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Pakistan's PM Demands International Blasphemy Laws From UN

eldavojohn writes "An article published in Pakistan's Daily Times contains several quotes from Pakistan's Prime Minister Raja Pervez Ashraf indicating his intent to push for international blasphemy laws in both the United Nations and the Organization of Islamic Co-operation (57 countries). These comments came shortly after Pakistan's 'Day of Love for the Prophet' turned into riots that left 19 people dead and, of course, this all follows the extended trailers of 'Innocence of Muslims' being translated. Questionable circumstances surround who is prosecuted under these 'blasphemy laws' and what kind of fear they instill in Pakistan's minorities. The UN's Human Rights Charter mentions protection from 'religious intolerance' but also in the same sentence 'freedom of opinion and expression.'"

957 comments

  1. Message to the intolerant by fnj · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You can't legislate respect.

    1. Re:Message to the intolerant by alphatel · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      You can't legislate respect.

      Tell that to the many Education panels in the US that have removed Evolution from curriculum. The stupidity never ends.

      --
      When the foot seeks the place of the head, the line is crossed. Know your place. Keep your place. Be a shoe.
    2. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Respect = Tolerance. So, basically, that should be the only law.

    3. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      you can legislate control. respect isnt the goal here

    4. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the law was "Live and let live" and people lived by it, it might work. But that'd be utopia, and we can't have that.

    5. Re:Message to the intolerant by mwvdlee · · Score: 2, Insightful

      One can be disrespectful of religion yet tolerate it at the same time.
      Ignoring something is considered disrespectful and all you need to do to tolerate something is to simply ignore it.

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    6. Re:Message to the intolerant by safehaven25 · · Score: 3, Informative

      Evolution isn't a proper noun, and their actions aren't intended in the slightest to gain respect... what the hell are you talking about, besides letting out your rage on an internet forum?

    7. Re:Message to the intolerant by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 3, Interesting

      That is indeed the meme shift underway.

      In the west, politics has taken over from religion in arrogating onto itself the power to force its views on everyone. This is reflected in things like the First Amendment.

      This process needs to happen over there. Do not allow it to grab more power.

      Next step: stripping it from politics. This was done once but it clawed its way back in. Politics and religion generate the same angers not because they are similar, but because they are the exact same phenomenon

      --
      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    8. Re:Message to the intolerant by Seumas · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Respect for what?

      Your dumb ideas are yours to have, but I've no obligation to hold them up to any sort of esteem any more than I'm obligated to respect the idea that the earth sits on a stack of turtles in space or that Santa squeezes down six billion chimneys every year. The sooner we stop giving ideas a retreat by couching them in "my belief system", the sooner we can get on with common sense.

    9. Re:Message to the intolerant by sl4shd0rk · · Score: 1

      You can't legislate respect.

      Nor tolerance.

      --
      Join the Slashcott! Feb 10 thru Feb 17!
    10. Re:Message to the intolerant by Seumas · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's okay to hate fags, but don't you dare say anything about the make-believe magic-man behind my faith that I use to enable my hatred!

    11. Re:Message to the intolerant by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Respect = Tolerance. So, basically, that should be the only law.

      "Respect" and "Tolerance" are basically orthogonal. Tolerating somebody does require that you respect their right to do whatever it is they are doing; but has no necessary connection with respecting whatever it is they are doing. Respect, by contrast, implies some degree of actual regard for somebody, rather than mere sufferance of them.

      In fact, 'tolerate' actually sounds pretty weird if used outside a context where the stimulus is implicitly negative in some respect. You wouldn't ask "How can you tolerate getting a raise and a corner office?" You would as "How can you tolerate that squeaky noise that the vent in your office makes?"

    12. Re:Message to the intolerant by pla · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You can't legislate respect.

      You can legislate education, however. And as people become more educated, they become less religious. Win-win!

      More to the point, you want respect? Start by learning why we think you sound like a complete idiot when you go frothing about your preferred fairy-tale. You want tolerance? Behave like civilized humans rather than rabid dogs. You want the freedom to practice your religion? Clean house and stop letting the worst among you represent your religion to the rest of the world.


      You can't legislate respect, but you can earn it.

    13. Re:Message to the intolerant by hazah · · Score: 0

      Such hate can only means that you were damaged sometime during your development.

    14. Re:Message to the intolerant by Hatta · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Blasphemy laws are legislating disrespect. Disrespect for each individual's free thought.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    15. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      By going to a church, most likely.

    16. Re:Message to the intolerant by Chrisq · · Score: 1

      You can't legislate respect.

      They don't want to do that, they want to legislate against criticism.

    17. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      "Tolerance becomes a crime when applied to evil"
      -Thomas Mann

      Any belief that tolerates murderers in its ranks is evil.
      Any belief that thinks its ideas, leaders and prophets are beyond question is evil.
      Any belief that mandates conversion or death is evil.

    18. Re:Message to the intolerant by Nadaka · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Sorry. But no. They are not the same phenomenon. Faith is a requirement for religion, because religions are always false. Faith is not absolutely necessary for politics, because people are genuinely capable of being both capable and and have good intentions, however rare that may be.

    19. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Very VERY bad (false flag) argument!

      Respect has to be earned. It has nothing to do with this WHAT-SO-EVER.

    20. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      They do not care, they are happy with you faking it.

      What they are afraid of is that you might demonstrate that by doing away with their self inflicted rules, you migth actually have more fun, and demonstrate that the X years they lived under them where a dramatic waste of time.
       

    21. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      actually your tolerance of such deviant acts is proof of damage some time in your development.

    22. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You do not need to legislate respect, but you can and should legislate tolerance.

      Tolerance basically means that being "shocked" is not a good enough excuse to harass someone.

    23. Re:Message to the intolerant by paiute · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "Tolerance becomes a crime when applied to evil" -Thomas Mann

      That's grand. Now whose definition of evil do we use?

      --
      If Slashdot were chemistry it would look like this:Cadaverine
    24. Re:Message to the intolerant by mcgrew · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's okay to hate fags, but don't you dare say anything about the make-believe magic-man behind my faith that I use to enable my hatred!

      It may be OK for Muslims to hate gays, but anyone who calls himself Christian who "hates fags" is fooling himself and needs to read the New Testamment. It has a few choice passages such as "love your enemies" and "judge not." It also has a few choice words about hypocrites that some "Christians" should read.

    25. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can educate "re-education". That's been done by the most brutal, oppressive regimes over that last century. Remember, they are all for education, right out of the Hadith. Who gets to chose? You would like to? Yeah... so would they.

    26. Re:Message to the intolerant by HeckRuler · · Score: 1

      Ah, the "respect has to be earned" line. Such a classic. I've got a great comeback for it too.
      There are different levels of respect. For example, this is my desk. I respect it as a desk. It holds things for me. If I pound my fist on it, it neither cries nor complains. I do not respect it as a human. It has done nothing to warrant that respect.
      You are a human though. I have to respect that. I might not respect you as a peer. Or as a person of reason. That is, as you say, respect that has to be earned. But as you look bipedal, move about in a human fashion, and seem more or less among the species homo sapiens, you have earned my respect as a human.
      And respect is a two-way street. *walks over with pounding fist*. So do you respect me as a human?

      This would work a lot better in person, presumably, and could be built up. I mean, unless they're an asshole, they'll agree about respecting you as a human. And then you could ask if they respect you as a... I dunno, a peer or something. If they said no, well that's something we can certainly work on.

    27. Re:Message to the intolerant by ichthus · · Score: 2

      Try an experiment: Choose a definition, apply it to the above statements, and evaluate the result.

      --
      sig: sauer
    28. Re:Message to the intolerant by scamper_22 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "You can legislate education, however. And as people become more educated, they become less religious. Win-win!"

      Yeah... of course you can legislate education. It's why every ideology seeks control of the education system. Hint... look up the Hitler Youth, or how communism took over education.

      Just what kind of legislated education do you think Pakistan will introduce?

      90% of education is indoctrination ( extreme word used on purpose). Really most education is about passing on the values of the society to the next generation.

      Many in the West lost sight of that simple reality known for thousands of years.

    29. Re:Message to the intolerant by i+kan+reed · · Score: 4, Informative

      Nope, you can tolerate something and still actively speak against it. Attempting to convince people they are wrong about something is harmless. It breaks into intolerance when you suggest or take action(be it legislative, violent, or manipulative) against a group.

    30. Re:Message to the intolerant by MitchDev · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Shush, the bible isn't meant to be taken as a whole, only fragments that you can twist to control the sheep you lie to with it.

    31. Re:Message to the intolerant by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

      They don't want respect. If someone is getting angry and getting violent and keeps going on about respect, they just want an excuse to get mad and violent. If it's not perceived disrespect, it will be about something else.

      It's a universal rule. In every culture, there are angry people who want to hurt you. "Disrespect" is usually the default excuse, but it is just an excuse. The real reason is testosterone, or misery loves company, or sexual frustration, or some other pathetic thing that won't be solved by beating someone up anyway.

    32. Re:Message to the intolerant by slashmydots · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I guess you didn't realize this amazingly advanced logic but as a christian, compared to muslims, one of us is correct and one is not. There is no "tolerance" when both religions demand that there be no other fake religions. The only person who can truly promote "tolerance" is one who thinks we're both wrong and that's atheists, which is around 18% of the US and the US is not rules by an 18% majority system. So we disagree, deal with it.

    33. Re:Message to the intolerant by groslyunderpaid · · Score: 2

      It has a few choice passages such as "love your enemies" and "judge not." It also has a few choice words about hypocrites that some "Christians" should read.

       
      You were doing good with all but the judge not part. It is an incomplete quote and taken out of context, as so often is done by those who seek to use the bible against the "bible believers". Then again the "bible believers" do the same thing, so hey, what the hell.

    34. Re:Message to the intolerant by fliptout · · Score: 1

      Look up the Hitler youth, eh? What a persuasive argument.

      --
      A witty saying proves you are wittier than the next guy.
    35. Re:Message to the intolerant by aglider · · Score: 1

      ... and you cannot respect the intolerant.

      --
      Sent as ripples into the electromagnetic field. No single photon has been harmed in the process.
    36. Re:Message to the intolerant by cayenne8 · · Score: 0

      Such hate can only means that you were damaged sometime during your development.

      Where did you read hateinto that previous post at all...??

      Sarcastic, yes..but where's the hate?

      Just because someone disagrees with something...it is now HATE??

      Sheesh.....

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    37. Re:Message to the intolerant by paiute · · Score: 1

      Who grades the evaluation?

      --
      If Slashdot were chemistry it would look like this:Cadaverine
    38. Re:Message to the intolerant by groslyunderpaid · · Score: 0, Troll

      Faith is a requirement for religion, because religions are always false.

       
      Not only is your assertion not provable as true, it can be proven false. Furthermore, it is flamebait and should be modded as such.
       
      There are over 4,200 religions in the world. Do you know them all? Have you proven each one false? HAve you read a peer reviewed journal for each one where it was proven false?
       
      From http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/religion: "a set of beliefs concerning the cause, nature, and purpose of the universe, ..." really? a set of beliefs is false? So my religion is that the universe came into being by chance. I assume you disagree and can prove this false?

    39. Re:Message to the intolerant by ahabswhale · · Score: 1

      He meant actual education -- not indoctrination, but way to take it to take it to the extreme just so you can be argumentative. (I know, welcome to /.)

      --
      Are agnostics skeptical of unicorns too?
    40. Re:Message to the intolerant by Nadaka · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Nope. Religion always have supernatural aspects. Otherwise, it would be called science.

    41. Re:Message to the intolerant by Charliemopps · · Score: 1

      No, hate is an integral part of the human psyche. In our tribal days, we feared "otherness" as other tribes could be dangerous. They could carry disease, or wage war upon us. Without fear and hate for strangers we likely would not have survived. It served us well then, but like so many of our instinctual traits from the past, it does not serve us well in the modern word. The key for the modern man is education and learning the ability to distinguish between rational though and instinct based decisions. Rational thought, and the ability to question ones own beliefs is the only true solution here.

    42. Re:Message to the intolerant by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      from your same source: 1. belief in, worship of, or obedience to a supernatural power or powers considered to be divine or to have control of human destiny

    43. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not sure if "religious intolerance" means "intolerance towards religion" or "intolerance from religion". I would hope it is "from" and not "towards". Outside of any religious context, I'm sure they can be properly protected under other standard laws.

      If it is read as "towards", then that opens up a possible future of a theocracy as they want. If it is read "from" than that enforces that all can be equal, no matter the organization or person.

    44. Re:Message to the intolerant by RabidReindeer · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I guess you didn't realize this amazingly advanced logic but as a christian, compared to muslims, one of us is correct and one is not. There is no "tolerance" when both religions demand that there be no other fake religions. The only person who can truly promote "tolerance" is one who thinks we're both wrong and that's atheists, which is around 18% of the US and the US is not rules by an 18% majority system. So we disagree, deal with it.

      Zeus tells me that BOTH religions are fake. And the Pink Unicorn tells me that making Religion into Law is blasphemous and shall be punished in eternal fire.

      Anyway, it's a feeble God who needs armed men to defend himself.

    45. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      18% majority system

      Their is no such thing as a 18% majority.

    46. Re:Message to the intolerant by nege · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I'm a Christian and I completely agree with you. Many "Christians" don't even read the Bible. Also, going to church doesn't make one a Christian any more than standing in a garage makes you a car.

    47. Re:Message to the intolerant by Vermonter · · Score: 0

      Yes, but Christianity also says to love those who oppose you, and those who are not Christian.

    48. Re:Message to the intolerant by nedlohs · · Score: 2

      No, it is when they state "my hatred" that most people read hate into it. Nothing at all do with disagreeing with anything,

    49. Re:Message to the intolerant by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 2

      Religions do tend to be a bit touchy about market share; but there is nothing that forbids them from tolerating the fact that everybody else is wrong and going to hell. Indeed, as demonstrated by the relative passivity of most of the world's theists, they generally do. Honestly, that's one of the most interesting things about people who profess that our beliefs and actions have infinite positive or negative consequences: most of them act a great deal like everybody else, aside from a few hours a week of minimally demanding ceremonial behavior.

      One would, naively, expect that the infinite valuation of salvation goods would lead to fanatical behavior on a scale that would leave the world knee deep in mangled corpses and televangelists. But it doesn't. It's odd.

    50. Re:Message to the intolerant by groslyunderpaid · · Score: 0

      So now you also make baseless accusations that the dictionary itself is wrong?

    51. Re:Message to the intolerant by fufufang · · Score: 1

      How about this? Pakistan's PM's comment is blasphemous in my personal religion.

    52. Re:Message to the intolerant by X0563511 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Lets be fair, here. Faith is a requirement because of a lack of evidence. This is not the same thing as false, just as it most certainly is not the same thing as true.

      --
      For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
    53. Re:Message to the intolerant by cob666 · · Score: 1

      it's a feeble God who needs armed men to defend himself.

      This is brilliant, mind if I pass it around?

      --
      Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law - Aleister Crowley
    54. Re:Message to the intolerant by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 2

      Respect != Tolerance, being left alone = tolerance. Being intolerant implies you will not sit still and accept the condition, you will attempt to remedy it.

      Intolerance usually involves someone taking action against what they don't tolerate. This gets confused a lot, especially by the gay community, wherein the best they can hope for, and all they deserve, is to be left alone. But they insist on ACCEPTANCE (also != respect), which will not happen in this generation. You can't legislate acceptance. You CAN legislate tolerance, and we have for time uncounted though it rarely applies internationally.

      What Pakistan is asking for is another thing entirely, and no way in hell do they get it. They will just have to learn about sticks and stones like every other 5 year old. The fact is you can call Jesus a homosexual, womanizing, child molestor with a penchant for violence, and while there will be uproar and disgust, a few calls for take-down and a lot of annoying lectures about how the decline of the alleged traditional US "christian" (whatever that is) religious state. But there won't be riots, and it has nothing to do with the passive and accepting nature of christians (they have a long history of violence as well). But over the years they have learned that what someone says about their messiah does not make it fact, and really doesn't matter. Any sensible person seeing that idiotic youtube video will just ignore it as the trash that it is.

    55. Re:Message to the intolerant by mcgrew · · Score: 0

      And as people become more educated, they become less religious.

      Then why do half of all scientists consider themselves Christian? The thing is, unless you have experienced God personally, the only logical belief is agnosticism. Your blind faith that there is no god takes just as much faith as someone who has not actually experienced God but believes anyway, and perhaps even more, because your belief assures you that you're going to die, while the religious see this "life" as a transitory thing. Nothing you do on this earth will ever have any effect on anything important when you look a geological time scales. Nothing you do will ever matter, period.

      You want tolerance? Behave like civilized humans rather than rabid dogs.

      There's a passage in the Christian bible that says nearly the exact same thing.

    56. Re:Message to the intolerant by Nadaka · · Score: 3, Interesting

      from your same source: 1. belief in, worship of, or obedience to a supernatural power or powers considered to be divine or to have control of human destiny

    57. Re:Message to the intolerant by amiga3D · · Score: 2

      Indeed, the message is to love sinners. So many who claim to be Christians don't seem to get the message but instead want to rush to judge others. Many need to read the passage about taking care of their own sins before attacking others (Matthew 7:1-5).

    58. Re:Message to the intolerant by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      There is faith that is required due to a lack of evidence, then there is faith that is required because the beliefs are self contradictory or in spite of evidence to the contrary. I've spent a fair amount of time researching religions, and every one that I have come across fails in that regard.

    59. Re:Message to the intolerant by DigiShaman · · Score: 4, Funny

      The Islamic community do not want their women to be educated. To legislate education might actually be disrespectful if not blasphemes to their religion.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    60. Re:Message to the intolerant by Gilmoure · · Score: 1

      So... No more bashing Windows phones?

      --
      I drank what? -- Socrates
    61. Re:Message to the intolerant by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      Why did you pick one that definition rather than one of the other options that are clearly more in line with the meaning the poster was using?

      But yes, if that set of beliefs was proven or the bulk of the evidence pointed to it as the best explanation we currently have then it wouldn't be called religion. It would be science or just reality.

    62. Re:Message to the intolerant by misexistentialist · · Score: 1

      Not really extreme, since education is biased most of the time and involves at least some low-level indoctrination (except in mathematics, at least one would hope)

    63. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The NT was/is a constellation of contradictions. With 4+ authours you can use it to justify anything, including hate/loving gays

    64. Re:Message to the intolerant by hazah · · Score: 1

      You're basically agreeing with my fundamental premise. The we develop, the more our rationality makes hate a thing of the past (ideally). Bring it back into the forefront on purpose indicates a step in the opposite direction.

    65. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh look at us, on our high horses, on going foreign crusades of liberation in the name of freedom and goodness against the axis of evil, looking in no way like rabid dogs, oh no, as we bomb and drone the enemy into submission. Civilized I say. The good guys. After all they bombed us first and had weapons of mass destruction, didn't they, didn't they!

      Clean house and stop letting the worst among you represent your foreign policy to the rest of the world.

    66. Re:Message to the intolerant by hazah · · Score: 1

      *The more we develop

    67. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey, it is possible to have a non-false religion. Here's a dictionary definition of religion (one of several, of course): a set of beliefs concerning the cause, nature, and purpose of the universe, especially when considered as the creation of a superhuman agency or agencies, usually involving devotional and ritual observances, and often containing a moral code governing the conduct of human affairs.

      Note the bit that says 'especially when considered as the creation of a superhuman agency or agencies'. The presence of the word 'especially' makes that bit commonplace, but theoretically optional. So it's possible to have a religion concerning 'the cause, nature... of the universe' that does not invoke superhuman (although I'd prefer the term 'supernatural' personally) agencies yet still satisfies this definition. And if this religion doesn't invoke any supernatural boogey-men and confines itself to beliefs which are actually true, hey presto, a non-false religion.

      I wonder if any actually exist....

    68. Re:Message to the intolerant by hazah · · Score: 1

      You are using an increase of tolerance as your yardstick to measure increase damage of development? If your attempt was to intice an emotional response, you have succeeded. I'm now passionatly convinced you are retarded, clinically.

    69. Re:Message to the intolerant by hazah · · Score: 1

      I think you need to re-read the post I replied to.

    70. Re:Message to the intolerant by Artifakt · · Score: 0, Troll

      Science proceeds from a baseline assumption that a natural explanation of each phenomenon studied is possible, but that does not prove that all natural phenomena can be explained by science - it's a working assumption working scientists have to start from before they begin applying the methods of science. There can be no proof possible within the scientific method of either this assumption or whether a particular given phenomenon is explainable in advance of actually explaining it. (See Sir Karl Popper, Jose Ortega y Gasset, and Thomas Kuhn for the arguments on this point, and definitely learn and understand the application of Godel's second great theorem to the limitations of the scientific method.). (But to put it straightforwardly, the only way to prove the whole universe can be explained naturally is to complete a Unified Field theory or Grand theory of Everything, not just to say string theory looks like it's the right track). You are advancing a faith based claim for the primacy of science and its supernatural power to prove all true but logically and mathematically unprovable contentions about the natural world, and so whether you think you are an Atheist or not, YOU have a religion.

      --
      Who is John Cabal?
    71. Re:Message to the intolerant by ahabswhale · · Score: 2

      There's a lot more "excepts" besides mathematics. For starters, you can add in all of the sciences. Really the indoctrination stuff happens in subjects like history, religion, and government classes.

      --
      Are agnostics skeptical of unicorns too?
    72. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Are you telling me you don't worship the fabric of spacetime to show thanks for gravity?

    73. Re:Message to the intolerant by DarkOx · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You should maybe read the Bible before quoting it.

      "judge not" has a great deal of context around it and does not mean "judge not" at all. It means you will be held to whatever standards you hold others. Its really more about our tenancy to rationalize our own ill behavior and to remind us to be "open minded" about the acts of others as they may very well have a reason for what they do. Don't demand the head of a man for stealing a loaf of bread, he might be desperately poor with starving child at home. Someday you might be in the same situation and you would want a little forgiveness and understanding.

      If there is something you believe is so wrong that you yourself would never ever do it no matter what, hope to die (and its otherwise consistent with the new testament), than its completely okay as a Christian for you to judge another for it, even harshly.

      --
      Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
    74. Re:Message to the intolerant by Vinegar+Joe · · Score: 1

      You can't legislate respect.

      Maybe not but they can chop your head off.

      --
      "The average reporter we talk to is 27 years old......They literally know nothing." - Ben Rhodes
    75. Re:Message to the intolerant by groslyunderpaid · · Score: 1

      The parent said "religions are always false". There was no need for me to hash through the possible definitions that may lend it credence, it was only necessary for me to provide a single definition which proved it inaccurate. That is why I chose that definition. That and because it was the very first one listed, not much use to keep going after I got what I came for.

      As to your second sentence, you are saying if the what you are describing matches up with the very first definition of a word in the dictionary, then we definitely do NOT want to use that word, we want to use some other word. Religion need not involve a deity, and your very argument flies in the face of what you are trying to say. I have proven to you that the dictionary backs up my position, evidence backs up my position, and yet you declare my position is invalid because if my position were valid, it would be backed up by evidence.

      My point is that anyone who says "religions are false" is generally either trolling, flaiming, or not thinking logically. I've never been able to figure out why, but intelligent, logical people somehow suspend all logic when someone enters the room talking about religion. I should have known better than to point out this bias on /. but sometimes I can't help myself.

    76. Re:Message to the intolerant by PineHall · · Score: 1

      You can legislate education, however. And as people become more educated, they become less religious. Win-win!

      That is not true in the USA. The more educated you are the more likely you are to be religious. A recent survey states

      According to the study, in the 1970s, 51 percent of college-educated whites attended religious services monthly or more, compared to 50 percent of moderately educated whites and 38 percent of the least educated whites. In the 2000s, 46 percent of college-educated whites attended on at least a monthly basis, compared to 37 percent of moderately educated whites and 23 percent of the least educated. The study defines the "least educated" as people without high school degrees.

      So the study says that people with more education are more likely to attend church than those with less education.

    77. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unfortunately, it's not about respect, it's more like the Islamic equivalent of the "you can't teach evolution in schools" demand.

    78. Re:Message to the intolerant by CanHasDIY · · Score: 3, Informative

      Who grades the evaluation?

      You.

      Stop being intentionally obtuse - it does nothing to further your point, and only serves to make yourself look like a pedantic jackass.

      --
      An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
    79. Re:Message to the intolerant by bornagainpenguin · · Score: 1

      90% of education is indoctrination ( extreme word used on purpose). Really most education is about passing on the values of the society to the next generation.
      Many in the West lost sight of that simple reality known for thousands of years.

      They didn't lose sight of anything--they're simply very well indoctrinated. . .

      --
      Have a Virgin Mobile USA smartphone? Give VMRoms.com a try!
    80. Re:Message to the intolerant by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      You have a fundamental misunderstanding. All natural phenomena do not need to be explained by science. Nor do I have to believe in an explanation for all natural phenomena.

    81. Re:Message to the intolerant by Nadaka · · Score: 2

      Would it make you feel better if I said that ALL of a statistically relevant sampling of religions have been proven false, to the point where the odds of any of the untested religions not being false is statistically irrelevant?

    82. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that rarity is so extreme as to require faith in the politician that he will carry out his election promises. A lot of people had Hope in the last presidential election cycle and if the promises had been delivered on then we could easily have had another Roosevelt on our hands. Suffice to say, that like every president in the last 30+ years, this one bowed to what was in his best interests instead of doing what was needful for the people.

      In other words, faith in the leadership is absolutely essential in modern day politics. Otherwise, no one would be reelected.

    83. Re:Message to the intolerant by Hatta · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If there were evidence it wouldn't be religion, it would be science.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    84. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Has any of the 4,200+ been proven true? Isn't that how it's supposed to work, that the people who claim something is true are supposed to have the evidence to back up the claim?

    85. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      he thing is, unless you have experienced the pink unicorn in my pants personally, the only logical belief is agnosticism.

    86. Re:Message to the intolerant by cavreader · · Score: 1

      Keeping yourself busy seeking the scientific proof for a Unified Theory of everything sounds a little more interesting than standing around waiting for a GOD to show up and just give up all the answers. Religions today are a conglomeration of man made rituals and practices that the originators claimed came from a GOD of one type or another but the proof is severly lacking. The leaders of the so called theocracy based governments are no more religious or holy than your average run of the mill sinner or blasphemous infidel. Religion is just a powerful means of social control for those seeking to remain in power and punish their adversaries in their pursuit of the title of Grand Poo-bah or whatever. As someone posted above it is a pretty poor GOD who would need to call upon human "holy warriors" to advance his ideals.

    87. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How do you educate a group of people that want a return to the 700 CE?
      If they go back to that level, they will remain infected with Mohammedanism and its constant jihad against any faith or belief that is not subjugated to Mohammedanism.
      That is why the 'CoExist' bumperstickers are such a joke with the first character being Crescent Moon & Star. By definition, the 'Peace' in "Religion of Peace" means the total subjugation to Islam.

    88. Re:Message to the intolerant by X0563511 · · Score: 2

      I don't see how that would be incompatible.

      --
      For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
    89. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      In general, I agree. But, personally, I have found my tolerance for any religion, and the practitioners of such, has diminished significantly in the last 5 years. All I see coming from them is intolerance and hate. By definition, they seem bereft of rational thought. I used to be one of them, but then I grew up. I don't understand how any person, with some years of experience behind them, can continue to see the world with such blinders.

    90. Re:Message to the intolerant by Golddess · · Score: 1

      Perhaps you could present it in the proper context then?

      --
      "I'm not sure I like the fugnutish tone you used in your post!" -RogL (608926)-
    91. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Man, you are not even wrong. No one uses that as the definition of religion, except people like you, trying to browbeat stupid people into listening to you. We'll care about your idiot beliefs when you start passing laws that affect us based on them. And then, we will call them false, as it is clear to see.

    92. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Likewise, if you're going to accuse Christians of being judgemental, don't be judgemental towards them by accusing them of things they're not guilty of. That's also hypocrisy. Just because Christians disagree with homosexuality doesn't mean they have hatred in their hearts.

      Definition of tolerance
      noun
              1 [mass noun] the ability or willingness to tolerate the existence of opinions or behaviour that one dislikes or disagrees with:

      From the above definition, I can disagree with or dislike something and still be tolerant.

    93. Re:Message to the intolerant by Golddess · · Score: 1

      Why just the new testament BTW?

      As I understand it, with the coming of Jesus Christ, the old laws (from the Old Testament) were basically thrown out, and new ones were provided by him.

      However, I too am not a Christian.

      --
      "I'm not sure I like the fugnutish tone you used in your post!" -RogL (608926)-
    94. Re:Message to the intolerant by Hatta · · Score: 3, Funny

      the US is not rules by an 18% majority system.

      Of course not. The US is ruled by .1%.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    95. Re:Message to the intolerant by Hatta · · Score: 1

      One would, naively, expect that the infinite valuation of salvation goods would lead to fanatical behavior on a scale that would leave the world knee deep in mangled corpses and televangelists. But it doesn't.

      It doesn't?

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    96. Re:Message to the intolerant by NumenMaster · · Score: 1

      Zeus.. It is a great tactic you used by mentioning a dead religion to further your point. I admire that. I'd have to admit mentioning other dead religions during discussions on modern religious myth. I generally go with Ra, of ancient Egypt.

      --
      Where's my sock? There it is...
    97. Re:Message to the intolerant by Type44Q · · Score: 1

      ...but anyone who calls himself Christian who "hates fags" is fooling himself...

      What gave it away; was it the dudes hanging out with each other out in the desert, wearing nothing but flowing robes?

    98. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whoosh!

    99. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not really called a misunderstanding in this case, though. It is called cognitive dissidence. Proving to himself that you have a religion, just different from his, is how he reconciles the dissidence. You cannot be right, or his whole existence comes into question. He cannot deal with that scenario, so does not.

    100. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sorry for you, if your education didn't teach you logic and critical thinking.

      Those are the best two weapons I received as part of my "indoctrination". Mine was done properly; even before I finished, I started turning those weapons on everything I had been taught was true.

    101. Re:Message to the intolerant by ichthus · · Score: 1

      I was performing an experiment of my own. Thank you for participating.

      --
      sig: sauer
    102. Re:Message to the intolerant by ultranova · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "judge not" has a great deal of context around it and does not mean "judge not" at all.

      And so we go from "judge not" to "judge harshly, confident on your moral superiority" in just two three short paragraphs, one of which was an ad hominem. Ah, the wonders of theology!

      --

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

    103. Re:Message to the intolerant by jamstar7 · · Score: 1

      If the law was "Live and let live" and people lived by it, it might work. But that'd be utopia, and we can't have that.

      Worse, we haven't figured out a way to make money off it...

      --
      Understanding the scope of the problem is the first step on the path to true panic.
    104. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "You can legislate education, however. And as people become more educated, they become less religious. Win-win!"

      Yeah... of course you can legislate education. It's why every ideology seeks control of the education system. Hint... look up the Hitler Youth, or how communism took over education.

      Don't forget "No Child Left Behind"

    105. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If there is something you believe is so wrong that you yourself would never ever do it no matter what, hope to die (and its otherwise consistent with the new testament), than its completely okay as a Christian for you to judge another for it, even harshly.

      You seem to contradict yourself... For one person, theft of a loaf of bread could be so wrong as to be inconceivable. They would rather die than steal, etc. So it's ok for them to harshly judge a bread thief with a starving child?

    106. Re:Message to the intolerant by HornWumpus · · Score: 2

      Sorry, but there is no majority religion in the USA. No matter what you believe, the majority thinks you are incorrect.

      Christian is too generic, it doesn't describe any particular sect or set of beliefs.

      Also agnostics and even most Christians would agree nobody has it 'right'. The Christians who insist their particular sect has things right are scary stupid BTW. We should let them fight it out.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    107. Re:Message to the intolerant by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Are you the self appointed decider of who is christian or not? Or is there some board that appoints people to make those declarations?

      Going to church doesn't make you a "good" Christian- accepting the premise of Jesus as lord and the son of God does make you a Christian though.

    108. Re:Message to the intolerant by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 4, Informative

      Then why do half of all scientists consider themselves Christian?

      At least if you're talking about in the US, I think you're overstating the number quite a bit. But even if it's true, considerably more than half of the US population as a whole identifies as Christian, so there's still a pretty strong negative correlation between being a scientist and being a Christian, or religious in any form.

      --
      The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
    109. Re:Message to the intolerant by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      The bible is not a "everyone follow this exactly" book. For the most part, it is a history of the religion to understand the different covenants God made with man. You can have completely contradicting passages that do not contradict because they are under different covenants. It is when the new or latest covenant repeats something that you can look back and understand how it was before in order to understand how it means in the present.

    110. Re:Message to the intolerant by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      It is easy to reelect someone who has proven themselves to be a sore disappointment. All it takes is the next most likely candidate being worse.

    111. Re:Message to the intolerant by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      And as the op stated, you cannot disprove something that is supernatural. You cannot claim it is always false.

    112. Re:Message to the intolerant by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 1

      I don't have any more recent numbers on hand; but the 1990 figures suggest that 3.7% of deaths were by violence(defined as homicide, suicide, and war) worldwide that year. Sub-Sarahan Africa was (unshockingly) leading the tables at 6%, with the Middle East at 5.6%.

      In absolute terms, that's a fair amount of blood spilled; but relative to the world population and deaths from other causes violence is surprisingly weak sauce, even once the slightly dubious step of factoring in suicide is taken...

    113. Re:Message to the intolerant by dcollins · · Score: 1

      Of course, Christianity took off and lasted over 1,000 years at a time when the vast majority of adherents couldn't read at all. So it's not a necessary condition... if anything, the possibility is a historical oddity.

      --
      We know where leadership by an anti-intellectual "strongman" who scapegoats minorities and likes boisterous rallies goes
    114. Re:Message to the intolerant by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      What does 'respecting someone as a human' get them? That and a subway token will get them on a subway.

      I can respect someone as a human and still tell them 'Get the fuck off of my property. If I ever see you here again your going to jail. Behave in a threatening manor on my property and you're going to die. No, I don't want to hear it. Just get the fuck out, and take your child molesting prophet with you.'

      Religious people want us to respect their belief systems. Which ain't gonna happen.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    115. Re:Message to the intolerant by dcollins · · Score: 2

      That's some very fine religious interpretive mangling bullshit that you've got going on there. "Judge not" doesn't mean "judge not" indeed. Very nice. I suspect I can guess your sect that engages in that more than others.

      --
      We know where leadership by an anti-intellectual "strongman" who scapegoats minorities and likes boisterous rallies goes
    116. Re:Message to the intolerant by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      You would still be wrong. You have no way of proving religions false- especially when claims of supernatural beings and events are included and you are limited to only natural tests and explanations.

    117. Re:Message to the intolerant by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      Religions often, if not always, make claims that are falsifiable either by being contradicted by another claim of the religion, or testable through scientific inquiry. Every religion I know of fails this test.

    118. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have mixed feelings on homosexuals myself, but take great issue with the frequent misinterpretation of "love your enemies." Love does not mean acceptance of any and all behaviors, rather it requires one to guide those who have fallen into sin back to the Lord. Some on the extreme do legitimately hate gays, but the majority of conservative Christians reject homosexuality - the sin rather than the sinner. If you start from the premise that homosexuality is sinful, rejecting and condemning homosexual behavior is showing love toward the sinner.

      A similar popular misunderstanding is "God would not have given them these feelings if they were sinful" but this ignores the fallen state of man, which explains why some people have 'natural' predispositions to sin in other ways - adultery, theft, etc.

    119. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just start with Romans 2:1, which immediately follows a verse about homosexuality:

      You, therefore, have no excuse, you who pass judgment on someone else, for at whatever point you judge another, you are condemning yourself, because you who pass judgment do the same things.

      There's no wiggle room, the "christians" spouting out hatred against anyone are just straight out ignoring what they claim to believe. Need this direct from Jesus rather than Paul? John 8:1-11 has that one covered with his own example, again bearing on sexual sins (And people who think homosexuality is somehow worse than having an affair are missing the point entirely).

    120. Re:Message to the intolerant by melikamp · · Score: 1

      Which Bible are you reading? It says really plainly in the very next sentence: others will be sure to apply your own measuring stick to you, duh. So judge away, but don't act surprised when people point out your hypocrisy. Example: when a chaste man tells you are a scum for fucking prepubescent boys, he is on the money. But when a Catholic bishop tells you the same, he is only exposing his own sin, being by choice a member of the club that actively covers up child molestation. Your understanding of this passage is some kind of warped moral relativism, which is as far from the original thought as you could get.

    121. Re:Message to the intolerant by Requiem18th · · Score: 1

      The Westboro Baptist Church don't read "I Hate Fags" but "God Hates Fags". Which he does, according to leviticus el throughout the bible.

      http://skepticsannotatedbible.com/gay/long.htm

      You seem like a good person, your god is not.

      --
      But... the future refused to change.
    122. Re:Message to the intolerant by Requiem18th · · Score: 1
      --
      But... the future refused to change.
    123. Re:Message to the intolerant by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Contradictory things within a religion does not make it false any more then your kitchen would be false if you made a peanut butter and jelly sandwich with spoon instead of a knife to spread it on the bread.

      Scientific inquiry does not make something false unless it is observed directly. You can say using water in a certain way to run this internal combustion engine doesn't work, but you cannot say no one has ever used water to run an internal combustion engine and never will.

      This is especially difficult when your abilities are limited to natural explanations and observations and the claim of supernatural events or powers or beings were part of the process. You simply cannot test supernatural claims. All you can do is find reasonable natural alternatives.

    124. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If there weren't evidence, it wouldn't be faith, it would be hope.

      Faith is the "assured expectation of things hoped for" and the "evident demonstration of realities though not beheld." (Heb. 13:1) It's not assured unless something assures it other than your hope, and there's no possibility of "evident demonstration" without evidence.

      Your definition of faith is wrong. True faith is necessary for a true religion. Hope is what you put in a pack of lies that sounds good to you, and it is sufficient for a false religion.

      And science is a process, not a belief structure. Any belief structure you form around science becomes a religion.

    125. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also faith can't be falsified which means it cant be scientifically disproved, ergo religion based on faith cant be science.

    126. Re:Message to the intolerant by nege · · Score: 1

      Oh, a comment from "sumdumass" :)

    127. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The New Testament only because Jesus' coming completes the law, and as a side effect of that we are not bound to follow the levitical rules. The Old Testament is included as part of the Bible because it provides insights into God's character and the history of his interaction with people, not to enforce the rules from it on believers in Christ. I don't expect you to necessarily understand that, though with the way you're cherry picking texts I might hope you actually would be willing to do some research before opening fire. But I guess that's really the point, to misinterpret and incite blind fear without understanding?

      Anyway, if you read on just a couple more versus to Romans 2:1 (You know, immediately following the part you quoted. And the chapter breaks don't mean the old section should be ignored while reading on, the whole book of Romans was a letter so it should be read that way) you'll get this:

      You, therefore, have no excuse, you who pass judgment on someone else, for at whatever point you judge another, you are condemning yourself, because you who pass judgment do the same things.

      So Paul is saying everyone sins sexually. It doesn't have to be homesexual to be sexual sin, and you're not off the hook if you judge someone for that while having any sexual sin yourself. And nobody is free of that, so nobody is free to judge here.

    128. Re:Message to the intolerant by scamper_22 · · Score: 1

      Yeah... the stuff that actually matters to society is indoctrination.

      Sociology, politics, history, philosophy... those are the things that make a society.

      Science and math are interesting, but not really reforming to society. There are a lot of very strict Muslims who are great in math in science.

    129. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You do realize the NT is only about 1/4 of the entire bible right?

      The OT says a whole bunch of crazy. Frankly, anyone calling them self christian should have their head examined.

    130. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They can pound sand. respect for human life comes above respect for big sky god.

    131. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Speaking of reading the bible:

      Ezekiel 23:20 New International Version (©1984)
        There she lusted after her lovers, whose genitals were like those of donkeys and whose emission was like that of horses.

      A god would have absolutely zero reason to include such an erotic sentence.

      Furthermore the account of creation has the sun being created on the fourth day of creation. How do tell were there three "days" prior to the sun existing?

      Genesis 1:16-19 New International Version (NIV)
        16 God made two great lights—the greater light to govern the day and the lesser light to govern the night. He also made the stars. 17 God set them in the vault of the sky to give light on the earth, 18 to govern the day and the night, and to separate light from darkness. And God saw that it was good. 19 And there was evening, and there was morning—the fourth day.

      The explanation for both of these is rather obvious, the bible was written by humans, not a god. And since no source external to the bible supports the existence of the christian god with actual evidence I believe that is enough to call the whole shebang bunk.

    132. Re:Message to the intolerant by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      Some supernatural claims can be tested. You can prove that magic spells and prayer are no more effective than random noise.

      Many supernatural claims can be refuted when the actual mechanism for an action or event is proven through science.

    133. Re:Message to the intolerant by Dragonslicer · · Score: 1

      The Westboro Baptist Church don't read "I Hate Fags" but "God Hates Fags". Which he does, according to leviticus el throughout the bible.

      God also hates pork and shellfish, but you never see Christians talk about it. But those are all minor details that are rarely mentioned in the Old Testament. If you want to talk major themes, let's talk about working on the sabbath and oppressing the foreigners in our land.

    134. Re:Message to the intolerant by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      Making a sandwich with a spoon instead of a knife is not a contradiction.

    135. Re:Message to the intolerant by Hatta · · Score: 1

      If there weren't evidence, it wouldn't be faith

      Since there is no evidence for anything supernatural there is no faith.

      True faith is necessary for a true religion

      Since there is no faith (see above), there is no true religion.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    136. Re:Message to the intolerant by Your.Master · · Score: 1

      Using a spoon to make a sandwich isn't a contradiction.

      I think you can make the argument that any contradiction within a religion nixes that religion but implies the existence of two more religions: one for each possible contradictory statement that is dropped (with a possible third where people believe some set of other things unstated by the original religion that lets you weasel out of the contradiction).

      As for observing directly, first, that's not entirely true, and second many religions make claims that are directly observable.

    137. Re:Message to the intolerant by sageres · · Score: 1

      OK, so what's wrong with loving the sinners but hating their sins?

    138. Re:Message to the intolerant by Insanity+Defense · · Score: 1

      I guess you didn't realize this amazingly advanced logic but as a christian, compared to muslims, one of us is correct and one is not.

      You missed something. You might BOTH be wrong.

      The only person who can truly promote "tolerance" is one who thinks we're both wrong and that's atheists,

      Agnostics are better suited to that role as they already realize that they don't know which of the many options is true. Atheists are sure that they know. If they weren't sure they would be Agnostic.

      Strangely enough Christians were once considered to be Atheists as they worshiped no visible god.

    139. Re:Message to the intolerant by a+whoabot · · Score: 1

      You can also not equivocate and still equivocate.

      That's not what these demands for tolerance are. When you actively speak against black people moving in to your neighbourhood, for many that is intolerant and should be denounced. When you actively speak against homosexual activity, for many that is intolerant and should be denounced. Many people demanding tolerance for Islam are asking for that sort of tolerance -- not speaking against Islam and denouncing those who do.

    140. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is not true and is more a cultural thing than a religious thing. There are many Muslim women in all fields, be it medicine, law, engineering etc. In fact, Islam encourages education and many early advances in chemistry, maths, medicine and even astronomy came from islamic scholars.

      The first word of the Quran to be revealed was 'Iqra' which literally means 'read'.

      A more correct statement would be Afghans don't want their women educated, or Pakistanis don't want their women educated.

    141. Re:Message to the intolerant by HeckRuler · · Score: 1

      What does 'respecting someone as a human' get them?

      Basic human rights.

    142. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fawk the Prophet !!!

    143. Re:Message to the intolerant by deadweight · · Score: 1

      This would appear to make God quite error-prone.

    144. Re:Message to the intolerant by ewibble · · Score: 1

      I don't know that because you are not 100% sure there is no God, you have to call yourself agnostic, instead of atheist. It is about level of belief, I am not 100% certain I am writing this post. I am not certain about anything (nor do I believe anybody else is either) how could I be when my knowledge is so limited.

      In life state what we strongly believe as certainty, but what I really mean is with all the information I have and the limited and flawed cognitive process available to me I a confident with a margin of error that I am correct (I could be wrong). But talking like that get very tedious very quickly.

      It works the other way too, just because you have doubts about religion doesn't mean you don't believe in God. But whenever say I could be wrong, people say I am agnostic, no I am just aware that I do not posses all knowledge in the universe, just like everyone else.

      It is healthy to understand everyone including yourself can be wrong. But we have to live our lives assuming we are right.

    145. Re:Message to the intolerant by deadweight · · Score: 1

      If Leviticus had real insights into God's character, he would appear to be a stone killer :(

    146. Re:Message to the intolerant by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      Feel free to stick with your definition of course, but usually some sort of supernatural element is part of what most people call a religion so there'll always be some confusion when you are communicating on this topic with a general audience.

      And the link you have now doesn't include your definition, at least when I view it now. Instead we have:

      World English Dictionary
        religion (rldn)
      — n
      1. belief in, worship of, or obedience to a supernatural power or powers considered to be divine or to have control of human destiny
      2. any formal or institutionalized expression of such belief: the Christian religion
      3. the attitude and feeling of one who believes in a transcendent controlling power or powers
      4. chiefly RC Church the way of life determined by the vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience entered upon by monks, friars, and nuns: to enter religion
      5. something of overwhelming importance to a person: football is his religion
      6. archaic
        a.the practice of sacred ritual observances
        b.sacred rites and ceremonies

    147. Re:Message to the intolerant by deadweight · · Score: 1

      In your private life - OK. But NOT as GOVERNMENT POLICY. Got that?

    148. Re:Message to the intolerant by fey000 · · Score: 1

      you can legislate control. respect isnt the goal here

      Fear is the goal. Random surges of rioting and killing is not exactly a sign of internal control, and if the offended nations cannot control what is already under their strict dominion, I don't think new legislation would improve that situation.

