silly given that Facebook's founder thinks his users are idiots.

      Thank you, Facebook, for restoring my faith in the utterly amoral nature of American business.

      Maybe Zuckerberg thinks it's holy to make money.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    2. Re:The right thing? No. Profit! by Drakkenmensch · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If a newspaper in Denmark, a prominently non-muslim country, can't do the same without being subjected with worldwide cannon fire from muslim authorities (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jyllands-Posten_Muhammad_cartoons_controversy), what are the chances that a website in a muslim country would fare any better?

  5. Neville Chamberlain by fustakrakich · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The world is full of these types now in our age of appeasement. Another repeat of history is almost due. And after such a short time, while people are still alive from the last time this happened. UGH! Sickening!

    --
    “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
  6. What are the rules? by jmichaelg · · Score: 3, Interesting

    First Facebook redefines its privacy policies making private data public.

    Now it yanks a political expression page because the page offends another group.

    One might be inclined to think Facebook Zucks.

    1. Re:What are the rules? by canajin56 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Well, except on May 24th the creators of the "Everybody Draw Mohammad" page deleted it themselves. Note that although the Slashdot summary says Facebook deleted it, the actual article only quotes FB as saying "The page has been removed" without ever declaring that they did so themselves. The stated reason is it became a 24/7 job to delete the endless flood of people calling for genocide against the muslims, and people posting gay porn of Obama and Muhammad (roughly 90% of the image submissions), or posting Muslims being disemboweled by assorted Aryan Americans. (I'm sure they were also tired of doing the converse). Naturally, pulling the page caused those same people to turn their hatred on the creators, calling them secret Muslim terrorists, and expressing murderous outrage that they ever dared to censor in the first place.

      --
      ASCII stupid question, get a stupid ANSI
    2. Re:What are the rules? by jmichaelg · · Score: 3, Informative

      Do you have a reference that FB had no role in yanking the page? This article says:

      Pakistan lifted a ban on Facebook on Monday after officials from the social networking site apologized for a page deemed offensive to Muslims and removed its contents, a top information technology official said.

      Further in, it continues:

      Facebook assured the Pakistani government that "nothing of this sort will happen in the future," Malik said.
      Officials from the website could not immediately be reached for comment. They said earlier the contents of the "Everybody Draw Mohammed Day!" page did not violate Facebook's terms.

      Maybe Malik got his facts wrong or he's outright lying but given FB's recent mendacity about what is and isn't private, it's hard to know who is telling the truth.

  7. Re:Another point of view by rotide · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Fine, if that's the way you want to go with it, lets all be "tolerant" of what _any_ other group doesn't like.

    I mean, if Russia doesn't like something, lets get rid of whatever it is they don't like. If France doesn't like the anti-France jokes, lets scrub sites of anything resembling it. If MADD doesn't like alcohol references, lets be "tolerant" and get rid of those as well, oh hey, 2 birds there. Oh there are a lot of groups who are offended by the idea of evolution, scrub that. Oh hey, there are other groups who only believe we come from aliens, etc. Scrub anything anti-alien created/derived.

    It's a slippery slope. If you don't want to read something, click away, or hey, just don't click it in the first place. It's not _my_ problem if you don't like something that is legal in my country where my post is located.

    Huge slippery slope. Cave to one groups demands and now you've set precedent. Now the next group sees that you cave to demands, so lets all demand what we want. I mean, hell, we can't police what we view ourselves so fuck it, lets have everyone self censor so I can live happily the way I want to. Fuck the rest of the world and their ideas!

  8. It's draw Mohammad MONTH now! by RyanFenton · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yeah! Selective censorship fixes EVERYTHING! Just cave into the most aggressive believers, and you tend to generate more aggressive believers.

    So, what happens when 1000+ pages are now created, celebrating Draw Mohammad Month, Draw Mohammad Brunch, Draw Mohammad Restaurant, Finger-Paint Mohammad with your Toes, Bake a Mohammad Cake, etc., etc.

    If you ban all mockery of religion that gets offended, then many religions will suddenly decide to get offended - and many groups will decide to define themselves as religion in order to get the censorship ability.

    There's always going to be overlap between validly interpreting religion as an outsider, and taking an insulting view from the perspective of an insider - making that perceived insult a crime is equivalent to making observations as an outsider a crime. I am not prohibited from drawing Mohammad. Creating a system where I am prohibited is saying my view isn't as valid as the aggressive believers in that space.

    Ryan Fenton

  9. Re:Face palm by PilogBue · · Score: 4, Informative

    There were a lot of submissions, and Muhammad had taken an unimaginable amount of forms. Although, quite a few took the oppurtunity to show their hatred towards muslims in general (nukes at the Kaba etc.), which made the impact of the images sort of embarrasing after a while. Another trend also occured, namely death threats. They seemed to flourish, judging by the amount of print screens that were posted. I think they actually ended up making a seperate death threat gallery. In my oppionion that just makes this caving even worse. Yet another victory for the unevolved.

    --
    When in hell, pray for rain
  10. Re:Another point of view by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm with Bill Maher on this one. Religious thought, in all it's forms, is a cancer of our civilisation. If you can't reason with something which threatens you, and you can't avoid it doing damage to you, then it needs to be exterminated.

  11. BEHEAD THOSE WHO INSULT FREE SPEECH by bersl2 · · Score: 4, Funny

    SLAY THOSE WHO INSULT FREE SPEECH

    Still, I'm sure that successful troll was quite successful.

  12. Re:Another point of view by realityimpaired · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Pretty poorly, considering that you're still alive to post that....

    The issue is that the radical Muslims are just that, radicals. just like the radical Christians, and the radical Jews, etc. hell, there's even been radical Buddhists doing this sort of thing in Sri Lanka. the problem is that we only hear about the radical nutjobs out there... but there's a billion Muslims on the planet. if they were *really* as bad as fox "news" would have you believe, we'd have turned this place into a self-illuminating glass-floored parking lot by now.

    Or to turn the tables another way, imagine if the only Christians you ever heard about were people like David Koresh?

  13. Bans by JavaBear · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Religious views offend me, lets petition Facebook to remove all pages with offensive content!
    Why not? They removed pages that were supporting a political and religious viewpoint (free speech and cartoons) to cater for the views and feelings a single groups of people. What about my views, and those of everybody else?

    New rule for Facebook, if they want to play that game, is that in order to be perceived as being fair, they must necessarily remove any content that is offensive to some group or people.

  14. nothing of this sort will happen again? by FooAtWFU · · Score: 3, Informative

    Not even something like this? and that's just with a 10 second search.

    --
    The World Wide Web is dying. Soon, we shall have only the Internet.
  15. Re:Another point of view by magarity · · Score: 4, Insightful

    For a minute think that you totally, fully, blindly believe in Quran and that God/Allah is going to fry your ass if you do not follow his words
     
    That's all very fine except no one can quote the passage dictating no pictures be made of Mr. Mohammad. The best they can do is make a tortured trail of logic between a prohibition against worshiping images leads to no pictures. If you think the people making cartoons on facebook and Dutch newspapers are in danger of worshiping them then you're sadly mistaken of the entire point of drawing them. Such intolerance is in need of correction, not ever more unilateral tolerance.

  16. Re:Another point of view by chill · · Score: 3, Informative

    In the U.S. the laws of Man far outrank the laws of Religion. The U.S. Constitution, Article VI states:

    This Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which shall be made in Pursuance thereof; and all Treaties made, or which shall be made, under the Authority of the United States, shall be the supreme Law of the Land; and the Judges in every State shall be bound thereby, any Thing in the Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary notwith-standing.

    In simple terms, this means in the U.S. the Constitution outranks the Bible, Koran, Vedas, Egyptian Book of the Dead and any other religious law or rule. And, in the U.S., Freedom of Speech includes the right to offend and blasphemy. It may be rude, but it is there to prevent the slippery slope of censorship, lesse majesty and, essentially, newspeek. Being occasionally offended is a small price to pay to not having to worry about being thrown in jail for calling the President/King/Mullah an dick, and the government a corrupt bunch of money-grubbing assholes.

    --
    Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
  17. Re: yeah lets point at them by Black+Parrot · · Score: 4, Insightful

    while Israel has just boarded a flotilla of ships killing 19 people in the process for importing wheelchairs, cement and wood banning a webpage seems a rather trivial response in comparison

    A lot of news gets ignored. A couple of weeks ago some guy firebombed a mosque in Florida while people were worshipping there. Not a peep on the news. A few days later two white supremacists shot a couple of cops who pulled them over for something, then got themselves shot in a firefight. Not a peep on the news.

    Meanwhile, CNN is interviewing American Idol winners...

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  18. Re:Another point of view by poptones · · Score: 5, Insightful

    We have every right to criticize anyone we want. It saddens me the only free venues of the internet are falling by the wayside to be replaced by corporate websites where shit like this runs rampant.

    OH NO! Hey look everyone, it's MUHAMMED waving at us!

              0/
             /|
             / \

    We're gonna get banned!

  19. Now you know how to delete your Facebook profile by jbssm · · Score: 5, Funny

    For all of us that wanted to delete our FaceBook profile, but couldn't because FaceBook hides it and plays around with the options so that we cannot do it. Well, now you have the answer. Just put some pictures of Mohamed sodomizing some sheep or similar and voilá.

    Perhaps thins is one of this new privacy options Zuckberg talks about. "It's now possible to delete your own personal page." (Big cheers from the public)."

  20. Re:Another point of view by siride · · Score: 4, Informative

    Facebook is a company, not the government. So whatever the constitution says about free speech is irrelevant.