    149. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That you cannot disprove the supernatural says absolutely nothing about it's validity. What value is a belief that provides no reliable predictions? Is it really any better than something that is provably false? At least the latter provides something definitive.

    150. Re:Message to the intolerant by marcello_dl · · Score: 1

      Perhaps you should read the whole chapter and tell me where it implies YOU as a christian should do anything about homosexuals, judgement included. God acted. What authority you have to imitate him?

      I even have a problem stating that we are talking about homosexuals, or potentially straight people who practices some same gender sex-based rituals.

      Sodomites were punished because they were fags or because they were menacing guests?

      Then, if Leviticus is saying "kill" against the 5th commandment and the one commandment by that Jesus guy, then consider Matthew 19 and his treatment of the law of divorce.

      Believe whatever you want about the Bible, but at least go a lil deep.

      --
      ---- MISSING MISCELLANEOUS DATA SEGMENT --- [sigdash] trolololol
    151. Re:Message to the intolerant by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      Absolutely nothing. So many seem to hate the sinner as well however. I myself have been guilty of operating in this manner. It's something easy to slip into. To loathe someone who trespasses instead of loving them as Christ commanded.

    152. Re:Message to the intolerant by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Some supernatural claims can be tested. You can prove that magic spells and prayer are no more effective than random noise.

      Some wasn't the claim. All and false were.

      No, you can not prove magic spells and prayer is "no more effective" then random noise. You can prove they are statistically similar but you cannot prove or disprove their effectiveness because you have no way to test supernatural events within the bounds of nature. That is why spells and prayer are not science.

      Many supernatural claims can be refuted when the actual mechanism for an action or event is proven through science.

      And just because you know how to make paper a certain way, it does not mean all paper is made that way or that it wasn't made in different ways.

      The problem you run into is that just because there can be a natural mechanism, it doesn't mean the event used it or the mechanism isn't a specific artifact from the supernatural event. We know this to be true within science specifically as we often shortcut natural processes through the means of manipulations and man made chemicals to get materials and organisms to certain stages that is more productive or valuable at the time. In antique restoration, fixed parts are often given a patina by artificial methods in order to match natural processes already on the pieces. Some of these processes are virtually indistinguishable from the real deal if applied by the right person.

      While those examples are still natural as in they obey the laws of physics and science as we know them, they are illustrative of a natural process being applied by other then strictly natural means. You can show something is possible without resorting to supernatural claims but you can't show anything about the supernatural-ness of the claims because you can't test it.

    153. Re:Message to the intolerant by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      It could, or it could be that when God gave man independence of thought and free will (something he later regretted), he couldn't control us so he trashed the system and started over from time to time.

      That's actually really close to how the bible tells it. Anyone who has read and understood it would know about the war(s) with man waged by god when we pissed him/her/it off from time to time. This is also the peace that Jesus brought, peace between God and Man not that there will never be wars or anything again.

    154. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because the laws of the Old Testament, technically, were replaced as soon as Jesus was raised from the dead and ascended.

      The only commandment that applies is to Love one another as you love your God and that's it. That one commandment covers all 10 commandments on top of everything else.

      A true Christian follows that one commandment if Jesus and that's all they need.

      As such, there's nothing to reconcile. Easy way to remember is the Old Testament is more for historical purposes and to show that the prophesies about Jesus. Once Jesus comes along, it all changes.

    155. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can say using water in a certain way to run this internal combustion engine doesn't work, but you cannot say no one has ever used water to run an internal combustion engine and never will.

      You're right, you could use water in an internal combustion engine, but it would require something like elemental sodium as a reactant. Also, water injection is currently sometimes used in forced induction engines to reduce intake charge temperature and to reduce knocking, though not as a fuel. (however, you never said the water had to be the fuel) More to your point though, you appear to be arguing for interpretive reading of religious texts. Some would say that's false, or at least intellectually dishonest. Others would say that it was never intended to be literal and that one is supposed to read between the lines. Regardless of which viewpoint you take, the problem with most religious texts is that people are reading them in languages other than the ones in which they were written. How do you know the translators captured the meaning correctly? You should be reading the original version (assuming such a thing exists... mind you, most of today religious texts are derived from various earlier works, so even the original is likely interpreted). Yes, you can reach out there and claim that the translators were being helped along my the invisible hand of [insert deity(s)], but really that's just cognitive dissonance trying to bend reality to match your preexisting beliefs. Would you make that leap for any other ancient text with a modern translation? Are you absolutely certain that the phrasing in Homer's Odyssey is translated exactly with no change in meaning? Of course not. Yet this is what many believe when it comes to religious texts.

    156. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your second and third paragraph are pretty inconsistent. How can you know if you've been open minded enough when you're judging someone?

    157. Re:Message to the intolerant by codeAlDente · · Score: 1

      One might argue that there is an obligation to respect the belief systems of others, in the sense that taxes support psychotherapy for some people, and professional standards for clinical psychologists prevent questioning a person's belief system. This seems like 'legislating respect' to me, though it may not lead to an increase in common sense in the end.

      --
      He once inserted random mutations into his code, just so he could have the experience of debugging.
    158. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To be fair, magic spells and prayer do work when it comes to injury/illness (presuming the patient believes in magic/prayer), but only as well as a placebo.

    159. Re:Message to the intolerant by RabidReindeer · · Score: 1

      Zeus..

      It is a great tactic you used by mentioning a dead religion to further your point. I admire that. I'd have to admit mentioning other dead religions during discussions on modern religious myth. I generally go with Ra, of ancient Egypt.

      What do you mean "Dead Religion"? You can look right up in the sky and see His planet! What more proof do you need? Some book a bunch of con artists cooked up?

      Ra, on the other hand is dead. The nuke that got ringed up into his ascending pyramid did it.

    160. Re:Message to the intolerant by RabidReindeer · · Score: 2

      it's a feeble God who needs armed men to defend himself.

      This is brilliant, mind if I pass it around?

      Fine with me. Of course, if you get struck by lightning...

    161. Re:Message to the intolerant by vux984 · · Score: 1

      than its completely okay as a Christian for you to judge another for it, even harshly.

      "Let he without sin cast the first stone."

      or perhaps better expressed as:

      "You feeling lucky, punk?"

      If there is something you believe is so wrong that you yourself would never ever do it no matter what...

      So if I'm a nazi supremacist and would never pair up with a black, asian, or anything but a pure blood white because i felt it was both disgusting and morally wrong.... well... then Jesus said it was ok when I curb stomped you for dating that latino girl.

      Class act.

    162. Re:Message to the intolerant by deadweight · · Score: 1

      I look at it as parent-child. God the parent left gum, candy, Playboy magazines, IPods, a few XBOX 360s, and machine guns in the play room and told the kids DO NOT TOUCH THIS STUFF and went to the store. Human nature being what it is - and guess who designed THAT - the kids were all over it. The "parent" then burns the house down with the kids inside it pour encourager les autres. That God is a stone killer.

    163. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Citation needed.

    164. Re:Message to the intolerant by green1 · · Score: 1

      And yet a blasphem law is bound to hit the atheists harder than any other group, even though they are the only ones who judge people based soley on the person and not at all based on the religion.

    165. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A fully logical person would not find agnosticism to be a logical belief. It makes no verifiable predictions, therefore there is nothing to support it.

      People often argue for agnosticism by saying that if a hypothetical deity exists, then it costs nothing to believe in that deity and thus gain the potential advantages said deity may provide. Yet it does have a cost in that it clouds the mind with falsehoods and prevents one from seeking truth.

      In my opinion, agnostics are being intellectually dishonest with themselves. Not quite ready to let go of the metaphysical, yet knowing that there is no basis for it.

    166. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can't legislate respect.

      Maybe not but they can chop your head off.

      Unless you kill them first.

    167. Re:Message to the intolerant by Nyder · · Score: 1

      I'm a Christian and I completely agree with you. Many "Christians" don't even read the Bible. Also, going to church doesn't make one a Christian any more than standing in a garage makes you a car.

      I bet a lot of people say they are Christian when they aren't.

      --
      Be seeing you...
    168. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Christ is in the NT, not the OT.

    169. Re:Message to the intolerant by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Which are pretty hard to determine with all the BS the UN has been publishing lately. The problem with letting the do gooders write treatys/declarations is that they make all of them seem equally silly.

      For example: The Geneva Conventions of the the 80s/90s basically make war illegal. These silly papers make the previous Geneva Conventions weaker not stronger.

      Don't get me started on the 'rights of a child'. Wishful thinking masquerading as diplomacy. It is ignored.

      The problem is defining 'human rights'. It's easy to repeat poetry and platitudes. Devil is in the details. Which takes precedent? My right to self defense./Somebody else's 'right to live without fear of weapons' (don't laugh, the UN found that one in some dark smelly place.)

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    170. Re:Message to the intolerant by 10101001+10101001 · · Score: 1

      The Old Testament is included as part of the Bible because it provides insights into God's character and the history of his interaction with people, not to enforce the rules from it on believers in Christ.

      Funny, but I always saw it as sort of an evidence used by Christians, especially the early ones, that the whole Jesus Christ/God thing wasn't simply a cult thing. After all, without the Old Testament backstory, Christianity's belief in Jesus Christ as a savior has about as much basis of belief as the Flying Spaghetti Monster as some sort of religious icon. After all, there's a pretty massive split in the ideals presented by Jesus and how God is and how the Judaic God is presented. Of course, current Judaic God in most western societies seems to have mellowed a lot, with the same sort of "it was all figurative" which is used by Catholics and other denominations on exactly how God can be "merciful" and be such an asshole in the Old Testament/Torah--and the excuse "the kids/my people had it coming" just doesn't fly.

      Ie, I'd say the Old Testament has repeatedly been in direct conflict with the idea of the Christian God and as such very much is useless to Christians to somehow gauge God's character* But, the very fact that it's part and parcel of Christianity effectively nullifies a sensible ability to believe in the New Testament as a consequence.

      *Btw, this is why your whole "cherry picking texts ... to misinterpret and incite blind fear without misunderstanding" doesn't really hold water. The God of the Old Testament had the character to damn homosexuals and demand they be stoned to death. Any sort of "live and let live" has come about through social change--that includes newly spawned religions--and selective misinterpretation that such text. After all, the text that was being quoted says: Romans 1:26-27, "26 Because of this, God gave them over to shameful lusts. Even their women exchanged natural sexual relations for unnatural ones. 27 In the same way the men also abandoned natural relations with women and were inflamed with lust for one another. Men committed shameful acts with other men, and received in themselves the due penalty for their error." Ie, the text is clearly judgmental on the aspects of the sin of homosexuality and all Romans 2:1 did was merely transmuted it from "God commands you to stone this homosexual" to "God will make sure homosexuals get their just punishment, so don't do the stoning yourself"**--which leaves all sorts of room for people to act like God is a don boss and to carry out his work.... Live and let live would be to take the farther step and really not even think about the person's homosexuality at all in any real context except the prospects of a sexual relationship, if desired; of course, that can just be a byproduct of living in a city of a million people and simply not having the time to be involved in that many people's lives.

      **Judge not lest thee be judge making only sense in this context if one considers judges of the era being judge *and* executioner. Otherwise, the moral judgments are still happening.

      --
      Eurohacker European paranoia, gun rights, and h
    171. Re:Message to the intolerant by dwye · · Score: 1

      "Tolerance becomes a crime when applied to evil"
      -Thomas Mann

      Any belief that tolerates murderers in its ranks is evil.
      Any belief that thinks its ideas, leaders and prophets are beyond question is evil.
      Any belief that mandates conversion or death is evil.

      So we should reinstitute slavery in the USA because the abolition movement was evil, in that it included John Brown, an undeniable murderer and a terrorist to any but his most extreme defender, who also believed that slaveholders had to convert or die? Niven has a Law that there is no movement, however righteous and holy, that does not have absolute bastards among its adherents.

    172. Re:Message to the intolerant by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      You're right, you could use water in an internal combustion engine, but it would require something like elemental sodium as a reactant. Also, water injection is currently sometimes used in forced induction engines to reduce intake charge temperature and to reduce knocking, though not as a fuel. (however, you never said the water had to be the fuel)

      Actually, I was using water injection in motors back in the mid to late 80's at the track. We did it then to lower the air temp and make it more dense in the intake. We also used alcohol and dry ice contraptions in an attempt to cool the intake attempting to do the same but you had to make sure it was sealed up good or you defeated your purpose and possibly caused health issues. But yes, it's still used today for more common purposes. The uses wasn't really the point, it is that just because we have a process, it doesn't mean it is or was the only process that something could happen or ever will happen. Saying that something can be proven false because it doesn't match that process is in and of itself false.

      More to your point though, you appear to be arguing for interpretive reading of religious texts. Some would say that's false, or at least intellectually dishonest. Others would say that it was never intended to be literal and that one is supposed to read between the lines.

      That wasn't an intended point, if it appears that way, it is purely by accident. My point is, just because someone can conceive of a way other then what is stated does not invalidate what was stated. The majority of so called contradictions in religions amount to the equivalence of Han shot first and misses the entire points of the religions. It's like trying to invalidate your entire post because you spelled Odyssey or deity wrong.

      Regardless of which viewpoint you take, the problem with most religious texts is that people are reading them in languages other than the ones in which they were written. How do you know the translators captured the meaning correctly?

      I somewhat agree. But there are tools like Dr. Strong's exhaustive concordance (others are available too) that can be used to completely understand the words and meanings. But even the original doesn't account for the changes in dialect over the ages so the problem still exists even with the originals (or as close to possible). The Hebrew spoken and written in Israel today is not the same Hebrew language written in the bible- there are more words in the present day so one word doesn't carry 20 meanings and so on. Similarly, it's like the language in the King James version of the Christian bible, the language in it isn't the same english we speak today and even between you and me, American English can be drastically different then in other countries. That's where a concordance comes in handy, if one word was used to mean X 3000 years ago, and ended up meaning Y, Z and eventually XYZ in today's time, the concordance will give you the definition and usages of the period time it was supposed to have belonged to.

      But you are correct, without some investigation other then reading a book, you will have issues trying to understand it as in the original intent.

      Yes, you can reach out there and claim that the translators were being helped along my the invisible hand of [insert deity(s)], but really that's just cognitive dissonance trying to bend reality to match your preexisting beliefs.

      Well, the translation processes that bring about the most common versions of religious texts aren't handled by one person. Take the Christian bible for instance. The line and verse numbers aren't there so you can quote something easily. They are artifacts from the early translations and copying where they portioned it off to the original and others would check the processes and work. It was actually a lengthy and complicated process. But there are a few issues that have slipped

    173. Re:Message to the intolerant by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Ever heard the expression that there is more then one way to skin a cat? It is important because the existence of one way does not in any way disprove another nor does it make any other ways false on it's own. When you start attaching reasons and motivations or attempting to disconnect them, it gets more complicated.

      That you cannot disprove the supernatural says specifically that you cannot claim it's validity to be false. The most you can do is show an alternate path to whatever the supernatural outcome was and suggest it was used.

      You ask what value is a belief that provides no reliable predictions or if it is better then something that can be provably false. Does it really matter if it is the truth of what happened? I mean if I used chemicals and house hold items to make a piece of furniture look old and antique, does the fact that after 100 or so years it would have looked like that anyways matter more then I deliberately did it? Of course it would because it effects the perceived value the purchaser might have. Likewise, with a religion, people are convinced their versions are true and the value of that conviction is something they need to decide, not you or I.

    174. Re:Message to the intolerant by Prune · · Score: 1

      While I'm an atheist, even I have no qualms pointing out that your mention of self-contradictions in religion area moot point. There is no proof (nor can there be) that the universe is describable by a self-consistent rational model. Even if you presuppose that reality can be mathematically modeled with no pehnomenological aspect remaining outside the model, no strong argument has ever been put forth saying the laws of physics are guaranteed to turn out Godel-decideable. It's quite possible, due to lack of any counterindication, that any final TOE will end up being either unknowable or a combination of models which are mutually inconsistent. And unless you claim that the universe cannot be fully encompassed in a set of formal models (such claim being an appeal to the supernatural), then you cannot, for the semantics pertaining to this discussion, distinguish the universe from the models, and thus if the set of models can be self-inconsistent, so can the universe.

      --
      "Politicians and diapers must be changed often, and for the same reason."
    175. Re:Message to the intolerant by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      I'm sure somebody somewhere's working real hard on upping their KPIs.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    176. Re:Message to the intolerant by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      Surprise and fear. And nice red uniforms.

      I'll come in again.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    177. Re:Message to the intolerant by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      You had to bring Obama into it, didn't you?

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    178. Re:Message to the intolerant by sodul · · Score: 1

      I disagree and so I hate you. ;-)

    179. Re:Message to the intolerant by Lucractius · · Score: 2

      1st, you totally earned your place in my +1 modifier pile here in this thread.
      2nd, there are a few examples remaining of religion that isnt violently opposed to others, most notably Hinduism. I'll steal the quote from wikipedia since it says it quite well.
      Hinduism - Beliefs

      Hinduism grants absolute and complete freedom of belief and worship. Hinduism conceives the whole world as a single family that deifies the one truth, and therefore it accepts all forms of beliefs and dismisses labels of distinct religions which would imply a division of identity. Hence, Hinduism is devoid of the concepts of apostasy, heresy and blasphemy.

      Quite refreshing really.

      --
      XML - A clever joke would be here if /. didn't mangle tag brackets.
    180. Re:Message to the intolerant by slashmydots · · Score: 0

      I guess you didn't realize this amazingly advanced logic but as a christian, compared to muslims, one of us is correct and one is not. There is no "tolerance" when both religions demand that there be no other fake religions. The only person who can truly promote "tolerance" is one who thinks we're both wrong and that's atheists, which is around 18% of the US and the US is not rules by an 18% majority system. So we disagree, deal with it.

      Zeus tells me that BOTH religions are fake. And the Pink Unicorn tells me that making Religion into Law is blasphemous and shall be punished in eternal fire.

      Anyway, it's a feeble God who needs armed men to defend himself.

      It's a feeble mind who doesn't realize that if God or Satan could do absolutely anything they wanted with no rules and affect humans via any method and remove all free will and veto and human action, that wouldn't work so well. Learn about something before you talk about something.

    181. Re:Message to the intolerant by Chrontius · · Score: 1

      Theory is, when Christ came, all the old rules went out the window, and a new covenant was established.

    182. Re:Message to the intolerant by Lucractius · · Score: 1

      Note: - raised Catholic, sacraments and all, no longer call myself one and no longer practicing, yet I'd still probably pray to god with a big G at the front when life throws me in a foxhole so to speak, old habits are hard to break.

      Don't abbreviate the quote please. It loses meaning in the process.
      "Judge not lest ye be judged" does imply as you said, that you will be held to the same standard you judge others.

      And as for the matter of how the foolish can reconcile this. Its rather easy for them to follow a train of though like this "I'm not gay, so its perfectly fine for me to expect no one else to be" as they are either not fully cognizant of the fact or simply don't care (this is worse) that the reciprocal judgement implied by their religious text, in fact refers to matters less mundane, its about their thoughts and actions, not things like being Muslim, or being gay (a lot of them contextualize by claiming that being gay is a choice and using that to try to lump it into the thoughts and actions category). The issue however is that the rest of the new testament implies a couple of things most of the vehemently anti-gay group seem to be ignoring:
      1st> You shouldn't expect them (sinners, etc) to change
      2nd> Its nice if your words and actions get them to change their ways... BUT
      3rd> Your supposed to 'lead by example', your not meant to keep chanting 'god hates gays' and protesting them getting the same rights as everyone else since above all the previous things your supposed to be treating everyone else with 'love'
      John 13:30

      Little children, yet a little while I am with you. Ye shall seek me: and as I said unto the Jews, Whither I go, ye cannot come; so now I say to you. 34 A new commandment I give unto you, That ye love one another; as I have loved you, that ye also love one another. 35 By this shall all men know that ye are my disciples, if ye have love one to another. —John 13:33-35 (KJV)

      and
      4th> If you browbeat someone into 'not being gay' or 'pretending they are christian' for instance people hiding the fact they practice something like Wicca or the 'lavender marriage'/beards among gay and lesbian groups... If they are doing this, then you pretty much failed in the worst way, you've convinced them they have to hide from your religion and thus probably guaranteed that they will never 'come to god' in the way that your supposed to accept him completely as savior light of the world, and so on, that is required of most Christian faiths.

      Regardless of philosophical viewpoints regarding the christian religious philosophy, I think we can all agree that the best example of 'doing it wrong' as far as 'Jesus related religion/denominations' goes... is the Westboro Baptist Church.

      --
      XML - A clever joke would be here if /. didn't mangle tag brackets.
    183. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps they could start by reading Romans 1:27.

      And likewise also the men, leaving the natural use of the woman, burned in their lust one toward another; men with men working that which is unseemly, and receiving in themselves that recompence of their error which was meet.

      Why just the new testament BTW? Leviticus says gays should be killed.

      I'm neither gay nor christian, but I'd have a hard time reconciling them if I was.

      Why? It is not as if the standards in the Bible are any different for those who subscribe to homosexuality being wrong. If you are single, guess what? You will be judged worthy of death too if you took part in adultery with someone else's spouse. Two single Christians living together without getting married? That's called fornication and you would be judged not worthy to enter the kingdom. 1 Corinthians 6:9-10.

      Gay and want to be Christian? Just abstain from sex just like those who are not married also have to.

    184. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about you look at more websites then just the one that clearly has a bias. Also look at the engineers/chemists/scientists in comparrison to the hard scientists, the ones who are really pushing the limits of the known universe, I think you will find that the latter group has a very high percent of non religious people compared to the average scientists. Not to say average scientists aren't smart or helpful, but that there are always bigger fish and the latter group has some of thee largest fish.

    185. Re:Message to the intolerant by Sarius64 · · Score: 1

      One wonders where this expertise you project was gained? Exactly how would God have any reason for anything? Citation? :)

    186. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why just the new testament BTW?

      As I understand it, with the coming of Jesus Christ, the old laws (from the Old Testament) were basically thrown out, and new ones were provided by him.
      However, I too am not a Christian.

      Jesus said "I have not come to overturn the Law, but to fulfill it." Nothing was thrown out, what he did was say "You fucking idiots didn't get it the first time, so let me phrase it another way."
      For example- the idea of "an eye for an eye" did NOT mean that if someone took your eye, you deserved to take theirs in return. Rather, it meant that you should never receive MORE than their eye in return for taking yours- or in modern terms, "the punishment should not exceed the crime." Note that Islam has the same requirement, which is rationalized away as "only applying to Muslims- anything goes against the Godless Infidels". Also note that this same rationale was used by the Christians at various points in time to oppress others- the idea that the "rules" only applied to the "Holy".

      Most of what was actually "changed" or "thrown out" of the Old Testament was done so not by Jesus, but later by his groupies. Errr, followers. For example, the removal of dietary restrictions (pork, etc.) didn't happen until Revelation when someone got his hands on some Mescaline and started tripping balls.

    187. Re:Message to the intolerant by Tranzistors · · Score: 1

      It's why every ideology seeks control of the education system. Hint... look up the Hitler Youth, or how communism took over education.

      You don't need to look that far to see it in action. Look at scientific ideology taking over school system. Ideally every thing taught is scientific or at least not contrary to science of the time. Just because most on /. approve this vigorously doesn't make it any less true.

    188. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why just the new testament BTW? Leviticus says gays should be killed.

      I'm neither gay nor christian, but I'd have a hard time reconciling them if I was.

      'course the old testament also specifies the death penalty for a whole bunch of other things, including, but not limited to, desecrating the sabbath, adultery, idol worship, etc. I'm not really sure what makes homosexuality so special in this regard o_O
      Clearly none of those punishments are actually applied today, nor does Christianity in general really bother much with the "legal" elements of the old testament, and therefore singling out its treatment of homosexuality doesn't really make much sense.

    189. Re:Message to the intolerant by justforgetme · · Score: 1

      For a moment I thought the goal was to make himself look like a fuzzy fuzzy fungus.

      --
      -- no sig today
    190. Re:Message to the intolerant by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      "judge not" has a great deal of context around it and does not mean "judge not" at all

      And that, gentlemen, is why we don't write laws based on two thousand year old religious texts.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    191. Re:Message to the intolerant by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      The OP was talking about the hatred shown by (some) religious people towards gays.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    192. Re:Message to the intolerant by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      That is indeed the meme shift underway.

      The word "meme" has been redndered meaningless by being co-opted to mean the same thing as "a running gag on the internet".

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    193. Re:Message to the intolerant by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      I don't see how that would be incompatible.

      If there was actual overwhelming evidence that God existed then people wouldn't argue about it any more than they do over whether the Earth is flat or not. Yes, there would still be the equivalent of Flat Earthers, but the vast majority of people would accept the evidence.

      Unfortunately for people who believe in God, there is no such evidence, and religious belief comes down to faith, which is not subject to proof or disproof, and is therefore not science.

      Without any evidence that God exists, the whole of the rest of religious belief becomes equally unfalsifiable/unproveable. You can believe in God, the FSM or pixies sprinkling magic dust on flowers to make them grow if you like, but you're never going to persuade anyone else they exist without evidence.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    194. Re:Message to the intolerant by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      The fact that the scientific method may not be 100% capable of self proof does not mean that therefore any other belief or set of descriptions is equally valid.

      Or, if it does, it still wouldn't give any greater weight to the claims of God over the FSM.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    195. Re:Message to the intolerant by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      as people become more educated, they become less religious

      Unfortunately, that is not entirely true. You still end up in the West with extremely well educated people believing in God. Although there is a more generally satisfying decline in church attendance in Europe, if not the US.

      I suppose it's bound to take time, given the hugely entrenched psychological dark spot that religion has cast over the human psyche for thousands of years.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    196. Re:Message to the intolerant by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      Then why do half of all scientists consider themselves Christian?

      Because they're just as weak and vulnerable as any other human beings when it comes to parental and societal indoctrination?

      unless you have experienced God personally, the only logical belief is agnosticism

      No it's not. I'm not agnostic about the Ancient Egyptian or Greek or Aztec gods: they don't exist. And, incidentally, I'm sure most Christians or Muslims would agree.

      The problem is that people who believe in a particular religion think that their own God is the Only One, and this is logically impossible unless you start on the old "primitive people have a partial glimpse of the truth of the Actual Real Christian God in their amusingly skewed religions" argument.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    197. Re:Message to the intolerant by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      The Islamic community do not want their women to be educated. To legislate education might actually be disrespectful if not blasphemes to their religion.

      Funny how I've worked with Muslim women with higher degrees than me then. Oh, of course you mean, some extremist countries like Saudi Arabia.

      By your logic, because some Christian groups in the US are violently anti-gay and anti-abortion, then "the Christian community" is homophobic, misogynistic and reactionary.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    198. Re:Message to the intolerant by tehcyder · · Score: 2

      it's a feeble God who needs armed men to defend himself.

      This is brilliant, mind if I pass it around?

      No no, it's just God giving mere mortals a chance to exercise their free will, which He gave them in the first place. So they could choose to defend Him. Or something.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    199. Re:Message to the intolerant by RabidReindeer · · Score: 2

      I guess you didn't realize this amazingly advanced logic but as a christian, compared to muslims, one of us is correct and one is not. There is no "tolerance" when both religions demand that there be no other fake religions. The only person who can truly promote "tolerance" is one who thinks we're both wrong and that's atheists, which is around 18% of the US and the US is not rules by an 18% majority system. So we disagree, deal with it.

      Zeus tells me that BOTH religions are fake. And the Pink Unicorn tells me that making Religion into Law is blasphemous and shall be punished in eternal fire.

      Anyway, it's a feeble God who needs armed men to defend himself.

      It's a feeble mind who doesn't realize that if God or Satan could do absolutely anything they wanted with no rules and affect humans via any method and remove all free will and veto and human action, that wouldn't work so well. Learn about something before you talk about something.

      So you're telling me that God is running a Wrath franchise, is that it?

      If you have faith in an all-powerful, all-knowing God, you understand that the petty noises that infidels make are less than nothing, like waves breaking on the rocks of truth. The make a splash, then they are gone. Another splash, it too is gone. But the rocks are the rocks and remain. But ordinary rocks erode, whereas the rocks of Truth abide forever.

      On the other hand, if your faith is weak, you will attempt to take matters into your own hands, because you do not believe that the truth defends itself, while lies break into a thousand pieces. This, too is free will. However, it is the free will of attempting to take away the free will of others.

      So I repeat. A feeble God is an untruth, and cannot survive without external help. A True God endures regardless.

    200. Re:Message to the intolerant by couchslug · · Score: 1

      NO.

      No idea should be safe from ATTACK, because otherwise demanding what that ideas proponents CHOOSE to DEFINE as "respect" is demanding CENSORSHIP of criticism.

      Want respect? Earn it.

      Political beliefs don't merit special protection from "insult", so why should Superstition?

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    201. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Paulus letters which are in the new testament states that Leviticus does not apply to Christians.

    202. Re:Message to the intolerant by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      That God is a stone killer.

      You assume God is human. We are made in his image, meaning that you are to God what Van Gogh's self-portrait is to Van Gogh. Wouldn't he be fine with destroying his own painting? Is it wrong for you to delete a program you wrote, especially if you discover some show-stopping bugs?

      Death is a part of life. Everybody dies.

    203. Re:Message to the intolerant by deadweight · · Score: 1

      You seem to agree with me. I can't see how something that kills humans with no more thought than I delete a txt file ISN'T a stone killer.

    204. Re:Message to the intolerant by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      Here is the whoe passage:

      1Judge not, that ye be not judged. 2For with what judgment ye judge, ye shall be judged: and with what measure ye mete, it shall be measured to you again. 3And why beholdest thou the mote that is in thy brother's eye, but considerest not the beam that is in thine own eye? 4Or how wilt thou say to thy brother, Let me pull out the mote out of thine eye; and, behold, a beam is in thine own eye? 5Thou hypocrite, first cast out the beam out of thine own eye; and then shalt thou see clearly to cast out the mote out of thy brother's eye.

      In short: judge not.

    205. Re:Message to the intolerant by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      Why just the new testament BTW? Leviticus says gays should be killed.

      So should you and I. We're all sinners, gay or straight. But the only sinless man who lived paid for your wrongdoings with his blood and pain. You get a free ride, so long as you repent your wrongdoings.

      I'm neither gay nor christian, but I'd have a hard time reconciling them if I was.

      It's impossible to live free of sin. The gays' sins are no worse than mine; fornication is likewise taboo, but sometimes I get laid...

    206. Re:Message to the intolerant by X0563511 · · Score: 1

      That's great and all, but you're mostly just repeating what I've said.

      What I was just saying now, is that "if there was evidence, it would be science and not faith" is not impossible. If evidence were provided, why could we not call it science then?

      --
      For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
    207. Re:Message to the intolerant by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      I have no idea how you can get "it's ok to judge" from that passage. In essence it's saying that you're no better than the person you're judging. Judging others makes you a hypocrite.

    208. Re:Message to the intolerant by cayenne8 · · Score: 1

      I think you need to re-read the post I replied to.

      I did re-read it....still don't see any "hate" in it....?

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    209. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is an incomplete quote and taken out of context

      You mean, "Judge not others lest you yourself be judged?" In what context does this have a different message?

    210. Re:Message to the intolerant by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      I alluded to that hypocritical wolf in sheep's clothing in my original comment. I doubt God takes kindly to people who sin in his name.

    211. Re:Message to the intolerant by hazah · · Score: 1

      It's okay to hate fags, but don't you dare say anything about the make-believe magic-man behind my faith that I use to enable my hatred!

      The word is spelled out twice. And, mind you, you misunderstood what I said too. People do have this attitude, even if the OP does not. The comment refers to those people.

    212. Re:Message to the intolerant by HeckRuler · · Score: 1

      Well, I dunno if this was clear or not in the example. But when I walk over to the the guy with my desk-pounding-fist and tell him that respect works two ways, and ask him if he respects me as a human, the implication there is that I'll punch him if he doesn't respect me as a human. You know, reciprocally, I don't respect him as a human so he's available for a pounding. I'm not looking for an international treaty as dictated by the UN. I just need some shmuck to understand that there's some basic level of respect that everyone is due.

      Otherwise, start here. You, uh, need to tone down the cynical dial a little. (oh, and that muslim hatred thing)

    213. Re:Message to the intolerant by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      I'm not agnostic about the Ancient Egyptian or Greek or Aztec gods: they don't exist.

      Not any more. Thor was the cave man who invented the hammer, which gave him god-like powers compared to his contemporaries. Prometheus tamed fire. Zeus invented the flaming spear. Etc....

    214. Re:Message to the intolerant by prgrmr · · Score: 1

      Leviticus is, almost entirely, about ceremonial and civil law; that is, the laws that the Israelites lived under while their form of government was a theocracy. If you are not living in a Jewish theocracy, then Leviticus isn't for you.

    215. Re:Message to the intolerant by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      God doesn't hate fags, he hates what they do. If he didn't love homosexuals he wouldn't have sent Christ down to pay for their (and my and your) sins.

    216. Re:Message to the intolerant by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      I agree, religion and government shouldn't mix.

    217. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because in the New Testament, Jesus is sent to fulfill the law. And also Jesus summed up the entire books of the law with two commandments - Love God with all your heart and Love your neighbor as yourself.

      Also, you may notice that the only people Jesus ever really got pissed with were the people who perverted the law to manipulate others - to maintain control (Pharisees, Sadducees, Temple Leaders, etc) - and never really got pissed off with those who sought knowledge or salvation. Jesus dined with sinners and societal castaways, healed lepers, and he also did not go out of his way to preach damnation and hellfire but more of grace and power. Try reading the gospels again, and start with those two things and work out from there. (Love god, love your neighbor as yourself)

      BTW Everyone's great at picking stuff out that supports what they say, but it's an entirely another thing to put it in relational context and see how that works out.

    218. Re:Message to the intolerant by KingBenny · · Score: 1

      respect goes both ways, threats to decapitate, 14 year olds blowing up embassies ... women getting stoned because they're raped, threatening people with death over a cartoon, burning books, destroying cultural heritage, throwing molotovs at newspaper offices because someone said something, no matter what it was?
      i hope we're on the same side where it comes to intolerance, and that goes both ways, everyone is getting sick of it... is that the same guy who offered 100k to kill the idiots who made that movie (was that even real?)
      if so, if the un gives in to that, they can be my official bitch and suck teh dcki as well

      --
      Free speech was meant to be free for all... how can anyone grow up in a nanny state ?
    219. Re:Message to the intolerant by KingBenny · · Score: 1

      excuse me twice for not using the edit button and being too lazy to find my other post ... let's be clear ... to me, it's not the religion in itself, it's the fanatics who are the criminals to say every muslim is a terrorist that's like blaming the crimes of the church of rome on every christian. To me the taliban, al qaeda, and the golden temple of rome are just as criminal, i'd jihad them back to the stone age all at once. I personally never knew a single muslim who was all that 'im gonna cut your head off because you're not on my side' and other fun stuff like that, and i've known a few. Most are just, well, as christian as the next christian as far as i can see, they just stick together more. There's more cohesion in their culture i dunno, maybe because most of them still feel strange in a strange land and band together. But when it comes to tolerance, i don't tolerate people who threaten others for being idiots. And i hope no one gives in because they're scared or this will never end

      --
      Free speech was meant to be free for all... how can anyone grow up in a nanny state ?
    220. Re:Message to the intolerant by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Grabs wrist of pounding fist, twists you up. Says 'No'. I lost respect for you when you started waving your fist around. Now GTF out of my face. As you say, it's a two way street.

      If you want respect, keep a lid on your behavior. Respect is earned, it can also be lost, all of it potentially. Do you really think intimidation is the path to respect? That said, most adults know that threats are implicit in everyday life. I won't attack you because you don't respect me, but I will not do any kind of business with you. Threaten me on the other hand and my default view is your ass needs kicking.

      My point upthread was addressing the constantly growing list of 'human rights'. Some would say I (through my taxes) have to feed, house and provide healthcare for everyone just because they are human and 'deserve respect'. Fuck that.

      And just an aside: I can be completely polite to someone I have _no_ respect for. I'd go so far as to say bluntness is a sign of respect.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    221. Re:Message to the intolerant by UnderCoverPenguin · · Score: 1

      At least if you're talking about in the US, I think you're overstating the number quite a bit.

      Perhaps because the US has some famous, well regarded scientists who are people of religion?

      For example, Vactican astronomer Brother Guy (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guy_Consolmagno). I've talked with him - both in a group and one-to-one. He's an excelent sciencetist. He was part of one of the best discussions of science and religion I've attended. It was a panel at a convention. The panel was about the social implications of first contact with a nonhuman, space faring civilization. The poor guy who orginally organized the panel arrived to find not only Brother Guy, but all of the guests of honor had joined as panelists. I don't think I could have handled that as well as he did. The ensuing discussion was fantastic and could have gone on much longer except all the panelists were scheduled for other panels the next hour.

      --
      Don't try to out wierd me, three-eyes. I get stranger things than you, free with my breakfast cereal. --Zaphod Beeblebr
    222. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But the only sinless man who lived paid for your wrongdoings with his blood and pain.

      We should use what we've learned from this to fix our modern criminal justice system! Once a year we pick a random innocent and painfully execute him and then cut loose all of that year's convicted!

    223. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      NO legislation cannot stop free thought and if you are swayed by a little disrespect which really means they disagree with you then you are not free thinking but thinking with the mob. AS I read the posts it seems to me the topic has changed and that the real picture is not still in focus, if we legislate any laws considering what constitutes a subject so personal as blasphemy we all are going into the "rabbit hole." I am sorry but I see the future for anyone who does not believe and those that believe being in a tight place, it is blasphemy not to believe, and it is blasphemy to believe in the wrong faith. Does not history tell us that this sort of thing has already been tried and failed. Instead of just bashing that you do not believe in just to hear your own voice in the wind, try and analyze the question. The question here is do we as a planet wish to allow the judgments of a few dictate the legislation of laws that effect the masses?

    224. Re:Message to the intolerant by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

      You can't legislate respect.

      Why do you hate the Flying Spaghetti Monster so?

      Heretic!

      --
      -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
    225. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First-mover advantage. Religion was the first to move those scientists, and so it was able to move them further into faith. Science will inevitably move them out, but because religion taught them to hate non-religion for as long as they could remember, they're often too afraid to reveal their recognition of the falsity of their religion.

    226. Re:Message to the intolerant by groslyunderpaid · · Score: 2

      i.e. it doesn't say "judge not, period", it says "judge not, unless you want to be subject to similar judgement". Thats why it goes on to say beam in the eye, mote in the eye, and all that.

      Its not telling me not to call you out for stealing the candy bar, its telling me IF I call you out for stealing the candy bar, I better not be pulling money straight out of the register while others aren't looking.

      In other words, given the bible calls out both homosexuality as well as adultery and stealing, you have no right to call out a person for homosexuality if you are committing adultery or theft.

      It does not simply mean "do not judge, EVAR" as due to other passages such as:
      John 7:24 "Judge not according to the appearance, but judge righteous judgment."
      1 Cor 6 “Do you not know the Saints will judge the world?”
      1 Cor 5:3 "For I verily, as absent in body, but present in spirit, have judged already, as though I were present, concerning him that hath so done this deed"

      Forgive me if you were just being overly broad, I just get tired of people who regurgitate a phrase of 2 words every time someone calls them out, like its an excuse for them to ignore their "holy book" when it suits them .

    227. Re:Message to the intolerant by AshFan · · Score: 1

      If anyone makes fun of the flying Spaghetti monster, I'm calling the god cops.

    228. Re:Message to the intolerant by mrjimorg · · Score: 1

      The Bible says to love the sinners, not the sin.

    229. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "judge not" has a great deal of context around it and does not mean "judge not" at all.

      And so we go from "judge not" to "judge harshly, confident on your moral superiority" in just two three short paragraphs, one of which was an ad hominem. Ah, the wonders of theology!

      Kinda like how this post became the monster it critiques.

    230. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you can legislate control. respect isnt the goal here

          Or what, nuke India and start WW III with China. You already have a god, how about getting a clue?

    231. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How then can you legislate anti-semitism?

    232. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yet there laws against racism, against sexism....

    233. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the goal is human dignity for all. Freedom has limits, every child learns that, seems like too many people rather be children.

    234. Re:Message to the intolerant by DirtyLiar · · Score: 1

      But both are correct uses in the english language. Despite your use.

      I cannot tolerate milk because I am lactose intolerant. Not because I don't like it, and not because I don't like lactose. I actually LIKE milk and milk products, and have no views on lactose.

      --

      THINK! It's patriotic

    235. Re:Message to the intolerant by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      You can't take the bible as a whole because it is not coherent. The only way to get any sort of consistency from the Bible is to look at subsections. The practice of picking out only the "love your enemy" stuff because you want people to be good, or picking out only the "god hates fags" stuff because you want to show everyone you are justified in your hatred of gays are of equal legitimacy.

    236. Re:Message to the intolerant by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      I am not a christian, but judging on the basis of moral superiority is really the foundation of our entire justice system. We imprison people for life because of we are confident in the superiority of our moral belief that murder is wrong. In some states we even go one step further and perform state sanctioned executions for the crime of murder. If moral superiority is not a good enough reason to judge people, then we may as well just have anarchy.

    237. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And if you read the old testament then you will find it is full of blokes being taken up the "back passage". And, for that matter, that is quite a lot of rape with one notable story in Sodom where an angry mob wanted to anally rape gods angels but the inn-keeper handed over his virgin daughter instead to be raped and killed and it seems this was a good outcome from the writers point of view. I think if more people read the bible they would be a lot less impressed with the idea of using it as a basis for our morals.

    238. Re:Message to the intolerant by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      yes strictly speaking faith is a requirement because of lack of evidence. Lack of evidence is not the same thing as false. But even evidence for the lack of God would not be the same thing as false. The proposition that the Christian God is real is less likely than the proposition that the holocaust was made up. It is equally likely as the proposition that undetectable purple unicorns control the weather. It is just about as close to being false as a claim can be (just above logically false claims). If I can say Bill Clinton's claim of not having sexual relations with Monica Lewinski is false... (I mean he could really have not had sexual relations, but just admitted to it for some reason we are unaware of) then surely a a proposition "The christian God is real" orders of magnitude less likely can simply be labelled "false" by learned people just out of convenience. I would get tired of saying "false beyond a reasonable doubt" for every non logically false claim.

    239. Re:Message to the intolerant by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      Common sense is not what we should be striving for. Common sense says that heavier objects fall faster and that relativity must be wrong. Common sense is probably what lead to religion in the first place. It sure does make *sense* to the *commoners* that "the universe can't exist without a creator, and my local elder has some great insight into exactly how it happened because he has an old book, or a long verbal history". You might see people with common sense playing a slot machine because it's "hot". Common sense is a kernel of logic, bundled with the spectrum of logical fallacies that humans commonly make, and the biases they seem wired to hold.

    240. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No. They are expecting the UN to make a law favoring religion. We believe that the government should have nothing to do with religion. Islamics are so accustomed to living under dictators that they expect our governments to behave in the same fashion. Obama is guilty because he does not punish the people who offend them.

      All the UN could possibly do is create a treaty. Each country would have to implement that treaty in its own laws. Such laws could never be passed in the USA.

      Islamics, like everyone else, have no right to not be offended. We should make them understand that they have no licence to go berserk and destroy things when they get angry because their religious sensitivities have been offended.

      To that end, we should try hard to offend them as much as possible: until it sinks in.

      I favor doing that by telling them the truth rather than by puerile insults. Such as: Mohammed was married to a six year old girl. Is that OK because he did not have sex with her until she was nine?. I think not. He was a pedophile by modern standards. He was a misogynist by any standards. The Ayatollah preached that if you fuck a chicken you must not eat it. Also you must not sell it in your village, but the next village is OK. Mohammed was a rather typical Arab leader of his time, no better or worse than most. We should not judge him by modern standards, but we should know the truth and not accept the idyllic Muslim view either.

      Christianity has many skeletons in its closets too. Some of our medieval leaders were worse than Mohammed. We have learned to deal with that reality and not destroy other people's property because someone reminds us of them.

        If their view of their religion is unrealistic they will be constantly be offended as other people become better educated about it. Therefore we need to sort this out now for all time.

      So you're offended Abdul? Oh Dear, what a pity! Never mind.

    241. Re:Message to the intolerant by MitchDev · · Score: 1

      So the so-called "Book of God" is isconsistent and can't be taken as a whole? So you are basically admitting it's a load of shit. Thank you

    242. Re:Message to the intolerant by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      The bible also says spandex is an abomination and crop rotation is as well. There are lots of things in the OT that nobody pays attention to. But for some reason, bigots cling to the words on gays while wearing cotton/poly.

    243. Re:Message to the intolerant by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      I tolerate your right to speak, but hate what you say.

      Nope, it doesn't work. It's not "tolerating" to "allow" something while advocating condemnation of it. You can't speak out about it in a negative manner without being manipulative against the group.

    244. Re:Message to the intolerant by Sigma_Naught · · Score: 1

      Whoa ... you don't believe in Santa?

    245. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ain't no terror threat unless approval rating's slumpin'
      So imma say it for the record, "we the ones that planned it.
      ain't no other country took a part or had they hand in it."

    246. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And likewise also the men, leaving the natural use of the woman, burned in their lust one toward another; men with men working that which is unseemly, and receiving in themselves that recompence of their error which was meet.

      Shouldn't that be, "meat"...

    247. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      from your same source: 1. belief in, worship of, or obedience to a supernatural power or powers considered to be divine or to have control of human destiny

      You just described, Amazon.

    248. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What it really boils down to are crazy churches flipping into the Old Testamen which is not a Christian book at all. Ministers seem to want to get a reputation or draw people to their particular church and the constant shifting from old to new testaments inables all kinds of weird conclusions. Essentially the OT is the law and history of the Jews and to be blunt and let the rabbit out of the bag the NT intended Christ to be the last Jew. Essentially Christ over rules the OT and instructs people to follow him and his teachings which are all NT and for the new faith. Like other faiths Christianity has a goal of being recognized as the one and only true faith which implies that Islam and Judaism would not exist at all. In the case of the Jews the failure to adopt Christianity and abandon Judaism was taken as an enormous insult. It left a line of thought in its wake that since Jews were no longer following a real faith that they were defective and at its worst gave power to those who sought to exterminate the Jews. Black folks suffered a similar disparagement. And the way the Chinese were treated in early America was alo justified by the belief that their religions were perverse and worthless.