  21. Americans by br00tus · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Americans arm and fund the Taliban and Al Qaeda to overthrow the secular Afghani government in the 1970s and 1980s. Then they invade Iraq, one of the few secular Arab countries left, whose constitution changes a country from what was nominally one following pan-Arab socialism (something it had been in the early days) to one that was officially Islamic. We keep hearing about how US intervention is against Islamic fundamentalists - yet to repeat, the US funded the Taliban and Al Qaeda, and the the Iraq invasion changed the Iraqi constitution to one stating the country was an Islamic one.

    So the US is funding Israel, which just killed a number of people on a humanitarian flotilla delivering food to blockaded Gaza today, a flotilla on which there is a Jewish holocaust survivor, Nobel Peace Prize winner and various European MPs. The US grabs Iraqis off the street and puts them in Abu Ghraib, forces them to masturbate and films them doing so (besides the one tortured to death). The forced masturbation is allowed to be done, but not broadcast on US TV because our good Christian values does not allow us to see what we are doing over there or something.

    So on top of all this bloodshed and mayhem the US causes in these countries, as their bodies pile up, Americans are now attacking their culture and religion. It is an attempt to dehumanize the people already being killed. If drones were not flying through Pakistan killing people, it would be one thing, but this Facebook thing is just another attack on all the blood and bodies Americans are stacking up in these countries. It has worked too - this sort of thing has stirred up fundamentalists in Pakistan, who just bombed some mosques of the moderate Ahmadis. So the usual US practice of getting rid of secular moderates and putting radical Islamists in charge is working.

  22. Re:Way to set a precedent for caving to zealots. by TheRaven64 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You know, I really don't have a problem with people posting pro-Klan stuff online, especially somewhere like FaceBook where it's linked to their real name. Makes it much easier to avoid having anything to do with them. If you think that people of a certain skin colour are inferior, then I'd much rather that you said it in public and self-designated as an idiot than that you kept it private.

    --
    I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  23. Re:Another point of view by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    We understand the other point of view. The point is in a free society, you do not have the right to not be offended.

    so, the other point of view does not matter.

    Every fairy tale god has taken its share of criticism, and ridicule throught out history, and in our so called free society, we are supposed to value the idea of freedom of expression.

    Instead here we are selling out our constitution, our struggle from historical oppression of thought and ideas.... only to find ourselves giving all of it away to make Muslims happy? Fuck them and their selfishness. We make fun of Jesus Christ every fucking day here in America, in music, arts etc. We also praise him every day in music and arts... and the same for Muhammad. If they dont like it... They can stay out of our way of life. They can STOP watching and listening to our are. And they can stay the fuck off our websites.

    Its all nice to "think of their side of things"... but their side of things beats women, forces them to wear burkas, and kills anyone who questions their god. WE already thought about their side of things... and it's fucking stupid.

    Here we are giving in to it?

    Fuck us. We're pathetic cowards.

  24. Complaints by mistralol · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I am sure we can all probably find something on facebook that each individual on the planet would find offensive. Why don't we all email them now and ask that they remove it?

  25. Re:I have deactivating my facebook account in resp by rtfa-troll · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I have deactivating my facebook account in respons[e]

    Try to do it together with a large group of friends. Try to find a decent alternative they can all move to together. If you don't do that then you may eventually find yourself moving back just because your friends are still in Facebook and you feel you need it.

    --
    =~ s,(.*),<sarcasm>$1</sarcasm>,g if any_point_you_wish();
  26. I'm a Muslim... by Iftekhar25 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    And even if I am offended (which I reserve the right to be), I don't think any of this should be happening (i.e., censorship). There has been defamatory material on the prophet for centuries, and in fact were around even during his time. This is nothing new; anyone as prominent as him had to have grown pretty thick skin to get anything done.

    His followers 14 centuries on, however, can't seem to follow in his footsteps even half as much as they claim they do.

    Every time something like this comes up, I try to dig a hole and disappear best I can. Yet another dysfunctional government like Bangladesh or Pakistan come up with a way to do their magical rabble-rousing and distract from the real issues at hand: economic development, education, and healthcare. All of which they are failing *miserably* at.

    This is all *political*. Almost all Muslims (both in the "West" and in the "East") have no beef with anyone or anything, and just want to go ahead living their lives. These idiots in government, who can't even ensure their citizens get basic utilities like garbage collection and electricity, are spending their energy on some drawings, which is perverse on multiple levels.

    The minority here is basically speaking for the majority. And honestly... the majority (like me) are looking to dig their own holes as well. We don't want to stick our heads out because we don't want the confrontation. This isn't something we particularly care about. I honest to goodness don't want to argue about the merits and demerits of my faith with some of the slashdotters on here, who are convinced that Muslims "don't belong."