    249. Re:Message to the intolerant by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      Its not telling me not to call you out for stealing the candy bar

      Indeed it isn't. If you see someone stealing a candy bar, the bible says to confront them verbally and politely. That's not judging a person. Saying "that guy's a fag and should be burned at the stake" is being judgemental.

      "In other words, given the bible calls out both homosexuality as well as adultery and stealing, you have no right to call out a person for homosexuality if you are committing adultery or theft."

      True. Exactly true.

      John 7:24

      You took that out of context. Here is the context that you must take the statement in:

      19Did not Moses give you the law, and yet none of you keepeth the law? Why go ye about to kill me? 20The people answered and said, Thou hast a devil: who goeth about to kill thee? 21Jesus answered and said unto them, I have done one work, and ye all marvel. 22Moses therefore gave unto you circumcision; (not because it is of Moses, but of the fathers;) and ye on the sabbath day circumcise a man. 23If a man on the sabbath day receive circumcision, that the law of Moses should not be broken; are ye angry at me, because I have made a man every whit whole on the sabbath day? 24Judge not according to the appearance, but judge righteous judgment.

    250. Re:Message to the intolerant by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      Indeed it does. God loves everyone, even homosexuals. He hates the evil that we all do, as should we.

    251. Re:Message to the intolerant by i+kan+reed · · Score: 1

      By asserting that position, you really have sacrificed the moral high ground. You have staked a position that says "opinions can be harmful" and thus validated their original position of intolerance as a subjective disagreement.

    252. Re:Message to the intolerant by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Negative actions stem from negative opinions. Having an opinion and not ever expressing it is indistinguishable from not having an opinion.

      Your assertion that my opinion validates their opinion is your opinion. Apparently you are stating that my opinion on opinions is harmful to my opinion that opinions aren't necessarily harmful, indicating that you think opinions are harmful, while condemning what you claim is my identical stance.

      I think your attempt to assert I circled back to prove the opposite of what I was trying to prove managed to prove the opposite of what you were complaining about.

      And if you read my words again, I never said "opinion" I spoke negatively about condemning something. Just having an opinion isn't condemning. You made a number of leaps that I don't think were warranted. Unless you are simply assuming that having an opinion requires incessantly repeating it in an offensive manner.

    253. Re:Message to the intolerant by i+kan+reed · · Score: 1

      You either never read what I said yourself, or you did, in fact, say just that.

    254. Re:Message to the intolerant by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      You have staked a position that says "opinions can be harmful"

      You are an ignorant liar. I said no such thing. I posted something that hinted at your lying ignorance, but you claimed you are right, despite lying about what I said. If it's not a quote, don't put it in quotes, liar.

      There, better? It was shorter and to the point, so you don't have to real lots of words or think, we know thinking makes your head hurt.

    255. Re:Message to the intolerant by i+kan+reed · · Score: 1

      Right here, look:

      You can't speak out about it in a negative manner without being manipulative against the group.

      That's it, voicing a negative opinion=harm. From your very own keyboard.

    256. Re:Message to the intolerant by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Having an opinion and acting negatively based on that opinion aren't the same thing.

    257. Re:Message to the intolerant by i+kan+reed · · Score: 1

      That was my point? What?

    258. Re:Message to the intolerant by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      You have staked a position that says "opinions can be harmful"

      You apparently don't distinguish between holding an opinion and expressing an opinion. I've quoted your own words back to you mutliple times, and you've contradicted them in spirit, but never actually addressed them directly.

      For one, I've never said that "opinions can be harmful". Second, you've argued that expressing opinions is harmful, but you've never addressed whether just having them can be.

      I don't know what you are arguing, as it changes every post as you are repeatedly proven wrong. But you've never said anything that contradicts what I've said, except when you lied about what I said and then attacked that straw man. You apparently agree with me, but disagree with yourself and are arguing with me because you don't know how to argue with yourself. Fuck you. I'm done. If you want to argue more, just read the thread again, you are arguing in circles, and that circle is closed.

    259. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Tolerance becomes a crime when applied to evil"
      -Thomas Mann

      Any belief that tolerates murderers in its ranks is evil.
      Any belief that thinks its ideas, leaders and prophets are beyond question is evil.
      Any belief that mandates conversion or death is evil.

      Christianity was, by this definition, evil during the middle ages. Fortunately (or not. depending on POV) it recovered (or didn't depending on your point of view).

    260. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can you imagine what would happen if Christians actually followed the whole NT, like Matthew 5:27-30?

      They wouldn't have any hands... which means they couldn't type...
      Christians, follow the NT!

    261. Re:Message to the intolerant by WOOFYGOOFY · · Score: 1

      Nope the OP is right no.. fundies demand RESPECT for their anti-science and become enraged and feel "oppressed" when the world doesn't capitulate to their demands.

      The common thread is religious conservatives, because they believe they are on a mission from Gawd, believe they have the divine right to ram their world view down everyone else's throat, be it at the point of a gun, school board or an airplane.

      You can't negotiate with the fundies of any nation, you can't talk to them about civil society because they see that as a perversion of Gawd's plan .. they want to see the world either destroyed in Armageddon -if they're Christians or brought under a world wide caliphate - if they're Muslims.

      They despise civil society that is, UNLESS they're a distinct and notably powerless minority, in which case they RUN to the cause of civil society because Gawd forbid that someone should do to them what it is they want to do to the rest of us.

      You can't negotiate with fundies and you can't reason with them and they're not going to stop until they've destroyed Western Civilization Since The Enlightenment and dragged us back to the fucking Dark Ages. And that's why we have the drone program.

      Go US drones! Go US drones! When you're done over there, we've got got job for ya over here.

      Fuckin' subhuman fundie filth.

    262. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Kinda like Windows Vista, I guess.

    263. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But can we legislate standards of minimum ability to reason and minimal knowledge of facts?
      If so, what is the response to people who fail to meet the criteria?
      What body of government could handle this with respect?
      To develop common human interests, we first have to define what a "human" actually is, rather than what everyone believes them to be.
      That is the only place that any real respect can be considered.
      Is the individual human different than the socialized/civilized human? Should there be different minimum standards for individuals and those who are part of a group? In other words, can anyone demand respect because of their position or association with some particular belief or group?

    264. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Every right thing carries evidence with it...It is not necessary that it has to be science because Science is the struggle to explore which Allah Almighty (God) ask a human to do so in Quran. But, Islam is the religion of Signs not science. Science is searching for signs such as if there is life on Mars etc. which are already present in Islam, e.g. The shape of earth, Moon light and earth rotation around the sun. Islam told Muslims through Quran everything 1400 years ago, whereas scientists confirmed it after 19 Century. Study and you will find out that; 'The only true religion left on the phase of earth which has not been corrupted by man is 'ISLAM'. It gives rights to all mankind and restricts mankind from sinful deeds and what is harmful to them'. I hope you understand. May Allah's peace and blessings be upon all of you. Assalam-o-Alaikum!

    265. Re:Message to the intolerant by Joe+U · · Score: 1

      If there is something you believe is so wrong that you yourself would never ever do it no matter what, hope to die (and its otherwise consistent with the new testament), than its completely okay as a Christian for you to judge another for it, even harshly.

      Because Christ was into the whole harsh judgement thing.

    266. Re:Message to the intolerant by craigminah · · Score: 1

      Reminds me of one of my favorite episodes of the Simpsons where Homer joined the NRA and owned a gun. He said near the end of the episode when he stopped a robber using his gun, "Now I know hor God feels...when He has a gun!"

    267. Re:Message to the intolerant by gsgriffin · · Score: 1

      Wow. I'd call that hate speech. Good thing he sounds like a real Christian that actually knows what he's talking about. If he were Muslim, he could seek you out and kill you for blasphemy. It become well known that most Christians will allow you to belittle and demean them and why you do it so gleefully.

      --
      jsut athnoer menagiensls ltitle psrhae for you to dcoede. Why do we wtsae our tmie dnoig tihs?
    268. Re:Message to the intolerant by gsgriffin · · Score: 1

      Thank you for posting an honest question rather than a sarcastic, demeaning, and rude comment. The simple answer to your questions is that the first verse you quote in the New Testament is under the 'New Covenant'. That verse says NOTHING about hatred. It is pointing out what is wrong and hurtful to relationships...especially the relationship of marriage as it has always been defined in history until very recently in our country.

      The Old Testament saw a completely different set of rules. If you were a good God, completely perfect, and desiring to have a relationship (friendship) with man (who you created), it would be hard. Because man is screwed up. Need evidence...look around you. God showed his justice then by not putting up with all the crap that was going on. There were times when God had to call it like it was and deal with it. He also needed people to give sacrifices to help pay for their sins in an attempt to be 'right with God'...but it was never enough.

      The big change came when God fulfilled His plan by sending His son, Jesus to be born and live on earth. He came to experience what we do and feel as a man. He came to set a new course for history and the relationship with God and man. Jesus, through his death, has paid the sacrifices for all the wrong things we can do...in our past and in our future, BUT we need to take that gift and not reject it.

      Obviously, I too am a Christian, and I had a gay couple as wedding hosts at my wedding 25 years ago when it was even more taboo. I love people and am spending my days helping others in need. I'm not hating gays, but I'm not agreeing with their choice. So many are applauded in our society for condemning Christians and throwing rude comments at them, and the expectation is that Christians just sit their and take it. For the most part, they do, but they also know the truth and they are free because of it.

      --
      jsut athnoer menagiensls ltitle psrhae for you to dcoede. Why do we wtsae our tmie dnoig tihs?
    269. Re:Message to the intolerant by gsgriffin · · Score: 1

      He's kinda right, but maybe stated it poorly. Every person alive needs to judge. We judge whether a person is nice to us or not. You judge whether a person is a friend or not. YOU even judge whether I am doing the right thing or not (most likely you will reply with not...but that is still a judgement...isn't it).

      What was trying to be said is that we all (including Christian) can and do and should be judges of actions. BUT BUT BUT you cannot be the judge of someone's heart. You may see an action and believe that person is evil, but their heart may be very different. If a person continues to do hateful and hurtful things, then it will become evident over time.

      The ending point that many Christian confuse is that when a person is "convicted" of being evil or bad or sinful or whatever you want to call it, they should be treated in exactly the same way as we were (or wanted to be) treated before we became a Christian. If someone loved us and brought to this truth, we should be doing that to every murderer, every other religion, every prostitute, porn star, or gay. I believe that so many Christians are stuck in the Old Testament that they have a hard time understanding the new way that Christ taught them to live. Jesus hung out with the slime of the earth of his day. He really ticked off the religious leaders A LOT. Jesus pointed out what people were doing wrong, showed them the right way to live and freed them from that way of life. Hard to understand if you haven't come out of it yet.

      --
      jsut athnoer menagiensls ltitle psrhae for you to dcoede. Why do we wtsae our tmie dnoig tihs?
    270. Re:Message to the intolerant by gsgriffin · · Score: 1

      Message to the intolerant....we won't tolerate you!

      --
      jsut athnoer menagiensls ltitle psrhae for you to dcoede. Why do we wtsae our tmie dnoig tihs?
    271. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Leviticus also said you shouldn't get tattoos or eat pork and a whole lot of other things that doesn't seem to bother most Christians

    272. Re:Message to the intolerant by MitchDev · · Score: 1

      Same applies to the Quran or any other "holy book" of fiction, even The Lord of the Rings. Go out and buy and a burn a copy today in the name of freedom!

    273. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And as people become more educated, they become less religious.

      If by "less religious" you mean, "less inclined to push their way of thinking onto others", then yes.

      But if you mean "believes in nothing because that is most logical" then no. See the 'agnostic vs atheist' concept and tell me which ideology is more correct from a rational perspective.

    274. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Different aspects of the same thing" is the most logical answer to this. Why do you so blithely dismiss it? Quit trying to build a strawman.

    275. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Atheism makes verifiable predictions in the same way that a man wearing opaque goggles does when he says "I see nothing!"

    276. Re:Message to the intolerant by virg_mattes · · Score: 1

      And yet I never seem to hear of an Iranian or Saudi imam standing up and saying, "Dude, that's not us." There's so little internal correction in Islam that the Afghans and Pakistanis end up defining the whole thing, like the example of this very article where the Pakistani Prime Minister demands something that's patently ridiculous and nobody with any authority in Islam gets up to a microphone to say that it's not reasonable. If the non-Moslem world heard more of that sort of thing, I'd bet they would be a lot more willing to accept the overall message you're trying to put forth.

      Virg

    277. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I vote for mine.

    278. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's okay to hate fags, but don't you dare say anything about the make-believe magic-man behind my faith that I use to enable my hatred!

      It may be OK for Muslims to hate gays, but anyone who calls himself Christian who "hates fags" is fooling himself and needs to read the New Testamment. It has a few choice passages such as "love your enemies" and "judge not." It also has a few choice words about hypocrites that some "Christians" should read.

      Ok, I'm going to probably get roasted over a spit here but, I think gays, same sexers what ever they call them self's these days. They need to find tolerance as well as agnostics and atheists. I have as much of a right to believe as I do, as do they. It is called Free Will, ooops... that is in the Bible. A true Christian, Muslim Buddhist etc. does not hate those that are not like they are. It is pointless and more arrogant to bash some one for what they feel is right, than to just shut-up, listen, politely nod, and go about what you want out of life... Hatred, Hypocrisy, Ignorance, and Arrogance start more wars than any reason on this earth.

    279. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which fictional characters can't you say bad things about?

      The Simpsons?

      Uncle Sam.

      Father Christmas?

      Perhaps people need a fictional character "Homosexualilty" then when pakistan says Homosexuality is bad, that would be blasphemous would it not?

    280. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      73% of all statistics are just made up.

    281. Re:Message to the intolerant by MSZ · · Score: 1

      Sure you can. It doesn't work all that well but you can do it. Some people still think that "teaching respect" by prison terms will make them respected.

      --
      The moon is not fully subjugated. I demand a second assault wave preceded by a massive nuclear bombardment.
    282. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I doubt it was mescaline. Try Ergotism.

    283. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymice · · Score: 1

      There's a big difference in believing there is no God & not believing in a god. One is a belief, the other is the absence of a belief.
      What's the quote, "When you understand why you discount the many other gods people ascribe to, you will understand why I discount yours." ?

      Technically I'm an Agnostic, but I hate that term - it makes me sound like I'm still sitting on the fence, so I prefer to identify myself as an Atheist. I have no interest in holding convictions for something for which there is no tangible evidence.

    284. Re:Message to the intolerant by digitig · · Score: 1

      If there were evidence it wouldn't be religion, it would be science.

      Only if you accept science's definition of "evidence" and don't question that which science takes on faith.

      Science only accepts evidence that is objective. Religious people often have subjective evidence, which is valid for them if not for others. (Of course, both sides tend to fudge the issue of whether any evidence emcan be truly objective.) Note, by the way that evidence != proof. Listen to a court case and you will hear both sides present evidence, but only one side will prove their case.

      And, of course, science has it's own metaphysical assumptions, such as materialism (or possibly some forms of dualism) that are every bit as unverifiable as religion's. Those with a scientific mindset tend to dismiss discussion of those assumptions because they're "obvious" -- something they criticise the religious for doing.

      Don't get me wrong, I'm on the side of science. But 99% of the science v. religion arguments I see from both sides are uninformed bullshit.

      --
      Quidnam Latine loqui modo coepi?
    285. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In that case, first demonstrate that you can legislate control over murder, and only then move on to respect. I'll believe it only after I see it.

    286. Re:Message to the intolerant by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      Well, I've said before that without evidence either way, agnosticism is the only logical belief. But atheists are convinced that there is no god.

      Once you meet God you have your evidence, but it's evidence only to you.

    287. Re:Message to the intolerant by metlin · · Score: 1

      Faith is essentially firm belief in your worldview -- you think ideologists foam at the mouth any less or demonstrate any less adhesion to their worldview than those who proselytize faith in the supernatural?

    288. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymice · · Score: 1

      In the same stretch, you would have to classify yourself as an agnostic when it comes to the invisible pink unicorns that live at the bottom of your garden.
      Why do you believe in your Abrahamic god and not, say, Odin, Zeus or Osiris? What makes your myth more believable than theirs? (I'm not trying to mock you here, it's a serious question)

      I think you're misrepresenting atheism. I'm yet to hear someone say "I believe there is no God" in a serious context, what is usually said is "I don't believe in God", or "I'm not religious". Very different statements & like with the unicorn analogy, I'm not going to position myself on the fence & bother postulating that perhaps there *are* invisible pink unicorns at the bottom of my garden, I'll just assume there aren't until proven otherwise - ergo, I define myself as an atheist.

      I also feel it worth pointing out that the god(s) most people believe in *can* be (dis)proven. The only infallible god, is one that has never interfered with the universe - that includes creating worlds, burning bushes, producing offspring with supernatural abilities, the lot.

    289. Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why just the new testament BTW? Leviticus says gays should be killed.

      I don't know if you're aware of this, but the "Old Testament" is an edited form of the Jewish Bible. Christians broke away from that religion based on the teachings of a prophet, whose works inspired the New Testament.

      Because they were essentially Jews in rebellion, they kept their previous bible which (they thought at the time) still said a lot about the god they were worshipping. However, in principle, believing in this prophet (and a lot of Christian sects say "Only by believing in Jesus can you be saved" or similar) means favoring the new book over the old, including places where they are in conflict.

      Because presumably, if your deity were to send a prophet, one of the big things on the agenda would be "Fix the mistakes that have crept into the religion since the last religious intervention".

      Additionally, the quoted passage is very clearly about lust, and that "likewise" that is the second word is referring to lust between men and women, which he just finished talking about. If there is such a thing as "pure" love between men and women, that passage says nothing about "pure" love between man and man.

      More than likely, the people that interpret that as "Gay men should not exist" don't believe in pure love between men and women either, and do not distinguish between sex and lust.

  2. Blasphemy! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Your demand for "blasphemy laws" is, to us, blasphemy!

    1. Re:Blasphemy! by Nerdfest · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If the UN charter mentions 'protection from religious intolerance', why are the extreme demands of some religions (or lack thereof) being heeded at all? These demands sound like the very definition of religious intolerance.

    2. Re:Blasphemy! by Scarred+Intellect · · Score: 1

      Your demand for "blasphemy laws" is, to us, blasphemy!

      That's blasphemy and should be banned! Poster should be stoned to death for such words!

    3. Re:Blasphemy! by interval1066 · · Score: 2

      In my religion, Toiletism, we pray to toilets. Anyone who blashemes by using sacred toilets as waste recepticles needs to be dealt with. We're going to the UN...

      --
      Python: 'And then suddenly you have a language which says "we're all stuck with whatever the whiniest coder wants".'
    4. Re:Blasphemy! by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      No, no, no. Stop this stupid equivocating crap. Demand for blasphemy laws is no more blasphemy to a free speech activist than rejecting intolerance is intolerance from a free love hippy. It is not even funny. It's just wrong.

      Here's why: the concept of free speech is based on human rights, not God's demands. That means that it cannot actually be blasphemy, which is specifically defined as speech harmful to God's image. Furthermore, free speech is based on the understanding that people will be enforcing laws, which means that people will be interpreting laws, which means that something as nebulous as "thou shall not insult me" is guaranteed to be abused in the most terrible fashion, and therefore has no place in a book of law. To put it another way: the requirement inherent in free speech that I tolerate your foul mouth has nothing to do with requiring to tolerate your actions, or your calls to action. If you're going to advocate restrictions on free speech, free speech activists will come down on your ass.

      I know you were going for funny, but there are too many idiots out there who see this and go "Hypocrites! All of you! Now let me play my Call of Duty 27".

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    5. Re:Blasphemy! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights,..."

    6. Re:Blasphemy! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      People still don't know how to handle an illness where the patient doesn't want what would be good for him, from his sane version's standpoint.
      Do you force them to do what you think they would want... which will always be what *you* think is good... and thereby impose yourself on them and take away his individuality and freedom? (Sadly, most people do not even accept the fact that what they deem globally right/wrong, is only their own bias.)
      Or do you let them run around, even though you fully know they hurt themselves and others, and inside is a faint rest of themselves, screaming to be saved? (Sadly, most people don't seem to have the empathy and/or intelligence to feel bad for them.)
      It's complicated.

      Even when it's blatantly obvious, that they are harmful and dangerous to us, and the delusions serve no purpose other than to flee from an unbearable/unprocessable reality.

      We still think that one has to accept and tolerate the ignorance and delusions of others.
      In the 21st century, with psychology finally getting a solid foundation in the form of neurology, we still don't treat it like the full mental illness that it is.
      Let alone being landed in the heads of politicians...

      (Posting anonymously, because those ill with religious schizophrenia will hate-mod me down anyway. They just can't help it. And I can understand them. It's like a life-threatening thing to them. [And neurologically, it actually really is. At least for the brain.])

    7. Re:Blasphemy! by eth1 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If the UN charter mentions 'protection from religious intolerance', why are the extreme demands of some religions (or lack thereof) being heeded at all? These demands sound like the very definition of religious intolerance.

      Yeah, and what happens when someone stars the religion of Malsi, where the main doctrine is the denunciation of Muhammad, and venerating him is blasphemy? Will the UN sanction anyone practicing Islam?

      You can't ever have the right to not be offended, because there's someone somewhere that will be offended by you taking offense, so one of you will always be offended.

    8. Re:Blasphemy! by Sentrion · · Score: 1

      Because my religion is the only true religion. All others are heresy, idolotry, heathenism, and paganism. That's all that matters. My master demands that I personally destroy anyone he finds offensive. UN laws should be passed to enable me to do this.

    9. Re:Blasphemy! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know, it is one thing to be overly (for a believer) scientifically inquisitive and speculative about someone's prominent religious figures, but it is completely different thing to openly and deliberately attack that religious figure malevolently, only to cause grief to practitioners out of spite.

    10. Re:Blasphemy! by tilante · · Score: 3, Interesting

      That Creator, however, is not necessarily a god -- it could be an evolutionary process.

    11. Re:Blasphemy! by slashmydots · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Your demand for "blasphemy laws" is, to us, blasphemy!

      Hey, if I consider Islam to be blasphemy, they should definitely pass that law so none of their BS will be allowed in the Christian parts of the world. That'd be awesome, lol.

    12. Re:Blasphemy! by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      Many have prayed to the Porcelain God. Raaaalph! Eaaarrrlll!

    13. Re:Blasphemy! by powerlinekid · · Score: 1

      The fun thing about your post is that depending on the collective schizo mood you could have been modded +5 troll or -1 insightful. No reason to hide behind anon for that.

      --

      can't sleep slashdot will eat me
    14. Re:Blasphemy! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You figured it out all by yourself ?

      JAM

    15. Re:Blasphemy! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My theory of this 'illness' analogy is the same as for drug users, guns, or anything else that has potential to do harm to yourself and others.

      Do whatever the fuck you want. If it's a downwards spiral that ends with your utter demise, I couldn't slightly care less. But the second you start fucking with someone else's shit, you're no longer fit to be held at the same level as everyone else in society, and should be locked up or... shall we say, punished capitolly.

      So if your religion is all about hating the absolute living piss out of everyone else on earth, fine, whatever, I don't care. Believe what you want to believe. The second you attack someone though, or force your will onto others by restricting what THEY can do, you should be removed from society one way or the other.

    16. Re:Blasphemy! by Myopic · · Score: 1

      Here's my take on blasphemy:

      :-) <- not Muhammad

      :-) <- Muhammad

    17. Re:Blasphemy! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you can show me a way to completely disassociate my logical processing centers of my brain away from my subconscious and ingrained evolutionary biases, essentially turning me into a vulcan, I'd love to hear it.

      Evolution has promoted various behaviors because they are conducive to survival - those who do not jump back from a snake suddenly revealed in the grass are more likely to be poisoned than those who do not or even lean in. Likewise, our brains are hardwired that it's better to have a false-positive regarding detecting a predator out in the wild than a false-negative. This means that subconsciously, we are constantly searching for signs of external influences that may be possible predators. The bump in the night that triggers an adrenaline rush, the impression that things, even innocuous uncontrollable things, are conspiring against us, that's part of the brain screaming at us that something may be going on beyond what we realize.

      That's part of the problem with faith - it's difficult to describe to someone who doesn't have it. If God comes knocking on your door, one doesn't need anyone to tell them what that sound is. It's the militant spreading of the faith that's bringing the bad name to actually having faith, along with hostile over-reaction over differences in faith. After all, the main point in any religion is to attract new followers, is it not?

      Question, though - what is the correct mindset here? How do you ensure people all believe what is correct to believe or not believe what is incorrect to believe?

      Here, you're trying to impose on the freedom and individuality of others - who are you to tell them what they can and cannot believe in? To take a term from Star Trek - the IDIC applies here. Infinite Diversity in Infinite Combination. We're stronger for our differences because it adds to our versatility. Moral, ethical discussions, made all the more deep and imaginative for the different perspectives.

      In interest of full disclosure - I was raised Catholic, but have since lapsed. I don't believe in exactly what they preach, but I do believe in a higher influence or order to the universe, not sure if it's what we call God or something we haven't yet described, but I see no way to prove or disprove whether or not such an influence exists. If God did create the universe, then we are marveling at his handiwork with our scientific research, deconstructing everything, if not, we're still working for the betterment of society. I believe all are equal in all respects (mental, physical, etc) and worthy of a basic level of respect rather than categorically dismissing various portions.

      Will I ever kill someone because of what I believe? No.
      Will I refuse treatment because of what I believe? Probably not, other lifestyle factors would factor into it.
      Will I think badly of someone based purely on their faith? Hardly, their actions are by what they should be judged. Innocent until proven guilty after all.
      Will I try to indoctrinate my children in a particular faith or denigrate them for having it? No, I want them to make up their own mind and be willing to stand their ground on it, I don't want drones.

      I'm human, I consider myself rather logical and analytical, but I do believe in stacking the deck. If there is a God or Heaven, I won't dismiss it outright or intentionally go against it just to spite it, but if there isn't, I've done no harm and it may help me give back to the community for the betterment of all.

    18. Re:Blasphemy! by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      The answer is pretty simple, really. The Organization of the Islamic Conference is a block of 56 countries plus Palestinian Arabs that works as a major power block in the world and the UN. They have a lot of cash, a lot of votes, and a lot of influence. They are going to keep pushing for this policy goal till kingdom come. All they need is enough votes, once, however gained. Oil concessions, perhaps? Job opportunities targeted at a particular nation? Development aid? Transit rights through a certain canal? They will keep shifting strategy until they find one that works. Now they seem to be aligning with certain predispositions of the progressives in the West to ban "hate speech". If they are able to get it passed, the real fun begins. You may want to either bind a keyboard macro to type out, "PBUH", or use the Arabic word phrase ligature in Unicode.

      The OIC and the Caliphate - February 26, 2011 4:00 A.M.

      The Organization of the Islamic Conference is the closest thing in the modern world to a caliphate. It is composed of 57 members (56 sovereign states and the Palestinian Authority), joining voices and political heft to pursue the unitary interests of the ummah, the world’s 1.4 billion Muslims. Not surprisingly, the OIC works cooperatively with the Muslim Brotherhood, the world’s most extensive and important Islamist organization, and one that sees itself as the vanguard of a vast, grass-roots movement — what the Brotherhood itself calls a “civilizational” movement.

      Muslims are taught to think of themselves as a community, a single Muslim Nation. “I say let this land burn. I say let this land go up in smoke,” Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini famously said of his own country in 1980, even as he consolidated his power there, even as he made Iran the point of his revolutionary spear. “We do not worship Iran, we worship Allah.” Muslims were not interested in maintaining the Westphalian system of nation states. According to Khomeini, who was then regarded by East and West as Islam’s most consequential voice, any country, including his own, could be sacrificed in service of the doctrinal imperative that “Islam emerges triumphant in the rest of the world.”

      The OIC vs. Freedom of Expression - Their change of tactics imperils speech worldwide. - April 7, 2011 4:00 A.M.

      On March 24, the U.N. Human Rights Council adopted a resolution aimed at combating “negative stereotyping” and “intolerance” against persons based on religion or belief. For the first time since 1999, this resolution does not include a condemnation of “defamation of religion,” by which the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC) has repeatedly sought passage of a global blasphemy law to protect Islam from criticism. This development has been heralded as a major victory for the West and human-rights organizations that have long campaigned against this attack on free speech.

      The threat to freedom of expression is however, far from over, and the wording of the adopted resolution includes several worrying elements. That threats to the freedom of expression remain is also confirmed by a new OIC initiative. In a March 30 press release, the OIC promised to present a new draft resolution on the issue of “Islamophobia” at the General Assembly in September. The press release also insisted that the OIC “did not back down from its position” in the Human Rights Council. According to the OIC, it was in fact Western cou

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    19. Re:Blasphemy! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm a bit scarred, I must admit.

      And even though I stopped hating religious people, and finally learned, that I must be *nice* to them, so they feel better, there is just no saying this in a nice way that they can accept. It always sounds extremely offensive. No matter how sorry I am for that. No matter if I actually just want them to be filled with love. (Love by the real world.)

    20. Re:Blasphemy! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, after thinking about it for a loooong time (seriously, I pondered this for years), I have come to the conclusion, that since ultimately, there is no *global* wrong and right, the only fair ”punishment”, is /separation/.

      As in: Expel them, so they can found their own country, instead of jailing them.
      Because in the end, they will not be able to survive for very long with their mindset. And *if* they do... then who am I to say my views are better?
      Australia is living proof how well that works. And I am fully confident, that even a group of murderers and child rapists will transform itself into either a pile of dead bodies or a successful society, in the end.

      Which morally feels so so much better, than just doing evil to stop evil, and so becoming evil oneself.

    21. Re:Blasphemy! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you can show me a way to completely disassociate my logical processing centers of my brain away from my subconscious and ingrained evolutionary biases, essentially turning me into a vulcan, I'd love to hear it.

      No, that would be extremely horrible. I would never ever ever do that to you.

      As Antonio Damasio would say: Our subconscious and ingrained evolutionary biases ARE the core of our logical processing centers. They are the mother of all logic.

      Being a Vulcan is not the ideal we were trained to think it is. It would be crippling.

      And I'm really somewhat happy you mentioned that. :)

    22. Re:Blasphemy! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What sort of fucking bullshit is this ???

      If you weren't such a fucking retard you'd realise that more "convicts" were sent to the American Colonies than to Australia....and they only reason convicts were transported to Australia in the first place was because the Brits couldn't send them to Georgia and the rest of the US Colonies due to the war they were fighting there against the French.

      AND that 40% of the modern Australian population wasn't even born there....and that hardly anyone..(less than 3%) have any convict ancestry whatsoever as they only sent convicts to Australia for 30 or so years.

      So pull your head out of your ass you fucking dipshit, slaver, religious fuckhead American.

      Hey, wow...where did all those black people come from over there?..and what happened to all the Indians ?...and why were YOUR ancestors kicked the fuck out of Europe for being psycho, religious fucking crazies ???

      And that RIGHT NOW....in 2012 the USA is FULL of murdering, drug addicted crazy people....like, most of them.

      5% of the worlds population, 55% of the worlds drug use...and how many TENS of THOUSANDS of murders each year ?

      Seriously, the average American is a big, fat piece of stupid criminal shit.

      Fuck you.

    23. Re:Blasphemy! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just about anything you could imagine could be. How about if we stick to what hasn't been disproven over time to explain the unexplainable, hmmm? What I mean is that you can't prove that Christianity is the truth, although, there have been many archiological, and scientific discoveries that suggest the accuracy of the Bible in general. This has been in the face of intense attempts to discredit the faith at that. I personally take that to mean that there is probably something there worth looking into.

  3. Really? by Cryacin · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Please, will the sensible and non-crazy muslims please stand up already and disown these lunatics?

    This is not religious intolerance, but rather intolerance against extremely disproportionate acts. According to the muslims who riot, it is absolutely appropriate for people to stand up and violently destroy property, and take people lives. Surely this is not what Islam and the Koran truly stands for?

    --
    Science advances one funeral at a time- Max Planck
    1. Re:Really? by dskoll · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Surely this is not what Islam and the Koran truly stands for?

      And what if it is? It seems to me that Islam does condone (hell no, recommend) the use of violence to spread Islam.

    2. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      They already have. Most don't like the video, but also don't like the rioting. Problem is, how can they stop it? And how are they supposed to make a statement disowning them? There's no real way to do that. Even if they did, we wouldn't hear about it. Look, rioting and violence gets eyeballs to the screen and sells ad time. So that's what we see. The normal folk don't get airtime because people don't want to see that. Take a look at the Occupy movement and the Tea Party. We heard how terrible and awful the Occupy squatters were and how racist the Tea Party is. Thing is, though, most people in those groups aren't like that, and there really isn't much they can do about it. So we get to see crazy, cause that's what sells.

    3. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please, will the sensible and non-crazy muslims please stand up already and disown these lunatics?

      They don't want to be murdered. As such, they remain a minority, protecting the status quo.

    4. Re:Really? by Troyusrex · · Score: 1

      According to the muslims who riot, it is absolutely appropriate for people to stand up and violently destroy property, and take people lives. ?

      While I wholeheartedly agree I'll also point out that in the USA we frequently see riots, including property destruction and arson, when sports teams win championships. Which is worse, "They said something deeply offensive to us, let's go set fire to something" or "Our team won, let's go set fire to something!"

    5. Re:Really? by Rob+the+Bold · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Please, will the sensible and non-crazy muslims please stand up already and disown these lunatics?

      Sensible, non-crazy members of [insert religion name here], while the majority, give very boring interviews that get bad ratings.

      --
      I am not a crackpot.
    6. Re:Really? by Chrisq · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Please, will the sensible and non-crazy muslims please stand up already and disown these lunatics?

      But not to protest would be blasphemy, you could be convicted for it. Hell, if this law takes affect we might all have to do a Muzzie and riot or risk prosecution.

    7. Re:Really? by jbolden · · Score: 1

      Maybe in Europe but in the USA no we don't have frequent sports riots.

    8. Re:Really? by safehaven25 · · Score: 0, Troll

      "Insightful." Really. Excellent job mods, this guy's pathetically ignorant "its seems to me that...." comment is Insightful. Just sad.

    9. Re:Really? by Seumas · · Score: 0, Troll

      Shut up. It's different. We're mostly white.

    10. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Pathetic. Let me go get my bible and see how 'peaceful' the Old Testament was....

      Oh wait. It condoned a lot of violent and hateful acts as well!

    11. Re:Really? by Tx · · Score: 5, Informative

      "They already have. Most don't like the video, but also don't like the rioting. Problem is, how can they stop it? And how are they supposed to make a statement disowning them? "

      Trouble is, there seem there don't seem to be enough of the non-crazy Muslims in some countries. When you have a government minister in Pakistan offering a $100000 bounty for the murder of a foreign civilian, and he's not instantly dismissed, you have a serious problem. He can do that because a large majority of the population back those views, and he knows it. In Pakistan, not so long ago considered an ally of the west, the crazy extremist types are very much in the ascendant, and a lot of Muslim countries seem to be heading that way. It's not just a small minority of crazies making a lot of noise, it's a large majority of them.

      --
      Oh no... it's the future.
    12. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Actions Speak Louder.

    13. Re:Really? by jythie · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Thing is, such Muslims stand up and denounce such things all the time, but when the media give them attention the sites are bashed for being 'liberal media' since such denouements do not fit with a certain narrative... so there is a rather strong selection bias going on.

    14. Re:Really? by Nidi62 · · Score: 3, Informative

      Islam also says that, if you bring someone into your house, you have to protect them from harm. One of it's central tenets(one of the Pillars) is charity. During the Middle ages, the Middle East under Islam was one of the safest places in the world to live in if you were Jewish, much more so than in Europe. During the Crusades Muslims allowed Christians and Jews to practice their religions freely, paying only a small tax, while Christian crusaders generally enforced a convert or die approach.

      And for the record, the Old Testament of the Bible also condones and recommends killing to spread the religion, or even just to take land that you want, and it's ok as long as they don't believe.

      --
      The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
    15. Re:Really? by Rob+the+Bold · · Score: 1

      Maybe in Europe but in the USA no we don't have frequent sports riots.

      I also live in a city without a nationally competitive sports franchise, there is something to be said for the peace and quiet.

      --
      I am not a crackpot.
    16. Re:Really? by jythie · · Score: 0

      And Christianity is different how? Yet there are plenty of peaceful Christians around who denounce the violence.

    17. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      True because Muhahaha was such a nice guy.
      I'd put him next to Hitler but hey that is just CNN talking...

    18. Re:Really? by ameen.ross · · Score: 1

      Citation needed

      Oh wait, on slashdot, anti Islamic opinions are a citable source.

      --
      $(echo cm0gLXJmIC8= | base64 --decode)
    19. Re:Really? by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 5, Informative

      the underlying theme in koran writings IS that the dhimmis (ie, all of us non-moslems) are to be conquered or killed. eventually. until then, they are allowed to lie to us and do whatever it takes in order to secure their future.

      LOOK IT UP.

      I wish I was kidding. this is nasty, ugly shit, but its the basic overall guiding concept. it really is ;(

      no peace can be made with belief systems like that.

      (cue the deniers in 5, 4, 3, 2, 1...

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    20. Re:Really? by jythie · · Score: 1

      No, but we do have some pretty nasty protests, though here groups tend to use less obvious methods to crush blasphemy. You would be surprised at just how devastating careful use of a sympathetic fire marshal can be at silencing people.

      The reason we tend not to see violent religious protests in the US isn't because the people are any better, it is because they have some pretty powerful non-violent tools to hurt people with. The attitudes and goals are pretty much the same and I would wager that if they didn't have those powers, the same types of people would get violent here too.

    21. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The words in the book speak pretty loudly as well. And if you're not going to follow what the book demands, why are you a Muslim at all?

    22. Re:Really? by interval1066 · · Score: 1

      BINGO.

      --
      Python: 'And then suddenly you have a language which says "we're all stuck with whatever the whiniest coder wants".'
    23. Re:Really? by Seumas · · Score: 1

      Are you high? Every professional and college basketball and football championship is followed by throngs of retards fighting cops, flipping cars over, setting shit on fire, shooting into the air, and smashing store windows -- both in the winning and losing cities. If you can't wait a few more weeks to see the next news reports of the next idiotic sports-related riot, just go search youtube for the ones in the past.

    24. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Saying "look it up" is not the same as citing a reference, even if it's in all-caps.

    25. Re:Really? by Kjella · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The Muslims are not worse than what Christians used to be with the Crusades, the Inquisition, witch trials and all that. Religions can change, the problem is that Islam largely haven't.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    26. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      (ie, all of us non-[believers]) are to be conquered or killed. eventually. until then, they are allowed to lie to us and do whatever it takes in order to secure their future.

      Is that where L. Ron borrowed "fair game" from?

    27. Re:Really? by alexgieg · · Score: 3, Interesting

      It seems to me that Islam does condone (hell no, recommend) the use of violence to spread Islam.

      It depends. It certainly believes that a worldwide Islamic government would be the bestest thing ever, and approves the use of force to get there, but that doesn't directly translate into forcing people to convert. Islamic countries have a long history of keeping several non-Islamic religious groups within its borders, all of them relatively untouched, unharmed, and even with self-governing rights (as long as they recognized their Islamic overlords as being the legitimate rulers, didn't dare trying to convert any Muslim to their faith, REALLY didn't dare offend Islam, and paid their special "2nd-class non-citizen" tax). So, in a way Islam had the first set of rules at something resembling "religious freedom" (as in "freedom to practice") mindset in the pre-Enlightenment world, so much so that it was quite common for European religious minorities to migrate to Islamic countries when things got really bad in Europe, kind of like when nowadays a North Korean dissident runs to China to escape oppression: from his perspective, a huge improvement; from ours, not so much. Evidently, at some point things in Europe started to improve at a faster rate than in the Middle East Islam, then surpassed them, and now we're the ones who look at them as the oppressive bad guys.

      So, not so much the use of violence to spread Islam, but the use of violence to spread Sharia law, which, although a closely related subject, isn't quite the same thing.

      --
      Conservatism: (n.) love of the existing evils. Liberalism: (n.) desire to substitute new evils for the existing ones.
    28. Re:Really? by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 2

      That means then that about a billion+ muslims in the world are not really muslims, because they're not busy spreading Islam through violence.

      What is it going to be? Are you going to legitimize a fringe set of muslim radicals as the only true muslims, or are you going to stop the Culture War that morons on both ends are itching to start?

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    29. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I also live in a city without a nationally competitive sports franchise, there is something to be said for the peace and quiet.

      So how is Detroit these days?

    30. Re:Really? by dskoll · · Score: 5, Informative

      Then you don't know anything about Islam other than what you think you've learned from news sites and CNN.

      Go read the Qu'ran. There are plenty of instances in which religiously-motivated violence is condoned or even instructed. Of course, the apologists will immediately cite other examples from the Qu'ran that contradict that. The nice thing about Islam is that its followers can pick and choose: Show the peaceful bits to the ignorant dhimmi and the violent bits to the true followers. You'll never get a straight answer.

      This is not unique to Islam, of course. Most religions have similar contradictions that allow believers to pick-and-choose according to the situation and the audience. The problem is that currently, Islam's violent underpinnings are causing far more problems for the world than the violent underpinnings of other religions.

    31. Re:Really? by dskoll · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I posted citations from the Qu'ran itself. No secondary sources needed to show that Islam condones and promotes religiously-motivated violence.

    32. Re:Really? by Pranadevil2k · · Score: 2

      "They think we are violent and terrible people, let's go be violent and terrible to prove them wrong!"

    33. Re:Really? by dskoll · · Score: 1

      Oh wait, on slashdot, anti Islamic opinions are a citable source.

      I cited the Qu'ran over here.

    34. Re:Really? by Chrisq · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Islam also says that, if you bring someone into your house, you have to protect them from harm. One of it's central tenets(one of the Pillars) is charity. During the Middle ages, the Middle East under Islam was one of the safest places in the world to live in if you were Jewish, much more so than in Europe.

      So, because Christians in Europe used to be violent to other religions you are saying its OK for the Muslims to do it now.

      During the Crusades Muslims allowed Christians and Jews to practice their religions freely, paying only a small tax, while Christian crusaders generally enforced a convert or die approach.

      Tell the whole truth. This payment was seen as acceptance of subjugation, and If someone had agreed to pay jizya, leaving Muslim territory for non-Muslim land was punishable by enslavement if they were ever captured. Also at times it was a heavy rather than light imposition. In addition to this Non Muslims were not allowed to practice their faith in the open, display religious symbols, or build or repair places of worship. They would also not be allowed to testify against Muslims, which is why today so many non-Muslim women raped by muslims have it thrown out as "no case to answer".

      And for the record, the Old Testament of the Bible also condones and recommends killing to spread the religion, or even just to take land that you want, and it's ok as long as they don't believe.

      And I would be as opposed to Christians or Jews doing this as I am to Muslims doing it. The fact is that they don't any more, whereas Muslims do,

    35. Re:Really? by jbolden · · Score: 1

      I don't know about crushing blasphemy. For most of Christian America a huge chunk of all the television and movies that come into their homes are hostile to their values. The books on sale in books stores, the internet, video games... I think Americans are better they have learned to understand their beliefs are their beliefs and not everyone else's.

      They hit back mostly by saying nasty stuff about other people.

    36. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Number of Christian bounties on people for purely religious reasons currently is....?

    37. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      During the Crusades Muslims allowed Christians and Jews to practice their religions freely, paying only a small tax, while Christian crusaders generally enforced a convert or die approach.

      I think you misunderstand what "free" means.
      Those crusaders were right, by the way. All those people who didn't convert are now dead.

    38. Re:Really? by Chrisq · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Surely this is not what Islam and the Koran truly stands for?

      And what if it is? It seems to me that Islam does condone (hell no, recommend) the use of violence to spread Islam.

      Then you don't know anything about Islam other than what you think you've learned from news sites and CNN.

      No, I've studies the Qur'an and listened to the dictates and fatwas of Imams and it certainly is what Islam decrees

    39. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, but that was close to 500 YEARS AGO. Christianity has evolved and we should expect the same from other religions.

    40. Re:Really? by Chrisq · · Score: 1

      And Christianity is different how? Yet there are plenty of peaceful Christians around who denounce the violence.

      You have answered your own question.

    41. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You are defending the Qu'ran by comparing it to the Bible? You religious people are crazy.

    42. Re:Really? by mblase · · Score: 1

      Please, will the sensible and non-crazy muslims please stand up already and disown these lunatics?

      They do, actually. It's just not as interesting news fodder, so nobody hears it.

    43. Re:Really? by jbolden · · Score: 1

      I'm searching and they seem infrequent. I'm seeing 3 from LA for the Lakers over the last dozen years and those seem to be mostly property damage. 1984 Detroit Tigers.

    44. Re:Really? by dskoll · · Score: 1

      Islamic countries have a long history of keeping several non-Islamic religious groups within its borders, all of them relatively untouched, unharmed, and even with self-governing rights.

      Depends. If you are Jewish or Christian, then yeah... you get to live as a subservient member of society. If you're Bahá'í in Persia, the wonderful Islamic republic puts you on a hit list.

    45. Re:Really? by Rob+the+Bold · · Score: 3, Interesting

      the underlying theme in koran writings IS that the dhimmis (ie, all of us non-moslems) are to be conquered or killed. eventually. until then, they are allowed to lie to us and do whatever it takes in order to secure their future.

      LOOK IT UP.

      Are you sure you are not interpreting the Koran -- assuming you've read it -- through the Christian Protestant, and in particular, fundamentalist, lens of sola scriptura, that is, that the holy book contains all necessary knowledge of the faith? Are you sure that this is also the Islamic standard of exegesis as well?

      --
      I am not a crackpot.
    46. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      No peace can be brought about by any religion.

      Do you actually believe this?

      [...] only pointing fingers at Islam [...]

      So shutup.

      Because if you do actually believe that, why are you telling the parent to shut up? They're pointing out the case of a religion ultimately bringing violence, not peace, which supports your first statement. Should you not want this told loudly, regardless of the religion? Or do you desire religious violence, ultimately?

    47. Re:Really? by photon317 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Really, the Middle East wasn't too bad in the early part of the 20th century, either. They were joining the modern world at a decent pace, women's rights were strong, they had universities with open-minded debates, female students, and even female politicians and leaders. They had open discourse on politics and religion, and generally everyone in the region was reasonably tolerant of others' religions.

      It's the *modern* Middle East that's the problem. The *modern* Islamist rule in the region turned everything upside down with a new interpretation of "fundamentalist" Islam and started enforcing it on their societies. There are still living (old) people in the Middle East who remember how it was before all of this, and they're ashamed of what their countries have become. Religion evolves, and it's fair to say that the plurality of the modern practitioners of Islam in the Middle East represent a very different religion than the more peaceful and progressive variant that preceded it.

      There may be an interpretation of Islam that's peaceful, but there are clearly also interpretations that are not. As with Christianity, the important thing in the moment is: which side is winning Islam's internal debate and controlling the majority of its political actions on the world stage?

      --
      11*43+456^2
    48. Re:Really? by gman003 · · Score: 2

      So what we need are sensible, non-crazy members of $religion who act like crazy people to bring in ratings.

      Maybe I should practice frothing while shouting about how while I disagree with your religion, I respect your right to practice it inasmuch as it does not harm others. And then I'll randomly reference long-dead politicians ("Charles W. Fairbanks would never have tolerated such buffoonery! The very concept of the thing would have driven Marcus Lepidus into fits! ALL MY OPPONENTS ARE PRACTICING BOLSHEVIKS!").

    49. Re:Really? by circletimessquare · · Score: 2, Interesting

      i always found it interesting and weird that:

      1. islam initially spread through violent conquest (the middle east), then later through peaceful conversion (bangladesh, indonesia)

      2. while christianity initially spread through peaceful conversion (the mediterranean), then later through violent conquest (south and central america)

      now the christian world is increasingly peaceful, while the muslim world is increasingly violent

      it's a weird historical contrast

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    50. Re:Really? by Bongo · · Score: 2

      There's 1.5 billion Mulsims (a 1500 year old tradition) and there's a few thousand actual violent terrorists.

      Somewhere between those two numbers is Political Islamism, sorta like the American Christian far right who believe secular laws are inferior to God's laws. These are people who believe in a kind of freedom: ie. you are free to do anything you like as long as it isn't forbidden by the Koran or the Hadiths (the sacred examples set by the life of the prophet (a lot of Westerners think it is all about the Koran, but the Hadiths and the abrogations are a bigger part of the story of what they take as moral guidance, and the prophet's life was that of a tribal warrior)).

      It is anyone's guess what percentage of the Muslim world supports and would vote for political Islamism.

      If even the USA, one of the most developed countries, still has a large percentage of people who believe Creationism and oppose abortion on religious grounds, you can just imagine what that percentage might be in the rest of the world, and how political Islamism might be a big movement, and decider in the fate of nations.

      Politics means getting power without resorting to violence, even if your aims are in the end imposing an oppressive system -- you just play the long game to gradually extend your influence. Turkey for example, seemed to be more secular before, but nowadays seems to becoming more of an Islamist state. And Turkey was considered something of a leader towards secular values.

    51. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "The nice thing about Islam is that its followers can pick and choose: Show the peaceful bits to the ignorant dhimmi and the violent bits to the true followers. You'll never get a straight answer. "

      Gee, just like Christians and the Bible.

    52. Re:Really? by Bobakitoo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Christianity has evolved and we should expect the same from other religions.

      Christianity did not evolve(eg: listen to the current pope's message for example), we simply mocked the shit out of it. Christianity learn it's place and is no longer a threat to the civilized world. The void its demise left in our societies was left empty on purpose. It is not a opportunity for Islam to take over and we must make that very clear by mocking the shit out of their religion too.

    53. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They are no worse than the Christians were circa ~1500's

      This, however, is the 21st f*cking century. The ideas of Jihad, kill the infidels, heresy and blasphemy are concepts that SHOULD have vanished with the Middle Ages. ( This applies to all of today's religions )

      The modern era has no place for those who continue to cling to religious ideology. Certainly no place for the zealots who believe the rest of the world should be sympathetic to their line of thinking.

    54. Re:Really? by alexgieg · · Score: 1

      Depends. If you are Jewish or Christian, then yeah... you get to live as a subservient member of society. If you're Bahá'í in Persia, the wonderful Islamic republic puts you on a hit list.

      I don't know much about Iran or Baha'i, so I can't comment, but I remember that in the Sunni areas the criteria was broader than tolerance only towards Jews and Christians. These two are obvious cases of "people of the book" given they're explicitly mentioned as such in the Koran, but the book also says something about God sending prophets to other peoples, meaning it's open for Islamic scholars to identify those others. For example, I read a few years ago that Hindu ones (in what today is Pakistan) had, after studying the Vedas and related literature in the 17th century, concluded Hinduism, even though polytheistic, was such a case of "people of the book", hence that Hindu practitioners would be allowed to keep self-contained communities and practice their religion if at some point India were to become a Sharia country. I didn't read anything about Buddhism, but by analogy I guess the same would apply to them. In regards to Baha'i though, no idea.

      --
      Conservatism: (n.) love of the existing evils. Liberalism: (n.) desire to substitute new evils for the existing ones.
    55. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      Go read the Qu'ran. There are plenty of instances in which religiously-motivated violence is condoned or even instructed. Of course, the apologists will immediately cite other examples from the Qu'ran that contradict that. The nice thing about Islam is that its followers can pick and choose: Show the peaceful bits to the ignorant dhimmi and the violent bits to the true followers. You'll never get a straight answer.

      Actually, the repugnant ones are the ones that count. The early verses are the ones with all the niceness, the later the nasty. The included instruction that if two verses seem to conflict, the later is the one that should be followed puts it in perspective. The muslims that seem to be nice to you are following the instruction to deceive the infidels (until the opportunity to take over presents itself).

    56. Re:Really? by Mike+Buddha · · Score: 1

      During the Crusades Muslims allowed Christians and Jews to practice their religions freely, paying only a small tax, while Christian crusaders generally enforced a convert or die approach.

      This is patently false. Non-Muslims living under Muslim rule were required to pay a tax to show their subjugation. There are many accounts of Muslims living in the crusader kingdoms praising the feudal system of the crusaders which allowed them self-governance, something they didn't have living under Muslim rulers.

      There were instances of slaughter during the crusades after sieges had been broken, but these were motivated more by greed than religious intolerance, as were most of the actions during the crusades.

      --
      by Mike Buddha -- Someday the mountain might get him, but the law never will.
    57. Re:Really? by Pinky's+Brain · · Score: 1

      The Koran is the less important part of Islamic dogma (just like the Bible is for Catholicism and the Torah is for Judaism). It's all about the Hadith (and the Magisterium for Catholicism and Talmud for Judaism).

      As for what the Hadith stand for ... well it ain't pretty.

    58. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, because Christians in Europe used to be violent to other religions you are saying its OK for the Muslims to do it now.

      How did you get that out of the words of the GP? I think you're stretching them out of any reasonable meaning in order to get some empty strawman rhetoric to challenge, but to assure you, no, the purpose of the words was not anywhere close to your interpretation, but was simply providing a historical context to show what the problem isn't, namely an intrinsic character unique or specific to Islam.

      Sorry, but it isn't.

      The problem is people.

      And I would be as opposed to Christians or Jews doing this as I am to Muslims doing it. The fact is that they don't any more, whereas Muslims do,

      Don't be so sure they wouldn't try. The Christian Identity/Dominionism movement is still around. They may not have quite as much noise, but they do exist.

    59. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are simply lying - there is no such thing in Qur'an . If there was you WOULD be in trouble ...
      So yes you should listen to your own advice - look it up and you'll se it's not true ... but somehow I think you are not well intentioned and you are just trolling :)

    60. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, because Christians in Europe used to be violent to other religions you are saying its OK for the Muslims to do it now. - where did he even mention that? Hating too much i say

    61. Re:Really? by MartinSchou · · Score: 1

      Personally I would like do donate to a bounty on Pakistani Railway Minister Ghulam Ahmad Bilour.

      I don't want him dead or injured.

      I just want to see a ... Let's say three minute video wherein his naked ass is spanked repeatedly with pig-skin sandals covered in dog shit.

      Maybe with a nicely styled chant along the lines of "this is what happens to intolerant hate mongers".

      And make absolutely sure that there can be no doubt as to the identity of the person being spanked.

    62. Re:Really? by macbeth66 · · Score: 2

      Actually, the Crusades were a result of fear.

      The Christians feared the increasing incursions of the Arabs into the West and banded together to push back the invaders. The best way to do that is to attack their homeland.

      What was done to the Arab people during the Crusades was no better or worse than what the Arabs invaders did to the Christian people. That is not a justification of what was done, but it helps to understand why thing happen.

      The fear of Islam, rational or not, is still ingrained into the minds of the Christians. They are not sure why they should fear Islam, but they know they are to be feared.

    63. Re:Really? by scamper_22 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Sensible, non-crazy, fairly secular Muslim here.

      I've spoken out in favor of free-speech and reform... but you know what. I'm tired of people like you thinking us other Muslims can somehow fix the 'crazy' Muslims.

      There is a reasonable reading of the Islamic text that does mean, you need to spread the Islamic state and when in a position of power to enforce blasphemy laws. This is simply a rather orthodox Islamic position.

      So, I can't 'convince' the 'extreme' Muslims to go against a pretty reasonable reading of the texts. The same text that says pray 5 times a day and tells Muslims how to pray is the same one that tell Muslim women to put on the veil and spread the Islamic state.

      FYI... Islam is not just the Koran. You need the Hadith as well. Hint... the Koran never even says pray 5 times a day. The Koran says follow Mohamed... so what Mohamed did is recorded in the Hadith. Most of what Muslims actually practice is in the Hadith.

      Now that I've given you some background.
      Let me tell you who you should turn your demands towards. Your ridiculous governments who have such a perverse view of rights.

      Religious rights are extreme. As long as someone can say something is part of their religion... somehow that means they should be able to do it.

      Let me tell you how I see it. I live in Canada. Not exactly land of liberty, but a pretty free country.

      This is a country where the government takes control of healthcare, can actually deny me treatment, can control a restaurants use of transfat oil, can send me to jail for smoking a plant, takes half my income to fund, can send in child-care workers if I spank my child, monopolizes the school system...

      My point of all this is not to complain about my rights being infringed or anything. Just to show how much government interferes with my 'rights' already.

      Yet this same government finds it a violation of 'rights' to tell Muslim women they can't wear the niqab. Yeah, which does more social harm. Me wanting to eat fish and chip cooked with transfat oil... or a Muslim women possibly being forced to wear the niqab due to social customs and isolating her and preventing social cohesion.

      And do you know who sits on all these government bureaucracies. It's not us Muslims. It's your fellow 'white' Canadians or American. Who sits on Human rights tribunals or drafts legislation?

      We have real social issues in the Muslim community. And you 'white Canadians/Americans' actually work to support the 'extremists'. You don't stand up for your Western values... then you suddenly demand us 'moderate' Muslims do everything for you.

      Classic Blasphemy example with this video. It pits freedom of speech against a theocracy. And what does the leader of the free world say? What does Barack Obama say? Does he come out in strong support of Free Speech and Western Values? What does Hilary Clinton say? They spend their effort talking about how offensive the film is.

      Heck, even George Bush... the so called... 'cowboy' barely stood up for Western values.

      Heck, I wonder if Nazism was a religion today, if you Western people wouldn't just sit there trying to be tolerant of it in the name of freedom of religion.

      The only people standing up for Western values are the 'crazy' white people... as you would probably call them. In the UK... it's the EDL. In the US, prolly people you'd refer to as rednecks. In Canada... its our 'rednecks'.

      So pardon me for not going out of my way anymore.
      I was born Muslim. I care about my people and my community, but I've stopped caring. I don't care anymore if you think Islam is a horrible religion. I don't care to defend it. I'm just tired.

      If you Western people won't even stand up for your values and way of life... why should I?

    64. Re:Really? by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1

      Then you don't know anything about Islam other than what you think you've learned from news sites and CNN.

      Perhaps he has actually read the Quran and found it there, like many others.

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    65. Re:Really? by Randle_Revar · · Score: 1

      Huh, really? Maybe I should read/watch local news... no, not worth it. As bad as national news shows are, local ones are worse. I am surprised though, I have not seen anything about that kind of thing here (Seattle/PNW in general). Well, ok, there was that one recently in Vancouver, BC...some hockey thing I think? But that is the *only* one I have heard of.

    66. Re:Really? by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1

      It's hardly violent to think you should fight people who don't respect the law of the land that they live on.

      So just pronouncing a religiously oppressive regime "the law of the land" suddenly makes it all right?

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    67. Re:Really? by X0563511 · · Score: 1

      ... and that somehow excuses the Qu'ran? Both are wrong in that respect.

      --
      For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
    68. Re:Really? by Vermonter · · Score: 0

      The Old Testament is full of examples of God's judgement against specific people. No where were the Israelites allowed to choose who to attack, or what land to take.

    69. Re:Really? by X0563511 · · Score: 1

      Yes it is, as it is referring to the primary source. The source IS the text, so go read it.

      --
      For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
    70. Re:Really? by ccguy · · Score: 1

      It's hardly violent to think you should fight people who don't respect the law of the land that they live on.

      You must be an American.

      What if those people are respecting the laws of the land *they* live on and you just happen to get pissed from overseas? Still hardly violent to burn their embassies?

    71. Re:Really? by DigiShaman · · Score: 0

      That's a lot of sand out there in the Middle East. They're just itching to have it turned into glass. Arn't they? It's sad to see a train wreck happening in slow motion between Islam and the West. No, as an American, we will *not* fall on the Islamic sword for their barbaric ass-backwards way of life.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    72. Re:Really? by tilante · · Score: 2

      The Jewish Bible says that anyone who sacrifices to any other god is to be destroyed (Exodus 22:20), and that it's okay to make slaves out of unbelievers (Leviticus 25:44-46). Obviously, no peace can be made with belief systems like that.

    73. Re:Really? by nedlohs · · Score: 2

      Yes because it also isn't peaceful, but instead supports keeping and beating slaves, killing people for their beliefs, punishing people for what their ancestors have done, etc, etc.

      What idiot was claiming it was peaceful? Or was it just the voices in your head?

    74. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have to understand, A book made by a divine authour versus a book made by hundreds of collected tales from diverse is two very different things

    75. Re:Really? by Galestar · · Score: 1

      The way I read his comment is that he is condemning both, not defending one. Both books preach violence and other more horrible acts.

      --
      AccountKiller
    76. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, Cleveland is supposed to be a really nice place to live.

    77. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hint - college kiddies getting drunk and knocking shit over on campus during/after playoffs is not the same as Major Riots After Sporting Events. For one thing, riots tend to involve adults...

    78. Re:Really? by nedlohs · · Score: 2

      So what?

      Yes christians are also lunatic nut jobs who love to force people to agree with them and do as they say. How does that have any bearing on Islam and muslims?

      Pol Pot killed less people Hitler or Stalin, so that makes him OK???

      And the historic low points for various people's are irrelevant anyway. The here and now is what matters, and the historic highs for reference - though I'm pretty sure Muslims and Christians are both more able to openly practice their religions in say Australia than anywhere in the Middle Ages. Other than the bits of their religions that involve forcing others to do or not do things.

    79. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey, I live in Sacramento, too!

    80. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Denying a reference due to lack of convenience is not the same as the reference not existing.

    81. Re:Really? by cellocgw · · Score: 1

      Please, will the sensible and non-crazy muslims please stand up already and disown these lunatics?
      IIRC, last weekend there were a few large demonstrations by Islamic residents of Syria *in support* of the USA. Whether this represents the majority of Muslims in that country remains to be seen. It also does nothing to counter the fundamental (oops) problem that organized religion is just plain insanity.

      --
      https://app.box.com/WitthoftResume Code: https://github.com/cellocgw
    82. Re:Really? by Psyborgue · · Score: 4, Informative
      Actually. the problem with Islam is the followers cannot pick and choose.

      2:106: None of Our revelations do We abrogate or cause to be forgotten, but We substitute something better or similar: Knowest thou not that Allah Hath power over all things?

      What that passage, and other similar passages in the Quran. have been interpreted to mean is that if two verses contradict each other, the latter verse abrogates (cancels) the previous. As the verse implies. Allah can do all things, including change his mind (or as believers would argue, change his commands to better suit changing times). Now the Quran is not arranged chronologically but i'll give you a hint what the last written chapter is. Sura 9. This means that all that peaceful stuff earlier in the Quran, written when Muslims were a minority in Mecca and it was convenient to preach tolerance towards religion were all cancelled by verses like 9:5. There shall be no compulsion in religion? Gone. Thankfully not all Muslims know about abrogation and of those who do, only a minority take seriously.

    83. Re:Really? by cellocgw · · Score: 1

      Maybe in Europe but in the USA no we don't have frequent sports riots.
      For what definition of "frequent"? Plenty of post-game uncontrolled crowd behavior after Div1AA football games, near-guaranteed riots after a football, basketball, or hockey pro championship, etc.

      --
      https://app.box.com/WitthoftResume Code: https://github.com/cellocgw
    84. Re:Really? by similar_name · · Score: 2

      You didn't cite anything so what is there to deny? So here is a verse from the Koran:

      "Surely those who believe, and those who are Jews, and the Christians, and the Sabians -- whoever believes in God and the Last Day and does good, they shall have their reward from their Lord. And there will be no fear for them, nor shall they grieve"

      To be fair, like any religion anyone can pick and choose whatever suites them. While all religion spouts that morality is absolute, few provide a basis for morality that isn't contradicting.

    85. Re:Really? by ravenscar · · Score: 5, Insightful

      People like you amuse me. When someone criticizes a non-Christian religion you respond with "Well, the Bible is bad too..."

      Why do you feel that everyone that criticizes a non-Judeo-Chrisitian religion must be a Judeo-Christian? Couldn't it be possible, for example, that a person who rejects Islam because of it's seemingly violent nature rejects Judeo-Christianity for the same reason?

    86. Re:Really? by dskoll · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I don't know much about Iran or Baha'i, so I can't comment,

      Then it's time you learned.

      I went to university with a guy from Iran who literally escaped death by fleeing overland to Afghanistan, thence Pakistan and finally Canada. He had to redo his entire engineering degree because the Iranian officials who wanted him dead would not release proof that he had graduated from university in Iran.

    87. Re:Really? by dskoll · · Score: 1

      You need to learn how to read in context.

      So do you. You may recall that I wrote: You'll never get a straight answer. Thanks for illustrating my point for me.

      The Qu'ran calls for murder and war. Context be damned; it's hate literature.

    88. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Please, will the sensible and non-crazy muslims please stand up already and disown these lunatics?"
      .
      .
      .
      crickets...

    89. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some power hunger people saw religious extremism as a path to power and took it. Happens all the time unfortunately and it's why the church must remain separate from the state.

    90. Re:Really? by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      Really?

      http://www.isna.net/events/Special-Announcement/ISNA-Statement-on-Profane-Video-of-Prophet-Muhammad.aspx

      Note it leads with condemning the video, the half way through mentions that their was some violence in response. Two sentences mentioning the violence is enough since then it is back to condemning the "extremists" who made a video. Nowhere does it say anything like "The people commiting this violence are abusing the name of Islam and their actions show that they are not true followers of Mohammad."

      Contrast with a random google example of another relgion responding to violence carried out by people calling themselves members of it: http://articles.latimes.com/1987-11-16/news/mn-14195_1_catholic-bishops

    91. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > now the christian world is increasingly peaceful, while the muslim world is increasingly violent
      Yes, we are peaceful, but no, we aren't increasingly peaceful. In Europe, at the moment, at least, I think there's no increase, and no decrease, either in the peacefulness of christians.
      For the rest of the world... well... I don't have any data. Sure, I have read some stories about those christian fundamentalist idiots in the part of the u.s. of a. called 'the bible belt', and I've read that those idiots are aggressive (and I'm pretty sure their aggressivity was the root cause of atheists all around the world thinking that all religious people are idiots), but I can't find any information about whether they are more aggressive or more peaceful now than some decades ago.
      Of course, this is just my opinion, and my experiences are from a very small area.

    92. Re:Really? by alexgieg · · Score: 1

      Then it's time you learned.

      Yep. I didn't mean that Iran wasn't persecuting, only that I didn't know anything specific about the Baha'i persecution, which is only one among many persecutions that go on over there. If that makes any difference, I know they also go after traditional Muslims, particularly their mystics (Saudi Arabia also does that towards Sunni mystics). One of the most awesome religious philosophers I've studied, Hossein Nasr, is Iranian, and he lost everything in that revolution of theirs and had to emigrate. Iran is a very scary place.

      But it should be noted that Iran's scariness comes from other sources than mere Islam. The revolutionaries adopted the works of German philosopher Martin Heidegger as their political ideology. Heidegger is a genius in a lot of philosophical fields, but one in which he definitely wasn't up to speed with sanity was in his belief in Nazism. When you theocratic literalism of the Iranian revolutionary kind with that, the results are ugly.

      --
      Conservatism: (n.) love of the existing evils. Liberalism: (n.) desire to substitute new evils for the existing ones.
    93. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As the onus is on you to provide links, please do.

      You are trying to convince all of us that you are correct, either you could look up links yourself, once and save the rest of us time. Or you could tell us to look it up ourselves, which means hundreds if not thousands must then go googling for what you claim to have examples of. It is a waste of human resources, and it means that most of the people who read your post will ignore it, as you sounds like a hyperbolic.

      I have heard of VERY few US sports riots. We are 9 months into the year, you should be able to find me three good sports riots in the US for this year. If you cannot, then there are not nearly as many US sports riots as you claim.

      Ohh BTW you have a 4 digit UID. You should know better.

    94. Re:Really? by Quila · · Score: 1

      Much of the Old Testament was superseded by the New Testament. The God of Anger and Hate was replaced by the God of Peace and Love. For example, you are no longer supposed to execute people for working on the Sabbath. Unfortunately, Mohammed decided to crib his new theology mainly from the Old Testament.

      Get back with me when the Quran gets a New Testament.

      No, I'm not even Christian, but the difference between the two is quite obvious. Equivocation is a cop-out.

    95. Re:Really? by KiloByte · · Score: 1

      Since it's the radicals who follow the book as written, yes, they are the only true muslims. Paying lip service and calling yourself a muslim does not mean you're really one. You're confusing this with Christianity which is impossible to follow without thorough cherry-picking; Koran sends a pretty consistent message.

      People try to take some passages out of context, like 2:109 which calls for forgiveness for christians and jews, but nearby you're told it is only because no one should be denied a chance to convert to Islam. And if they refuse "the truth", then well, what to do next is reiterated so many times inside the Koran.

      Or, putting it another way, 86:17 "So give a respite to the disbelievers. Deal thou gently with them for a while.". Further explained in 9:5 "Then, when the sacred months have passed, slay the idolaters wherever ye find them, and take them (captive), and besiege them, and prepare for them each ambush. But if they repent and establish worship and pay the poor-due, then leave their way free. Lo! Allah is Forgiving, Merciful."

      --
      The creatures outside looked from Alt-Right to Antifa; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
    96. Re:Really? by CdBee · · Score: 1

      Actually its not entirely wrong - in Jerusalem a vibrant Jewish population was protected and respected by Saladin, and later slaughtered by European knights when the city was taken.

      --
      I have been a user for about 10 years. This ends Feb 2014. The site's been ruined. I'm off. Dice, FU
    97. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Already happening:
      http://www.cnn.com/video/?hpt=hp_bn2#/video/world/2012/09/24/damon-benghazi-armed-militias.cnn

    98. Re:Really? by ryzvonusef · · Score: 1

      As the Resident Pakistani Slashdotteur (lol a la francaise), allow me to elucidate.

      Frankly, our dear PM is pulling a Kirchner. You might be wondering, what the hell does the Argentine President have to do with this? The answer is: both pull-out totally unrelated issues to hide the real deal. For Kirchner it's the Falklands, for our dear prime-minister, its the religion card.

      The economy is in the shitter, our PM raison d'etre is to prevent our president from being jailed (no really, that is why he was appointed, to continue the job when the court dismissed the other one for doing the same), people are jobless, we have rolling blackouts, and the government is doing literally nothing except scheme to extend their reign.

      So when your popularity is below that of a rabid dog, you will clutch at straws. And how nice of the US to provide some.

      And then our leaders will conveniently realise they are Muslims, and suddenly act all pious. The bastards, even the president of Uruguay is more muslim than you!

      Fear not, this is just hot air, our PM will just bark out popular sentiments, and ride out the wave. And when his popularity graph is high, and people have been sufficiently distracted from the fact that people are summarily shipping their entire frikin' factories en masse to such *backward* locations as Bangladesh and Kenya, they will go back to saving the President from the Swiss courts.

      (I have lived in Kenya ['94-'99], best fucking place in the universe, everything I have ever learnt, I owe it to my black, christian, teachers there. They knocked into me my habit of reading, and I can't thank them enough)

      Look, we know the real deal, we know that the Friday holiday (with conveniently down cellphone networks) was not about protesting, it was for their thugs to have a grand loot.

      And our dear blasphemy law, you think non-muslims are the only target? It's a very convenient law to eliminate people you don't like, muslim or non-muslim (like the poor building owner, who was *turned* in by his non paying tenant...)

      Our *democracy* is a farce, our people are intentionally being kept illiterate by feudal lords (best thing India ever did was to eliminate the landlord system).We have no fucking clue what the hell is going on.

      Like my MNA (representative), he has never shown his bloody face in my area (he is being implicated in a drug scandal, btw), but was here on friday to hold up the road (he held a rally in the friggin' crossroads! which I don't blame him, since we don't actually have open spaces or parks...) To remind us he was a full blooded Muslim, and thus we should vote for him, er.. DOWN WITH THE INFIDELS!

      So please, please, don't associate us with our damn politicians. We didn't elect them, we can't control them, we don't even know them.

      As the joke goes, we have three type of people in Pakistan: Those who are too poor to move abroad, those who who are tying to move abroad, and those who have come back from abroad to rule the roost.

      By the way, I suggest y'all hop by /r/pakistan (and /r/islam for that matter) sometimes. Come to the dark side, we have nihari :P

      (Oh, and dear slashdot, please support character accents, or my french teacher will hang me from the university lamppost :P)

      --
      I am an ACCA student. Got a query on Accountancy/Finance? Maybe I can help!
    99. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The "Jewish Bible" doesn't say that. The Christian interpretation of the English translation of original hebrew says that.
      Meanwhile what the Jews understand from those words is quite different, since they have a tradition of interpretation alongside the original text.
      You don't even have a clue what a "slave" is in Judaism, since there is no Christian equivalent. Jewish "slaves" were the norm, not non-jewish. And only the extremely rich could *afford* them, since they had to be treated better than a regular contractor.

    100. Re:Really? by Psyborgue · · Score: 1

      I'm reading Sura 9 here and I don't seem to see any indication that it applies only towards those living in an Islamic state. If as you claim Sura 9 only refers to those who live in an Islamic state and not violent expansionism, how then did Muhammad manage to occupy such a large portion of the Middle East? Did he go door to door like the mormons? Did he do personality tests like the Scientologists? Did he pass out tracts and get on TV and proclaim you're going to hell unless you convert like the Christians? What a peaceful. progressive guy Muhammad was. I'm sure he never spread his religion by the sword. That would be barbaric! I mean it's not like mosque translates into "house of war" or anything!

    101. Re:Really? by CdBee · · Score: 1

      interesting post, thank you.

      --
      I have been a user for about 10 years. This ends Feb 2014. The site's been ruined. I'm off. Dice, FU
    102. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And for the record, the Old Testament of the Bible also condones and recommends killing to spread the religion, or even just to take land that you want, and it's ok as long as they don't believe.

      And I would be as opposed to Christians or Jews doing this as I am to Muslims doing it. The fact is that they don't any more, whereas Muslims do,

      Actually, they do. Israelis are systematically killing Palestinians to take their land, and doing so with biblical justifications. Bush the Younger referred to the war on terror as a "Crusade." There's no way of telling how many innocent Iraqis and Afghans have been killed by Christian soldiers because of their beliefs, but some elements of the U.S. Military have certainly encouraged the mass murder of innocent civilians based on the fact that they were Muslims: http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2012/09/lawsuit-total-war-islam/

      If anything, I think the religious killings by Christians and Jews are probably greater in number than those by Muslims. They aren't reported on in the same way - if you live in the U.S., you'll never see the U.S. or Israel accused of genocide by the media - but they're there whether you hear about them or not.

    103. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Christians don't behead enough people.

    104. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In case of the west they don't have to conquer anything. They just have to wait. The pagan western civilization is on it's way to die out all by itself (disasterous birth rate). Historically this will not be the first time when pagans dissapeared from the face of the world. Here is a challenge for you guys. Since the west is dying out, and Islam is grownig and procreating very well, according to Darwin they are simply better suited to the environment. Evolution is blind and does not care about "right" and "wrong". Seems like free speech, lack of religion, woman equality, free love and other "achievemnets" of the west are simply another dead end in the evolution of species. What an irony.

      JAM

    105. Re:Really? by Mike+Buddha · · Score: 1

      Actually its not entirely wrong - in Jerusalem a vibrant Jewish population was protected and respected by Saladin, and later slaughtered by European knights when the city was taken.

      Yes, when the siege of Jerusalem was broken, crusaders went on a rampage of raping, killing, and looting, like I said. The only reason eastern Christians weren't slaughtered was that they had been expelled from the city during the siege.

      The crusades were a travesty, but they were all about a money grab more than they were about religious righteousness. Opportunists took the call to secure a route to the holy lands from Constantinople and decided they'd set up their own kingdoms instead. The land grab had a heck of a recruiting pitch for the common man, though.

      --
      by Mike Buddha -- Someday the mountain might get him, but the law never will.
    106. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually in Islam u cant "pick and choose." Contradictions are acknowledged by scholars of Islam, but Muslims are instructed by the Quran that when 2 things contradict the latter "revelation" is the one to go with. In this case this is the one that instructs them to kill ppl who will not convert. This is why Islam's nickname has come to be "the religion of the sword." Violence is just part of it.

      The difference in Christianity is that things like the Crusades are in direct conflict w/ the Bible and all its teachings. In Islam they are the same.

      For example, in Christianity extremists who spew hate or violence are complete opposite of fundamentalists, but in Islam such fundamentalists and extremists are the same because it aligns with the teachings of the Quran.

    107. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I like the cut of your jib sir, I find your website interesting and would like to subscribe to your newsletter

    108. Re:Really? by dskoll · · Score: 2

      Gee, just like Christians and the Bible.

      Your point being... what? Christianity is nasty? Yeah, probably, but so what? Islam is just as nasty and is currently much nastier in practice.

      You also conveniently cut the rest of my post:

      This is not unique to Islam, of course. Most religions have similar contradictions that allow believers to pick-and-choose according to the situation and the audience.

    109. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Really, the Middle East wasn't too bad in the early part of the 20th century,

      All ending on the 14th of May, 1948?

    110. Re:Really? by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      And for the record, the Old Testament of the Bible also condones and recommends killing to spread the religion

      The Old Testament is the basis of Judism, Islam, and Christianity, but in the Christian faith the old covenant was overturned and a new covenant was put in its place. I haven't read the koran but it's possible Muhammed similarly changed the rules. But in Christianity at least, it is decidedly NOT ok to kill, period. Not for land, not for money (Christ was decidedly anti-greed), not even to spread Christianity. Just because some British and Italian big shots in the dark ages thought it was OK didn't change what Christ said.

    111. Re:Really? by ryzvonusef · · Score: 1

      First of all:
      http://www.foxnews.com/world/2012/09/24/pakistan-disowns-minister-100000-bounty-on-anti-islam-film-maker/

      Secondly Mr. Bilour is trying to distract people from the fact that he has nearly ruined Pakistan Railways (deliberately, I might add, since it competed with his family transport business of buses and trucks, of which he himself owns around 500)

      So if I were you, I would ignore his ramblings, he has no credibility left.

      --
      I am an ACCA student. Got a query on Accountancy/Finance? Maybe I can help!
    112. Re:Really? by Razgorov+Prikazka · · Score: 3, Informative

      Although you are right in the point that both books write about violence and other more horrible acts, there IS a difference, and it is this:

      First of all the bible is written in two distinct parts; the old testament and the new one. It is quite possibly the old testament that contains most violent and horrible acts. The old testament describes a god that is vengeful and grim. The smallest mischief and its all fire and brimstone on your puny little ass. Nevertheless, it is god himself who does that, and on those occasions when humans thought they could (or should) be violent, god intervened. This starts with Abel and Cain, where the latter killed the former, and he is punished by god. Even with Sodom & Gomorrah it is God who does all the killing NOT humans.
      Then there is the new testament. In part two of this novel a young protagonist has been send to right some wrongs. First he points out that he intimately knows the main character of part one personally and that he isn't half as bad-assed as described in part one. He goes on telling that God actually wants people to love each other. Casting of the first stone, turn the other cheek, love your neighbour as yourself, be nice to prostitutes and even the guy's from the IRS etcetera etcetera... the list goes on... Then he is treated very unfriendly and goes home.

      Then there is the Koran, This could be viewed as part 3 of the trilogy, OR as a re-write of part 1 & 2 with an alternative ending. Now to come to a good understanding of this book one should read it at least two times, because the chapters are not chronological but sorted in length. This was more convenient to... well who knows? Anyway, it is important to read it twice, first to have an overview, second time to understand the context of each chapter.
      Here God is portrayed as a bad-assed mofo again, but this time he is more like a got-father who tell's people (Muslims) to be violent against non-people (non-muslims). He goes so far as to call non-muslims monkeys and pigs, man he is ill-tempered! That violence is almost always in the form of killing, wich is commanded to the believer, can be found here (Sura 2:191), here (Sura 5:33), here (Sura 8:12), here (Sura 8:60*), here (Sura 8:65), here (Sura 9:5), here (9:29*), here (Sura 9: 123*) and finally here (47:4). Marked * are disputable, it all depends a bit which translation is being used one can be found here: http://www.universalunity.net/English_Translation_By_R_Khalifa.htm

      In short, the difference is that in Christianity being violent is God's job (and no one else's), in the Quran being violent is the job of the believer. There are scores of Christians who want to help God a little (wrongfully if they had read their book) and scores of Muslims who do not kill anyone (wrongfully if they had read their book).

      --
      rm -rf --no-preserve-root / ...and let /dev/null sort them out...
    113. Re:Really? by dcollins · · Score: 1

      And where do we look it up? Short quote, title, page number, please. Three quotes would be excellent.

      --
      We know where leadership by an anti-intellectual "strongman" who scapegoats minorities and likes boisterous rallies goes
    114. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, the 1% of the area of the Middle East that came under new leadership then was the cause of all problems before, during, and after that date. Just keep on saying that to yourself, and maybe it will come true!.

      Wait- 1%! I knew it, those 1%'ers are always causing trouble!

    115. Re:Really? by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      You can date the start of the violent christian conquests to the conversion of Constantine. The end to removal of religious leaders from secular power.

      Religion is basically a violent force whenever it has the power. If you think about what they believe, it's only logical that they use just a little force to save your soul. It's for your own good.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    116. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, not so much the use of violence to spread Islam, but the use of violence to spread Sharia law, which, although a closely related subject, isn't quite the same thing.

      If I'm at my wife's funeral (stoned to death for showing her legs in public), rubbing the stump where my hand used to be (for any one of a number of "offenses"), I'm not going to quibble about the difference between violence to spread Islam, and violence to spread Sharia law.

    117. Re:Really? by CanHasDIY · · Score: 1

      the underlying theme in koran writings IS that the dhimmis (ie, all of us non-moslems) are to be conquered or killed. eventually. until then, they are allowed to lie to us and do whatever it takes in order to secure their future.

      LOOK IT UP.

      I wish I was kidding. this is nasty, ugly shit, but its the basic overall guiding concept. it really is ;(

      no peace can be made with belief systems like that.

      Your premise is flawed, in that it requires ever Muslim on the planet (all 2,500,000,000+ of them) share the exact same dogmatic view. They don't, anymore than Catholics and the Westboro Baptist Church do.

      Had you said that every Christian believes it's OK to murder entire populaces (save the virgin daughters, that is; funny, there are a lot of stories in the "peaceful" Bible that end with wholesale slaughter and child-rape, all with the nodding approval of the Christian "God"), you'd be guilty of the same fallacious thinking.

      (cue the deniers in 5, 4, 3, 2, 1...

      Well, maybe if in the future you were to refrain from making obviously false blanket generalizations, no one would feel compelled to point out your hypocrisy.

      --
      An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
    118. Re:Really? by Myopic · · Score: 1

      The sensible Muslims are out there, especially here in the USA. The problem is that they are vastly outnumbered by the crazypants Muslims. It's not hard to find a peaceful freedom-loving American Muslim, if you look for him, but they don't tend to make the news, and they don't have very much influence over the crazy ones.

      I hope it takes less than a millennium to get almost everybody on the same page with atheism. It won't stop all the fighting but it will help.

    119. Re:Really? by CanHasDIY · · Score: 1

      The Muslims are not worse than what Christians used to be with the Crusades, the Inquisition, witch trials...

      Firebombing movie theaters, murdering abortion doctors, tormenting the families of dead soldiers...

      Religions can change, the problem is that Islam largely haven't.

      Just because you conveniently ignore the violence of modern "Christians," doesn't mean it's not happening. Pot, say hello to kettle.

      Perhaps you should consider removing the 2x4 from your own eye, before you whine about the dust speck in your neighbors. - Matthew 7:5

      --
      An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
    120. Re:Really? by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      There was a big riot in Tennesee just this past spring after a basketball playoff that resulted in many injuries and much destruction. It isn't unknown here, although it is more prevalent in Europe.

    121. Re:Really? by volmtech · · Score: 1

      The Catholic Church used violent conquest in the Americas, not Christians. The Popes have lots of blood on their hands. Some so called Christians will turn to violence occasionally but wholesale slaughter of "heretics" is reserved for papists.

    122. Re:Really? by Psyborgue · · Score: 1

      There is a reasonable reading of the Islamic text that does mean, you need to spread the Islamic state and when in a position of power to enforce blasphemy laws. This is simply a rather orthodox Islamic position.

      Islamophobe! Seriously, though. I really appreciate you being honest enough to acknowledge your religion has some serious problems and I empathize with your frustration, but you do realize that if I were to say the exact same thing you just did in public, I would be marginalized as an Islamophobe. See. There are organizations like CAIR who raise a stink every time somebody like me says something like you just did. You, on the other hand, could simply reply "but i'm a Muslim", and that would be the end of that. That's why people expect Muslims like yourself to stand up against the extremism. You're the only ones who can. Otherwise, things are going to get so bad that the backlash is going to take moderates like yourself with the extremists. I was very very happy to see what happened in Libya recently (the people rising up against Ansar Al Shariah and others). That sort of thing needs to happen more and people such as yourself can help "at home" by publicly telling the truth about Islam and urging more Muslims to chill out.

    123. Re:Really? by CanHasDIY · · Score: 1

      Maybe in Europe but in the USA no we don't have frequent sports riots.

      Think collegiate sports.

      --
      An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
    124. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...now the christian world is increasingly peaceful...

      Hardly.. It's the Christian world that's waging war in Iraq and Afghanistan and supporting right wing dictators in Central/South America since the beginning. Only the 'infidels' now are called 'terrorists' or 'communists'.

      now the christian world is increasingly peaceful, while the muslim world is increasingly violent

      it's a weird historical contrast

      Not really. It's like following a biorhythm chart. One part is up, the other down, and the other in the middle.

      The Muslims are ham fisted and clumsy, like the Russian mob. They'll destroy the planet to get their target. The Judeo-Christians have their drones (and James Bond), which normally, with their precision, are much better PR. It's just that wedding parties attract them like a trailer park attracts tornadoes.

        Hell, even the damn Buddhists are still at war with somebody. There is no peaceful religion, only by degree is one more 'peaceful' than the other, and then the poles swap. Let's find something new, shall we?

    125. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess that would make Part 4 is the Book of Mormon. Perhaps what we really need is a global prayer to ask God for just one more prophet, this one on live video stream to the whole planet, just so we can get it straight this time. Part 5: The Director's Cut.

    126. Re:Really? by CanHasDIY · · Score: 1

      The Koran is the less important part of Islamic dogma (just like the Bible is for Catholicism and the Torah is for Judaism). It's all about the Hadith (and the Magisterium for Catholicism and Talmud for Judaism).

      As for what the Hadith stand for ... well it ain't pretty.

      16 years as a Catholic, even went to Catholic school for a little while, and I never heard the term "Magisterium" before today (had to Wiki it just to be sure you weren't making shit up). Contrarily, we read from the Bible pretty much daily. One would think, if "Magisterium" were such a crucial part of Catholic life, I'd have heard it as some point prior to today.

      I call bullshit on your theory.

      --
      An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
    127. Re:Really? by alexgieg · · Score: 1

      If I'm at my wife's funeral (stoned to death for showing her legs in public), rubbing the stump where my hand used to be (for any one of a number of "offenses"), I'm not going to quibble about the difference between violence to spread Islam, and violence to spread Sharia law.

      Except that's not quite how the thing works. I don't know about the wife stoning, although I do remember the requirement is for women to use veils over their hair, and that's that (burqas are a cultural thing from some places, not others). As for the hand cutting, from what I studied of the Islamic schools of jurisprudence the rule is that it's only a valid punishment if the government provides for the the needs of the poor, thus there's absolutely no need for one to steal to stay alive, and hence that the thief's impulse to steal was 100% the result of an evil intent of his. Weren't it like this and we'd be seeing a huge amount of amputees in the news, clearly not the case.

      --
      Conservatism: (n.) love of the existing evils. Liberalism: (n.) desire to substitute new evils for the existing ones.
    128. Re:Really? by jbolden · · Score: 1

      Those incidents aren't riots.

    129. Re:Really? by scamper_22 · · Score: 1

      Yeah... you're scared of being labelled an Islamophobe... so you won't say anything. Which was my point... Western people have stopped caring.

      But I as a Muslim who has to risk my own life, my own family, my own community association...?

      As I said... I'm done. I don't care enough about what you think of Islam to care. If you don't care about Western values or the Western way of life to defend it,
      That's your issue.

      Then don't demand that we 'moderate' Muslims stand up.
      The least you can do before you demand we stand up, is you should stand up.

      I have my Freedom in Canada and I don't really care if the society becomes a little more anti-Islamic. If it gets really bad, maybe you'll actually start to care about your society.

      Again, I know politics and I'm not demanding you stand up. I'd like you to, but I know its challenging.

      I was simply responding to those who 'demand' Muslims speak up while they don't speak up themselves.

    130. Re:Really? by jbolden · · Score: 1

      I agree they happen. The claim was they were frequent.

    131. Re:Really? by Psyborgue · · Score: 1

      I wasn't even trying to say necessarily that the problem is that it's dangerous for me or could cause social troubles. The problem is nobody will listen. What would you have me say that would get people to listen? I'd love to know. I'd love to know how to get Muslims to reconsider the violent aspects of their religion -- convince them to ignore the ugly bits. I'd love to know how to convince my government that apologizing all day long is only going to make us look weak. I'd love to be able to convince some on the left that Islam is not necessarily a "Religion of Peace". I'd love to convince those in power that some alliances come at too great a cost. How do I do that? I know it's dangerous for you, but at least people might listen more. People would assume I was a bigot, a racist, an atheist, a christian, a jew, or whatever... It's like if I, being gay, were to say gay men were on the average probably a little more horny and often a little less careful than their heterosexual counterparts, that would be ok -- while if Paris Hilton says it she spends the rest of the week apologizing.

    132. Re:Really? by CanHasDIY · · Score: 1
      --
      An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
    133. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Heck, I wonder if Nazism was a religion today, if you Western people wouldn't just sit there trying to be tolerant of it in the name of freedom of religion.

      Actually, in America, we *are* tolerant of Nazism. You want to spout any tired, old rhetoric; go ahead; that's you're right.

      We do put our foot down when you use that rhetoric to affect other people, though. Talk about the crazy beliefs of a one-testicled Austrian house-painter all you want, and how one particular tribe of desert ex-nomads are somehow responsible for all the world's problems; we'll tolerate that. Follow through with (what you consider) the logical conclusions of those beliefs and prepare to get smacked down.

      THAT is Western values and way of life and that is something people stand up for all the time (in fact, this entire discussion is an argument in favor of it). Believe what you want; that's a cornerstone of those values.Just don't think you can force those beliefs on anyone else, be it through "blasphemy laws" or forcing a powerless segment of your population to wear certain clothing.

    134. Re:Really? by Psyborgue · · Score: 1

      Also, if we can't "fix" the loonies. What exactly can we do?

    135. Re:Really? by jbolden · · Score: 1

      Yep that has about 4 good ones. But that doesn't prove frequent, more or less all the time, which was the way back claim. Rather that list proves infrequent.

    136. Re:Really? by CanHasDIY · · Score: 1

      Yep that has about 4 good ones. But that doesn't prove frequent, more or less all the time, which was the way back claim. Rather that list proves infrequent.

      Depends on what metric we're using to measure frequency. Also, that is by no means a comprehensive list of all collegiate sports-related violence in this country.

      --
      An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
    137. Re:Really? by turgid · · Score: 1

      Are there any atheists in Pakistan? Or does that get you hanged?