    But someone's gotta say it. Most of us are not like this. Most of us just want to get on with our lives. Please don't let the vocal minority dominate the debate. This is political distraction tactics and has little or nothing to do with free speech, Facebook, or the prophet.

    1. Re:I'm a Muslim... by vic.tz · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Not to volunteer you for anything, but your demographic (passive, reasonable Muslim) is exactly who we need to speak out against this nonsense. I believe what you're saying is true, but based on 95% of media coverage, it would be easy to mistake the minority for the majority.

    2. Re:I'm a Muslim... by Iftekhar25 · · Score: 4, Informative

      I agree with you on that but it's during these times that Muslims least want to be identified as such. Muslims watch the same news you do and we have a pretty good idea what's going through the average person's mind. And it's not your fault either, that's the admission: if I was not a Muslim I'd be pretty mad at Muslims too (in fact even as a Muslim I'm fairly annoyed).

      And so the moderates are kind of, I feel from personal experience, in limbo. Now is the worst possible time I can imagine to have to admit being even remotely associated with people I deeply disagree with and, in fact, have very little in common with.

      It's really a weird spot to be in. They're a half a world away, I disagree with them (and honestly kind of dislike them), but somehow I need to dissociate myself from them.

      It's an unenviable position to be in for any reasonable person, Muslim or not. All reasonable dialogue is drowned out by shouts of exclusion from both sides. The best time to talk is usually after the full-throated yelling has ended, and is best demonstrated by actions rather than words.

      These things really set back that long term, grassroots dialogue back. Depressing.

    3. Re:I'm a Muslim... by Xarvh · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Probably you moderate Muslims should stop being so passive, stop hiding and reclaim your religion from the loonies that hijacked it.
      Disappearing every time the crazies go insane is the last thing you should do.
      Take the responsibility of your beliefs and confront the crazies, as a Muslim you are in a better position to do it than anyone else.

    4. Re:I'm a Muslim... by nixbox · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I am a Muslim and completely agree with what you said. The irony is that the Prophet was maligned, harmed and thrown stones upon, his response was always peace but the Muslims who claim to be defending the Prophet actually abuse people on facebook pages and forums. The question I ask is this. Does any of this result in something constructive? I don't think so, I have seen more people uttering bad words, being violent (which by the way is un-islamic). So what is the point? If the Prophet was alive today, he would never even heed to these things. I do acknowledge that as a Muslim I get offended about such things, but there is a way to express one's views. Most of the Muslims today do not think about the outcome of what they are doing. I think that banning these websites actually spreads it out more, because people who had never even known about it would come to know of it. We as Muslims have let a bunch of people get hold of the leadership of our countries and they are doing nothing for us. They just gobble up more money and deprive people of their basic necessities. The biggest Jihad is to stand against these Muslim leaders and demand our rights. If we as a people unite, these leaders cannot do anything. We have inflicted the current situation upon ourselves, by letting them take hold of our freedom.

  27. Re:Way to set a precedent for caving to zealots. by MightyMartian · · Score: 4, Insightful

    No more than we need to keep people from posting pro-Klan materials on the site. Ultimately, people weren't doing it as free speech, they were doing it out of ignorance for Islam. Free speech has never been about saying whatever you could to offend other people. It's been to assure the people of the ability to speak out about meaningful things. This isn't any different than bans on homophobic, racist, antisemitic posts that most websites of that sort have.

    Um, Larry Flynt might differ with you on that one.

    Beyond that what you write is troubling. Who gets to decide what is meaningful? That's always been the issue surrounding free speech and censorship. We can all agree, to one degree or another, that some forms of speech are damaging, but beyond the "yelling fire in the theater" kind of speech, where there is a very direct correlation between the speech and the harm it can cause, it becomes far more difficult to meaningfully quantify.

    I hardly expect Facebook to a beacon of free speech. It isn't even a beacon of security or privacy. Still, these people were exercising a legitimate right, and while I think they're rude and crude, I believe they have the right to be, just as Muslims have the right not to look.

    --
    The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
  28. Re:Isn't anyone going to check the facts? by DWMorse · · Score: 3, Informative

    Oops, I didn't get the whole link copied.

    http://www.facebook.com/pages/Everyone-Draw-Mohammed-day-May-20/112498195453416?ref=search&sid=rZX7KTtpVe7NtecVn9xYWQ.1122781147..1

    Now you can click the functional link and see the page (instead of going to Facebook and searching "Everyone Draw" and have it pop up as first result.)

    I'd never been to the group page before today.

    --
    There's a spot in User Info for World of Warcraft account names? Really?
  29. Re:Way to set a precedent for caving to zealots. by Abcd1234 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Ultimately is is both derogatory and hateful.

    Agreed. And yet South Park showing a statue of the Virgin Mary bleeding out of her ass is tolerated. Gotta love hypocrisy...

    the fact is that there's a lot of bigots out there to get their lulz by insulting Islam.