    138. Re:Really? by jbolden · · Score: 1

      Yeah the original comment was vague. I took it as a high percentage of all championships (big number). But if it just means a few times a year... absolutely.

      I'd separate violence from rioting though.

    139. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And which "Koran" have you read? as far as i know the Qur'an doesnt use the word 'dhimmi', It uses other words to describe certain groups of people e.g 'Kaafir/Kufar' (disbeleivers), people of the Book, or even the tribes of Israel to name a few. Dhimmi refers to those 'non-muslim' people who live in Islamic countries. The Qur'an also forbids murder, suicide and lying among other things.
       
      so take your troll post elsewhere.

    140. Re:Really? by dskoll · · Score: 1

      It's somewhat premature to predict the dying out of Western civilization. If we project your trends further, the West will have low populations but quite a bit of wealth whereas Muslim countries will be overpopulated and probably barely able to feed their own people. We'll see who ends up surviving...

    141. Re:Really? by dskoll · · Score: 1

      ... in that it requires ever Muslim on the planet (all 2,500,000,000+ of them) share the exact same dogmatic view ...

      Muslims are not the problem.

      Islam is the problem. The fact that most Muslims are not evil is entirely unrelated to the fact that they profess to follow Islam and completely related to the fact that most people have basic human decency regardless of the twisted belief systems they're force-fed as kids.

    142. Re:Really? by CanHasDIY · · Score: 1

      ... in that it requires ever Muslim on the planet (all 2,500,000,000+ of them) share the exact same dogmatic view ...

      Muslims are not the problem.

      Islam is the problem. The fact that most Muslims are not evil is entirely unrelated to the fact that they profess to follow Islam and completely related to the fact that most people have basic human decency regardless of the twisted belief systems they're force-fed as kids.

      No; Islam, i.e. the religion itself, is an inanimate object - inanimate objects are incapable of good or evil. Rather, it is how the inanimate object is applied by people that is at issue. Might as well blame hammers for cracked skulls.

      One could just as easily substitute "Muslim" and "Islam" in your statement with any dogmatic belief system and its followers and come to an equally flawed conclusion.

      --
      An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
    143. Re:Really? by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      The Jews don't recognize the NT. Doesn't turn them into murdering monsters though.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    144. Re:Really? by Ch_Omega · · Score: 1

      "You are simply lying - there is no such thing in Qur'an . If there was you WOULD be in trouble ... So yes you should listen to your own advice - look it up and you'll se it's not true ... but somehow I think you are not well intentioned and you are just trolling :)"

      Surah 9. Nuff said.

    145. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also, if we can't "fix" the loonies. What exactly can we do?

      Stand up to them before they come to hunt you down in your homes?

      Hell, at least FIRE the dumb fuck who did this:

      Classic Blasphemy example with this video. It pits freedom of speech against a theocracy. And what does the leader of the free world say? What does Barack Obama say? Does he come out in strong support of Free Speech and Western Values? What does Hilary Clinton say? They spend their effort talking about how offensive the film is.

      Shit can Obama come November.

      Seriously. What the hell good is a progressive who won't stand up for free speech?

    146. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sensible, non-crazy members of [insert religion name here], while the majority, give very boring interviews that get bad ratings.

      If you look at the results of the elections from the Middle Eastern countries that were recently "liberated" by the Arab Spring, you will find that the MAJORITY elected into office the Muslim Brotherhood, whose goals are, amongst other things, to introduce Sharia Law, and who support the implementation of a world-wide United Nations sponsored blasphemy law.

      And lets not forget that the VAST majority of people in the United States will NEVER elect into office a secular humanist or an atheist.

      Your statement is based on ignorance and prejudice.

    147. Re:Really? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      islam initially spread through violent conquest (the middle east), then later through peaceful conversion (bangladesh, indonesia)

      Islam didn't really stop spreading through violent contest later on either (in Africa and Middle East), it just fractured and those factions started fighting each other more often than outsiders.

      . while christianity initially spread through peaceful conversion (the mediterranean), then later through violent conquest (south and central america)

      The history of violent spread of Christianity actually predates the colonization of Americas - Polabian Slavs, for example, were wiped out in what was effectively a Crusade in the 10th century, and Baltic peoples were subjugated in more of the same shortly afterwards. Also, even in those countries where the ruling elite converted willingly, the common people were often converted by force with a lot of bloodshed that often stopped just short of a civil war - Kievan Rus was one example of that, but elements were also seen in Scandinavia.

      Really, Christianity became violent as soon as it became a state religion in the Roman Empire. It makes sense, too - if you recall the founding myth, Constantine converted to Christianity after having a vision from Christ to put his symbol (Chi-Rho) on his battle banners before the battle with Maxentius. Of course a religion adopted in such circumstances could not truly retain its non-violent angle. Violent persecution of non-Christians in the Empire became shortly afterwards - less than 100 years later, St John Chrysostom was already preaching that, with respect to blasphemers, "should it be necessary to inflict blows, spare not to do so; smite him on the face; strike his mouth; sanctify your hand with the blow".

      Islam, on the other hand, was a state religion - or rather a religion which defined how the state and its mechanisms should work - from the get go. And it was also violent from the get go.

      From that I think it's reasonable to conclude that, once religion becomes directly involved in politics, it tends to get violent. State, by definition, is the organization which holds the monopoly of violence, and uses it - or usually the threat to exercise it - to enforce law and order. Once you get religion into that equation, it has to tolerate the use of state violence and threats in order to further its goals. From there, it's only one step to holy wars.

    148. Re:Really? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      The Islamic standard is Koran + Sunna, the latter coming mostly from the hadith - but accepted hadith do not contradict the point he has stated, at least not in mainstream Islamic schools.

    149. Re:Really? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      The specific verse he referred to is sura At-Tawba, verse 5.

      However, when interpreting verses, don't forget about abrogation. What Muhammad said or did later in time is considered binding over what he said or did earlier, if the two are in conflict. Note that the suras themselves are not given in chronologic order, so you need to look at their context to know what's happening when.

    150. Re:Really? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      I don't know much about Iran or Baha'i, so I can't comment, but I remember that in the Sunni areas the criteria was broader than tolerance only towards Jews and Christians. These two are obvious cases of "people of the book" given they're explicitly mentioned as such in the Koran, but the book also says something about God sending prophets to other peoples, meaning it's open for Islamic scholars to identify those others.

      Don't forget that Muhammad is the "seal of the prophets" in Islam. Which basically means that he's the last and the final prophet who brings the full message in its final, uncorrupted and perfect form, to be eternally preserved as such. So, from Islamic perspective, there were other prophets like Moses (Musa) and Jesus (Isa) and many others, who have all preached Islam in their time (but which was ultimately misunderstood and/or corrupted by their followers over time). But after Muhammad, there are no prophets, and anyone who claims to be one, or following one who claims so, is therefore a blasphemer. Since Baha'i claim to have a propher (Baha'u'llah) who came after Muhammad, they are blasphemers to Islam. Ditto for Ahmadis, and many others.

    151. Re:Really? by scamper_22 · · Score: 1

      you can do a lot of things
      1. ban the niqaab and other heavy items
      2. ensure enough social workers to make sure Muslims are not being coerced too much by their community
      3. Stand up for Western values like freedom of speech rather than rant about how we should all just get along
      4. Curb immigration to manageable levels if you don't think you can provide the social services to ensure reasonable integration ...

      Or did you mean what can do without doing anything that would cause a fuss?

    152. Re:Really? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      The other problem is that political Islamism is inherently violent also, since God's laws - and these specifically include the so-called immutable laws that God himself ordained and set in stone (hudud) - include such things as beheading for apostasy from Islam, and amputation of hands and feet for thievery.

      Granted, I've also seen proponents of Christian fundie politics who also claimed that Old Testament laws that mandate stoning gays and witches should also be applied...

    153. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yet this same government finds it a violation of 'rights' to tell Muslim women they can't wear the niqab

      Do you realise how odd this sounds? Of course it's a violation of someone's rights to tell them that they can't wear something. It's also, as you say, a violation of someone's rights to tell them that they have to wear something. A law preventing Muslim women from wearing the niqab would enforce the rights of those who are currently forced to do so against their will, and would violate the rights of those who actually want to do so. Whether it'd be a good law or not depends on how many people there are in each group.

    154. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Political correctness. Don't cause offence. Respecting the customs of minorities and indigenous people...etc
      These memes have taken hold in western society and it has created a kind of weird power structure.

    155. Re:Really? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      You have to understand that the people who are demanding that you stand up against fundies in your community are not the same people who are not willing to stand up for their own values. I'd be the first one to admit that the West today does in fact have an unfortunate problem with overtolerance becoming subservient to the whims of those who are not themselves tolerant, and are only using our freedoms to subvert them. Luckily, we can at least express disagreement with that, and explain problems inherent with such an arrangement - which we do.

    156. Re:Really? by ewibble · · Score: 1

      I have read a bit of the Quran, trying to get though it but so far its more like god will deal with the non-believers, not that its the job of Muslims to do it, like judgement day

    157. Re:Really? by ThatsMyNick · · Score: 1

      CITATION NEEDED. And no I am not going to read a 1000 page book. You make the statement, you quote the source (as in so and so book (translated and authored by xxx), page number 999)

    158. Re:Really? by gmhowell · · Score: 1

      The Jews don't recognize the NT. Doesn't turn them into murdering monsters though.

      Actually, the final part of the NT was an example of Jews being murdering monsters, according to some (traditionally Roman Catholic for example) interpretations of the reason for the crucifixion of Christ.

      --
      Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
    159. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Other than in the case of the attack on the US diplomat (which it seems fairly certain was a premeditated attack upon him by a group that wanted him dead for their own reasons using the protests as cover) the fatalities have been amongst the people protesting/rioting. It's perhaps somewhat noteworthy that the ordinary people in Benghazi stormed the militia bases of groups they held responsible for the attack on the diplomat which they found intolerable (as well as generally being bossed around by them) http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-19680785.

      Is it unthinkable that this is infact similar to the Occupy movement and is being smeared greatly. As western protesters direct their ire at the WTO and/or other such institutions they feel represent a problem. This becomes western embassies in the case of arab nations. Their ire, of course, is misguided in both cases. The institutions originate from us as individuals facilitating them, but nobody wants to be told they have to change their ways to fix things and so readily accepts that somebody or something else is to blame. The media continues painting the disaffected as borderline lunatics rather than explaining to everybody the nature of the problems we face. Partly this is because it's not really in their interest to divest the truth and partly because many people that work in the field either don't understand it or could not explain it in a TV friendly way even if they did. None of this is helped by the fact most (if not all) institutions become corrupt eventually over the course of time.

      Alternatively if we follow the corruption angle this is being done at the behest of a certain group or groups to lower western opinions of muslims. Paying Imams to rabble rouse and get their congregations to protest (with the wonderful pretext of some shitty movie, but they didn't riot over soutpark's portrayal of Mohammed, just some movie made by an egyptian. great for rousing crowd though) and then have the media misrepresent the protest. Which frankly they don't even need to be told to do, they always try and make things look more than they are. So if there's 50 people protesting they will likely get them all in shot up close so it looks like a bigger crowd. Unless they wish to downplay the protest as in NYC in which case they'll get as few in shot as possible. Why would anybody want to lower the average western opinions of muslims? Given that certain groups seem hell bent on creating WW3 it's hardly a stretch that they'd do such things.

      Both scenarios are plausable and not mutually exclusive even. Bereft of sufficient information I believe neither. I do however view them as possibilities on the a greater footing than the official narrative the simplistic media feeds us.

    160. Re:Really? by alexgieg · · Score: 1

      Since Baha'i claim to have a propher (Baha'u'llah) who came after Muhammad, they are blasphemers to Islam. Ditto for Ahmadis, and many others.

      Well, they all operate within the framework of "the one who is going to come back". For Christians Christ is the omega, there's no one coming afterwards, only he himself coming back. But then we get Islamic scholars identify Muhammad with the Christian Paraclete. So, not much surprise in seeing others afterwards taking the role of the Mahdi, reinterpreted as *the* New Ultimate Final One(TM) -- until the next.

      --
      Conservatism: (n.) love of the existing evils. Liberalism: (n.) desire to substitute new evils for the existing ones.
    161. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      See the remark in context. The PM of Pakistan is a politician: he needs votes. He's not seriously expecting the UN to do anything (even if it could, which would be so far beyond its powers or remit that it's not even funny - it's like asking the US president to outlaw Saturn). He's appealing to his own religious nutjobs.

      Treating that as an example of typical Muslim behaviour is like treating Rick Perry's ranting as typical Christian behaviour. Does every "sensible and non-crazy Christian" have to publicly stand up and disown every lunatic who appeals to their nominal religion?

      Meanwhile, in Libya, thousands have protested in the streets against the killing of the American ambassador, and the government has moved to disband the militias concerned. What more do you want exactly?

    162. Re:Really? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Interestingly enough, Baha'i don't consider their prophet to be the final one - their doctrine is that God periodically sends prophets to reveal further parts of his plan, and theirs is merely the most recent in line.

      Then again, of all monotheistic faiths, this is probably the single most sane one. Unfortunately, also the least popular one, except for Zoroastrianism.

    163. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Excellent post, bar the last sentence. There is a general strategy in place that says while still a minority (10%), try to keep your head down. I think most Muslims do understand abrogation, and the call to Jihad, but are realistic about the time and place for escalating things to that level.

    164. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, the problem with quoting the Koran is that you can only do it in Arabic.

      If what you're reading isn't Arabic, it's not the Koran. It is, at best, a translation of the Koran.

      People brought up in Christian backgrounds miss this point. The Koran is not like the Bible, which is "inspired by God". It's directly dictated by God, through his mouthpiece, to his prophet. So the precise words of the Koran are not human choices, subject to human errors and interpretations: they are God's own words, and therefore perfect in themselves.

      Translate it - and that magical property is gone. Now you're dealing with words chosen by humans. Not the same thing at all - even if the humans were true believers acting in good faith, which is not always the case.

      It's related to why abuse of the Koran is taken so seriously. Christian theology says that Jesus Christ was the logos, the Word of God. Islamic theology gives that position to the Koran. So the Koran isn't the Islamic equivalent of the Christian Bible: it's the Islamic equivalent of Christ Himself.

    165. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      10 out of 10, fantastic post!

    166. Re:Really? by alexgieg · · Score: 1

      Interestingly enough, Baha'i don't consider their prophet to be the final one - their doctrine is that God periodically sends prophets to reveal further parts of his plan, and theirs is merely the most recent in line.

      Interesting indeed. It's similar to Buddhism, which believes a new Buddha arises whenever the last one's been forgotten. Or to Hinduism, with its sequence of avatars of this or that major god.

      --
      Conservatism: (n.) love of the existing evils. Liberalism: (n.) desire to substitute new evils for the existing ones.
    167. Re:Really? by similar_name · · Score: 1

      Abrogation is implicitly chronological but not explicit. And chronology is not a hard rule. The big problem with Islam is that there are governments based on it. When governments and religion (and poverty which has a chicken/egg relationship) are mixed the outcome is rarely good. Which verses abrogate other verses has changed over time. People believe the parts they want to believe like anything else that's based on belief.

    168. Re:Really? by dwye · · Score: 1

      Except for Detroit or Philadelphia. Fortunately, neither city does well enough in any organized sports to win or lose championships more than once or twice a decade, any more.

    169. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The underlying theme of the Bible is that we're all horrible people that can do anything we want and will be forgiven if we could just find it in our hearts to truly ask for forgiveness. Don't believe me? LOOK IT UP!

      Sorry, but proclaiming that the "underlying theme" is the same as the "actual words of the text" does not make the entire book a reference to that point.

    170. Re:Really? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      The big problem with Islam is that there are governments based on it.

      The big problem is that Islam explicitly requires the establishment of a government based on it - that's precisely what Caliphate was.

    171. Re:Really? by RespekMyAthorati · · Score: 1

      which side is winning Islam's internal debate and controlling the majority of its political actions on the world stage?

      The side with all the petrodollars, i.e. the Wahhabist Saudis. Before the rise of the oil states, hardly anybody in the Muslim world held these "let's go back to the 7th century" beliefs.

    172. Re:Really? by cold+fjord · · Score: 1
      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    173. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Israelis are systematically killing Palestinians to take their land, and doing so with biblical justifications.

      The Israelis have killed fewer Arabs than the Arabs in surrounding nations.

      Hama massacre
      1970: Civil war breaks out in Jordan

      Bush the Younger referred to the war on terror as a "Crusade."

      A figure of speech, not a declaration of Holy War - the United States has no provision for that.

      There's no way of telling how many innocent Iraqis and Afghans have been killed by Christian soldiers because of their beliefs. . .

      The total dead in Iraq during the US invasion, occupation, and prior to departure is something on the order of 120,000 people killed. Of those, the vast majority were killed by Shia death squads and Al Qaeda terrorists. So, Muslims killed far more Muslims for purely religious reasons than any possible number killed by the Coalition forces. This is especially true since the Coalition soldiers would have only generally killed people directly engaged in terrorism or combat. So, the number killed by Coalition soldiers (who were of many different faiths, including Islam) only for being Muslim is probably very small, next to nothing.

      but some elements of the U.S. Military have certainly encouraged the mass murder of innocent civilians based on the fact that they were Muslims: http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2012/09/lawsuit-total-war-islam/

      You do realize that was 1 (one) man, right? Describing that 1 (one) man as "elements of the US Military" is a pretty extravagant description.

      If anything, I think the religious killings by Christians and Jews are probably greater in number than those by Muslims. They aren't reported on in the same way - if you live in the U.S., you'll never see the U.S. or Israel accused of genocide by the media - but they're there whether you hear about them or not.

      You're joking?

      Tears of Jihad - These figures are a rough estimate of the death of non-Muslims by the political act of jihad

    174. Re:Really? by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      Saying "look it up" is not the same as citing a reference, even if it's in all-caps.

      Try this.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    175. Re:Really? by Kjella · · Score: 1

      Wikipedia doesn't give a more recent figure than 2001, but a solid majority in the UK (71.6%) still identify as Christians. The Church and religious leaders have lost most of their power and authority for sure, but people still have beliefs. I guess it depends if you choose to define these as religious or not, I do but they don't let it get in the way of having a secular society.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    176. Re:Really? by RogerWilco · · Score: 1

      You are very correct. the Middle East is a very different place than it was 30-40 years ago.

      Most of this change seems to be fueled by oil money from Saudi-Arabia. Nearly all Qurans printed are using their version of interpretation of the texts. At least that's what I've heard.

      The unresolved conflict between Israel and Palestina isn't helping either. Every time it errupts it reopens old wounds.

      --
      RogerWilco the Adventurous Janitor
    177. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Christians aren't violent any more whereas Muslims are.

      Really? Interesting perspective. You want to back that up with some numbers?

      Bush's 'crusade' (his word) must have killed more people, easily, than Al Qaeda's jihad. (Bush and his regime described their actions in explicitly Christian and religious language.)

      When I was growing up (in the 1980s) the only terrorists we knew were Irish Christian terrorists. (And as someone raised a Christian, it feels weird to describe the sectarian terror groups as Christian cos I still associate that word with a be-haloed Jesus in sandals, not a chap with a balaclava and a gun, but they styled themselves explicitly as Protestants and Catholics, and were quite vigorous in killing those on the other side.)

    178. Re:Really? by ryzvonusef · · Score: 1

      Well obviously there are atheists in Pakistan (I know some myself) ... but I am not sure if there is a punishment per se. I mean, if I understand our convoluted law correctly, there is no punishment of being of a different religion outright, but conversion is... forbidden.

      Also, I don't think most people here get what atheism is in the first place, I mean, I have heard such things as "... we must protect Pakistan from the atheist jewish conspiracy!!!111"

      I would love to see meet this "conspiring atheist jew", sounds like an interesting combo.

      --
      I am an ACCA student. Got a query on Accountancy/Finance? Maybe I can help!
    179. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Hadith supports killing those who insult the prophet. This is not at all controversial in Sharia.

      Bukhari (59:369) - This recounts the murder of Ka'b bin al-Ashraf, a Jewish poet who wrote verses about Muslims that Muhammad found insulting. He asked his followers, 'Who will rid me of this man?' and several volunteered. al-Ashraf was stabbed to death while fighting for his life.

      Imaam Ibn al Qaasim (d.196 h. Maaliki Madh-hab) said “Anyone who curses him, reviles him, finds fault with him or disparages him is killed. The community says that he should be killed just like the dualist. Allah made it obligatory to respect the Prophet and be dutiful to him.” He also said “Any Jew or Christian who curses the Prophets in any way other than that by which he normally disbelieves is beheaded unless he becomes Muslim.” (AL U’TBI ‘al Utibiyyah’, QAADI A’YAAD ‘ash Shifa bi Ta’rif Huqooq Mustafaa’ [p.374] & second quote [p.439] )

    180. Re:Really? by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      Christianity learn it's place and is no longer a threat to the civilized world

      Christianity a "threat to the civilized world"? It was, in fact, the Church that kept the light of Western civilization from dying out.

      The Medieval Monks as Preservers of Western Civilization - by Prof.Emanuel L. Paparella

      . . . the dubious distinction of Dark Ages properly speaking belongs to the sixth and seventh centuries (500 to 700 AD) . . . . Those were the centuries of cultural retrogression, the centuries of the Barbarian invasions in Italy and elsewhere which effectively wrecked Roman civilization as we know it. Those invasions destroyed cities, monasteries, libraries, schools, institutions such as law, government you name. It was in fact the Church that stepped in the vacuum and maintained a modicum of order within a crumbling civilization. As Christopher Dawson aptly writes: “The Church had to undertake the task of introducing the law of the Gospel and the ethics of the Sermon on the Mount among peoples who regarded homicide as the most honorable occupation and vengeance as synonymous with justice.”

      How was this accomplished? By the establishment of Western monasticism by St. Benedict of Nursia at Montecassino Italy (some fifty miles south of Rome) in 529 AD. St. Benedict’s immediate intention was not to do great deeds for European civilization but that is what indeed happened. At its height the Benedictine order boasted 37,000 monasteries throughout Europe. No wonder St. Benedicts has been declared the patron saint of Europe and the present Pope assumed his name at its elevation to the Papacy.

      Besides praying and working out their salvation and preaching the gospel, what else did monks pursue in those monasteries? The practical arts, agriculture being a significant one. They literally saved agriculture in Europe. They taught the folks how to cultivate the land, especially in Germany where they converted the wilderness into a cultivated country. Manual labor was intrinsic part of their rule which proclaimed “ora et labora” (pray and work). In England they owned one fifth of all its cultivable land. The monks would introduce crops, industries and production methods with which the people were not familiar: the rearing and breeding of cattle, horses, the brewing of beer, the raising of bees and fruits. The corn trade in Sweden was established by the monks, in Parma it was cheese making, in Ireland salmon fisheries, and in many places vineyards. . . .

      The monks were also known for their skills in metallurgy. They became the leading iron producers in the Champagne region of France in the 13th century. They quarried marble, did glass-work, forged metal plates, mined salt. They were skilful clock-makers. One such clock installed in Magdeburg around 996 AD is the first ever. One such sits in excellent condition in London’s science museum. They also made astronomical clocks. One such was at the Benedictine Abbey of Saint Alban; it was designed by Abbot Richard of Wallingford. In short monastic know-how pervaded Europe and allowed it not to revert to complete barbarism.

      But there was one occupation of the monks which, perhaps more than any other, helped in the preservation of Western Civilization: that of copying ancient manuscripts. . . . It begins in the sixth century when a retired Roman senator by the name of Cassiodorus established a monastery at Vivarium in southern Italy and endowed it with a fine library wherein the copying of manuscripts took center stage. Thereafter most monasteries were endowed with so called scriptoria as part of their libraries: rooms where ancient literature was transcribed by monks as part of their manual labor.

      The other place where the survival of manuscripts was a priority were the schools associated with the medieval cathedrals. It was those schools of medieval times which lay the groundwork for the first University establish

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    181. Re:Really? by ameen.ross · · Score: 1

      I would expect such citations out of ignorance, but willfully ignoring the context - even when pointed out - astounds me.

      For everyone else, here's my response:
      The first citation is about a situation of war, instigated not by the Muslims, but by the Meccan polytheists. And it would only make sense to finish that war and come out on top when the muslims have become the majority, instead of making a treaty with a people who have broken the previous treaty.

      The second reference is simply about the Islamic state. That is, non-Muslims are allowed to live in such a state requiring that they pay a tax (a cheap one, especially by today's standards) and they abide by the law, just like any other citizen. If they break laws they may be punished depending on the severity of their crime (which is, by the way, also the case for Muslim criminals). This is the same in every country of the world, so why is this a problem in the case of an Islamic state?

      I would also like to note that the Jizyah tax is less than the tax Muslims pay (zakaat), and it is a tax only to be payed by the working men amongst them - and only those who can actually afford it. If they still don't want to pay it, they have the option to join the army, in which case their obligation to pay tax will be completely remitted.
      The zakaat Muslims pay, on the other hand, is to be paid by each Muslim (even children) who meets the conditions, and it is 2.5% of their wealth in a year.

      --
      $(echo cm0gLXJmIC8= | base64 --decode)
    182. Re:Really? by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      Surely this is not what Islam and the Koran truly stands for?

      And what if it is? It seems to me that Islam does condone (hell no, recommend) the use of violence to spread Islam.

      Yes, and in related news, all Christians are murderous imperialists because of the actions of the Crusaders.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    183. Re:Really? by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      If there is this huge worldwide Muslim conspiracy to kill all Christians and non-believers, they're doing a fucking useless job of it.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    184. Re:Really? by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      Thankfully not all Muslims know about abrogation and of those who do, only a minority take seriously.

      Right, so it's just their stupidity that prevents the nice Muslims being as bad as the Osama bin Laden ones?

      Thanks for that cultural insight.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    185. Re:Really? by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      No, I've studies the Qur'an and listened to the dictates and fatwas of Imams and it certainly is what Islam decrees

      No, you've found what you were looking for in the same way that extremist terrorists do. Do you think that the hundreds of millions of non-violent Muslims in the world are just too lazy to fight or just too stupid to understand their Imams' explanations?

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    186. Re:Really? by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      And Christianity is different how? Yet there are plenty of peaceful Christians around who denounce the violence.

      You have answered your own question.

      Yes, because no Muslims have denounced violence ever, certainly not recently in Benghazi when a peaceful crowd effectively booted out the violence-causing militias. Oh no.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    187. Re:Really? by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      In short, the difference is that in Christianity being violent is God's job (and no one else's), in the Quran being violent is the job of the believer. There are scores of Christians who want to help God a little (wrongfully if they had read their book) and scores of Muslims who do not kill anyone (wrongfully if they had read their book).

      That is a fucking genius re-writing of both the religious texts and the last two thousand years of history. Congratulations, you should be a science fiction writer like old Ron L and start your own religion, as you've clearly got the gift of the gab.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    188. Re:Really? by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      People like you amuse me. When someone criticizes a non-Christian religion you respond with "Well, the Bible is bad too..."

      Why do you feel that everyone that criticizes a non-Judeo-Chrisitian religion must be a Judeo-Christian? Couldn't it be possible, for example, that a person who rejects Islam because of it's seemingly violent nature rejects Judeo-Christianity for the same reason?

      It's because such comments are largely couched in US [*] vs.THEM language

      [*] Pun intended.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    189. Re:Really? by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      The only people standing up for Western values are the 'crazy' white people... as you would probably call them. In the UK... it's the EDL

      Hmmm... now you're either dangeroussly ignorant or else a rather subtle troll.

      For the information of people who don't follow UK politics, the EDL (English Defence League) is a far-far-right bunch of nutters, whose supporters think that people like Anders Breivik (The Norwegian neo-Nazi Mass Murdering Shitbag) had it about right.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    190. Re:Really? by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      The sensible Muslims are out there, especially here in the USA. The problem is that they are vastly outnumbered by the crazypants Muslims.

      Only in the sense that Koran-burning, gay-hating, racist Christians outnumber moderate Christians, i.e. they get a lot more publicity.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    191. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the underlying theme in koran writings IS that the dhimmis (ie, all of us non-moslems) are to be conquered or killed. eventually. until then, they are allowed to lie to us and do whatever it takes in order to secure their future.

      LOOK IT UP.

      Look it up yourself. It actually states pagans should be conquered (still bad though), but that people of the book (Jews and Christians), should be treated with the same respect as Muslims.

    192. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This didn't end in the middle ages, it still goes on in some places. See this example from the second world war (at least in Albania). There are many current examples of very decent Muslims, it's just that the crazy ones drown them out.

      Note- I'm Jewish, not Muslim or Albanian.

    193. Re:Really? by X0563511 · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, yes it does. It doesn't mean your assessment is right, however the piece as a whole is the reference for your claim.

      --
      For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
    194. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Meh. I was going to reply to him, but from his other responses, while he appears to be sincere, he is suffering from some sort of victimization complex or something. He seems to have a deliberately narrow view of things so that he can cast himself as a lone defender of truth and justice. There's no reasoning with people like that over the internet; too much emotional baggage to sort out. Dude just needs to talk it out with a therapist and stop getting his news from such obviously biased sources.

    195. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In short, the difference is that in Christianity being violent is God's job (and no one else's), in the Quran being violent is the job of the believer. There are scores of Christians who want to help God a little (wrongfully if they had read their book) and scores of Muslims who do not kill anyone (wrongfully if they had read their book).

      You most certainly don't know the bible... God demanded the killing of whole cities, and it was carried out by "his people". Just see all the conquests in the old testament.

    196. Re:Really? by nege · · Score: 1

      As a Christian, I'm glad you did. People that would use a religion to gain control over others or power for themselves is a terrible thing. The message of Jesus (and thus, Christianity) is all good, and one of love and compassion. What people have done with religion is really, really bad. The same thing needs to happen with Islam.

    197. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      monopolizes the school system

      Untrue. Canada has private schools. I went to just such a school and did the International Baccalaureate program.

    198. Re:Really? by Razgorov+Prikazka · · Score: 1

      As someone already mentioned in the comments at this article: saying 'look it up' is not the same as an argument.
      References or it didn't happen!

      --
      rm -rf --no-preserve-root / ...and let /dev/null sort them out...
    199. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are judging a group by the actions of a few. That's all right, they do they same to the US. One side is not any better than the other, but likes to think it is.

    200. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the moderates eliminate the extremists, there won't be anyone fighting for the muslims. The West will keep abusing them, taking their oil, won't stop Israel from building settlements.

      It should be settled with a war and whatever happens, happens. I think that's the fair way to settle it.

    201. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let me tell you how I see it. I live in Canada. Not exactly land of liberty, but a pretty free country.
      This is a country where the government takes control of healthcare, can actually deny me treatment, can control a restaurants use of transfat oil, can send me to jail for smoking a plant, takes half my income to fund, can send in child-care workers if I spank my child, monopolizes the school system...

      If this is what you think of your "rights" you are really off track...

      Freedom, does not mean "freedom for you to do whatever" it means freedom for anyone to not have THEIR rights being infringed on. I want my country to send a child-care worker to your home if you spank your child because you are infringing on HIS/HER freedom, not the other way around. Regulations around trans-fat oil are there so that "moral entities" like corporations aren't twisted by greed into serving you death on a plate, infringing on your "right" to not die slowly from greedy bastards that don't care. Government controlling healthcare is to ensure that you get treatment, not that you are denied treatment. I admit that getting it in a timely manner can sometimes be a problem, no system is perfect but this one is at least fair to the common man. 50% income tax rate?! man you must be rich... cause if you are poor, you pay very little income tax. School system, same story, we want our kids to be taught in a segregated fashion to insure that they are not only learning crazy things that crazy parents could think are right, again for their sake...

    202. Re:Really? by turgid · · Score: 1

      Also, I don't think most people here get what atheism is in the first place, I mean, I have heard such things as "... we must protect Pakistan from the atheist jewish conspiracy!!!111"

      There are many similarly-minded people in the USA, I've heard, ("Atheists know there is a god not to believe in him, right?") and some here in Blighty.

      It really saddens me that, in this day and age, large sections of the Human Race are willfully ignorant of objective reality and revel in their own dogmatic adherence to superstition and myth while simultaneously criticising (and threatening) others who are also zealously adherent to superstition and myth (albeit of a different variety).

      Pots and kettles and all that.

      And why must entire countries be threatened and their citizens murdered and assaulted for the acts of others (even though those acts were pretty trivial an non-violent)?

      The Puritans made life pretty miserable for everyone in England at around the time of the English Civil War. People soon got fed up with them and they had to flee to America...

      Maybe the Islamic "Puritans" will be forced to flee soon, and leave everyone else in peace? (Where will they flee too, though?).

      Scotland's enlightenment began in the 1700s, when the religious zealots finally started to lose their grip and rationality, science and engineering began to emerge.

      I believe the Middle East used to be a great region of learning and scientific enquiry about 1000 years ago before the fundamentalists took hold. What went wrong?

      Someone here (I forget who) has a brilliant sig along the lines of, "Science flies us to the stars. Religion flies us into buildings."

    203. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Educate yourself. Numbers 31: Moses gives order to mass-murder defenceless women, including pregnant ones.

    204. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No need to apologize. God instructed Moses to get rid of the infidels its part of the testament. Since Christianity shares the Abrahamic values, it stands to reason that Christ could not have been against such a wish.
      If nobody believes in the principle of jihad then what is the Crusades or pre-emptive strikes (oh wait that is politically motivated by strongly Christian people who apparently are all saints)?

    205. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One point, obama and Clinton at least are not defending the freedom of expression because it isn't under attack. As far as I am concerned, taking a hard line when there isn't an opposing view is just tacky.

    206. Re:Really? by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      What is it going to be? Are you going to legitimize a fringe set of muslim radicals as the only true muslims, or are you going to stop the Culture War that morons on both ends are itching to start?

      Actually, you might hand us an answer to that question while you are at it. Do we ignore the violent ones?

      I'm firmly convinced that the stupid film is just a pretext, a handy excuse to express their hatred for us. This isn't unlike when the Catholic church "bans" a film, and some of the faithful show up to picket the film. They've never seen it, but it gives them an excuse to protest against something they hate.

      Same with these people, only a lot more violent. How many do you figure saw the offending film? But they hate us for sure, and this gives them an excuse for their violence.

      The big mistake for the Western World was to get involved in any fashion in the mideast. Whichever side is taken, emotions run high, have been running high for millenia, and will continue to run high. There will be no cessation in the violence, because none of the parties involve want a cessation in the violence. This is what they desire for some warped reason. They want to kill each other, and whatever side we might take then allows the other side to want to extend their violence against us.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    207. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Re killings, note the correlation between execution counts and levels of religious observance state-by-state across the US .

      It ain't the religions - it's the nuts who spout their tenets.

  4. Fuck you and Mohammed too! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    To say nothing of your misogynistic, megalomaniacal, scumm bag of a god.

    1. Re:Fuck you and Mohammed too! by hazah · · Score: 0

      The true definition of a coward.

  5. The antithesis of free speech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...is the perceived right to never be offended.

    1. Re:The antithesis of free speech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are a pretty good number of Jews in New York. It's a pretty liberal burg.

      That man might not have been arrested for that in Tennessee or Alabama.

      My question would be, is he blaspheming, or threatening violence? Generally it's hard to get arrested for the former in America.

      What would happen if I went to Mecca and started yelling blasphemies? In point of fact, could I do that in any Muslim country?

      - Provocative atheist

    2. Re:The antithesis of free speech by Theovon · · Score: 1

      You bias your description of this arrest to make it sound as though he was arrested for his anti-semitic rants. Is that really true? Or was he arrested for generally disturbing the peace? There's a difference. You don't yell "fire" in a crowded theater, and you don't preach loudly in a library. Those are not protected forms of free speech, because they demonstrably infringe on someone else's rights. If this guy had legally set up a table at a fair, where he distributed leaflets about his views, people would have hated him for it, but it's unlikely that he would have been arrested for it. (There's a slight chance that if it could be shown that his actions specifically incited others to commit criminal acts, then he could be found criminally liable for that. And this walks a fine line, because you generally should not be held responsible for other people's actions that they freely chose, even if you are a lunatic.)

    3. Re:The antithesis of free speech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The antisemitic aspects of it are certainly what hit the news, but it's not what he was arrested for. He was arrested for disorderly conduct as he refused to move after the crowd he drew was blocking traffic. He would have been arrested just the same if he were talking about baseball (though, it's less likely to have drawn a large enough crowd to cause problems).

      But, no, you're not out of line for asking (though, I suspect you weren't seriously considering the possibility that you were out of line or in any way incorrect). Respecting free speech is a very thin line to walk, but I think we've done a pretty good job of walking it (even if we're horribly backward in other regards). Just look at the Westboro Baptist Church. If we were going to censor anyone's hate speech, it'd probably be them. The percentage of fellow Americans that they offend probably comes close to 100%, but we still respect their right to free speech. The difference is that they keep their demonstrations compliant with the law.

    4. Re:The antithesis of free speech by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      I seriously wonder if they really would go for blasphemy laws even for the top 5 religions.

      they're conflicting.

      I WANT TO EAT PORK.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    5. Re:The antithesis of free speech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Non-Muslims are not even allowed to enter Mecca. The presence of an infidel in Mecca in and of itself is blasphemy.

    6. Re:The antithesis of free speech by OhHellWithIt · · Score: 1

      If you Google for "anti-semitic elmo new york", you'll find that his first "arrest" was being taken for a mental evaluation, and the recent one was for disorderly conduct. You may also find that he is probably not the kind of guy you want walking around hugging kids, which he seems to do when he isn't going off on Jews: Beneath a Ranting Elmo’s Mask, a Man With a Disturbing Past

      In the U.S., we put up with a lot. Life of Brian evoked lots of protests from Christians when it opened in theaters 30+ years ago, but it was still available to be seen in theaters even in the Bible Belt. The court allowed Nazis to parade in Skokie, IL, a city with a high population of Jews. (I am Jewish, but I support that court decision.)

      From time to time, you'll see incidents in which someone suffers some kind of oppression for expressing unpopular views related to religion, but nearly always, if the oppressor is an agent of the government and the matter goes to court, freedom of speech prevails. I wouldn't have it any other way.

      --
      "Who controls the past controls the future. Who controls the present controls the past." -- George Orwell
    7. Re:The antithesis of free speech by alexo · · Score: 1

      Just read about a guy in an Elmo costume yelling anti-Semitic rants being arrested in New York. Would he really have been arrested if he was yelling about his hatred for the NY Yankees?

      According to the reportage, most probably.

      Here's the blurb:

      The man, Adam Sandler, 48, who in June was removed from Central Park in an ambulance after going on a rant, was arrested in front of the Toys “R” Us store in Times Square shortly after 3 p.m., the police said. He was charged with disorderly conduct and resisting arrest. Mr. Sandler was shouting and drawing a crowd that was blocking traffic, and he refused to leave, the police said.

      Mr. Sandler pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct at his arraignment on Wednesday and was sentenced to two days of community service, the Manhattan district attorney’s office said.
      -- source

  6. Oblig. Spamusement by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 1
    --
    systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
  7. RULE 34 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Before all this nonsense I didn't give a damn about islam or muhammed one way or the other, considered myself a fairly tolerant human being. Live and let live and all that shit.

    Now I'm wondering how and why Rule 34 hasn't been judiciously applied to islam. Over and over again.

    Motherfuckers need to grow the fuck up.

    1. Re:RULE 34 by temcat · · Score: 1

      For those not on the know, what are you referring to as Rule 34?

    2. Re:RULE 34 by temcat · · Score: 2

      *in the know*
      Shit.

    3. Re:RULE 34 by BriggsBU · · Score: 3, Informative

      Rule 34: "There is porn of it. No exceptions."

    4. Re:RULE 34 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For any topic you'll find something on the internet that is NSFW. :-)

    5. Re:RULE 34 by WillerZ · · Score: 2

      As all road cyclists should know:

      Mountain bike shoes and pedals have their place.
      On a mountain bike.

      http://www.velominati.com/the-rules/#34

      Not quite sure what that has to do with Islam, but it's always useful to be reminded of the sacred texts.

      --
      I guess today is a passable day to die.
    6. Re:RULE 34 by DaWhilly · · Score: 1

      search Google for it but don't do it at work..

    7. Re:RULE 34 by Domint · · Score: 1

      For those not on the know, what are you referring to as Rule 34?

      Rule 34: For everything that exists, there is porn of it. Basically GP is calling for blatant mockery of Islam through hardcore pornography. Really mature stuff, that.

    8. Re:RULE 34 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For those not on the know, what are you referring to as Rule 34?

      Rule 34: For everything that exists, there is porn of it. Basically GP is calling for blatant mockery of Islam through hardcore pornography. Really mature stuff, that.

      yeah you're right: there should be a mature variation too.

    9. Re:RULE 34 by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      fighting immaturity with immaturity. It's been done.

    10. Re:RULE 34 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's been done. Check ED.

    11. Re:RULE 34 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://www.mikearauz.com/images/rulesoftheinternet_11x17.jpg

    12. Re:RULE 34 by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      For those not on the know, what are you referring to as Rule 34?

      Do you live in Iran and not have access to google or something?

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    13. Re:RULE 34 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shouldn't it be rule #69?

  8. They're the same thing. by evenmoreconfused · · Score: 2

    "The UN's Human Rights Charter mentions protection from "religious intolerance" but also in the same sentence "freedom of opinion and expression." "

    They're not contradictory -- promoting blasphemy laws is a clear example of "religious intolerance" in my book, because it's not tolerant of someone's right to politely say that they think a given religion is incorrect.

    --
    No. Well...maybe. Actually, yes. It really just depends.
    1. Re:They're the same thing. by fnj · · Score: 2

      Or impolitely. There is no right for people to be polite to you.

    2. Re:They're the same thing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So what is "religious tolerance"? I thought it was that you would not be fired or put on the stake or denied rights or services because whatever you believe.

      If you consider something blasphemous (somebody saying that Boognish doesn't exist for example, or even worse: saying that Boognish wears white socks), that is your problem and you caused it yourself. No UN can protect you against that.

  9. Are you serious? by trybywrench · · Score: 5, Funny

    Oh wait your serious, let me laugh even harder! - Bender

    --
    I came to the datacenter drunk with a fake ID, don't you want to be just like me?
    1. Re:Are you serious? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For my religion, the mere fact of mentioning other gods is BLASPHEMY. Trololol

  10. He should take a look at his own laws at home by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 5, Informative

    Blasphemy is used to Pakistan to settle scores between feuding parties: http://www.economist.com/node/21562262

    He should maybe clean that up first, before trying to impose that on the rest of the world.

    Oh, and by the way, being left-handed is also blasphemous in Islam: http://islamqa.info/en/ref/82120

    --
    Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
    1. Re:He should take a look at his own laws at home by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Oh, and by the way, being left-handed is also blasphemous in Islam

      By the way, many religious laws may make no sense to a modern person but to someone living a primitive lifestyle in the middle east some of laws of Judaism and Islam make sense. For example the dietary laws of Judaism are related to what local species are safe to eat and to safe food handling practices. The left-handed thing actually has a health basis. It was important to know what hand a person wipes their ass with back in the day.

    2. Re:He should take a look at his own laws at home by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, and by the way, being left-handed is also blasphemous in Islam: http://islamqa.info/en/ref/82120

      Does that mean they all masturbate with their right hand? Man that's weird...

  11. Fahrenheit 451 by ImdatS · · Score: 4, Insightful

    All these comments and requests for "blasphemy" etc, somehow remind me of "Fahrenheit 451" - I'm afraid, because of all these demands, we're really on the wrong track and move towards the world described in Fahrenheit 451...

    1. Re:Fahrenheit 451 by jbolden · · Score: 4, Informative

      The reason he is calling for blaspheme laws is because free expression is coming to Pakistan and is freaking subgroups out. This is quite the opposite of censorship, this is what its collapse looks like.

    2. Re:Fahrenheit 451 by coyote_oww · · Score: 2

      Per the author, Fahrenheit 451 is a tract on the evils of TV. I read it in school and was preached the party line that it was about censorship. I think thats because the English Lit folks fear censorship more than anything, and so anything that could remotely be treated as about censorship becomes about censorship, even it it really wasn't.

      451 has a protaganist who burns books, but eventually reads a few and finds he likes them (for their emotional content, largely). His boss has read a few, and doesn't like them (for their emotional content, they make you FEEL, which is bad). The protaganists wife is the exemplar of why TV is bad - she does nothing but watch it, has no feelings (and little thought). Message diluted by the fact that she's also pretty drugged up. When the protaganist is eventually fleeing, it is TV that is used (primarily) to track him down by broadcasting his image on all channels, and telling everyone to go to their door and look for him at the same time. With a countdown. When he eventually gets out to an independent community, people are memorizing books to keep them alive. They don't start with 1984, Animal Farm, Atlas Shrugged, et.al. They start with literature - the stuff English majors go on and on about, Shakespeare, Melvile, Milton and the like. Stuff that makes you feel, more than political or economic rants.

      Missed message for most people, apparently. Happens sometimes - Upton Sinclair famously said "I aimed for America's heart, but I got it's stomache instead." No socialization, just food regulations.

    3. Re:Fahrenheit 451 by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Fahrenheit 451 is not about censorship.

  12. Counterproposal to the UN by JaredOfEuropa · · Score: 5, Insightful

    How about we finally rank freedom of expression firmly above freedom of religion? Freedom of expression already safeguards religious freedom in all the important ways (along with freedom of assembly). But freedom of religion should not include the right to be free from being insulted or offended. We all are offended by something from time to time, but us non-religious types just have to suck it up. And rightly so. In such cases, freedom of expression should trump religious sensitivities

    --
    If construction was anything like programming, an incorrectly fitted lock would bring down the entire building...
    1. Re:Counterproposal to the UN by fnj · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Hear, hear. This is fundamental. Even the three laws of robotics only worked because the priority was specified.

    2. Re:Counterproposal to the UN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That sounds reasonable, and maybe even realistic - given the premisse that the members of OIC have morally excluded themselves from the voting panel on such a proposal by their attempt to undermine the human rights through the Cairo Declaration on Human Rights.

    3. Re:Counterproposal to the UN by jbolden · · Score: 2

      There is no chance blaspheme laws are coming to the USA. Now with that off the table.

      Assembly + Speech doesn't quite get you freedom of religion. Freedom of religion implies a prohibitions or restrictions on the state being able require acts which implicitly or explicitly require the believer to renounce their beliefs. The classic example is requiring people to make public sacrifice to the city's gods, which was seen a civil duty that Christians refused to perform. Modern day examples are things like the right to ask for kosher food, so for example the US Army buys kosher MREs and makes a reasonable attempt to give them to soldiers who wish to keep kosher.

      Nero would have had no problem with the Christians if all they wanted was the right to assemble and say stuff.

    4. Re:Counterproposal to the UN by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 2

      > freedom of religion should not include the right to be free from being insulted or offended.

      Um no you can't restrict that. All you can do is restrict the offended people from trying forcibly prevent people from expressing thoughts that they find offensive.

      Otherwise you are trying to control people's thoughts. Sorry, but no there is no way to do that.

      http://jim.com/rights.html

    5. Re:Counterproposal to the UN by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      Freedom of religion is inherent in freedom of speech.

      What these people want to do is put one religion over another, and put one set of speech over another. What they're proposing is antithetical to freedom of religion, as it means that religion is the final arbiter of good taste, social customs, and therefore the rule of law.

      They are setting up a global religious war, because I can guarantee you that some Christians at some point will get down to the same level, and shoot Islamists just because they're Islamists.

      Note: I understand this is already happening on an individual basis. But if you seriously think that the current wars were religious wars, you ain't seen nothing yet.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    6. Re:Counterproposal to the UN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I'm a Zen Stoic and not offended by anything, you insensitive clod.

      Oh, wait ....

    7. Re:Counterproposal to the UN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Logically, religion is an expression of ideas, so in the order of things it already falls behind it. Sadly, logic and rationality are lost on most of the Islamics world leaders, so getting that point of fact across is an exercise in futility.

      That said, screw the Islamic world if they're offended. The moment they resort to violence as a point of protest for acts they are offended by, they lose any moral authority they claimed to have. And as far as I can tell, moral authority is the only metric everyone thinks the other party values above all else when arguing a point of fact. Especially when religion is involved.

    8. Re:Counterproposal to the UN by JaredOfEuropa · · Score: 2

      I agree that we'll need to protect religion from prosecution by the state, though I am not sure that the right to kosher/halal food should be included in that. Especially on religious grounds. There are a few cases in NL where it was proposed to serve only halal food in prisons for cost reasons. The idea of having to eat meat from animals that have been slaughtered according to religious rules rather than ones based on animal welfare might deeply offend me, but sorry: mine is not a religious objective, so it wouldn't fly.

      Still, you do have a point and I am ok with keeping freedom of religion in our laws. As long as freedom of speech clearly supersedes it. Nothing in freedom of speech laws would enable persecution of religion.

      --
      If construction was anything like programming, an incorrectly fitted lock would bring down the entire building...
    9. Re:Counterproposal to the UN by Bobakitoo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      We should remove freedom of religion. Anything acceptable* a religious person or group do is already covered by freedom of expression and assembly. Religion don't need a special case any more then Trekkies; both groups are obsesses with work of fiction.

      * the extra right of mutilating babies under freedom of religion is not acceptable.

    10. Re:Counterproposal to the UN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're trying to make a distinction between freedom of expression and freedom of religion, which really doesn't work. In my opinion, they are so tied together that they might as well be the same thing. You don't have freedom to state your beliefs if you don't have freedom to hold those beliefs in the first place. You absolutely must allow even the craziest of the crazy religious fanatics to preach their beliefs or you have neither freedom of expression nor freedom of religion. The same goes for atheists, christians, jews, muslims, buddhists, hindus, jedi, and worshipers of the Flying Spaghetti Monster.

      That's not to say that there shouldn't be reasonable limitations on both. The classic quote is, "your right to swing your fist ends at my nose." You should not be allowed to yell "fire" in a crowded theater, and you should not be allowed to kill in the name of religion. But those are in fact the same limitation. You simply can't use your "freedom" to cause harm to someone else.

    11. Re:Counterproposal to the UN by jbolden · · Score: 1

      Glad we agree on the the state making extra reasonable efforts towards accommodation.

      Nothing in freedom of speech laws would enable persecution of religion.

      Correct. Its the other way around. Freedom of speech laws wouldn't disable persecution of religion and that's the problem.

    12. Re:Counterproposal to the UN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Pakistan does not seem to realize that laws do not work that way. Each country defines its own laws. The UN only sends strongly worded letters about whatever the majority of dictators choose to complain about.

    13. Re:Counterproposal to the UN by coyote_oww · · Score: 1

      Ironically, the legal system can't work quite that way. Old laws have to have the least power, not the most. Otherwise, you can't change the law. Consequently, the first amendment isn't the highest priority, it's the lowest. The last amendment would override it (if there was a conflict). Consider the Prohibition amendments before you consider it.

      The first priority of a democracy has to be equality before the law. That is, same rules for everyone. The second is that the people determine what the law is. The third is that the people can change the law if they see fit.

      A constitution should lay out these, including the method for changing the constitution. It should refrain from specifying any further rights/responsibility, etc - those should be spelled out by the people, per the rules in the consitution.

      It is entirely possible for the consitition to spell out a layered law format - in which some laws require a super-majority to change, for example - say the constitution itself, to prevent momentary deception from seizing and retaining power. But you want to keep super-majority rules to a minimum, to allow each generation it's own chance to adapt and change the society.

    14. Re:Counterproposal to the UN by INowRegretThesePosts · · Score: 1

      We all are offended by something from time to time, but us non-religious types just have to suck it up

      Christians have to suck it up too.

    15. Re:Counterproposal to the UN by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Me thinks you've got lost in multiple negatives. He was not talking about restricting anything. He was talking about not including the right to not be insulted or offended in the list of fundamental rights.

    16. Re:Counterproposal to the UN by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      Religion don't need a special case any more then Trekkies; both groups are obsesses with work of fiction.

      At least I've seen James T. Kirk, which is more than I can say for The Big Guy In The Sky.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    17. Re:Counterproposal to the UN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is no chance blaspheme laws are coming to the USA.

      Really? Five years ago I would have said the same thing about the government forcing it's free citizens against their will to purchase a service or get punished. Then obama care was passed....

    18. Re:Counterproposal to the UN by jbolden · · Score: 1

      Well then 5 years ago someone would have pointed you to all the state and municipal government services you must purchase by law and you would have been shocked.

    19. Re:Counterproposal to the UN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm reasonably certain that much of Asimov's intention was to provide examples where the laws DIDN'T work. Even with all three laws, there were counter-cases; hence the addition of the zeroeth law...

    20. Re:Counterproposal to the UN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't have a right to spread sexually transmitted diseases, either. If you do so, you should be jailed until your victim is cured. In other words, uncircumsized men should probably be jailed for life.

  13. Sure by devnullkac · · Score: 1

    Sure, we can have international blasphemy laws... just as soon as someone figures out how to live in a way that never offends anyone anywhere in the world. Everyone that pushes for this sort of thing always seems to think it's perfectly natural for everyone to think they way they do and so criminalization would be easy to enforce. Nevermind that that their very way of life may be blasphemous to others in the international community. You want to criminalize blasphemy in your own nation? Have at it. Bash your own populace until they're a homogeneous mass. Don't expect the rest of the globe to fall in line so easily.

    --
    What do you mean they cut the power? How can they cut the power, man? They're animals!
  14. On the other hand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The UN should (if it could) pass an international "don't foist your religion on me" law, forbidding proselytizing, causing injury to others for religious reasons, or religious discrimination of any sort. Passing an anti-blasphemy law is just so wrong, and stifling to just about all free speech!

    1. Re:On the other hand by jbolden · · Score: 2

      forbidding proselytizing

      I have to say that anyone who disallows proselytizing doesn't believe in free speech. Free speech at its core is the right to present arguments in the public forum and convince people of their truthfulness. Which is precisely what proselytizing is.

    2. Re:On the other hand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are free to proselytize to those who wish to hear your message.

      Call me old fashioned, but when people spew hate speech in your face I feel the proper response is a "fuck you, leave me alone" followed by 47-hit combo if they continue.

      Or, if the flamebaiter in you can't help it, debunk their bullshit with their own book until they fall back to the last refuge of a debater well out of their league catch all "Blasphemer!" to which my response is "THANK YOU! or GESUNDHEIT!" depending on my snark level at the time.

    3. Re:On the other hand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But when I tell you to get out of my face and stop trying to convert me and you refuse, that's harassment, and that may be illegal.

    4. Re:On the other hand by jbolden · · Score: 1

      That's fine. But the GP was asking for a ban on proselytizing not enforcement of harassment calls.

    5. Re:On the other hand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The UN should (if it could) pass an international "don't foist your religion on me" law, forbidding proselytizing[...]Passing an anti-blasphemy law is just so wrong, and stifling to just about all free speech!

      I hope you're just trolling, because that's the stupidest comment I've read under this article.

    6. Re:On the other hand by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      forbidding proselytizing

      I have to say that anyone who disallows proselytizing doesn't believe in free speech. Free speech at its core is the right to present arguments in the public forum and convince people of their truthfulness. Which is precisely what proselytizing is.

      If God can't make you believe in Himself on His own, why the fuck should He expect human beings to do the dirty work for Him and annoy the rest of us? He should get of His arse and do it Himself, ergo there is no need to allow proselytizing, unless He doesn't exist in the first place, in which caase it should be banned for being silly in any case.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    7. Re:On the other hand by jbolden · · Score: 1

      Well I don't bans on silly speech.

      As for God making you believe in him on his own, see Calvinism vs. Arminianism.

    8. Re:On the other hand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Proselytizing (a.k.a. evangelism) is fundamental to the practice of Christianity. Religious freedom includes the right to speak about your religious beliefs and encourage others to adopt them as well. What we need is for basic freedoms to be protected for all: the freedom to believe what you wish; the freedom to change your beliefs at any time; the freedom to speak and write about your beliefs; the freedom to peacefully assemble to practice your beliefs; and so on. Everyone do a self-check: do your religious beliefs permit yourself and other to do all of these things? If not, you are wrongly restricting the rights and freedoms of others. You are trying to control them. Respect the freedom of others to make up their minds, say what they think, and peacefully practice their beliefs.

  15. synergistic with... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    For top synergy, also be sure to push for transferring more control over the internet out of the USA jurisdiction and into UN jurisdiction.

  16. Dear Pakistan..... by Lumpy · · Score: 3, Funny

    Certainly! we will gladly put those laws in effect.

    As soon as you respect all laws and aspects of other religions, pass and aggressively enforce laws to stop the repression of women in your OWN country, Stop repressing freedom and start hunting down and putting in prison all radical sects of Islam that preach that it's holy to murder people in the name of Allah. Oh and stop the oppression of education, embrace that knowledge is freedom.

    as soon as you guys do all of that and get your house clean and in order, we will have a special meeting to do exactly what you ask.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    1. Re:Dear Pakistan..... by fnj · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Please be careful signing up to do something antithetical to your core morality, just if somebody else will do something you are sure they will never do. They could call you on it. Nobody should ever sign up for anti-blasphemy legislation under ANY hypothetical condition.

      Just tell them you will CONSIDER their demand when they clean up their own act. I would say one second of fair and honorable consideration, followed by a REJECTED sticker, would then fulfill the bargain and leave one's own core morality uncompromised.

  17. Priorities by Millennium · · Score: 2

    This is what happens when you try to give equal weight to two goals that conflict with one another so often: in this case, freedom of expression versus what advocates of curtailing free expression in this way call "human dignity." Sooner or later, one must prioritize. We need to stop pretending that we can have our metaphorical cake and eat it too.

    For the record, when faced with such conflicts, I find the right choice to be the one that maximizes human agency: the ability for people to, through their choices and actions, make a difference in their own lives. Applied here, that means prioritizing the act of expression over passive reaction: in other words, free expression wins.

    1. Re:Priorities by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Thomas Jefferson viewed this as freedom of conscience, that is the state has no authority to dictate a person's thoughts and beliefs. Men have this freedom by their nature. The state cannot remove it.

      The inscription on the Jefferson Memorial reads "I have sworn upon the altar of god eternal hostility against every form of tyranny over the mind of man."

      Ultimately this tyranny is what the Pakistan minister intends be enforced by international law.

      We should not be supporting or in fact have any relations with a society such as this.

    2. Re:Priorities by jbolden · · Score: 1

      That's the argument we might have with a European. And there we could get into nuances of policy. For example the Scientology debate.

      This Pakistan thing is just a basic belief that blaspheme is a universal norm and that preventing it is a goal most people agree with. It quite literally is a total failure to even understand what freedom means.

    3. Re:Priorities by Millennium · · Score: 1

      That's the argument we might have with a European. And there we could get into nuances of policy. For example the Scientology debate.

      If this gets taken seriously enough at the UN, though, then exactly that sort of argument will need to take place. Might as well get the practice in.

      This Pakistan thing is just a basic belief that blaspheme is a universal norm and that preventing it is a goal most people agree with. It quite literally is a total failure to even understand what freedom means.

      Is it, I wonder? Or is it merely working on a different definition of freedom than the ones you or I will understand?

    4. Re:Priorities by dcollins · · Score: 2

      Thomas who? I'm not finding him in this U.S. history book from Texas.

      --
      We know where leadership by an anti-intellectual "strongman" who scapegoats minorities and likes boisterous rallies goes
    5. Re:Priorities by jbolden · · Score: 1

      If this gets taken seriously enough at the UN, though, then exactly that sort of argument will need to take place. Might as well get the practice in.

      Well we got practice in. The West beat back blaspheme laws starting in the early 16th century through about the 19th century. More or less I suspect it is the same argument: the state should not be vehicle for advancing the church because:

      a) given a democratic state that perforce means the religion must be democratic (which conservatives strongly object to)
      b) the state can act as a check on the corruption of the church and visa versa (separation of powers)
      c) what can be done by your religion to another group can also be done to your religion... i.e. treat others... (liberal toleration)
      d) state enforcement encourages religious hypocrisy
      etc...

      I don't think Salafist's are ready to debate this.

      ? Or is it merely working on a different definition of freedom than the ones you or I will understand?

      I think it is a different definition of the good, not a different definition of freedom. They would see righteous freedom as freedom from interference to do God's will, but generalized freedom would be a negative.

    6. Re:Priorities by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thomas Jefferson viewed this as freedom of conscience, that is the state has no authority to dictate a person's thoughts and beliefs. Men have this freedom by their nature. The state cannot remove it.

      The inscription on the Jefferson Memorial reads "I have sworn upon the altar of god eternal hostility against every form of tyranny over the mind of man."

      Are you referring to Thomas Jefferson the slave owner?

    7. Re:Priorities by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      The inscription on the Jefferson Memorial reads "I have sworn upon the altar of god eternal hostility against every form of tyranny over the mind of man."

      Which is ironic as religion is one of the worst tyrannies over the mind of man ever invented.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  18. Note that their interpretation of "Blasphemy" is " by Chrisq · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Note that their interpretation of "Blasphemy" is "Critical of Islam". From TFA:

    We would go to the UN and OIC and get a law passed to stop anti-Islam activities, including blasphemy, for-ever,

    So burning bibles will be fine, as will be the destroying artefacts of other faiths. Of course it will not interfere with their right to kill anyone who converts from Islam (apostasy has the death penalty in Pakistan and many other Muslim countries, or allow non-Muslims to worship in the open. I suggest that the UN ought to think about preventing the death penalty for changing religion rather than make it illegal to say "Muhammad was violent".

  19. *Tap* *tap* *tap*...Is this thing on? by davmoo · · Score: 1

    I'd just like to say that Prime Minister Raja Pervez Ashraf's mother wears combat boots in the shower.

    --
    I want a new quote. One that won't spill. One that don't cost too much. Or come in a pill.
    1. Re:*Tap* *tap* *tap*...Is this thing on? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is this one of the strangest "Your mom" posts ever or am I just missing a cultural reference? What consenting adults get up to in private is none of our business.

    2. Re:*Tap* *tap* *tap*...Is this thing on? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      It is when they get to pass or enforce laws about, or judge, those things "got up to".

  20. And how do we do that? by cfulton · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Christianity is blasphemy to a Muslim. Islam is blasphemy to a Jew. Mormonism is blasphemy to a Christian. And us atheists, well no religion thinks that ain't blasphemy. So, would this mean that everybody just shuts up about their particular brand of religion or does the world have to pick just one? Because, otherwise it is a joke of an idea.

    --
    No sigs in BETA. Beta SUCKS.
    1. Re:And how do we do that? by jwilcox154 · · Score: 1

      Christianity is blasphemy to a Muslim. Islam is blasphemy to a Jew. Mormonism is blasphemy to a Christian.

      Actually Mormonism is a denomination of Christianity.

      Also not all Muslims, Jews, Christians feel that other religions are blasphemy to them.

      And us atheists, well no religion thinks that ain't blasphemy.

      I can't speaks for other religions, however I can speak about mine. As a Wiccan I do not see Atheism as blasphemy and AFAIK no other Wiccan sees Atheism as blasphemy. What we do believe is "An ye harm none, do what ye will" and denying someone his or her right to believe or disbelieve as they wish is harming someone.

      So, would this mean that everybody just shuts up about their particular brand of religion or does the world have to pick just one? Because, otherwise it is a joke of an idea.

      How about allowing each person choose his or her religion freely, even if it is none of the above. Freedom of speech and freedom of religion are both, IMO, quite important and should not be limited just because someone is simply "offended."

    2. Re:And how do we do that? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Islam is blasphemy to a Jew".
      According to Judaism, non-jews can be whatever "religion" they like (and are discouraged from trying to become jewish). No *beliefs* are expected from non-jews (or even from jews according to many codifiers).
      The only *behavior* expected from non-jews are seven general rules such as no murder, no theft, certain sexual relationships (mother-son, male-male, maternal siblings) etc.

    3. Re:And how do we do that? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Mormons may call themselves Christian, but most other Christian denominations view Mormonism as having strayed so far afield doctrinally as to no longer be a part of Christianity. For example Catholics and Protestants in the US have much warmer views of each others' doctrines than either does of Mormonism, by a wide margin. I think therefore that by any objective classification you have to place Mormonism outside of the community of modern Christian faiths (at the very last, barely hanging onto the fringes of it).

      While not all practicing Muslims, Jews, or Christians personally feel that members of the others blaspheme, as a matter of doctrine they definitely do. The whole reason that these three faiths are not united (and for that matter, the reason that each is so fragmented into sub-denominations) is precisely because of very important doctrinal distinctions. Asserting the core beliefs of Judiasm *is* blasphemy to a Christian (Jews do not believe that God's "second coming" in the form of Jesus was the real second coming). Ditto for any pair of religions you can name, really. That's the reason they split and became distinct in the first place. Those who like to take the Hippy-Religion point of view that they don't see their neighbors of another religion as blasphemers are basically just doctrinally lazy and/or don't understand their own religion very well.

      As long as we're on the subject of blasphemy, I'll go ahead and speak ill of Wicca while I'm here just to rile your feathers. I'm an atheist, so obviously I view all religions to be about as valid and interesting from a philosophical and/or theological standpoint as the Flying Spaghetti Monster. But really, I at least have to give the older, well-established religions of the world a minor nod over things like Wicca. At least their memes have cultured and matured for centuries into major movements, and some could even have debates about the merits of their religious practices and institutions independent of the veracity of their theology. In other words: they may be wrong, but at least they've got some history and legitimacy in the societal sense.

      And then there's Wicca, which is basically a 20th century invention out of nowhere. Some people gathered up some odd random bits of folklore and mysticism and stuck them together with their own modern rules and started calling it a religion, and really go out of their way to try to convince everyone else that it's ancient and valid. Most modern researchers don't buy Gardner's crap about the ancient origins of any modern form of Wicca. Having met many Wiccans (and other related occult oddities) in my life, I think it's fair of me to assume that most of them join these religions out of some sort of misguided or misplaced attempt to rebel against western Christianity. To all of them, I wish I could say: There are easier ways to rebel against religion that don't involve inventing yet another, new, fake religion...

    4. Re:And how do we do that? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you advocating a "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" policy?!

    5. Re:And how do we do that? by jwilcox154 · · Score: 1

      Nope, no feathers riled at all. You can view the universe any way you see fit just as I do right now. You should have every right to speak your mind just like I do as well. What you have posted does not harm anyone.

      On the subject of Atheism while I do not agree with the view that there are no deities I do feel that it is wrong for people to discriminate against others for being Atheist. Case in mind, Lance Armstrong had to give up his medals because he allegedly used "Performance enhancing drugs" simply because some were claiming he did. It was a bloody witch hunt against him for being Atheist. That is what riles up my feathers, the intolerance for others simply because they are different.

      Back to Wicca, I can only speak for myself, not for others, as to logic behind choosing Wicca. I chose it to grow spiritually. To learn to not only tolerate others that are different, but also accept them as well. Learning from others is the way to becoming wiser. Wisdom will allow for me to see whether or not my actions will harm others before I take them. Through wisdom I can become more accepting of others regardless of beliefs or lack thereof. While I may not be perfect I do realize that perfection is merely a destination and my life is but a path I travel along to reach my destination. Even though I will never make it to my destination I will do my best to get as close as possible.

      Do I believe that Wicca is for everyone or that everyone should be Wiccan? Definitely not as each one of us has a unique path to travel and our paths will cross from time to time. But just because someone chooses a different religion or no religion at all doesn't make him or her any more or less of a person than anyone else on this planet.

      Now, with the laws Pakistan's PM is demanding. Mere laws will not erase the hate, just cover it up. Those laws will allow the hatred to continue to boil to the point it will explode. Once it does we will have more violence and violence will beget more hatred and violence.

    6. Re:And how do we do that? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Actually Mormonism is a denomination of Christianity.

      That depends on one's definition of Christianity. The mainstream one includes the belief in Trinity, which Mormons (and Jehovah's Witnesses, and some other folk) don't share.

    7. Re:And how do we do that? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And us atheists, well no religion thinks that ain't blasphemy.

      buddhism does not regard atheism as blasphemous. aside from the fact that it does not posit a supreme being, buddhism has no concept of blasphemy. in fact it encourages a healthy skepticism until a religious claim has been put to the test (whatever your test may be) and has withstood the test successfully.

    8. Re:And how do we do that? by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      As a Wiccan

      Sky-clad pix or it didn't happen.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    9. Re:And how do we do that? by jwilcox154 · · Score: 1

      Even the mainstream Christians are torn on that one. Some believe in the trinity while others believe that Yahweh and Yeshua are one in the same. All denominations of Christianity go by a simple phrase found in the Gospel according to John, chapter 3 Verse 16.

    10. Re:And how do we do that? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Mainstream Christian trinitarianism is the belief that Father God and Jesus are one and the same "but not really" - i.e. there is trinity, but nevertheless there is only one God. It's deliberately confusing.

      There is no mainstream denomination that does not agree on that - it's a fundamental dogma for Orthodox, Catholics, Anglicans, and all Protestant churches. So much so that it's part of the creed of faith (Nicene) on which all these agree.

  21. Can they coexist? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From the article:
    The UN's Human Rights Charter mentions protection from "religious intolerance" but also in the same sentence "freedom of opinion and expression.""

    Is this even possible? To address religious intolerance while promoting freedom of opinion and expression? I honestly can't see how...

    1. Re:Can they coexist? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, they can coexist. Religious intolerance means suppressing a religion. Which actually includes suppressing certain forms of free speech (namely those endorsing that religion), but is not limited to it (for example, it also includes things like if you cannot apply for a government job because of your religion).

    2. Re:Can they coexist? by jbolden · · Score: 1

      By religious intolerance they generally meant state sponsored religious persecutions. Not individuals saying mean stuff.

      The USA has strong religious tolerance and strong freedom of expression laws.

    3. Re:Can they coexist? by Qybix · · Score: 1

      Religions cannot coexist. It is impossible. Eventually the leaders of each religion will realize that the only way to make more money or control more people is to destroy the other religions. There is no religion without the greedy and intolerant wanting to be in control of everything they see.

      Even the bible itself is a great example of this; why did god throw the devil into hell? Because god didn't want to share his toys. Greed is the foundation of religion and the very reason that these people want intolerance enforced on all; so that no one can question their domination.

      Without greed being the entire equation, there would be no need for intolerance.

      Qybixxx

      --
      Qybix ----- I do not have a belief system; I'm an Anti-theist and proud of it! Saying that not believing in anything i
  22. Umm... by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 3, Informative

    Blasphemy isn't 'religious intolerance'; but banning blasphemy is fairly obviously contrary to 'freedom of expression and opinion'. There, that was easy.

    Incidentally, since most religions contain significant incompatibilities(on occasion, you get organizational splits purely because of personality spats or disputes over who gets the earthly loot; but all the really good schisms are over doctrine), the practice of almost any religion is necessarily blasphemous(at least by implication, often quite overtly) toward almost all the others.

    In practice, of course, anti-blasphemy laws are usually just an excuse to suppress the minorities and the dissidents; but it would be (morbidly) amusing to watch the epic pileup that would occur if one were actually applied rigorously... There would also be some fun around statements that are simultaneously likely to arouse ire and are confirmed by assorted holy texts, the denial of which would also cause ire(Anything concerning the fact that the god of the old testament is kind of a genocidal psycho, or that Mohammed fucked a nine year old, would qualify, as would, no doubt, an endless number of subtler doctrinal quibbles between more enthusiastic sects).

    1. Re:Umm... by Kupfernigk · · Score: 1

      The really good schisms are still over money, it's just that they manage to conceal it as doctrine. Do you really think Joseph Smith didn't mainly benefit financially from starting Mormonism?

      --
      From scarped cliff or quarried stone she cries "A thousand types are gone, I care for nothing, no not one."
    2. Re:Umm... by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 1

      I tend to suspect that the 'prophets' who know when to skip town are in it for the money, while the ones who end up getting themselves killed over it are either sincerely deluded or caught up on the power and the status. Smith did alright for himself for a while; but he ultimately failed to take the money and run when that would have been a great deal more sensible...

    3. Re:Umm... by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      What do you think sectarian violence is all about? Shias and Sunnis are happily killing each over whether there was a 13th Imam or not, and both don't like the Sufis. Compare it to Mormons, Catholics, Protestants and their various flavors, and blasphemy laws have never lead to anything but general violence against people "we don't like".

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    4. Re:Umm... by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 1

      What do you think sectarian violence is all about? Shias and Sunnis are happily killing each over whether there was a 13th Imam or not, and both don't like the Sufis. Compare it to Mormons, Catholics, Protestants and their various flavors, and blasphemy laws have never lead to anything but general violence against people "we don't like".

      My point was merely that, in application, I've never seen a blasphemy law that is applied across the board and thus suppresses basically all religious activity. In practice, the monopoly religion(or an oligopoly of doctrinally somewhat different; but-agree-to-politely-not-talk-about-that as part of a big-tent strategy religions) get to enforce the law against their opponents, and their opponents generally don't get to return the favor.

    5. Re:Umm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Smith had been relocating regularly for over ten years before he was imprisoned and killed. I think his fatal blunder was refusing to give in to his wealthy 'investor's' demands for control over the cash flow, as it turned most of his high-ranking support against him.

    6. Re:Umm... by dargaud · · Score: 1

      "Let the gods avenge themselves." — Roman law maxim on blasphemy.

      --
      Non-Linux Penguins ?
    7. Re:Umm... by loneDreamer · · Score: 1

      were actually applied rigorously...

      In the west at least, these kinds of laws are only applied moderately, just enough to avoid massive subversion. They still get to easily destroy anyone they would like, even against rights or other laws. I mean, it's easier to blame and condemn someone of blasphemy than pedophilia or terrorism, but not that much...

    8. Re:Umm... by multimediavt · · Score: 1

      ...it would be (morbidly) amusing to watch the epic pileup that would occur if one were actually applied rigorously...

      Oh, you mean like the Spanish Inquisition? Yeah, laugh riot that was. History has already shown us what blasphemy laws will do to society, and it's NOT a good thing. I agree with those that have said that Pakistan and other Islamic countries are dealing with a new thing, freedom of expression. They haven't really had it before and their established social norms (based almost solely on feudalism and rigorous religious practice and doctrine) are being wiped away by this freedom of expression thing.

      It's very difficult for those of us that have lived in societies that have not only protected but defended free expression for generations to understand what these developing nations are going through. The established, conservative element is going to rail against this because they see it for what it is, a threat to their method of control. Religion, like any other bureaucracy, is a method of control and regulation. Like other bureaucracies the power inherent in the system can easily be abused. I don't think Islam is a bad thing at all, nor do I see other faiths as bad. I see religion (idealism given form and function) as bad no matter what faith is behind it.

      Yes, there is a distinct difference between faith and religion. They are NOT mutually inclusive. I consider myself agnostic at best. I have faith in humanity and the overall goodness of mankind, but I don't need a book (I've read the Bible, Quran, Buddist texts and Torah), a preacher, or anyone else to tell me what's right and what's wrong or how I should interpret things. I'm an educated, intelligent human being and I can make my own decisions, thank you very much! Some can't. They lack the skill set or the know how. It's sad. They are sheep being led. Sometimes being led far from what is truly right and wrong. (more on TRUTH later...). I don't see blasphemy as anything more than someone getting bent out of shape because they don't like what was said or done. Don't like it, don't do it, but don't try to hurt the other person because you disagree. As the late Phil Harris would say, "Bad, bad, bad, bad, bad!"

  23. Fuck allah by AlphaWolf_HK · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Hell, fuck all invisible men in the sky.

    --
    Careful with names containing L slashdot.org/~AiphaWolf_HK slashdot.org/~AlphaWoif_HK slashdot.org/~AiphaWoif_HK
    1. Re:Fuck allah by Chrisq · · Score: 1

      Mother nature is a cold hearted bitch who has killed 99% of all species that have ever existed.

      And one day she will kill me, but I still love her

    2. Re:Fuck allah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can I mod this up and remain AC?

      Fear of death squads and fatwas and all that.

      Eventually they will push too far and the moderates will lash out at all extremists (of all faiths and none).

      They day I get charged for blasphemy is when I really start to get creative (Lenny Bruce, nice guy, didn't go far enough) (Sam Kinison, good starting point, but needs to put some feeling into it) Get my drift?

    3. Re:Fuck allah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some woman named Maria did that about 2000 years ago, and look where it got us. :-)

  24. Religious intolerance? They ARE the intolerance by Omnifarious · · Score: 3, Interesting

    This 'religious tolerance' thing is exactly what these rioting mobs are not demonstrating. Religious tolerance does not mean that you don't have to hear anything you don't like about your religion. It means that you do not suffer political or economic repression for your religious beliefs. That's it.

    So I'm sorry (well, no, I'm not really) but no. This absolutely will not fly. I don't care what kind of weaponry people who think rioting over an insult to their religion acquire. They must never be allowed control under any circumstances. This kind of behavior is flat out unacceptable and intolerable. I will never in any way support it and nobody else should either.

    Fix your own worldview, because you will not get to impose it on everybody else. I will never agree to it.

    1. Re:Religious intolerance? They ARE the intolerance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree. But: If you are insulted by people from a country who routinely during peace-time bomb civilians in your country using remotely operated aircraf, then I can see how you might not be very intellectual and smart in your reaction...

  25. Free speech? by jenningsthecat · · Score: 2

    'Cultural sensitivities' notwithstanding, it seems to me that there's a fairly clear line between speech which is harmful and speech which is just annoying. If my speech purposely incites others to cause harm, then perhaps that speech should be proscribed. If my speech simply expresses an opinion, or makes fun of a person, a group, a religion, etc., then the person, group, or religion just needs to develop a thicker skin and/or turn a deaf ear to what I'm saying.

    So to all of you fundamentalists of any stripe who have your knickers in a twist over people dissing your sacred whatever, GET OVER IT AND GET YOUR SHITTY LITTLE SENSE OF 'SACRED' ENTITLEMENT THE FUCK OUT OF MY FACE! No, the world does not owe you special treatment no matter how hard you pray, nor how fervently and sacredly and preciously you believe in your prophet, your god, your saviour, or your belly button lint. Grow up, and stop turning minor insults into end-of-the-world scenarios. Your fanaticism causes nothing but harm, and I am utterly sick of it.

    A quote from the Sydney Morning Herald piece puts it best: ''Human rights are not about protecting religions; human rights are to protect humans." Personally, the closest I come to religion is to say 'Amen to that!'

    --
    'The Economy' is a giant Ponzi scheme whose most pitiable suckers are the youngest among us and the yet-unborn.
  26. Pakistan = GOP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The situation in Pakistan is very similar to what is happening within the GOP, namely that through a process of political decay, they have gradually become beholden to the fringe elements of the community. At some point you pass a threshold where events conspire to turn everything into a self-fulfiling prophecy, especially when it becomes an "us versum them" scenario. So instead of reject the fringe elements and reevaluating their position (the healthy choice), they double down.

    1. Re:Pakistan = GOP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think the GOP is going around and killing people of other faiths or executing people for crimes against Islam(Christianity). Individualism and federalism/localism are important tenets of the GOP platform. The GOP doubles down because we have agreed and compromised with every social program since 1933. If you want a NHS how about compromising and giving up something like SS or the Department of Education. You want to solve global warming and I want a reliable power system that can meet the demands of American energy usage. Nuclear power would be a good compromise. Are you willing to reject the green movement's position against nuclear power? We are doubling down because we see the tenets of individualism outlined in our constitution being destroyed by the other side and sometimes even own party. These tenets are slowly being replaced by a movement of collectivism that is sold as a path to safety, progress, and modernism. This collectivism is a path to tyranny.

    2. Re:Pakistan = GOP by multimediavt · · Score: 1

      The situation in Pakistan is very similar to what is happening within the GOP, namely that through a process of political decay, they have gradually become beholden to the fringe elements of the community. At some point you pass a threshold where events conspire to turn everything into a self-fulfiling prophecy, especially when it becomes an "us versum them" scenario. So instead of reject the fringe elements and reevaluating their position (the healthy choice), they double down.

      And just like the GOP you've created a false equivalency. What we're seeing is not due to political decay. It's not about being beholden to "fringe" elements in their society, because their top-to-bottom societies have been based on these principles for centuries. We are clearly seeing what can happen to a society once feudalism/dictatorship and dogma are washed away by freedom of expression and interaction with other free cultures. A major problem is the level of education in these countries is appalling by Western standards and people are being led around by their religion (see my earlier post for definition: http://yro.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3139989&cid=41439197), not by reason. Again, the faiths of Islam, Christianity, Judaism, Buddhism NOT bad. Religion, bad!

  27. but you can by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    of course, it doesn't work. but it creates a lot of suffering for a long time

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  28. this is really about power by Dan667 · · Score: 1

    perverting religion to gain power is done by christians and jews as well.

  29. to hell with that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'd rather see the entire middle east flattened by thermonuclear weapons than give in one inch on free speech in the West.

  30. Yeah well bacon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'll sign up for this as soon as there is an international treaty banning anydisrespectful language towards pigs and pig products. For too long religious nutbags have attacked and besmirched the good name of bacon, and I, for one, am sick of it.

  31. Fuck that by kimvette · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Mohammed was a warmongering, misogynistic, bigoted pedophile, and Allah is a lie. Islam is a religion bent on destruction, murder, and world conquest. Fuck Islam.

    Muslims, read the above. Know it's not a religion of peace because Mohammed taught the principle of abrogation, where the newer writings overrule the older writings where they conflict, and while in the beginning he was peaceful and had good relations with the Jews he grew up with, he later became warlike, hateful, bigoted, and a massive megalomaniac on the scale of Stalin, Hitler, and pretty much every other evil historical figure you can think of, and his writings changed to match his philosophy, hence the jihad changed from one's internal struggle of conquering human nature's evil characteristics to world conquest, He wrote of converting people by the sword if they won't accept his stupid book, and he also preached that Muslims should kill the Saturday people (Jews) and the Sunday people (Christians) since they were friends to the Jews.

    Again: Mohammed was flat-out wrong. Allah is a myth. Islam is a religion of hate.

    Take that, Pakistan! I just blasphemed your ass to next Tuesday.

    --
    The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
    1. Re:Fuck that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What is the punishment for the realization that Islam is nothing but a bile fuels hate cult? its death. If you are an unlucky fucker, born and indoctrinated into this hate cult, and you leave, then you must die.

      Relgion of peace? LIKE FUCK

      Take your hate cult back into the dark ages where it belongs!

      I will mock you and your beliefs because they are stupid and deserve mocking

      What this shows us is that millions of Muslims are kept in the dark, fed bullshit by those in power and wheeled out to riot and kill people whenever the powerful so decide it.

      Islam = Hate = Intolerance.

    2. Re:Fuck that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I pay 100k$ dollars to whoever slays this infidel.

    3. Re:Fuck that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bitcoins? Do I hear bitcoins? Now you're talking.

    4. Re:Fuck that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Allah is a myth.

      Allah is not a myth. Allack is a black rock in Mecca that Muslims worship.

      Some day Mecca will be bombed and we non-mulims will finally get to see the shards of that rock.

    5. Re:Fuck that by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      Know it's not a religion of peace because Mohammed taught the principle of abrogation

      Has some right wing DJ in the States just discovered the word "abrogation" and told all his followers to go out and use it as much as possible? Because it keeps coming up in this thread in the context of "anything good in Islam can be ignored because anything bad obviously over-rules the good". (As opposed to the bible which is, of course, flawlessly logical and consistent throughout).

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  32. first question, who defines 'blasphemy' ? by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1

    who gets to define it? who gets to say 'no' when I want to bring my own definition and seek to outlaw those who speak against my view of 'god'.

    what's that you say? no new applications are being accepted?

    damn. late to yet another party.

    --

    --
    "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
  33. The US South would support this by 0xG · · Score: 0

    no doubt; burning the flag is already considered the equivalent to blasphemy, after all.

    --
    A pox on web designers who feel that window.innerWidth == screen.availWidth
    1. Re:The US South would support this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      oh for fuck's sake, grow up.

    2. Re:The US South would support this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, those stupid people generalize all the time.

    3. Re:The US South would support this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      circletimessquare, is that you?

  34. Problem by mythix · · Score: 2

    For this to work they would have to accept all gods of all religions, and acts against a christian god would also be blasphemous, not just against a muslim prophet because your country is mostly islamic... Recognition of other religions is a problem in most religions... so good luck there....

  35. Blasphemy laws are blasphemous in my religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow, brain freeze

  36. NO - simple reasons why by RichMan · · Score: 1

    A) valid criticism must always be possible
              - can you imagine a society where valid criticism is not allowd ?
    B) religions are non verifiable
              - still waiting

    - which basically means all criticism, investigation, and parody of religions must be possible

  37. pakistan, sigh by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 2

    look guys: not only do we not want your stupid 'blasphemy' laws, but we INSIST YOU CHANGE YOUR STUPID WAYS, now that you mention it.

    the world is not compatible with your bullshit ideas. truly, you are a backward believing culture and this resistance to join the modern age is growing rather tiring on the rest of the civilized world.

    please grow up and get your own home in order before trying to 'fix' the rest of us.

    oh, and fuck mohammed.

    --

    --
    "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
  38. Domestic Consumption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    a) Just more posturing for domestic consumption. We have zero leverage internationally after all......

    b) You know a similar dynamic is at play in Chinese nationalism as well, with its sensitivities over islands in the South China sea or over Tibetan independence. Its been demonstrated as well with Hindu chauvinist groups like RSS or Shiv Sena.
    Its the notion that your honor is in other peoples hands, so they better watch their mouth. You might be able to do something about that if your community is in the same town as the offense giver (see Hindu/Muslim relations in India). But when global communication networks have brought the ability to hear about any insult from anybody anywhere, these old notions must be put away as yesterday's tools. They just don't scale.

  39. so here's the dynamic for the next few decades: by circletimessquare · · Score: 4, Interesting

    1. someone insults islam. could be erudite high culture, like salman rushdie, could be a useless troll, like the "innocence of the muslims" hatemonger. doesn't matter

    2. the muslim world goes apeshit. moderate muslims say the muslims going apeshit do more damage to islam than the insult to islam. they're right. doesn't matter

    3. someone from the west, or in the west, gets killed. this matters

    see, it doesn't matter if you believe that you should be able to say anything you want and it doesn't give anyone else the right to kill you. because there's a large group of extremists who believe that if you insult their religion, this gives them the right, no, the duty, to kill someone, ANYONE from the west. because if some low iq asocial reject who hasn't washed in a week draws a lame cartoon or writes a bad play about muhammad in his mom's basement, this represents the entire west. the reject's basement could be in hamburg. could be in sydney. could be in vancouver. doesn't matter: the entire western "tribe" attacked the honor of the entire muslim "tribe". that's the way it works in their head. now it is ok to kill someone from that tribe, anywhere, anytime. to restore honor. that's the "logic"

    yes, this is some ignorant medieval shit, i agree. but that doesn't matter. what matters is that there is a large group of medieval ignorants who can not be reasoned with who will firmly and dependably adhere to this dynamic

    this will go on and on for decades. what i fear is that it accelerates and destabilizes a country into the hands of a muslim version of hitler

    i try to be an optimistic person in life. that you can solve problems nonviolently. but this is a small planet, getting smaller, because of jet air travel and the internet. and not that we shouldn't aim for peace, but that peace is not possible, due to the determination of a fringe, but a fringe of enough financial backings, sympathies across large enough of a population, and over a dynamic of many decades, whereby large scale bloodshed comes, despite the best efforts of everyone sane otherwise

    muslim moderates, in the muslim world and the west: you can not hide from these fools. you have to fight for your lands. this will make you targets, and a lot of you will be targeted and killed for not being properly devout. but the alternative is these dipshits come to power, and then it is large scale conflict with the west, and it will make wwii look like a tea party. please: take your lands away from these assholes. it will be very difficult. you understand the alternative is worse

    what i fear is simple: fortune favors the bold

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:so here's the dynamic for the next few decades: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere the ceremony of innocence is drowned; the best lack all conviction, while the worst are full of passionate intensity.

    2. Re:so here's the dynamic for the next few decades: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, what I am hearing is please clean up your mess.

      When we have these bigoted, close-minded, hate-mongering idiots who can't even grasp the subtleties of their own religion, it is the responsibility of the populace to oppose them.

      Go google "Texas A&M Westboro Baptist Church" for the proper response to these nutbags.

    3. Re:so here's the dynamic for the next few decades: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... peace is not possible, due to the determination of a fringe, but a fringe of enough financial backings, sympathies across large enough of a population, and over a dynamic of many decades, whereby large scale bloodshed comes, despite the best efforts of everyone sane otherwise

      muslim moderates, in the muslim world and the west: you can not hide from these fools. you have to fight for your lands. this will make you targets, and a lot of you will be targeted and killed for not being properly devout. but the alternative is these dipshits come to power, and then it is large scale conflict with the west, .... please: take your lands away from these assholes. it will be very difficult. you understand the alternative is worse

      Strangely, a Muslim splinter group, Baha’i, predicts exactly this scenario - an approaching conflagration in the Muslim world. A group founded by Baha’u’llah in 19th-century Persia by a somewhat Christ-like figure (willingly died for his beliefs) who preached non-violence, tolerance, and the acceptance of all religions. Baha’is are now widely persecuted/killed for their beliefs by the Muslim fundamentalists.

      No, I'm not Baha’i - I don't buy his multiple wives (including a 12-year-old) or his teaching that homosexuality is a sin (even if he taught loving, not hating, homosexuals). Still, it's an interesting take on the current Muslim perversions, and possibly even predictive.

    4. Re:so here's the dynamic for the next few decades: by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      muslim moderates, in the muslim world and the west: you can not hide from these fools.

      Sure they can, and they do. And you can't blame them for it. People want to live a calm and peaceful life, for their kids to be raised in a sane and civilized environment. They don't want to be targets and be killed for resisting the fundies.

      but the alternative is these dipshits come to power, and then it is large scale conflict with the west

      I'm not convinced that there would necessarily be a large scale conflict with the West even if Salafists manage to create their Caliphate - and even that will take time, decades most likely. Even if there will be one, looking at the relative technical capabilities of the potential parties to that conflict - and the, shall we say politely, explicit disaffiliation of fundies with scientific (and therefore technical) progress - I have no doubt about which side would be the victor. Millions of mujis with AKs, versus B-52s and cruise missiles? Ha.

      In fact, if you assume that this conflict is likely, it would make more sense to invite liberal Muslims to live in Western countries. Let them have their peace, and contribute to our economies, our technological advance, and through those, to our combined defenses. The more of them come here, the fewer will end up being forced to work by the fundies for the same over there.

    5. Re:so here's the dynamic for the next few decades: by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      A good start might be for the West (well, basically the US) to keep out of other countries and let their own people sort out what they want. This was as true in the days of the USSR as it is now. If country X wants a repressive theocracy or Central Economic Planning, let them - hopefully temporarily. The virtues of democracy, fredom of expression, equal rights and so on should win in the end, however long it takes.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    6. Re:so here's the dynamic for the next few decades: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      once the moderates win, they'll need to do war with the west. who'll then stand up to israel#s settlements? the us certainly wont. why eliminate the fighter when youll need them to fight the bigger war for u.

    7. Re:so here's the dynamic for the next few decades: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      These dipshits are already in power. In Iran, in Saudi Arabia, now in Egypt, in Palestine. The key to stopping these idiots is to end their lives, pure and simple. OBL was right in one respect when he said (paraphrasing): "People will back the stronger horse". Everybody loves a winner. And we need to be the winners. And we only do that, as history instructs us, by killing many more of them than they kill of us.

      Nasty and brutish, but thus the world as it's always been.

  40. Assholes ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    Sorry, but if one of the government ministers of Pakistan is offering a $100K bounty for the lives of these people, then he's a terrorist.

    If Pakistan and other Muslim countries can't do anything but act as terrorists, it's time we treated them as such. That includes their government as Pakistan seems to go a long way to supporting terrorists.