    Yeah, unfortunately that's true. The sad fact is, there are many who choose to attack Islam as a whole, without realizing that the real issue is with the extremists. Unfortunately, that makes the battle against the extremists rather tricky, as inevitably, the fucktard racists/bigots end up jumping onto the bandwagon.

    More than that it's hardly an effective way of bringing the extremists into check.

    Yeah, but you'll *never* bring the extremists into check. They've *already* decided that the western way of life must be stopped. The best you can do is paint them as the ridiculous zealots that they are, and hope that the rest of the world realizes that bowing to their demands is tantamount to surrendering to their beliefs.

    The real problem is that the moderates aren't out there attacking the zealots with equivalent force. IMHO, moderate Islam needs to start actively working to cut the cancer of fundamentalism out of their ranks, as it's the only way these people will finally be marginalized.

  30. My problem with this... by TrisexualPuppy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's an obvious slippery slope. Let's try a few scenarios, all tasteless in one way or another--

    -Jews wanting to take down a "money grubbing Jews" page
    -Christians wanting to take down a Woodland Critter Christmas South Park page
    -Environmentalists wanting to take down an anti-Earth Day page
    -Vegetarians wanting to take down a "For every animal you don't eat, I'll eat three" page

    Honestly, where does it stop? You can't start taking down one page for one party because that would be discriminatory to everyone else. Why shouldn't environmentalists get the same treatment as Muslims? What about the vegetarians? They have their reasons and causes, too.

    My guess is that Facebook knew how much money they were losing from advertisers and that once again, they would rather take the "less free" way out once again to rake in as much cash as possible.

    Thanks, Zuckerberg!

    1. Re:My problem with this... by laughingcoyote · · Score: 4, Insightful

      What are you talking about? Facebook's goal is to make money for their investors. If they think taking the page down will be more profitable over some period of time, then of course that's what they will do.

      The question is, "what period of time"? If some advertisers return tomorrow, sure, it could be short-term profitable. But what about when Facebook develops the reputation that it will take a page down the moment it offends someone? I don't honestly think that will enhance their profitability long term. Do you?

      The problem with the "damn the torpedoes, only exists to make money for the investors" concept is that it is ultimately harmful even to the business and the investors. Ultimately, a bad reputation is corrosive to a business. It may take years for the damage to manifest (especially in arenas where there is a high degree of lock-in), but eventually, if everyone loves to hate you (even if they have to stay with you today), at some point, someone will come along with an alternative, and your customers will stampede out the door. You may also find yourself hit with regulations that are actually harsher than what you would've had to do on your own. Ultimately, it is society, through government, that grants the limited liability corporations enjoy, and society has every right to restrict or revoke such grants if an entity granted such is acting so as to damage the public for the enrichment of its shareholders. I wish we exercised that right more.

      Doing the right thing and acting decently may cost a little more today, but it pays off in terms of long term sustainability of a company. Ultimately, "being evil" has a cost. Preserving your company's reputation long term is something you can do for your investors, and that's only done by setting clear principles and then steadfastly sticking to them. For a site like Facebook, one of those principles should clearly be "We will not interfere with what our users want to post, unless they are doing something illegal", and then pointing any critic of any page to an FAQ clearly stating that they do not write or approve the content of anyone's page, just as no one from Slashdot wrote or approved this comment. If you find it offensive, then, I offended you, not Slashdot.

      Then again, that's why I would tend to say to avoid crap like Facebook, and if you want to put something up on the web, build it and do it. It's not that hard to build a basic website. If you want something done right (and to stick around even if someone doesn't like it), do it yourself.

      --
      To fight the war on terror, stop being afraid.
  31. Partially voluntary take down? by mccarrot2 · · Score: 4, Informative

    I was a member of the group, and I hadn't looked at it a week or so. Last I saw though, the admins were saying they were going to voluntarily take the site down because they had made their point and that it was too time consuming to keep up with cleaning up the posts/links/porn people were posting to the page. Some folks offered to take over admin so that the page wouldn't be destroyed. I never checked back to see what happened.

    Personally, I'd like to see the apology to Pakistan from facebook, because it sounds a little too good to be true.

    P.S. The first time the page was removed was May 20th, 2010. Here's the wall quotes from a group admin from May 22th, 2010:
    "This page was removed two days ago, after one of our moderators had his email and skype hacked. His personal data was revealed. He then got scared and deleted the page, the blog and the emails. The rest of us, are now back without him after he backed out. This is another scare tactic from the Islamic extremists. We won't fall. Pictures you were unable to post on the 20th? Check the forums for interviews." "A great big thank you to the facebook-gang for restoring the page. A great big thank you to all freedom lovers out there. Now we have new persons to handle the media and we will soon release some info about the past few days. And to all of you: One can never beat freedom of speech, opinion and idividuality, because they are all basic human rights."