    There's no right to not be offended, and despite claims to the contrary, Islam doesn't exactly demonstrate itself to be a religion of peace and tolerance.

    It may be peaceful at its core, but largely been co-opted by intolerant, ignorant, and violent assholes. If this is truly what Mohammed taught, then he was a false prophet.

    Muslims are supposed to respect the peoples of the book. Instead, they've decided that Christians and Jews pray to a different god (it's the same one) and should be exterminated.

    Islam doesn't deserve respect as we see it from around the world. Instead it presents itself as a cancer.

  41. Who is this "we" I keep hearing about? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about we finally rank freedom of expression firmly above freedom of religion?

    "We"? The concept of a global "we" is non-existent. There are as many different versions of "we", all with their own ideas of "how things should be run, bub!", as there are tribes, races, regions, countries, pacts, organizations, religions, cults, governments, societies, etc etc etc. I don't see mankind getting to a global "we" anytime soon, until direct brain to brain communication becomes possible, and even then I'm not sure...

  42. Why do remain silent on the Otoman empire? by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Funny, so you mention the crusades but not the Otoman empire? Wonder why you tell only one side of a story.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

    1. Re:Why do remain silent on the Otoman empire? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      or Athiests during WWII (Stalin), Cambodia (Pol Pot), China (Mao), etc.

    2. Re:Why do remain silent on the Otoman empire? by Mike+Buddha · · Score: 2

      or Athiests during WWII (Stalin), Cambodia (Pol Pot), China (Mao), etc.

      Don't forget the French Revolution. The triumph of atheism and rational thought brought about The Terror.

      --
      by Mike Buddha -- Someday the mountain might get him, but the law never will.
    3. Re:Why do remain silent on the Otoman empire? by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1

      or Athiests during WWII (Stalin), Cambodia (Pol Pot), China (Mao), etc.

      These people didn't kill others because they were atheists, they killed others because they were power-hungry nutcases.

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    4. Re:Why do remain silent on the Otoman empire? by Artifakt · · Score: 2

      There's a lot more than two sides to this particular story.

      Ty this: http://www.mapsofwar.com/ind/imperial-history.html

      This video shows 16 waves of occupation and conquest across the region we now call the middle east (I'm counting the classical Roman and Byzantine empires as a single wave to get that number). Interestingly, the Crusades are very low on the damage list in terms of either land area or total death and distruction wrought. (Not that they didn't try). The Ottoman empire ranks much higher, but would definitely fall well below the top three waves on area. Since it was later in the game, the damage in terms of population is another story, and it might well rank third by some estimates. Probably the Mongols would be number 1 overall. They fall in the middle era in this schema, when avarage populations were lower, but they were so damned big they probably killed raped, or enslaved more people in total than any others, as well as being the clear leaders by geographical area. Since populations have generally risen with modern times however, the European Colonial era may have been the most grevious, simply because there were more civilians to be rolled over and slaughtered in these more modern times.

      --
      Who is John Cabal?
    5. Re:Why do remain silent on the Otoman empire? by CdBee · · Score: 0

      The Ottoman empire was the first cosmopolitan, tolerant empire on earth. It is the place where multiculturalism was invented. It's worth a mention.... Also, regarding the grandfather post, Islam's only about 1370 years old. Hasn't matured yet, sadly...

      --
      I have been a user for about 10 years. This ends Feb 2014. The site's been ruined. I'm off. Dice, FU
    6. Re:Why do remain silent on the Otoman empire? by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      or Athiests during WWII (Stalin), Cambodia (Pol Pot), China (Mao), etc.

      Don't forget the French Revolution. The triumph of atheism and rational thought brought about The Terror.

      Yes, and it inspired ther US Founding Fathers. Clearly the world would be a better place if we still had the French monarchy and the US was still just one of the Queen's colonies.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    7. Re:Why do remain silent on the Otoman empire? by heefeneet · · Score: 1

      or Athiests during WWII (Stalin), Cambodia (Pol Pot), China (Mao), etc.

      Except that none of them did what they did in the name of Atheism.

    8. Re:Why do remain silent on the Otoman empire? by Mike+Buddha · · Score: 1

      Yes, because the French Revolution in 1789 inspired the American war of Independence in 1776. Math not your stong point?

      --
      by Mike Buddha -- Someday the mountain might get him, but the law never will.
    9. Re:Why do remain silent on the Otoman empire? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is an old post. But please, reading comprehension. He was saying the started the same, and one changed the other didn't.

  43. expanding on your words: by circletimessquare · · Score: 5, Insightful

    intolerance of intolerance is not the same thing as intolerance itself

    "i oppose you because of your skin color" is not the same as "i oppose you because you oppose people simply because of their skin color"

    but in that difference, is the confusion: some social conservatives view the left as the most intolerant. because the left won't respect their homophobia, for example. "how can you say you stand for tolerance when you don't respect my right to deny someone else's right to marry?"

    did you see that trick? did you see how it gets turned around?

    it's the same as "if some troll somewhere makes a bad youtube video about muhammad, the honor of islam must be restored with blood from someone else from your tribe, the west"

    it all comes down to: how do you deal with people who demand respect for a worldview which is essentially disrespectful

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:expanding on your words: by i+kan+reed · · Score: 4, Insightful

      From my perspective, you got it wrong.

      "I oppose you because of your skin color" is a statement that is to be rejected as unethical and foolish. Just because someone subscribes to at least one unethical and foolish position does not justify categorizing them and hating them. The position can be attacked without attacking the person.

      I "tolerate intolerance" in as much as I respect the right of people to hold the position, I don't tolerate it in as much as I will point out the incorrectness of the position, actively fight against acting on the position, and make an honest attempt to convince the holder of their error. In spite of following this course precisely, I've been accused of not tolerating intolerance by people who just don't know what tolerance means.

    2. Re:expanding on your words: by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 5, Interesting

      You can actually generalize that a bit: 'tolerance' is really only a coherent concept with regard to certain classes of stimuli.

      It is, at best, weird to speak of 'tolerance' of things you like. Nobody really talks about 'tolerating' things that they like. They don't not-tolerate them; but they don't tolerate them in any meaningful way.

      It is downright incorrect to speak of 'tolerance' of things that are deemed to be beyond the pale. You don't 'tolerate' murderers or critical security flaws; not because you are 'intolerant'; but because such things are not accorded toleration.

      It's only the intermediate class of things, things that are distasteful, unpleasant, etc; but are accorded some sort of right(or some sort of inevitability, in context, as with the squeaky vent that Facilities is never going to fix), that you can meaningfully 'tolerate', and the degree to which you do so determines how 'tolerant' or 'intolerant' you are(the medical usage semi-overlaps here, in that the less responsive to a given drug you are, the greater your tolerance to it is said to be, just as the less responsive to a given negative stimulus you are, the greater your tolerance is said to be).

      The tricky thing is that, in practice, 'tolerance' is forced to carry two(quite distinct) meanings: The one is strictly a measure of how you endure the third class of negative-but-not-eradicable stimuli. The second is your system of classification for these three categories. That's a wholly different thing; but it has to coexist in the same word.

      In the example you give(assuming the participants are actually sincere, that line frequently isn't), you really have an argument over whether or not homophobia is a class II or class III phenomenon: If it is class III, then failure to tolerate it is intolerance. If it is class II, failure to tolerate it is simple moral clarity. (There may also be a secondary argument over what exactly 'tolerance' means: There are definitely social circles that you will be frozen out of for socially retrograde attitudes; but the Leftist firebombing campaign against southern baptist churches just hasn't panned out... Exactly how polite you are required to be to count as 'tolerant' is a somewhat unsettled question).

      Inconveniently, the case of the Blasphemy Police vs. freedom of expression is probably fairly similar. Nobody seems to be saying "Yup, I think that everyone deserves freedom of expression; but I Just Can't Stand It when I see a picture of Mohammed as a drag queen and I flip out, I'm intolerant, I guess." They are, rather, saying that blasphemy, at least against their favorites, is outside the set of phenomena to which tolerance applies. Inconveniently, while somebody's degree of 'tolerance' relative to a pre-supplied set assignment is measureable, and you can argue for or against given actions and policies based on how tolerant they are, the set assignment itself is basically in the same boat as the rest of moral philosophy: little more than handwaving and appeals to 'intuition' or emotion, or imaginary friends.

    3. Re:expanding on your words: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't give them the respect, and if they get violent about it, you smack their asses right back down.

    4. Re:expanding on your words: by MozeeToby · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The position can be attacked without attacking the person.

      I disagree, some positions are indefensible and holding them shows a great deal about the person's attitude in general. Racism exposes much more about a person than merely the fact that they hate a certain race.

    5. Re:expanding on your words: by i+kan+reed · · Score: 1

      Sure, to the extent to which you must judge others, judge them based on what you know of them. But I say you shouldn't add additional judgement without action or call to action. People do not need to be punished for thinking bad things.

    6. Re:expanding on your words: by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Just because someone subscribes to at least one unethical and foolish position does not justify categorizing them and hating them.

      Why not? If they refuse to be convinced of right and good positions through facts and logical argument, are they not themselves unethical and foolish?

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    7. Re:expanding on your words: by Hatta · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Inconveniently, while somebody's degree of 'tolerance' relative to a pre-supplied set assignment is measureable, and you can argue for or against given actions and policies based on how tolerant they are, the set assignment itself is basically in the same boat as the rest of moral philosophy: little more than handwaving and appeals to 'intuition' or emotion, or imaginary friends.

      No, you can easily come up with empirical measures to determine whether something should be tolerated. Does it materially harm anyone other than the person doing it? If not, it must be tolerated. I don't see anyone claiming that blasphemy causes anyone any specific harm, so it must be tolerated.

      You also don't give philosophy enough credit. Remember, logic is a branch of philososphy. And we can make irrefutable logical arguments about what should be tolerated. Assume for the sake of argument that causing someone offense should not be tolerated. You would then advocate for laws against offense. However, I find such laws themselves offensive, as offensive as any religious person finds blasphemy. Therefore the laws themselves would be illegal. QED, a simple logical proof by contradiction that offense should be tolerated.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    8. Re:expanding on your words: by guises · · Score: 1

      but the Leftist firebombing campaign against southern baptist churches just hasn't panned out...

      This isn't really addressing the point you were making, but what were you talking about here? I searched and this is the only baptist church bombing that I could find:

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/16th_Street_Baptist_Church_bombing

      That isn't leftist though. There were also a few mentions of planned parenthood bombings by baptists and some mosque bombings, but no other bombings of baptist churches.

    9. Re:expanding on your words: by i+kan+reed · · Score: 5, Insightful

      What ever makes you think they've been exposed to right and good positions through facts and logical argument? Seriously? I posit the following: every human being on the planet believes at least one absurd thing they have never been reasonably challenged on.

    10. Re:expanding on your words: by Goaway · · Score: 0

      I don't see anyone claiming that blasphemy causes anyone any specific harm, so it must be tolerated.

      It is easy to form an argument that it does under the assumptions of religion.

      First, you can consider your god a person, and blasphemy causes him direct harm.

      Second, you can say that blasphemy causes your community to not receive blessings from your god, which could cause any number of disasters.

    11. Re:expanding on your words: by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 2

      That was pretty much the point, there isn't any such thing: even if you accept the premise of the 'why are you so intolerant of my intolerance? Huh? Huh?' argument, the level of intolerance you'll find is incredibly tepid on the American left. It's mostly a footnote to the broader point, which is about the issues with the word 'tolerance'; but in the specific context of where you commonly hear the argument grandparent mentioned, it's worth noting that the 'intolerance' being complained about is generally incredibly feeble.

    12. Re:expanding on your words: by melikamp · · Score: 1

      Logic is a branch of philosophy, but IMHO that's just inertia. For about 100 years now logic properly belongs to mathematicians. Any kind of logic that cannot be given a mathematical description is trash. Here's one: statements are decided to be "true" or "false" according to what the New Testament tells us about the matters. This is a mostly consistent and very practical way to sort statements, but do we want to call this "logic"? And any other logic with a subjective or mystical element will fall on its face just as hard. Philosophers are free do the philosophy of logic, though, and it will be as fruitful as their work in the philosophy of mathematics.

    13. Re:expanding on your words: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      This is tricky, because it requires someone to define what things are themselves intolerant. Child molestation? racism? Someone hating someone who wears red pants?
      BTW, I don't have an answer for this, but I've got a few friends who quite emphatically say it's Ok to be intolerant of the intolerant. That stance, however, sometimes starts to morph by them into intolerance of other things.
      Intolerance of racists devolves into a general intolerance of all things Southern. Because, of course, they're all racists down there.

    14. Re:expanding on your words: by Hatta · · Score: 1

      That's a good point. Thanks.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    15. Re:expanding on your words: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not so much. I 'm willing to be, if you were raised racist in a racist house, where everything was presented to you as it being proper, there's a good chance you'd come out racist.
      You might get over it over time, should you at some point move outside that bubble. But it's not an innate "oh, i'm fighting against it".

    16. Re:expanding on your words: by i+kan+reed · · Score: 1

      And I'd like to say I also understand and respect your core position. There is a duty to improve one's own opinions when possible. I fully understand rejecting willful ignorance.

    17. Re:expanding on your words: by Hatta · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It is easy to form an argument that it does under the assumptions of religion.

      If you allow people to assume whatever they want, you can make an argument for anything. This is why I said "material harm". If you can't measure the harm done, it may as well not exist.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    18. Re:expanding on your words: by amck · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Toleration of people and their rights to autonomy.

      I'm intolerant of _actions_, because these impinge on other people, and hence need to be justified.

      Ideas: no. The world is full of bad ideas, many of which I've had myself. We need to examine and criticize ideas, examine their consequences, etc. No ideas (such as religions) get a free ride. Having held many bad ideas in the past, I don't hold that against people. We're all seeking after truth and a better life.

      As for "general intolerance of all things Southern", the key point you're looking for is prejudice: treat people as individuals, look for their humanity, rather than one of a class. Once you're willing to dismiss people for being racists/black/jew, that way lies the ovens.

      --
      Anyone who believes exponential growth can go on forever in a finite world is either a madman or an economist
    19. Re:expanding on your words: by readin · · Score: 4, Funny

      The reason violent intolerance is so rare on the left is that they control the levers of power by controlling most of the media (both news and entertainment). When the left finds something that makes them extremely angry, they talk about it on their news shows and TV shows. They are able to laugh about it on late night talk shows and SNL. They control the debate to the point that even Republicans (who are, after all, politicians) feel they must give in.

      Conservatives, on the other hand, are silenced. We don't see our views respected and heard. Instead we see "two-sided" debates in which the person supposedly representing our voice is apologizing for us and accusing us of being extremists. Or we read newspaper articles in which our side is misrepresented or ignored entirely.

      That's why Rush Limbaugh and Fox News have become so popular. Sometimes you want to hear your views stated out loud in a forum where you know others can hear them so you feel like you have a voice in the debate. Even though Rush says so much I disagree with, and makes so little logical sense, I will always have gratitude for him because he was the first media personality I ever heard throwing arguments back at liberals. He wasn't logical, and he wasn't fair, but then neither was all the liberal trash I heard and saw on nightly news and TV shows. When your team is losing because the refs keep favoring the other side, you can't help but feel grateful when a ref enters the field who makes unfair calls in your favor. Sure you would rather have all the refs be fair, but since that isn't happening, you're at least glad to have one of the refs on your side.

      --
      I often don't like the choices people make, but I like the fact that people make choices. That's why I'm a conservative.
    20. Re:expanding on your words: by cfulton · · Score: 0

      Not true. The bible itself is logically inconsistent. You cannot decide what is "true" or "false" based on it using logic alone. Sometimes you must love your neighbor and sometimes you must kill them all and their women and animals down to the last one. If the bible could be parsed logically and you just did what it said then we would not have 2000 years of church doctrine and disagreement about what the bible says. If you start with the premise that is not consistent then none of the statements in your logic are valid. The bible is not consistent ergo cannot be used to generate logical action.

      --
      No sigs in BETA. Beta SUCKS.
    21. Re:expanding on your words: by orgelspieler · · Score: 1

      I posit the following: every human being on the planet believes at least one absurd thing they have never been reasonably challenged on.

      I was in college when my wife-to-be informed me that there were no such thing as cob spiders. I thought that's where cobwebs came from. I wonder what other absurd things I believe to this day.

    22. Re:expanding on your words: by cfulton · · Score: 1

      What, What the left controls the media and the right has nowhere to speak. Except that then you talk about all the places where the right not only speaks, but allows no other points of view. The left wing controlled media you disparage in your first paragraph allows discussion from both sides. While it might lean to the center or center left it allows the debate from both sides to be heard. Fox news and its ilk simply call all who disagree communist Unamerican traitors. We hear this lie from the right so often that people begin to believe it. The loudest most heard political talk comes from the far right. Please stop with the victim of the lame stream media act. It wears very thin. Poor poor right wing victims.

      --
      No sigs in BETA. Beta SUCKS.
    23. Re:expanding on your words: by readin · · Score: 2

      What, What the left controls the media and the right has nowhere to speak. Except that then you talk about all the places where the right not only speaks, but allows no other points of view.

      So the right gets Fox News and Talk Radio. The left has its media sources that are just as biased but they generally aren't as popular. Why? Because the left has so many other sources that, while they aren't completely one-side, lean very heavily to the left. I'm sure the most people on the right would gladly trade Fox News and talk radio for CNN, NBC, CBS, ABC, and NPR.

      The left wing controlled media you disparage in your first paragraph allows discussion from both sides. While it might lean to the center or center left it allows the debate from both sides to be heard.

      Too often it only makes a show of doing so. For example, I regularly listen to NPR. A typical program might have 1 moderator (a liberal), one openly partisan commenter (from the left), one openly partisan commenter (from the right) and two reporters (liberals). And NPR is about as good as it gets.

      Fox news and its ilk simply call all who disagree communist Unamerican traitors. We hear this lie from the right so often that people begin to believe it. The loudest most heard political talk comes from the far right. Please stop with the victim of the lame stream media act. It wears very thin. Poor poor right wing victims.

      Oh please don't say "lame stream media". It is sooo annoying. It's just as annoying as "RMoney" and "I can see Russia from my house" (which Palin never said - that was one of those mainstream TV shows that you seem to think isn't very liberal). As for Fox News calling folks who disagree "Unamerican traitors", I'll have to take your word for it since I don't watch it. But I guess it's a bit like the rest of the news channels calling anyone who disagrees with them "racists".

      --
      I often don't like the choices people make, but I like the fact that people make choices. That's why I'm a conservative.
    24. Re:expanding on your words: by Dr.+Hellno · · Score: 3, Informative
      Corroboration: this story from This American Life. The first act has a few funny anecdotes about absurd things people believed for longer than would seem plausible.

      Kristy Kruger: It was about a group of five to seven people, kind of standing around the keg, just talking. And somehow a discussion of endangered species came up, in which I posed the question, is the unicorn endangered or extinct? And basically, there was a big gap of silence [...]and then everybody laughed. And then that laughter was followed by more silence when they realized I wasn't laughing. And I was like, yeah, oh God, unicorns aren't real? Oh no.

    25. Re:expanding on your words: by Lucractius · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Even though Rush says so much I disagree with, and makes so little logical sense, I will always have gratitude for him because he was the first media personality I ever heard throwing arguments back at liberals. He wasn't logical, and he wasn't fair, but then neither was all the liberal trash I heard and saw on nightly news and TV shows. When your team is losing because the refs keep favoring the other side, you can't help but feel grateful when a ref enters the field who makes unfair calls in your favor. Sure you would rather have all the refs be fair, but since that isn't happening, you're at least glad to have one of the refs on your side.

      Thank you for making the rest of your argument clear and not some kind of political rant back, you merely stated your position & feelings rather than attacking. Nice to see sanity prevail in politics of any kind, left or right.

      Secondly... Unfortunately the kind of "at least this ref is cheating for my team" leads to the breakdown of the game theory assumptions behind democracy. If your only happy with someone cheating for you and they are only happy when someone is cheating for them, the system breaks down through a kind of yo-yo effect between the sides involved which will typically reduce to just 2. I'm not making any kind of political statement left right up down... vote for the start button for all i care lol. I'm a 'swinging voter' but the thing is, I vote carefully considering each time. I want the fairest ref I trust not to screw me over somehow, problem is 'everyone' (not literally but in the sense that most people are voting towards their self interests) else wants the ref that cheats for their team.

      Thirdly, the second thing isnt a personal attack, i realize that your looking after your interests when you vote for the guy that cheats for you, simply because if you didnt then the other side would completely railroad you which sucks even worse for you and the 50% of the people on your side. My problem is more that it has become a matter of 'sides' in the first place. It should be 1 side... the people running the country in the best interests of its people.

      Democracy these days feels like its turned into a game of football (the type of football is not relevant in this statement)

      --
      XML - A clever joke would be here if /. didn't mangle tag brackets.
    26. Re:expanding on your words: by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      Just because someone subscribes to at least one unethical and foolish position does not justify categorizing them and hating them

      Yes it does. If someone chooses to be a racist, I will judge them as a racist idiot, full stop. I don't care if you're a racist who is good with children, donates to animal charities and can tell a good joke, you're still a racist and I'm basically not interested in spending time in your company

      BTW if you think of racism as merely "unethical and foolish" I'd take a good hard look at your own beliefs before commenting on other people's behaviour..

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    27. Re:expanding on your words: by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      What ever makes you think they've been exposed to right and good positions through facts and logical argument? Seriously? I posit the following: every human being on the planet believes at least one absurd thing they have never been reasonably challenged on.

      You are free to believe in whatever stupid crap you like, but unless you were raised by wolves or something it's impossible that you can get to be an adult and have no idea that other people find it idiotic, offensive, or whatever.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    28. Re:expanding on your words: by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      Why has this been modded funny? As far as I can see the poster is totally serious, and probably mentally ill. You shouldn't mock the afflicted.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    29. Re:expanding on your words: by readin · · Score: 2

      Ok, now I'll make a somewhat snarky but also serious comment. You wrote, "i realize that your looking after your interests when you vote for the guy that cheats for you." Actually I haven't done that. Rush Limbaugh never ran for office and has never received a large number of conservative votes. Al Franken, on the other hand, who wrote they weighty political tomes "Rush Limbaugh is a Big Fat Idiot" is currently a Democratic senator.

      I too would rather we have fair refs. My cable doesn't include CNN, but from what little I've seen Anderson Cooper seems decent enough. I can't speak for many of the others because I've mostly stopped watching. When I do catch some news show - whether the traditional big 3 or one of the all news networks, it just reminds me why I stopped watching. I do listen to NPR regularly on my way to and from work, but only because the other choices are so much worse (some right wing guys who have perfected the art of being permanently indignant and resentful).

      I don't know if we've ever had a press that was unbiased and fair, but I think that is probably too much to ask. We can't expect them to completely abandon their judgment. But at least they should be working to make sure all sides of a debate have a reasonable hearing rather than trying to hide reasonable positions in order to make the other side seem like extremists. For example, on immigration, how about we hear more from the people who want to build a secure and permanent border (something that isn't just de-funded the following year) along the Mexican border and want to grant amnesty to all the illegal aliens? That is an idea that is largely ignored while NPR, Washintong Post et al. try to portray everyone as either intolerant racists or as being in favor of "comprehensive reform" (change the laws but it doesn't matter because there is no border). If you listen to them you'll hear no middle ground - which means we continue to have the problem.

      --
      I often don't like the choices people make, but I like the fact that people make choices. That's why I'm a conservative.
    30. Re:expanding on your words: by nege · · Score: 1

      Clearly you are a liberal. Even claiming to be a conservative on the internet will immediately get you harrased, regardless of individual views. I used to think like you do, then became a conservative. Then I saw the REAL hate directed towards an entire group of people regardless of their individual beliefs.

    31. Re:expanding on your words: by UnderCoverPenguin · · Score: 1

      No, you can easily come up with empirical measures to determine whether something should be tolerated. Does it materially harm anyone other than the person doing it?

      There is also where part of the problem lies. If you burn something that is owned by some one else, you could be guilty of a crime. Said crime being comesserate with the value of the thing burned. There are Christians who consider burning a Christian Bible an act of blashemy.

      --
      Don't try to out wierd me, three-eyes. I get stranger things than you, free with my breakfast cereal. --Zaphod Beeblebr
    32. Re:expanding on your words: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where is the scientific evident that "I oppose you because of your skin color" is a statement that is to be rejected as unethical and foolish. Blacks in America oppose whites in America because they have subjugated and oppressed them for decades. Look at your prison statistics and tell me that Black Americans are not still under the white man’s boot.

    33. Re:expanding on your words: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      intolerance of intolerance is not the same thing as intolerance itself

      No.This isn't a math equation where two negatives make a positive, nor is it a matter of "fighting fire with fire".

      Intolerance is intolerance, regardless of what the objective of the intolerance is.

      Intolerence is a set of emotions and thoughts that lead to behaviors. The objective is less important then the emotions, thoughts and behaviors, because suffering them for one thing can allow suffering them for another, simply by transfering the emotions and thoughts and behaviors to another target.

      But tolerating Intolerance doens't mean acceptance. You can argue against, demostrate it's weaknesses, promote tolerance etc.

      "Intolerance of intolerance" is a case where it makes you no better then the target of your intolerance. It is also an example of ying and yang, where trying to use intolerence against intolerance contains the seed for the rise of intolerance again even as you extinguish it.

    34. Re:expanding on your words: by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      How about saying bad things? Speaking is an action, but so many in the US consider speech to be thought, and thought is sacred. What actions based on bad thoughts should be actionable?

    35. Re:expanding on your words: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Inconveniently, while somebody's degree of 'tolerance' relative to a pre-supplied set assignment is measureable, and you can argue for or against given actions and policies based on how tolerant they are, the set assignment itself is basically in the same boat as the rest of moral philosophy: little more than handwaving and appeals to 'intuition' or emotion, or imaginary friends.

      No, you can easily come up with empirical measures to determine whether something should be tolerated. Does it materially harm anyone other than the person doing it? If not, it must be tolerated. I don't see anyone claiming that blasphemy causes anyone any specific harm, so it must be tolerated.

      You also don't give philosophy enough credit. Remember, logic is a branch of philososphy. And we can make irrefutable logical arguments about what should be tolerated. Assume for the sake of argument that causing someone offense should not be tolerated. You would then advocate for laws against offense. However, I find such laws themselves offensive, as offensive as any religious person finds blasphemy. Therefore the laws themselves would be illegal. QED, a simple logical proof by contradiction that offense should be tolerated.

      Of the following actions, which would you allow to be banned, if either, and why:.

      Two adopted people meet, fall in love, and are preparing to marry. Investigation shows they are siblings. For reasons (they are the same gender, one has been sterilized, take your pick) offspring do not represent a problem. Should they be allowed to marry?

      One man is going to die. He agrees to allow another to eat his corpse. Should this be allowed?

    36. Re:expanding on your words: by virg_mattes · · Score: 1

      That's just an attempt to avoid the concept by applying a fairly arbitrary concept of "material". Riots incited by a film left 19 people dead. Are the rioters to blame, or the film maker, or neither of them or both? The whole article pivots on the answer to that question, so trying to dodge it by claiming "material harm" in such a peculiar way doesn't serve any logical ends.

      Virg

    37. Re:expanding on your words: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Got news for you buddy. It's been broken for a long long time. It certainly does have the look and feel of a game. One in which the politicians win, and everyone else loses.

    38. Re:expanding on your words: by eclectro · · Score: 1

      debates in which the person supposedly representing our voice is apologizing for us and accusing us of being extremists.

      It's because of the worst kind of arrogant ignorance, you are extremists.

      For whoever sees me as missing the humor, Poe's law is in effect. Regardless, there is a section of the republican party that is a joke

      --
      Take the cheese to sickbay, the doctor should see it as soon as possible - B'Elanna Torres, "Learning Curve"
    39. Re:expanding on your words: by readin · · Score: 2

      Let's take a simple but core measurement like taxing and spending.

      Conservative: Someone who wants the government to tax less and spend less.

      Liberal: Someone who wants the government to tax more and spend more.



      Now look at the pattern over the last 40 years. Sometimes we tax more, sometimes we tax lesss. Tax rates go up and down. But spending only goes one way: up. In my lifetime spending has never decreased. Sometimes we have Democratic leadership that gets what it wants and we get higher taxes and higher spending. Sometimes we see compromise and get something even worse: lower taxes and higher spending. When we finally got some Republicans in control of the Congress and White House, they spent even more!

      Frankly we're fed up. We manage to get a few congressmen elected who are serious about not raising spending, and they're called "extremists". What is so extreme about asking the other side to compromise occassionally? We've compromised and compromised so that spending is outrageous. But when we ask for a compromise in return, not even lower spending but just to stop raising spending, we're called extremists. Come on - meet us half way and keep spending from growing for once. Stop calling us extremists because we're trying to hold you to an 11-89 split instead of a 10-90 split.

      For years you kick us in the head, punch is in the nose, slash our tendons, and spit in our faces. We put up a tiny hand to lessen the next blow and we're "extremists".

      Lower spending. That's it. It's not extreme. It's the perfectly normal thing you do when you're running a huge deficit. Just lower spending a bit.

      --
      I often don't like the choices people make, but I like the fact that people make choices. That's why I'm a conservative.
    40. Re:expanding on your words: by rhalstead · · Score: 1

      Your view is the opposite of mine. I'm neither left nor right, but I see far more violence and intolerance on the left than on the right. Take the Tea Party (I'm neither a member or supporter) They are a peaceful group working for change, yet the left has demonized them and put out false stories about them promoting violence. The left has a double standard as to how they treat women and blacks if they are on the left or right. They also promote the unions that in turn promote violence. So far both sides are pretty much big government and promote the entitlement mentality that we can not afford.

  44. Re:Note that their interpretation of "Blasphemy" i by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

    Of course - anyone who gets offended by blasphemy only gets offended if THEIR religion is on the receiving end. You don't think that these people want to protect some animist sects in the Brazilian jungle from missionaries, do you?

    Conversely, any Christian who wants to put God, Jesus and the Holy Spirit under legal protection ought to be laughed out of court the same way. Unfortunately, that's not happening either.

    I'm pretty sure we're heading down the road towards a global Culture/Religious War. It won't be fun.

    --
    Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
  45. Just to play Devil's Advocate... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

    What was the bounty that the US government 'ministers' offered for the murder of Osama and friends and why weren't they instantly dismissed?

    1. Re:Just to play Devil's Advocate... by spire3661 · · Score: 3, Informative

      Osama wasnt a civilian. He took up arms against a nation-state. That is a soldier.

      --
      Good-bye
    2. Re:Just to play Devil's Advocate... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Osama wasnt a civilian. He took up arms against a nation-state. That is a soldier.

      All by himself?

    3. Re:Just to play Devil's Advocate... by DigiShaman · · Score: 3, Informative

      Functionally he was a soldier, but per the 3rd Geneva Convention article 4 he wasn't as he didn't fulfill all the requirements to meet the definition.

      4.1.2 Members of other militias and members of other volunteer corps, including those of organized resistance movements, provided that they fulfill all of the following conditions:
      that of being commanded by a person responsible for his subordinates;
      that of having a fixed distinctive sign recognizable at a distance (there are limited exceptions to this among countries who observe the 1977 Protocol I);
      that of carrying arms openly;
      that of conducting their operations in accordance with the laws and customs of war.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    4. Re:Just to play Devil's Advocate... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Functionally he was a soldier, but per the 3rd Geneva Convention article 4 he wasn't as he didn't fulfill all the requirements to meet the definition.

      4.1.2 Members of other militias and members of other volunteer corps, including those of organized resistance movements, provided that they fulfill all of the following conditions:
      that of being commanded by a person responsible for his subordinates;
      that of having a fixed distinctive sign recognizable at a distance (there are limited exceptions to this among countries who observe the 1977 Protocol I);
      that of carrying arms openly;
      that of conducting their operations in accordance with the laws and customs of war.

      Not meeting those requirements doesn't make you a civilian. It makes you a soldier that doesn't qualify for geneva convention protections awarded to soldiers.

    5. Re:Just to play Devil's Advocate... by dwye · · Score: 1

      Osama wasnt a civilian. He took up arms against a nation-state. That is a soldier.

      No, because a soldier is in service to another state (or legal faction thereof, in case of civil wars), not to his own personal vanity. Osama bin Laden was no more a soldier than Blackbeard was in the 1720s.

    6. Re:Just to play Devil's Advocate... by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      Maybe not a soldier, but certainly a combatant. And you are correct - no protections if you don't follow the rules while engaging in combat. That is an enforcement mechanism and incentive to follow the rules.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    7. Re:Just to play Devil's Advocate... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If OBL had just made a distasteful video, and left it at that, there would have never been a bounty.

      If the Egyptian filmmaker had committed mass murder of civilians anywhere in the world instead of making that film, and was known to be in the U.S., he would have been arrested and charged immediately. And no one (except for a minority of sicko nutjobs) in the U.S. would have celebrated the mass murder.

      I really don't understand how you don't see the difference between making a distasteful movie and committing mass murder.

  46. Re:god is imaginary by hazah · · Score: 1

    It's not necessarily flamebait. This can be discussed based on the merit of the message without idiocy if you have more than 2 brain cells. Being AC is probably unhelpful though. At any rate, this quote is in context.

  47. We gave the Jews Israel.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Let's give the Sikhs Pakistan.

    Problem aggravated. But we can use it to show the fundie Muslims if they don't keep their yaps shut, we'll do unto them as they've done unto us.

    Respect is a 2 way street bitches.

    Captcha was: 'chided'
    That sounds like a good punative measure.

  48. Demand anti-science laws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I demand the UN pass anti-science laws which deem any statements that are unprovable by science unlawful!

  49. Re:Note that their interpretation of "Blasphemy" i by Chrisq · · Score: 2

    Of course - anyone who gets offended by blasphemy only gets offended if THEIR religion is on the receiving end. You don't think that these people want to protect some animist sects in the Brazilian jungle from missionaries, do you?

    True, though there are a few people who want a law that outlaws deliberate insulting of any religions, based on the fact they can understand that others feel about their religion as they do about their own. Though I have some sympathy with this view (which is very different from what the Muslims want) I don't think its workable - to many people an expression of one faith is a direct and deliberate insult to another.

  50. blasphemy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    One thing to always keep in mind:

    It's only blasphemy if you believe in it.

    On this Earth, there are more religions than I could keep track of, and also lots of people who don't care for any of them. It's not nice to make fun of one's religion, that's true, but also not fun to be absolutely intolerant. People make fun of religious issues every day, and with a lots of different religions, and you don't see us kill and bomb each othes because of it.

    Tolerance has to come from both ways, it doesn't just work one-sided. If you want people to respect your religion, you also have to respect that others might disagree with your views, and let them be.

    Remember, live and let live? Follow that and you'll suddenly realise things can get much better.
     

    1. Re:blasphemy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tolerance has to come from both ways, it doesn't just work one-sided. If you want people to respect your religion, you also have to respect that others might disagree with your views, and let them be.

      What part of "there is only one god but allah" did you not understand? Don't you get it? You was born into the worng. Now convert or die...

      These are the Islamic ways. I don't hate muslim, they are only victims of Islam. If possible we should help muslims achieves enlightenment(eg: there is nothing but here and now. Stop been obsesses with unprovable myths.), but until then the proper answer to Islam is 'Fuck off'. Do no give them a inch or they will take a mile and your life, and then the world.

  51. Yes, draconian blasphemy laws for everyone!! by Theovon · · Score: 1

    So that when those muslims blaspheme other religions, they too can be put to death.

    Oh, but NOOOO. Islam is a SPECIAL religion, so they deserve SPECIAL TREATMENT, because all other religions are FALSE.

    Seriously, I think that we should have UN laws that specifically condone all kinds of free speech, ESPECIALLY those that are critical of these crackpot religions. If Christians and Hindus and everyone have to put up with criticism and blasphemy against their gods, then the muslims damn well better accept the same equal and fair treatment.

    That being said, it doesn't mean they have to shut up about it. COMPLAINING about blasphemy would ALSO be free speech. (I just don't have to give a crap about listening to it.)

  52. yes, please by Tom · · Score: 2

    I am an Episkoposes of the POEE. Please give me a law so I can prosecute everyone who defiles our sacred number 5.

    Please?

    Also, anyone who eats hot dogs.

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  53. Ok. -so let's talk about the text. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So long as the law reads. Anyone declaring that Jesus of Nazareth is anything other then the Christ and messiah who came to save the world.
    Is Guilty of blasphemy.
    Anyone declaring there is any profit of God greater the Jesus or claiming that Jesus is NOT God is guilty of blasphemy.
    Anyone declaring the the false profit who called Mohammad who denounces the divinity of Jesus is a true prophet is Guilty of blasphemy.

  54. Re: Because we like having our... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    dicks in office stroked, but we don't like anybody knowing that we stroked the other guy's.

  55. As a person with two Pakistani parents... by HerculesMO · · Score: 1

    Let me tell the PM to go f*ck himself.

    --
    The price is always right if someone else is paying.
    1. Re:As a person with two Pakistani parents... by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Are your Pakistani parents with you wherever you are (which, I assume, is not Pakistan)?

      If not, then work on getting them there. We need more sane people on this side of the fence.

    2. Re:As a person with two Pakistani parents... by HerculesMO · · Score: 1

      They are in the US, as am I for many, many years. I'm born and bred here. And it's not sanity. It's education that really makes the difference.

      --
      The price is always right if someone else is paying.
  56. ding dong! by Thud457 · · Score: 1

    proselytizing

    A sign reading "private property - no trespassing" should take care of that. Anyone fanatic enough to ignore such a clear directive opens themselves up to being dealt with forcibly.
    sux to be a renter.

    --

    the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

  57. This Is How Freedom Of Religion Works by JohnPerkins · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Freedom Of Religion, for me, means I can worship Allah, Jehovah, the Flying Spaghetti Monster, etc., without you interfering in my worship.

    Freedom Of Religion, for you, means you can worship Allah, Jehovah, the Flying Spaghetti Monster, etc., without me interfering in your worship.

    Freedom Of Speech, for me, means I can say (almost*) anything, including insulting your religion.

    Freedom Of Speech, for you, means you can say (almost*) anything, including insulting my religion.

    * Exceptions for things like yelling "fire" in a theater that isn't on fire.

    When I insult your religion, I am using my freedom of speech, but I am not preventing you from practicing your religion. That is why the guy who made that anti-muslim video can make a video like that. He is exercising his freedom of speech. This does not prevent any follower of Islam from practicing their religion. Your freedom of religion affects your actions, not mine. I can stand out front of a mosque with a sign saying 'Islam is wrong,' because I am exercising my freedom of speech but I am not preventing you from entering the mosque and exercising your freedom of religion. If, on the other hand, I block the entrance to the mosque, then I would be preventing you from exercising your freedom of religion, and I would be in the wrong.

    Allah/Jehovah/etc. is not so weak that the words of a person can harm them. I think that, whatever the nature of the deity, they are probably more upset with all of the hate and pain done in their name than with the words of a person as a direct attack on them. This is what these rioters are, in effect, saying when they riot: "My god and my faith in my god are so weak that he can't take care of himself, so I have to go around killing people."

    On the other hand, if you believe that god wants you to run around rioting, killing, etc., and it's okay to do these things, then you don't get to also expect not to have your ass kicked by a superior military power. If violence is the way, then you're going to get your ass kicked and you shouldn't complain about it. If peace is the way, then you shouldn't be running around killing people. I'm not talking about whether any particular conflict is justified or not; just the internal logic of the rioters.

    All rambling aside, if there's one message I would like the muslim world to get, it would be this:

    Allah is great. He doesn't need you to run around killing people for him. He put jerks in the world to test you. Get over it, pass His test, and get on with your lives.

  58. Just a stupid idea by tomscott · · Score: 1

    So I haven't read the article from Pakistan's Daily Times but the idea of telling people of other faiths or no faith at all that they aren't allowed to say something about another persons faith is just a ridiculous idea. Why doesn't the Pakistan Prime Minster instead try to pass laws in Pakistan that would punish extremists who are causing the trouble in his country.

  59. In Other News.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The US Constitution tells the Pakistani PM to "Go fuck himself." Now for Weather, Chip?

  60. The UN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The UN is NOT some sort of meta-government. It is a body to foster international cooperation to the end of preventing the conditions that lead to wars, especially world wars. The UN doesn't make laws for the world. So let them make all the laws they want, with the exception of Security Council mandates, it's all non-binding.

  61. How about.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Jesus giving a reacharound to Mohammed, who is providing 'linguistic services' to Abrahim?

    Seems like a good way to rile up the extremists from all three groups at once.

    Maybe add in some blue multi-armed guy and a fat dude stroking his pud for good measure.

  62. do as I say, not as I do by Thud457 · · Score: 1

    We're all in real trouble the day the space elephants[1] from Sirius come down and insist we strictly adhere to all our silly rules.


    [1] stet, hail Eris!

    --

    the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

  63. Re:Sick of Seniors getting a free ride by Vaphell · · Score: 1

    silly, you thought they saved all that money for you? They spent it all, they used it to buy your vote with your own money and then some more to bomb the shit out of beige people in various parts of the world in the name of pax americana.

    or from another angle: ok, dishonest politicians cheated you. Does that mean that next generations should be screwed even harder and forced into the govt mandated ponzi scheme, so you can have your 'justice'? It's your children and grandchildren who you are willing to screw.

    You belong to the generation that experienced the standard of living no other generation will experience ever again so don't whine.

  64. it's not just media bias by circletimessquare · · Score: 3, Interesting

    there are a lot of moderate muslims. there is also a heck of a lot of extremist muslims. it's hard for the moderates to exercise restraint and power when they aren't actually fully in power

    it's also hard to say "calm down" when the other guy feels fully justified in putting a bullet in your head because you are not adequately devout, of the wrong sect, too western sounding/ looking, etc.

    if you want to talk media spin, here it is: when a muslim extremist kills a westerner, the western media goes apeshit. when a muslim extremist kills a moderate muslim, you don't hear about it. but eh latter happens 10-100x more than the former. because the simple truth, by orders of magnitude, is that the greatest victim of muslim extremist terrorism, is other muslims. moderate muslims. they are literally being killed off if not cowed by fear

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:it's not just media bias by quacking+duck · · Score: 1

      We are starting to see that to a lesser extreme in the west, as the right-wing extremists are trying to label "progressive" and "moderate" as as terms no better than "liberal" (which they've already been allowed to tie to "socialist" and "communist"). In one non-political discussion I agreed with someone that moderates were better than extremists because moderates are far more willing to evaluate information from both multiples sides, and the response I got was that those in the middle of the road deserved to be roadkill.

      As far as I've seen there's no equivalent left-wing attempt to marginalize centrists or moderate right political labels (facists and nazis are already extreme labels and don't count, nor do made-up words). I'm willing to see any labels offered as example.

    2. Re:it's not just media bias by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      there are a lot of moderate muslims. there is also a heck of a lot of extremist muslims. it's hard for the moderates to exercise restraint and power when they aren't actually fully in power

      That is too sweeping a generalisation. Not all countries with a lot of Muslims are as bad as Iran or Pakistan. Somewhere like Turkey (or here in the UK) has a lot of moderate Muslims. I don't suppose they were too thrilled by the crappy anti-Muhammed film, but there weren't widespread riots and killings, just a few protests.

      However, the point about the protests is that they are broadly anti-American, with the film being a slightly tenuous pretext. The fact is that a lot of the world now hates the US, and it has nothing to do with religion, other than in the sense that many of the civilians killed in places like Iraq and Afghanistan were Muslims.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  65. Applies to them too by kmahan · · Score: 1

    If they implemented this would the muslim countries enforce it on their people? All those statements about christianity they love to make.

    --
    Invalid Checksum. Retrying.
    1. Re:Applies to them too by Jason+Levine · · Score: 1

      Not to mention their statements about Judaism. I'd love to see how active the Muslim governments would be in cracking down on antisemitism. Tell you what, Muslim World: First clean up all traces of antisemitism and anti-Christian rhetoric and then we'll pass a "Don't Insult Muhammad" law. We'll check back with you in a decade or three.

      No, I don't think insulting another person's religion is usually appropriate. Nor do I think it is productive in most cases. However, people have the right to express themselves and don't have the right to be immune from being insulted. Moreover, if Person A wants Person B's rights limited (i.e. keep Person B from insulting Person A's religion), Person A better not be using and want to retain that freedom (i.e. Person A wants to keep insulting Person B's religion).

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
  66. International Law?? by el+jocko+del+oeste · · Score: 1

    I'm unclear on how there can be an international law on this. International law governs the relationships between countries and what happens in international waters and territories; it has no bearing on individuals within a country. It's not as if the UN can pass a law making it illegal to commit blasphemy, have me arrested in the United States, and try me in an International Court. (And yes, I'm aware of the International Criminal Court--but that court only comes into play for acts such as genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity. Unless blasphemy is about to be raised to that level, this court is a very different beast.)

    So I'm not sure what it is that the Pakistani PM is really asking for here and I didn't find it in the article. A resolution condemning blasphemy? A change in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights? Some actual but non-binding international law? It's either showboating or there seems to be some nuance of International law in play that I don't understand.

  67. Blasphemy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Blasphemy is a Victimless Crime. It's blasphemous! Crimes of blasphemy were invented by the religious to defend holy doctrines and dogmas of their religion that were incapable of standing up to scrutiny. Besides, you can't offend what doesn't exist

    1. Re:Blasphemy by Mike+Buddha · · Score: 2

      Blasphemy is a Victimless Crime. It's blasphemous! Crimes of blasphemy were invented by the religious to defend holy doctrines and dogmas of their religion that were incapable of standing up to scrutiny. Besides, you can't offend what doesn't exist

      Yeah, because Chrstians aren't real! Good thinkin', brainiac.