  32. Re:Score by icebraining · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Why the cheap shot against the "left"? You could say I'm a "leftie" (especially by US standards), and I'm pissed off by this.

  33. This isn't about free speech at all. by Mostly+Harmless · · Score: 3, Insightful
    First and foremost, Facebook's T&Cs outranks free speech. It explicitly states:
    • You will not bully, intimidate, or harass any user.
    • You will not post content that: is hateful, threatening, or pornographic; incites violence; or contains nudity or graphic or gratuitous violence.

    Draw Muhammad Day isn't about us standing up against terrorists. It isn't even about standing up against Islamic fundamentalists. It's about blatant bigotry. I'd venture to say most (if not close to all) people who participated did so out of pure hatred and with complete ignorance. This certainly violates Facebook's terms.

    Fighting hateful behavior with more hateful behavior is sophomoric. While I really wish I could be defending free speech here, there has to be a point where I draw the line. If Draw Muhammad Day was a peaceful, public demonstration where people where drawing the prophet hugging pandas and sniffing roses, this post would be quite different. Unfortunately, that's not the case. People where being intentionally hurtful on a publicly-accessible, corporate-owned website. Facebook did the right thing.

    --
    "`Ford, you're turning into a penguin. Stop it.'" -Douglas Adams, THHGTTG
  34. Re: yeah lets point at them by Shihar · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Um, the top TWO of three spots on Google news is about the Israeli shooting. Is it even remotely possible to be more popular than that?

    As to the news worthiness of the Facebook issue, it is news worthy. It is in fact far more important that a few people dying in the fill-in-the-blank scary thing of week (please tell me shark panic season is almost upon us...). There are almost 7 billion people in the world and hundreds of thousands die each day. Any death is a tragedy, but when we are stripped of our ability to communicate, especially in the political realm, a crime is committed against millions. The repercussion has the ability to make miserable or kill untold numbers. Free speech is the top defense against most forms of oppression and persecution. Hell, oppression and persecution is ALWAYS preceded by a reduction in the freedom of speech.

    Freedom of speech is the primary defense against injustice in this world. When it gets reduced, you should care. Hell, if nothing else, count in your head the number of times that a reduction in the freedom of expression was followed by something terrible. Okay, now count how many times an increase in the freedom of speech was followed by something terrible. It is pretty easy math.

  35. Re:Face palm by Teancum · · Score: 5, Insightful

    My concern about caving into the extremist Muslims on this issue is that it is it gives legitimacy to their viewpoint.... to the exclusion of any other viewpoint. The freedom of speech is something that is incredibly important to preserve, including preserving viewpoints that are on occasion distasteful and against your own viewpoint.

    The dilemma of "new media" groups is to see how much editorializing will be done.... and sticking to your guns in terms of that editorializing. Facebook unfortunately, for good or ill, has become a community bulletin board where they have at least to this point cultivated all sorts of viewpoints including overtly political viewpoints that they are broadcasting and supporting.

    If Facebook, or any other similar group starts to engage in censorship for what is overtly political speech, and much of what is done here in regards to cartoons of Muhammad is explicitly political speech by its nature, it puts that group onto incredibly slippery ground to be "forced" to censor other kinds of speech to the point they are really only advocating a particular political point of view. I don't have a problem with censoring types of content, such as pornographic images or perhaps groups that are advocating various kinds of illegal activity (aka some video on YouTube that is a "how to" for making meth.... to give an example). What concerns me here is more that the topic itself is somehow forbidden.

    I don't see that Facebook would be censoring a cartoon depicting either George W. Bush or Barack Obama with nuclear missiles in a hat they are wearing. Why should the fact that the subject of the image simply being Muhammad be singularly targeted if anybody else would be acceptable? This is where it really goes over the top. If Muhammad were to be depicted in a manner that would be otherwise offensive and censored regardless of who is the subject of the image.... fine, get rid of the image.

    The other aspect here is that those who are promoting the Islamic faith are cramming that faith down my throat, and the throat of everybody else in the world too. I respect the freedom of worship and belief. This is something which is essential to a free society in general and something I claim for myself. That freedom includes even the complete and total rejection of a belief in a god of any type, or worshiping things that I would consider down right silly.

    By telling me that I, a non-believer in the Islamic faith, can't make a rendering of the image of Mohammad and use that image in a political fashion, they are in turn forcing a religious belief upon me and others who may wish to engage in this kind of activity. It is especially galling when the target of the activity (in this case the cartoon) is in fact directed toward other non-believers and is not being done explicitly make to flamebait or otherwise cause a reaction out of the believers.

    As a Christian, I am particularly offended that in this case the Islamic faith is somehow being protected when in fact religious icons and symbols of Christianity are routinely depicted in a negative light as well and are not similarly protected. Perhaps it is a valid point where something which is held as sacred should be respected in some fashion and not trashed. This includes even symbols that are not overtly religious but are still held in some reverence such as a national flag. If Facebook is going to be consistent here, at least set up some general and broad policy that all sorts of similar symbols ought to be treated with respect. That isn't exactly an easy policy to implement nor enforce.

    I certainly don't understand why death threats ought to be made over non-believers (or believers for that matter) making light of these things. When people make light of religious symbols which I consider important, I certainly am willing to grant them some latitude and don't necessarily get angry with them. I still am disappointed, but I wouldn't seek to harm somebody for doing that.

  36. The 'Left' gave women the vote. by FatSean · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Stop trying to say Left-leaning people support this religious bullshit. I certainly don't.

    --
    Blar.
  37. Re:Another point of view by Teancum · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The question here is then if Facebook has become a "common carrier" and as such must take all forms of speech (including offensive kinds of speech) or if they are exercising editorial control over their content. Once you accept that you are engaging in editorial control, you need to make editorial decisions about all content.... something I think Facebook would have some trouble with.

    Facebook then becomes liable for everything which is posted on its site and written about on their site. That is a situation which most sane people would not want to be in and that having the status of common carrier is preferable. That requires permitting speech that can from time to time be offensive.

    The only thing that was a problem with the depiction of Mohammed is the topic and subject, not the method or manner in which somebody is depcited.

  38. you have a lot of work to do by circletimessquare · · Score: 3, Insightful

    i agree 100% with you that economic development, education, and healthcare are far more important than rabble rousing

    however, what i see that you don't is that if those issues are ever going to be addressed, it will be done by YOU

    you are the majority? then you solve your problems in muslim communities. do you want to know why the muslim world has the problems you dislike? i'll tell you why:

    "Almost all Muslims (both in the "West" and in the "East") have no beef with anyone or anything, and just want to go ahead living their lives."

    no, you can't go on living your life. you are part of the problem BECAUSE YOU DON'T SOLVE THE PROBLEMS IN YOUR COMMUNITY

    you don't have the right to just go on living your life. you have the RESPONSIBILITY to clean up your community. if that doesn't cdome first, YOU WILL NOT BE ABLE TO GO ON WITH YOUR LIFE UNMOLESTED. not by the west, but by the lunatics in your own community. clean them up!

    if the demagogues are in charge, it is because the majority, you, let them be

    you are to blame. because you don't understand this IS your problem

    as the obvious reciprocal corollary, as an american i loathe gw bush and the tea party morons with every fibre of my being for being the ignorant propagandized sheep they are. and i will do my best to make sure these crackpots and assholes do not get power in my country again

    now i am asking you to say the same about your lunatics

    and if we fail, god save us. if we are the moderate middle in this world, it is our responsibility to keep the keys of power out of the hands of the stupid and the evil, in BOTH our communities. and if we don't, god save us all, because it is nothing but suffering for all of us

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  39. Ban this, you spineless mother-fucker. by mosb1000 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What? Free speech sometimes means offending people! You don't support all free speech, you don't support free speech at all! What's next? Should Slashdot automatically delete this post for calling you out as the freedom-hating douche-bag you are?

    Do you think I'm being deliberately offensive? The words you have said here are much more offensive than mine. But I haven't been dishonest by covering up my harsh words with flowery language. You don't want to protect people from offense, you want to prevent people from openly expressing their honest opinions in favor of your sanitized version of communication.

    1. Re:Ban this, you spineless mother-fucker. by Dunbal · · Score: 3, Insightful

      People were being bigots, and that's Just Not Right.

            And you are the biggest bigot of all, Mr. Holier than Thou. Because you talk about bigotry instead of standing up for the principles of free Western civilization, while that framework is being eroded from under your very feet. If you are white, I am sure there are parts of town you refuse to go to, bigot or not. And the same applies if you belong to another ethnic group. The hatred is out there, and the guy that stabs or shoots or bombs you isn't going to care if you are or aren't a bigot. He will kill you for what you stand for to him, not for who you are.

            So if you want to go ahead and ignore everything that's happening around you, watching government after government cave in because of the threat of violence from radical muslims, go ahead. That's what living in a free society means. However do not get in the way of us "bigots" as we struggle to keep you free by forcing the governments to finally choose to abide by our long standing principles, or declare themselves puppets of the new caliphate.

            However the radical muslims would do well to remember that most of us come from Viking stock...

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
  40. Re:Damn right! by lgw · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you truly dislike fundamentalism of any stripe, it would be nice to see that claim backed by political actions. Batshit crazy Christian fundamentalism very rarely surfaces these days in terms of actual laws, but large sections of the world live under Islamic law that is unchanged since the middle ages.

    Christian fundies are a bit backwards perhaps when it comes to women's rughts (if you see abortion that way), but Islamic fundies savagely punish rape victims for being sluts and this is law in many countries. Christian fundies are against gay marriage, but Islamic fundies punish homosexuality with death and this is law in many countries. Alcohol, pornography, I could go on.

    Islamic fundies are vastly worse in each area that Christian fundies are annoying about, and are agressively moving to impose thier mindset worldwide. Holy War has been declared on Western liberal culture, but Western liberals seem too conflicted over "tolerance" to fight back. If you've ever said "be tolerant of everything but intolerance" you're being called out on that right now!

    Where is the opposition from the left to the celebratory mosque being built overlooking the 9/11 site? Why does the left go apeshit over any suggestion that any counter-terrorism activities ever focus primarily on muslims? The other side isn't at all conflicted over "tolerance", as the facebook debacle clearly shows.

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  41. Re:Face palm by Omestes · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Yes, the US blocks sites it finds objectionable. They tend to be the kind that Americans would make death threats about.

    Could you cite this? I don't recall the US blocking any sites on a national level. I'm not saying that they haven't, but I have seen no evidence for it.

    --
    A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government. -edward abbey
  42. Re:Score by Wrath0fb0b · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Why the cheap shot against the "left"? You could say I'm a "leftie" (especially by US standards), and I'm pissed off by this.

    Because there has been an internal division among the left (of which I consider myself a proud member) about the limits of free speech. Some openly deride the value of free speech in favor of hate speech laws, campus/employer speech codes[3][5], laws prohibiting "defaming or insulting religion"[6]. Outside the US, there appears to be no limit to prosecutions for even trivial insults against Christianity[1] or Islam[2]. In a most bizarre ruling from Canada, apparently you can be sued for libel for calling someone an 'enemy of free speech' in response the plaintiff's initiation of various cases before the CHRC that were, in fact, attacks on speech[4].

    Slashdot has a particular brand of leftism that is largely against these attacks on free speech but it would be silly to think that this represents a worldwide view. There are significant attacks on free speech from the left (and, as always, from the right as well on different issues) and it would behoove us to pay attention and confront our fellow lefties that are clamoring for European-style (or even Canadian-style) regulations of 'hate speech' and the like.

    [1] http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/atheist-given-asbo-for-leaflets-mocking-jesus-1952985.html
    [2] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trial_of_Geert_Wilders
    [3] http://volokh.com/tag/rodriguez-v-maricopa/
    [4] http://www.nelligan.ca/e/PDF/Warman_Court_Decision.pdf
    [5] http://www.tuftsdaily.com/2.5511/csl-hearing-turns-spotlight-on-controversial-source-pieces-1.590986
    [6] http://theamericanmuslim.org/tam.php/features/articles/combating_defamation_of_religions/

  43. Re:Another point of view by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 3, Informative

    Asking for some respect doesn't make you radical.

    Saying "Respect us or we'll kill you!" makes you radical. And the "moderate" Muslims so rarely have anything to say about it. Moderate Christians aren't quite as bad.

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  44. Re:Face palm by Moryath · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Why is it that showing pictures of a 7th-century pedophile who started a death cult is somehow "offensive"? The whole fucking religion is OFFENSIVE to anyone sane anyways...

  45. Re:Damn right! by cain · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You were doing fine up until this:

    Where is the opposition from the left to the celebratory mosque being built overlooking the 9/11 site?

    celebratory? It is a mosque and a community center. Saying "celebratory" implies the people building the mosque are celebrating 9/11 and the death of over 3,000 Americans. This is untrue and needlessly inflammatory. It seriously weakens your otherwise solid post.

  46. Re:Face palm by Posting=!Working · · Score: 3, Informative

    No, the US was demanding an unconditional surrender. The Japanese offered a conditional surrender. The US rejected that, and proceeded to use nuclear weapons against non-military people.

    You do not accept conditional surrenders from someone who has repeatedly attacked you without provocation. Should we have accepted a conditional surrender from Hitler when we got to the German border? Left him or the Nazis in power? Let the holocaust continue? Let him continue to develop the V2? Why should Hirohito and the Big 6 be left in power in Japan?

    The US, Great Britain, and the Soviets all agreed to accept nothing but unconditional surrender. Accepting a conditional surrender was not an option for the US, and at the time very few citizens of the US would have accepted a conditional surrender from Japan. The Japanese were only starting talks with the Soviets about a conditional surrender, which the Soviets rejected and built up forces on the Manchuko border. There was no conditional surrender on the table when the bomb was dropped, they had been warned at Potsdam on July 26th by the 3 powers to unconditionally surrender or face prompt and utter destruction. Even after the second bomb was dropped, it took the emperor another 5 days to formally declare surrender. None of this is consistent with the bullshit theory that the US rejected an offer to surrender when the bomb was dropped.

    Read the actual histories, not revisionist crap with cherry picked quotes, to get the actual information.

    --
    This sentence no verb.