      --
      by Mike Buddha -- Someday the mountain might get him, but the law never will.
  68. every single country has or had laws by circletimessquare · · Score: 4, Insightful

    that basically boil down to "you have to respect me but i don't have to respect you"

    for example, the muslim world has tons of hate against judaism and christianity which isn't punished. nevermind that mobs of jews and christians aren't threatening death and destruction because of it

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:every single country has or had laws by ichimunki · · Score: 1

      Really? It's not Christians and Jews invading Muslim countries? Dropping bombs on wedding parties? Interfering in the political machinations of sovereign nations? I'm pretty the USA and Israel are Christian and Jewish countries. Even though the USA has an official policy of no state religion, the majority of the citizens do I identify as Christians. In fact, the more vocal any given US citizen is about their Christianity, the more they seem to be interested in bombing Muslim countries for any reason. Obviously not true for all US Christians, but a surprisingly vocal and public number of them. While the riots are being "sparked" by the films and the blasphemy, it's clear that a great deal of the hatred here can be chalked up to the "add insult to injury" principle.

      --
      I do not have a signature
  69. Re:Muhammad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Does that actually rhyme somewhere? Fuck, aussies are weird.

  70. Faith supports evil by Cajun+Hell · · Score: 2

    Some people have a hard time wrapping their heads around the idea that religion or the gods within the religion might simply be evil by human standards. If you suggest this, they'll shrug it off saying the God works in mysterious ways and it's not for them to understand it. And yet, they are human and practice that religion. God works in mysterious ways so therefore you must work in mysterious ways too? You must practice what you know to be evil, having faith that in some demented way that human brains can't understand, it's actually secretly good?

    Maybe so. Once you open the door to faith, anything is possible. If you can believe in a god without there being any evidence, then why not believe that murder is ok, because some celestial accountant is putting into the "good" column for reasons that no jury would ever accept?

    --
    "Believe me!" -- Donald Trump
  71. Demand? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Not in the USA pal.

    Why did the Senate reject a bill by Rand Paul to suspend foreign aid to these knuckleheads?

    1. Re:Demand? by Mike+Buddha · · Score: 1

      Because where we have no money, we have no influence. Simple enough for you?

      --
      by Mike Buddha -- Someday the mountain might get him, but the law never will.
  72. Better idea... by MitchDev · · Score: 2

    Promote intelligence and logic and reason and religion will vanish...

    1. Re:Better idea... by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      Promote intelligence and logic and reason and religion will vanish...

      We've been doing that for hundreds of years, and you still get retards on slashdot saying that religion and science aren't mutually exclusive.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    2. Re:Better idea... by MitchDev · · Score: 1

      When people can think and realize what a load of shit religion is, they will drop religion like the stinky turd it is.

  73. reformed bacontarian by Thud457 · · Score: 1

    what kind of fucking turncoat pope are you?!!

    Consumption of hotdogs is acceptable at any time. It's the eating of hot dog buns that's proscribed.

    Personally, if I have to go, I elect for the the Pastafarian Heaven.

    --

    the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

    1. Re:reformed bacontarian by Tom · · Score: 1

      Details we do not want to burden the unenlightened with. Since hot dogs include buns... think of the children!

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  74. This just gave me the best idea ever! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A video of the prophet Muhammed rubbing one off onto an American flag. They won't be able to decide whether to cheer (defamation of the american flag) or riot due to the blasphemy (not only are you showing an image of the prophet, but you're showing him MASTURBATING, a sin punishable by death (correct me if I'm wrong.).

    Oh the irony of that eh?

  75. "Blasphemy laws" ARE "religious intolerance" by Rogerborg · · Score: 2

    End of retarded discussion.

    --
    If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
  76. Loss of sensibility... by Valor958 · · Score: 1

    FFS... as sensible, reasonable, and rational as I try to be, things like this make it very hard to come across that way when I offer any response.
    Regardless of what anyone in their particualr faith may say, 'true' Muslim followers are hate filled warmongers because their religion dictates as much. All these moderate and peaceful Muslims... aren't Muslim. If anything, they're closer to Catholics who call their god Allah, and preach Mohammad over Jesus.

    They're all too bound up in what their book says about who was special, and so on, and so forth... how about living a peaceful and moral life based on common sense ideologies? Hell, I hate to referrence Dogma (the movie)... but hell, that movie has it just about right on how religion should be treated! We don't KNOW anything about religion besides books that have been written.. by men, not God (et al.for names...). Therefore, all religious texts are fallable unless they were brought into spontaneous existence through divine will. Even if some did trully convey the 'Word of God'... it's a conveyance.. a 2nd hand account... subject to interpretation.

    I am devoutly Agnostic... I have some good ideas, but admit to knowing nothing about the truth of existence. I live because I do. I do right and good as I see right and good to be. I hold beliefs from a broad assortment of belief systems/religions as they suit to be sensible to me. Out of all of this research and rationale I apply in my reading... I find the Muslims to be the hardest hit by an obviously oppressive and violent religion. If I were to make a conjecture about it's "true" origins, I would say it was a means to establish central power under the guise of Divine Right as perpetrated by Mohammed. Honestly... about the same as most other major religions. If God were as the Catholics/Christians/Jewish say God is... why is an organized religion even necessary? Wouldn't all sensible and good people end up following out of a desire to see good in the world... not because a book says so?

    Though the anti-Muslim movie in question was undoubtedly nothing more than 'flamebait'... the response it has elicited hardly does anything to help support their faith being 'peaceful'.

  77. Re:Sick of Seniors getting a free ride by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Nonsense. Politicians used this money to give rich people tax cuts. Why do you think Social Security taxes went up during Reagan's administration? Why do you think wealth is so highly concentrated in the top percentage now?

    Clinton managed to balance off these factors and had a structure in place that would have been able to pay off these benefits. What happened? Bush passed another tax cut for rich people.

    I want it back, either in the form of benefits paid periodically, or in a lump sum.

    If it means taxing the hell out of rich people, oh well. They have been the primary beneficiaries of the current financial structure.

  78. He can go and... by jonfr · · Score: 2

    Pakistan Prime Minister Raja Pervez Ashraf can go and fuck him self in the ass. No, I am being serious. This cunt and others like him have no right on forcing others to obey by there religious rules. While the Koran forbids Muslims to draw pictures of Mohammed prophet (and warmonger of his time). It says nothing about others not being able to do so.

    Submission by fear is not something I agree with. Nobody should in fact. So PM of Pakistan can go fuck him self in the ass. Preferred on live television world wide.

  79. I wonder where this is going. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wonder how this period will go down in the history books. During my high school years I had classes on modern history. One period broadly covered was the 1930s in which democratic European countries used policies of Appeasement to deal with neighboring dictatorships and avoid war by making concessions. These policies were heavily criticized as they failed to prevent the outbreak of war in the end.

    I'm getting the feeling that history might be repeating itself, in some aspects. Right now every time some guy in some country makes a cartoon or a film criticizing or mocking Islam, it seems like half the world's Muslim population rises up in riots. We see that representatives of those countries are now even making ridiculous demands in the UN. At the same time we see a lot of western nations representatives denouncing the film that caused all this instead of defending everyone's right to free speech. They are obviously doing this to divert anger, make it somebody else's problem, to keep their citizens safe, but that will not work long term.

    There exists the image of a culture clash between the West where Christianity is slowly being replaced by Atheism and Agnosticism and the cultures in the Middle-East and Asia, where Islam seems to be gaining followers fast, including a large number of fanatics. I do not know if all of that is true, but it is how a lot of people feel. The west feels somewhat threatened by this and again resorts to appeasement. The only difference between today and 1930s is the threats are not in the form of troops, tanks, and bombs but instead terrorists or WMDs.

    Posting anonymously because I do not like attaching politics to my name, yet I still felt I wanted to share these ideas.

  80. An eye for an eye... by xded · · Score: 2

    Are you suggesting that since in the Middle ages Christians killed in the name of God, it's ok now for Muslims to kill in the name of God? Is this your idea of religion? Is it ok for these to be the Midlle ages of Islam?

    Let's just try to do what's best for humanity already. Let's try to evolve from the dark past. Let's stop preaching ourselves ideas meant to bring order into chaos and let's try to move forward, not to grow roots in a place someone said it's good enough.

    1. Re:An eye for an eye... by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      No, the point is that the past actions of both Christians and Muslims are broadly irrelevant. But where we in the West laugh at extremists calling the US "crusaders" there are many people here who are prepared to take seriously the idea that "Islam" is about to start some holy war to reintroduce the fucking Ottoman Empire Mk 2 or something.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  81. not suprised by arekin · · Score: 1

    I'm afraid that as violence becomes the common answer for suck offenses, the UN will attempt to enact something like this to stem this violence. From there, how long until the words "I'm an atheist" see actually prosecution under this law and the "christian majority" in the US extradites you to a Muslim country to face charges, because obviously they don't care if an atheist dies, they were going to hell anyway. Do I think this will happen, I would hope not, but I also thought that there was no way the US would suspend Habeas Corpus (again). I would never have thought we would re-elect GW. I am no long deluded enough to think that any stupid law would be denied on the grounds of reason. We are just as likely to back Pakistan on this as a means to go after terrorists (because they believe differently than we do.) I'm not really going all conspiracy theory here, I'm just not going to be suprised if this supidity does become a law.

    --
    Disagreeing with you does not make me a troll.
  82. I don't understand this word "Blasphemy" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you consider that a religion is a belief or faith, then it is very well possible that others may not believe or have faith in the same thing as you do.

    Notice these words, "Believe" and "Faith" - they imply we're not sure. If you're not sure, you should keep an open mind about the opposite situation - there not being a Higher Being at all.

    If there really is a Higher Being which I deny, that'd be blasphemy. If, on the other hand, there isn't one, I can't possibly blaspheme against that being. The problem here is that my beliefs don't necessarily mirror your beliefs, and what I perceive as common sense, you may perceive as blasphemy. Now, I can try to be sensitive towards your beliefs, but I'd expect the same sensitivity from your side: Don't call it blasphemy unless you have solid proof, that that which I deny to exist, actually exists. I don't need laws telling me that I need to believe in your invisible friend.

  83. Blasphemy in laws? by aglider · · Score: 1

    From the "Concise Oxford"

    Blasphemy: profane or sacrilegious talk about God or sacred things.

    As you cannot define what's sacred for everyone, you cannot place any "world wide" law.
    Unless you create an "international registry for sacred things" to be kept up to date.
    Then you'd need to resolve disputes, espcially those calling as sacred two opposite concepts/things.

    Personally I keep "intelligence" and "freedom" as sacred, so that call for an international law is ... a blasphemy to me!
    You insensitive and blaspheme clod!

    --
    Sent as ripples into the electromagnetic field. No single photon has been harmed in the process.
  84. Blasphemy is not the issue by Mike+Buddha · · Score: 0

    The blasphemy is not the root cause of all this trouble, poverty is. People who don't have jobs have nothing to do but sit at home and stew about how the Jews/Americans/Whoever are keeping them down and shitting on what little they have left. There's a lot of pent up rage in the Muslim world because there's so much crippling poverty. Give people work and they become much more docile.

    --
    by Mike Buddha -- Someday the mountain might get him, but the law never will.
  85. Blasphemy, really by miketheanimal · · Score: 1

    OK. Lets do it. The Koran says that Jesus was a prophet (abliet rather a special one) and not the Son of God. That is blasphemy, so the Koran should be banned in all Christian countries. I may be an aetheist, but I know double standard where I see them.

  86. Once again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    I'm the Prophet Mohammed. I fuck camels!
            /
    \O/
      |
    / \

  87. What the UN really needs to do by scourfish · · Score: 1

    is pass the "Whaaambulance!" resolution, which states that if someone complains of blasphemy, then other members of the UN hand them a phone and tell them to call said whaaaa!mbulance.

  88. I am all for it by gweihir · · Score: 1

    As an atheist, every expression of religion is blasphemous to me. Propagating meme infections of the religious kind to children and others is blasphemous and a serious crime, like spreading the plague.

    So, yes, I am all for it and I want it strictly enforced. Stop the cancer that is religion! (Wops, not what he wanted? Too bad!)

    --
    Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
  89. Free speech is a strange idea ... by quietwalker · · Score: 1

    ... to the rest of the world.

    Check out this brief article & interview : http://www.npr.org/2012/09/19/161439562/held-dear-in-u-s-free-speech-perplexing-abroad

    The summary of the above link brings up an interesting blind spot: the rest of the world does not have free speech, not in any way. I'm not just talking about countries where you could be executed for praying to the wrong god. I'm talking about 'Western Nations,' like the UK and members of the EU. For example in France - where many of our ideals of personal liberty spring from - you can be jailed for 6 months (and fined) for being seen as insulting the country, flag, anthem, or any public worker. Imagine not being able to speak negatively about a politician or the police, on threat of jail time. This is standard almost everywhere else in the world.

    Heck, you can even be jailed in Canada for writing hate speech.

    The US is one of a small handful that really places freedom of speech at the top of the list, and doesn't just pay lip service to it.

    I would summarize it like this: Socialism promotes the welfare of society over that of the individual, and rather than protecting 'the right to not be offended,' they simply focus on the improvement of society as a whole. It just looks like 'the right to not be offended' on the individual level. The most socialist your country gets, the more likely they are to trade the privileges of the individual for the betterment of society, and free speech is one of those.

    So, they may see racism as bad (which it is), and so they outlaw it in both deed AND word. They may consider Nazis to be awful, and so they forbid anyone to claim to be a Nazi, or even learn about them, or listen to any of their speeches - just in case they might accidentally like it: better to bury it all and pretend it never happened.

    It's also not unrelated that most of these laws were birthed from strongly fascist or oppressive monarchy governments. They had different motivations, but they also did not value personal liberty. At extremes, there's little difference between strong socialism or strong fascism - they use the same means and have the same goals.

  90. Remember the Bamian Buddha, by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 3, Informative
    Those were huge statues of Buddha. Some 200 or 300 feet tall. Carved into niches of rock face of a hill. Something like Petra. They were in Afghanistan. They were 1500 years old. And the Taliban decided to dynamite them.

    Government of Sri Lanka begged the Taliban government to let them carve and carry off the whole statue if they did not want it in their Islamic land. Japan offered to cover the whole statue behind a wall of concrete if they did not want to see it.

    The Taliban refused all such overtures, and dynamited those historical figures. Where were all these Muslims who demand the world respect their prophet? Would this new blasphemy law prevent Saudi Government from disfiguring images of Hindu/Buddist/Sikh/Jain Gods or holymen found in books and magazines carried by workers traveling into Saudi Arabia?

    The double standards from the fanatics is understandable. But the double standards from those claiming to be moderates is infuriating. I am with Bill Maher in this. All religions are not the same. No other religion demands the right impose its rules on people who do not belong to their religion. All the moderates talk in English to the west explaining why the fanatics are outraged. Yes, the fanatics will be always outraged. It is the job of the moderates to control the damned fanatics. If you can't, stop demanding to be treated like other religions.

    Well, the Bamian Buddha is powerful. He got rid of Taliban within a year of His statute being demolished. Buddha will rid Afghanistan of Islam in due course.

    --
    sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
    1. Re:Remember the Bamian Buddha, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, how subtly hateful of you.

    2. Re:Remember the Bamian Buddha, by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 1

      Buddy, it aint all that subtle.

      --
      sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
    3. Re:Remember the Bamian Buddha, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No other religion demands the right impose its rules on people who do not belong to their religion
      What about Christian fundamentalists?

  91. under these condition by heracross · · Score: 1

    under these conditions (a) you outlaw public displays of religion in all countries so I do not have to hear or have your religion forced upon me (2) you outlaw Jihad in all countries and any activity linked to terrorism and (3) all counties must respect and treat all religions equally as well as Atheism otherwise my blasphemy rates will rise with this law

  92. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  93. Please don't feed the Ashraf troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He's just doing what the banksters tell him, anyway. Why else would he turn to their captive world "governance" body to address the "problem"? Everybody running to them to solve the crisis du jour. Wonder why?

    Fuck the UN. You want to do something about intolerance? Abolish the Fed. Cut off the funding to the Usurians looting and exploiting the entire world and then putting us up, and our military, to take the heat when pissed off people, opportunists, or more likely, paid agents of state actors -don't look too closely at just which ones, pay no attention to that man behind the curtain- seize any pretext to do something about it, and "have their turn", as well. (The good con always appeals to the mark's greed.)

    I'm going to paraphrase Santayana here: Those who learn from history appear to feel they're entitled to exploit those who don't, and thus repeat it. Such arrogance has consequences. Last time this particular matter was in play, we ended up being obliged to Vlad the Impaler. His next incarnation could be more catholic in his revenge. He very nearly was, last time. The matter apparently wasn't settled either, but they're still using the old play books this time around. It's not that they expect this to "work", it's just that they just know how to milk conflict. Why do you think they foster so much?

    Played. Yep, we are being played here big-time. Best thing to do is just laugh at these pretentious phonies our fellow countrymen let run things, and the credulous idiots jumping through hoops for them.

  94. At the UN, tolerance is built in. by boyfaceddog · · Score: 1

    PREAMBLE TO THE CHARTER OF THE UNITED NATIONA
        WE THE PEOPLES OF THE UNITED NATIONS DETERMINED

            to save succeeding generations from the scourge of war, which twice in our lifetime has brought untold sorrow to mankind, and
            to reaffirm faith in fundamental human rights, in the dignity and worth of the human person, in the equal rights of men and women and of nations large and small, and
            to establish conditions under which justice and respect for the obligations arising from treaties and other sources of international law can be maintained, and
            to promote social progress and better standards of life in larger freedom,

    AND FOR THESE ENDS

            to practice tolerance and live together in peace with one another as good neighbors, and
            to unite our strength to maintain international peace and security, and
            to ensure, by the acceptance of principles and the institution of methods, that armed force shall not be used, save in the common interest, and
            to employ international machinery for the promotion of the economic and social advancement of all peoples,

    HAVE RESOLVED TO COMBINE OUR EFFORTS TO ACCOMPLISH THESE AIMS

    Accordingly, our respective Governments, through representatives assembled in the city of San Francisco, who have exhibited their full powers found to be in good and due form, have agreed to the present Charter of the United Nations and do hereby establish an international organization to be known as the United Nations.

    http://www.un.org/en/documents/charter/preamble.shtml

    --
    Here will be an old abusing of God's patience and the king's English.
  95. Re:Note that their interpretation of "Blasphemy" i by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Laws that prohibit insulting of ANY religion exist in Singapore and Thailand. I've been to Singapore enough to know that they seem to work well there, and it seems that people of various religious groups get along just fine.

  96. Heinlein... by dlingman · · Score: 2

    Of all the strange crimes that humanity has legislated out of nothing, blasphemy is the most amazing - with obscenity and indecent exposure fighting it out for second and third place. [Robert Heinlein, Notebooks of Lazarus Long]

  97. Legislating to the lowest common denominator by DrXym · · Score: 1

    Pakistan, just because you enshrine pig ignorance and superstition into your national laws doesn't mean everyone else should.

  98. a perspective by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Does that mean islamists will not be allowed to blow up buddhist statues, or attack christians?

    1. Re:a perspective by Beorytis · · Score: 1

      Just the opposite of your first conjecture: Since Buddhism is a non-theistic religion there is no deity to be offended and Buddhists cannot claim anyone's actions to be blasphemous. Further, as a non-theistic religion Buddhism denies the existence of the god common to the Abrahamic religions and therefore offends all of them. Other Buddhists may disagree with me, but I feel the value of Buddha statues like those demolished in Bamiyan was as cultural or archaeological artifacts. A great loss to humanity, but not a personal affront that must be avenged.

    2. Re:a perspective by Millennium · · Score: 1

      Further, as a non-theistic religion Buddhism denies the existence of the god common to the Abrahamic religions and therefore offends all of them.

      This last part isn't actually intrinsic to Buddhism, which in some regions has long shown a propensity to adopt figures from other faiths as enlightened beings of various sorts. To a Buddhist such beings are certainly not on the order of a "One True God" or anything like that, but they may indeed exist. If so, while they may be misunderstood by followers of the religions dedicated to them, they would still be worthy of respect as enlightened beings.

  99. free up bandwidth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Would be a quick way to free up bandwidth on the Internet

  100. where's the enlightenment? by ubermiester · · Score: 2

    I wonder if people in the middle east realize how steadily their image as pre-enlightenment zealots with no interest in modernization is solidifying in the West. There was once a valid critique that said the West just didn't understand the Mid-East and that it was judging it in a relativistic way. But now that the West has been paying attention for a while, those early truisms seem downright sage-like.

    "Experts" continue to offer somber explanations for such violent outbursts, saying that their youth is feeling a profound humiliation and that they are simply taking it out on the Western boogieman their parents and grandparents were taught to fear. This may be true on some level. But at what point do they take the responsibility for their own development. How long before they realize that whether or not you believe someone else is holding you back, you have to move forward on your own.

    The "Arab Spring" seemed to offer a tantalizing bit of hope for a change from within, but if the religious right in the US is any indication, there is no reasoning with a zealot. And when the government of such a large and strategically important nation like Pakistan calls for worldwide censorship to avoid further offending an already humiliated culture, where is the path to change?

    1. Re:where's the enlightenment? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, how not so subtly hateful of you. Way to meet intolerance with more intolerance, jackhole!

  101. Here's my law suggestion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    NO RELIGION ALLOWED.

    It's easy to remember. It's short and has no weak points.

  102. You will get that law... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    when the global muslim community pass a definitive fatwa on global terrorism.

    Fair is fair.

  103. Let's make a deal by Quila · · Score: 2

    We'll illegalize *all* religious intolerance, period. That means a Catholic church and a synagogue are free to be built in Mecca, people of those faiths free to enter the city, live there and attend their services. That means evangelical Christians are free to roam throughout Muslims countries and try to convert Muslims. They and converted Muslims will be without fear of legal or extra-legal punishment. Jews get to rebuild their first Temple, the likely location of which is right next to the Al-Aqsa Mosque on Temple Mount in a currently empty area.

    But you know this won't happen, the tolerance goes only one way.

  104. Get Bent by atriusofbricia · · Score: 1

    At the risk of repeating something that may have already been said here...

    Pakistan's PM can get bent.

    --
    I was raised on the command line, bitch

    "Nemo me impune lacesset"

  105. No by AdmV0rl0n · · Score: 1

    Modern Islam has become the new Nazi'ism. Its 57 states have unified into a wholly evil conglomerate. Its distorted and twisted human rights law at the UN in diabolically awful ways with a prime directive of distorting the human rights laws to make them compatable with islam (impossible).

    Many people in the world keep trying to peddle the idea of islam being peaceful and trying to make an equality between it and everything else. These people, and the 57 states managed to get on the UN books the cretinous 'Islamophobia' stupidity.

    Eventually, everyone in the world is going to have to face down this lunacy, or allow it to get out of control and then be forced to face it down. Neither is good.

    As for the Pakistani's - an arrest warrant needs issuing for the Railway minister, and it needs to be made clear in our lands - insightment to murder backed by money is a crime. And if he sets foot in the west let him be arrested.

    --
    We`re all equal .. Just some of us are less equal than others.
    1. Re:No by bigscience · · Score: 1

      If you are going to condemn religion why are you using its own terminology? To call islam evil is simply playing into their hands. "Evil" is a mythological term created to instill fear into non-believers of whichever religions use the term Wouldnt it be easier just to say the leaders of islam are corrupt war mongering money heads just like our politicians are? All that islam has become in Iran etc etc is a few wealthy corrupt politicians using fear and blind obedience to subdue and manipulate a population

  106. Here's a thought. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe I'm a Christian, and I want the UN to put in laws that say you cannot worship any other God than the one true God.

    F-you Pakistan.

  107. He can demand all he wants by zrbyte · · Score: 2

    It's not like he's not allowed to express his opinion.

  108. Religions are generally false by Tony · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The parent said "religions are always false". There was no need for me to hash through the possible definitions that may lend it credence, it was only necessary for me to provide a single definition which proved it inaccurate. That is why I chose that definition.

    Ah, yes. Argument by dictionary. That's an excellent strategy: it allows you to avoid the substance of an argument by focusing instead on specific word-use.

    Let's try this instead: no religion has been shown to be true. In fact, no religion has demonstrated a basis by which its truth-claims can be evaluated. Religion has no epistemic footing.

    You indicate this yourself when you mentioned, "There are over 4,200 religions in the world." (This ignores the various nuanced schisms that exist in many of those 4,200 religions, but we'll let that slide for the moment.) This number indicates there is no real epistemic foundation on which to build a reliable religion. Basically, it's all just gut-feeling, social mechanisms for control, pareidolia, and a desire to know things that are effectively unknowable (or, without answer because the question is bad, such as, "Why are we here?")

    So, yes, I think I can say that all religions are wrong, even if they are right in some details. It'd be like the claim, "The earth is warming." That is a correct statement of fact. However, one can be wrong in stating it: "The earth is warming because Hell is getting closer," would simply be wrong.

    Religious statements are effectively without basis. Every religious statement that is not grounded in observation and logic (basically, science) can be summed up thusly: "I believe this thing, but I have no basis to assume this thing is true." Asserting a thing as true without a solid basis in observable reality is worse than being wrong. At best it is misleading. At worst, it papers over ignorance, effectively vetoing reason and inquiry.

    --
    Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
    1. Re:Religions are generally false by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And I'll say that your faith in them being wrong, is wrong.

      aren't opinions fun?!?

    2. Re:Religions are generally false by nege · · Score: 1

      So... because you can't prove something with science it is immediately wrong? It must be nice having the answers to life, the universe, and everything!

    3. Re:Religions are generally false by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If an argument can be trivially defeated via "argument by dictionary," then it probably wasn't a very strong argument in the first place.

    4. Re:Religions are generally false by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In fact, no religion has demonstrated a basis by which its truth-claims can be evaluated. Religion has no epistemic footing.

      That's not true. You just haven't found one that has; unless you can claim to have investigated all "4,200". And not just investigated, but performed (as you have requested) their mechanisms that form the basis by which their truth-claims can be evaluated.

      You indicate this yourself when you mentioned, "There are over 4,200 religions in the world." (This ignores the various nuanced schisms that exist in many of those 4,200 religions, but we'll let that slide for the moment.) This number indicates there is no real epistemic foundation on which to build a reliable religion. Basically, it's all just gut-feeling, social mechanisms for control, pareidolia, and a desire to know things that are effectively unknowable (or, without answer because the question is bad, such as, "Why are we here?")

      On the contrary, I think it corroborates that there are many more falsehoods for a single truth. How many wrong answers are there to the question 1+1? How many "almost right" answers?

      So, yes, I think I can say that all religions are wrong, even if they are right in some details.

      I think you can say that you haven't found the right one yet.

      Every religious statement that is not grounded in observation and logic (basically, science) can be summed up thusly: "I believe this thing, but I have no basis to assume this thing is true." Asserting a thing as true without a solid basis in observable reality is worse than being wrong. At best it is misleading. At worst, it papers over ignorance, effectively vetoing reason and inquiry.

      I agree with you. It sounds like you just haven't found the one that is grounded in reason and especially inquiry. When you do, it will answer the question "Why are we here?"

    5. Re:Religions are generally false by cerniagigante · · Score: 1

      "The earth is warming because Hell is getting closer" that is most likely wrong (although a scientifically minded would choose "unproven" rather than wrong), but would you argue with the Hell is getting closer because the earth is warming?

    6. Re:Religions are generally false by graphius · · Score: 1

      I agree that many western religions are way out of control, and are used to subjugate sheeple. However, most religions, at their core, are a set of rules for healthy living in a society. For example, the Koran says women should cover themselves. Maybe that is because when that was written, most women worked outdoors in the hot Mediterranean sun. They did not want to get a sunburn...
      Don't eat pork. Back in the day, pork was much more likely to cause diseases and parasites. No way to tell if it is properly cooked, so how about we just say no....
      In Christianity, "Thou shall not kill" Duh!

      Many eastern religions are more a lifestyle than an explanation of the world around them. And yes there are things like reincarnation and stuff to make people feel better, but think about it:

      jerkwad king, "Why should I give a crap, I'm just going to die anyway. I'll treat everyone like shit"

      Monk, "Imagine if you were reincarnated as a cow, and everyone beat you all day. How would that feel?"

      jerkwad king, "Oh wow, I better declare cows sacred because I will be reincarnated...."

      Monk

    7. Re:Religions are generally false by graphius · · Score: 1

      jerkwad king, "Why should I give a crap, I'm just going to die anyway. I'll treat everyone like shit"

      Monk, "Imagine if you were reincarnated as a cow, and everyone beat you all day. How would that feel?"

      jerkwad king, "Oh wow, I better declare cows sacred because I will be reincarnated...."

      Monk [facepalm]

    8. Re:Religions are generally false by obscuro · · Score: 1

      Actually, Zen is counted as a religion and it doesn't posit the existence of God. It recommends a set of precepts and encourages it practitioners to look to the phenomena they are experiencing and beyond it to a state void of that experience. There's plenty of evidence that the practice of Zen meditation among experienced practitioners alters their brain waves in ways that could objectively indicate that they are experiencing the states Zen claims are available. Unless you choose to claim that Zen is not a religion, I don't see how you get around it as the case that invalidates your assertion.

      --
      Every rule has more than one consequence.
    9. Re:Religions are generally false by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank you sir for the new word!
      pareidolia: a psychological phenomenon involving a vague and random stimulus (often an image or sound) being perceived as significant.
      (just new to me but liking it a lot)
      Cheers!

  109. 14th Century Syndrome by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It strikes me that some minority (but high-visibility / impact / newsworthiness) parts of Islam is going through a retrenchment of the kind of pre-mediaeval barbarity seen among Christians in the 14th and 15th centuries - their equivalent of burning of heretics etc

    I doubt Christians of that era would have enjoyed being mocked by an older faith (say, Judaism) any more than Moslems engaged in this rather retro barbarism enjoy it from the West.

    I also suggest that a law should be drafted: Giving a right of complaint of blasphemy (to be enforced by a UN court with appropriate sanctions) to any nation with a moslem majority that has laws encompassing freedom of speech, freedom of religion, freedom of conversion and comprehensive womens and gay rights. Nations failing to meet those standards would be debarred from bringing complaints.

  110. What should happen by StillNeedMoreCoffee · · Score: 2

    Is that the UN passes legislation that supports freedom of speech even when it offends some religious group. How else will autocratic governments and religions have the necessary critical review that would allow them to stand or fall on their own merits, which is the necessity and power of free speech to maintain free societies.

  111. Close but not entirely accurate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Passing over the obvious point that even the Christian gospels allow numerous atrocities, although few believers would carry them out.... the Qu'ran offers some protection from killing to non-believers who follow another Abrahamic religion, EG, Christians, Jews, possibly Zoroastrians and Arianists also... those people are referred to as 'the people of the book' and the islamic version of God describes them as 'also my children'

  112. Patton Oswalt by ThatsNotPudding · · Score: 1

    'Hey, you gotta respect their beliefs...' "No you don't. I have an uncle that believes in Sasquatch; we do not believe him, nor do we respect him!"

  113. Now for some Christians by StillNeedMoreCoffee · · Score: 1

    It is blasphamey to say that Christ was only a profit. Now how are they going to resolve that. The key point here is an authoritarian group that claimes to have the (disputed) undesputed truth and wants to deny anyone from the disuptation.

    I think it is very wrong headed. Now for a Muslem I think it fine that if one that lives by that faith dies by that faith if that be the punishment for blasphamy, but then if we live by that rule, they should live by our rules, like freedom of speech. So I think the answer is live by your rules (those in the faith) and leave the rest of us alone, including those in your countries that are not of your religion.

  114. First Amendment protects both religion and speech by DavidHumus · · Score: 2

    I've sometimes wondered if the US Constitution's First Amendment groups together freedom of religious practice (in part by _prohibiting_ Congress from passing a law respecting an establishment of religion) and freedom of speech because of the Founding Fathers' awareness of the scourge of blasphemy laws which were in effect in much of Europe at that time.

  115. On Jizya by Quila · · Score: 1

    There is a real purpose in this. Back then all Muslim men were required to fight. Jews were not required to fight, so in lieu of service they pay a tax. Many societies have done something like this.

    The rest is correct though. Sorry, they need to grow the hell up if they don't want to be nuked from orbit by really pissing off someone eventually.

  116. Pakistan, ally of the west... by CdBee · · Score: 1

    I think it would be fairer to say that it's long been expedient to pretend that Pakistan is not what it is, which is to say an absolute enemy of Western nations. It was all a part of the greater game (cold war, then indian-subcontinent regional stability reasons, then later the need for some sort of play regarding Afghanistan.

    --
    I have been a user for about 10 years. This ends Feb 2014. The site's been ruined. I'm off. Dice, FU
  117. whos prophet is it? by bigscience · · Score: 1

    One point these so called religious leaders fail to explain is why I should revere the persona of their prophet, if A) I do not believe he is a prophet, and B) Even if he is important in any other way, politically, I have no desire to respect the person nor those who follow that persons teachings Otherwise arrest me now for stating that, Karl Marx is a pig, eating flea dirt in the bottom of a barrel, because a statement like that would be on a par with any statement I would have to make about any religious cult of any type and their so called prophets. If they cannot prove there is a god they cannot prove he is a prophet. I certainly have no respect for islam whatsoever, and further more I would make a case in court that it is only blasphemous to say so if these people can bring me absolute unequivocal proof of the existence of a god! The same goes to christians and any other religion

  118. THIS by ThatsNotPudding · · Score: 2

    it's a feeble God who needs armed men to defend himself.

    Can we get a Kickstarter going to fund this writ large in geosynchronous orbit, please?

    1. Re:THIS by Lucractius · · Score: 1

      Make it out of solar panels and solve the energy problem by beaming it down to earth.

      The amount of space required for visibility of a written message assuming you dont want to just spell it out with shiny points visible in the day as tiny stars in lines, would likely be sufficient to deliver more than 100% of the power needed for the next 50 years.
      And as for the geo orbit... you would need to build 3 or 4 if you put it there... some people could hide on the other side of the planet and try to ignore it.

      --
      XML - A clever joke would be here if /. didn't mangle tag brackets.
  119. International brainwashing laws by WaffleMonster · · Score: 1

    Hey PM dude...like you know this shit aint going to happen.

    The same way our congress will never pass a bill instating performance based pay of themselves or the president (Specifically prohibited by constitution).

    Perhaps if you ...you...know...... LEAD.. actually did something positive to improve the lives of your citizens in your own country you would not have found yourself in a position of having to scrape and claw for legitimacy by means of anti-west/whatever rants designed exclusivly for local consumption.

    This film thing is a pathetic excuse to cover for your own abysmal lack of gumption.

  120. Missed it by over a thousand years by Quila · · Score: 1

    Cyrus the Great let everybody of any religion live in peace in his kingdom. He even paid respect to the minority religions, including ordering the rebuilding of the Jewish Temple. Islam had nothing on Cyrus when it came to religious tolerance.

    1. Re:Missed it by over a thousand years by alexgieg · · Score: 1

      Cyrus the Great let everybody of any religion live in peace in his kingdom. He even paid respect to the minority religions, including ordering the rebuilding of the Jewish Temple. Islam had nothing on Cyrus when it came to religious tolerance.

      Well, except his policies faded, things got worse, then a LONG time afterwards the Islamic solution came around, and in a form that managed to last a fair bit more. But, yeah, I myself prefer polytheistic approaches to these issues. They have a tendency of producing less aggressive outcomes, what with the whole "you have gods? we also have gods! let's join them!" mindset. Although that's not always the case, evidently.

      --
      Conservatism: (n.) love of the existing evils. Liberalism: (n.) desire to substitute new evils for the existing ones.
  121. Blasphemy laws? Great! I'm all for it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let it be law, that freedom of speech and the freedom of arts have absolute precedence over your preferred fairy tale.
    That any national laws regarding punishment related to crimes against rules mandated by fairy tales are a reason to get punished and excluded from international institutions.
    I'm totally in favor of such laws.

  122. How about international free speech law instead? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Time to wall off the Islamic world from the rest of it.

  123. October Surprise by ThatsNotPudding · · Score: 0

    Follow the money; I'm betting this idiot (who should be prosecuted for manslaughter at the very least) got money and support from the GOP, albeit hidden under several layers of shell organizations. It greatly benefits the Right Wing if it looks like the entire Muslim world is about to rise up and destroy Jebus, NASCAR, and college football.

  124. This might not be too bad an idea... by number6x · · Score: 1

    Mis-quoting an off the cuff remark by Ronald Reagan...

    U.N. Spokesperson: "We have just passed the first international blasphemy regulations. It is now illegal for any nations to engage in blasphemy at the national level. As our first act under this legislation, any offending nation that has officially referred to any other nation as 'The Great Satan' is now outlawed... We begin bombing the offending nations in 5 minutes."

    Thank you, I'll be here all week. Remember to tip your waitresses.

  125. Shari'a, the right solution by CdBee · · Score: 1

    A proper application of Shari'a law would allow the one who felt harmed by an action to respond by doing equal harm by the same methods.

    I would like to invite every offended moslem to make a bad film about something Nakoulah or whatever his name cares about, then post it on Youtube. Troll back the troll!! And go away secure in the approval of your lord. And stop fucking whining.

    --
    I have been a user for about 10 years. This ends Feb 2014. The site's been ruined. I'm off. Dice, FU
  126. DANEGELD by CdBee · · Score: 1

    ..was the old word for it.

    --
    I have been a user for about 10 years. This ends Feb 2014. The site's been ruined. I'm off. Dice, FU
  127. More like a few percent by Quila · · Score: 1

    That few percent is willing to go violent easily for their cause. The problem is a few percent of 1.5 billion is an awful lot of people. Given that almost every country that has a Muslim majority has implemented some form "politicla Islamism", I'd say a majority of Muslims would support it.

    The number of Christians in America who would support a Christian version of that is very small, and the number willing to get violent is extremely small. If it weren't, we'd have had deadly riots over Piss Christ and a dead artist. But the most we got was the standard hate mail you get from anything that pisses people off (remember, people who opposed gay marriage in California got death threats too), and an effort to keep the government from paying for it. Nobody killed him for it as happened to Van Gogh. As it is, the worst we've had is a couple lone rangers killing abortion doctors, and they believed they were directly saving babies from being murdered by executing serial killers.

    As far as general attitude, look at how we treat most extreme. Jihadists are admired by many Muslims. We laugh at the Westboro Baptists, and most people fighting against them are Christians.

  128. Religious Rights by Faisal+Rehman · · Score: 0

    Just like freedom of expression, there need to be freedom of religious rights too.

  129. The problem with words.. by gmuslera · · Score: 2

    .. is that don't have the same meaning for everyone, everywhere, and thats the field where UN plays. What is blasphemy for ones could be holy word for others, what is "common sense" for ones could be a sin for others. Even claiming owning the truth, what is right or wrong (as most religions do) could be blasphemy for others, and binding governments with religions is a dangerous mix for that reason too.

  130. Re:First Amendment protects both religion and spee by craigminah · · Score: 1

    It's interesting to see how perspectives get skewed by those perpetrating the crimes. How is blasphemy considered so evil it needs an international law but killing people and chopping off their heads isn't? Why aren't radical muslims and those who tolerate them arrested?

    IIRC, this is part of the master plan; use the West's legal system to promote islam...

  131. Pork by coyote_oww · · Score: 1

    Eating pork is not a tenet of any religion that I am aware of. The New Testement specifically addressed it by NOT imposing Jewish dietary law on Gentiles. Whether Jews were still bound or not is a bit vague. So, its kind of "do what you want".

    Christianity as described by the New Testiment has a lot of that. Slavery is mentioned a couple times - once "Servants obey your masters..." used as a justification by the Old South as a justification. OTOH the book of Philemon is one long plea for a particular slave owner to free a particular slave (Philemon). However, it is not a COMMAND, rather, a rational and very emotional plea. Paul, the author, offers to pay any compensation in order to free Philemon. But, Paul apparently sent the letter back to the owner in the hands of the aformentioned Philemon. Make of it what you will. It can be hard to interpet a foriegn culture from only snippets of writing.

  132. Strawman. We are NOT asking you to "fix" them. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We are asking you to stand WITH US and denounce the crazy Muslims; separate yourself from them.

    Because the 1% or 10% or 50% of crazy Muslims are using you for cover. So YOU have to stand up (like the Catholics need to stand up against child molesters.) and DENOUNCE them, and help us marginilize them, and beat them back as well.

    You (and all like you) have to stand up and say "Hey you know, you can be Muslim and not be crazy, not wear the hijab, etc., etc., etc." Of course that is hard to to because then the crazy Muslims will kill you first, before coming after us.

    So yes, you have to step up. Otherwise you are covering for them, and by that association, become part of a criminal conspiracy (again, like so many Catholics.)

    PS: The film is offensive. This is just Barack's and Clintons's way of having it both ways - they are of course politicians, and have other concerns. It is up to the PEOPLE to stand up for our rights, not the government to protect them.

    1. Re:Strawman. We are NOT asking you to "fix" them. by scamper_22 · · Score: 1

      In case you missed the point... you're not asking us to stand with you. Where is the massive Western people's protest in favor of free speech? Where are the Westenr leaders. Exactly... you won't stand up for your own values.

      The only people standing up for free speech are the crazy white people... people I'd rather not be associated with.

      I don't even know what values you have anymore.
      About the only thing you stand against is violence.

      Just recently there was a protect in Toronto by Muslims demanding the government classify the video as hate speech. Plenty of you Western people just dismiss it as... oh well... they're not being violence... so it's okay. You don't find it offensive that they are demanding the government give up freedom of speech?

      So screw it. I don't see the crazy Muslims as the problem anymore. It's the Western government and Western citizens that are the problem. And if I can't even get Western people to recognize the problem, what hope in hell do I have of convincing Muslims?

    2. Re:Strawman. We are NOT asking you to "fix" them. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hold on.

      - You say the only ones standing up for western values are the "crazies". Yes, you're right, I'm one of them.
      - You say you don't want anything to do with those "crazies". Ok sensible considering how we're treated, but you don't seem to like the "extremist" muslims (understandable as they would kill you just as they would me) and you don't seem to like the idiotarian whites (who I don't like either, I never voted for any of them) who hide behind YOU.

      So... where does that leave you? And where does that leave me and the other white "crazies" that are trying to take back our native lands and ideals from those who betrayed us?

      By the way in the west it's normally only leftists who protest publicly in huge numbers because such protests are essentially fascist bullying tactics and not the manner in which "crazies" like me think society should be governed or influenced.

      Who do you vote for? Which truths do you tell? What will you do if it all goes to hell? Will you stay true to yourself? Risk your life for it? Lose it?

      Hard questions for me as well. I think what we both should fear the most is a sudden widespread loss of patience.

      Or is that the only solution left?

    3. Re:Strawman. We are NOT asking you to "fix" them. by scamper_22 · · Score: 1

      I don't know why you're at 0.

      But anyways...

      "So... where does that leave you?"
      I don't know. Perhaps why I stopped caring and have just resigned myself to live my life.

      There are Western intellectuals that I can side with. Thomas Sowell, Mark Steyn... But that doesn't really do any good in terms of real change.

      "Who do you vote for?"
      In Canada, I voted for harper. Though I have no real allegiance to them. I don't see any political party as really willing to take on the big issues. They were just the least worst option.

      "Which truths do you tell?"
      All truths, as I see them of course. I'm not stupid about things, but I put myself more out there than most people.

      "What will you do if it all goes to hell? Will you stay true to yourself? Risk your life for it? Lose it?"
      I'm still debating. For now, I'm okay if all goes to hell. I get along with most people as does my immediate family. We'll be okay regardless.

  133. Yeah, That's Going Nowhere by Greyfox · · Score: 1
    I'm getting tired of listening to shit coming out of that failed little nation-state. I vote we just hand northern Afghanistan and Pakistan over to the Chinese and southern Afghanistan and Pakistan over to India and let those guys sort it out. Because, you know, arbitrarily splitting up that region of the world has NEVER caused problems in the past! Anyone have a problem with that?

    Oh yeah, and if China and India want to draw their borders all the way to the Persian Gulf and the Caspian Sea, that'd be OK with me, too. Looking at you, Iran! If you just kept your bitch-ass mouth shut like your neighbor, Turkmenistan, we wouldn't be having this little talk right now. When was the last time you heard anything about Turkmenistan in the news? NEVER, is when!

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

  134. Blasphemy is a right! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Freedom of speech is a *human* right not an exclusively American right. And being offended is the offendee's problem. No one has any obligation not to offend someone else for the obvious reason that there will always be someone somewhere that takes offense to any given thing you say.

    Not Islam, nor Christianity, nor Judaism, nor Hinduism, nor Shinto, etc has any right to impose their concept of blasphemy on anyone else ever. This is censorship and the imposition of a religion on those that do not subscribe to it.

    Islam needs to grow the fuck up and join the rest of the make-believe ceiling cats in the 21st century.

  135. Blasphemy is not a felony, at most is a sin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Civil society and laws must be isolated from cults of nay kind. Blasphemy has nothing, or should have nothing, to do with advanced societies which separate civil societe from Church.

    It might be a sin in some beliefs, but that mileage varies and I just do not care. Should not be civil law

  136. Context is important by Quila · · Score: 1

    He gave a reasonable interpretation that is by no means a stretch from the plain text and context. Likewise, "thou shalt not kill" in context can't be understood to be an absolute prohibition on killing or few Christians or Jews ever would have gone to war, or defended their homelands against the invading Muslims. Context is important.

    This is not the mental gymnastics you get when trying to say that the Bible didn't condone slavery, or doesn't condemn homosexuality (even in the NT).

  137. Its reasonable with the following additions: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sure but we are going to add the following:

    1. All past and present religious sites must be persevered. Displaced religious group may practice in their lost sites.
    2. Government will be secular and blind to religion morale code and punishment.
    3. No one under the age 18 should forced to practice religion. It should be up to the person to make this choice.
    4. No one should be forced to convert.

    I bet there is alot more to add.

  138. Re:Sick of Seniors getting a free ride by Vaphell · · Score: 1

    Clinton managed to balance jack and shit. His epic economic achievements are the results of dotcom bubble in near peak stages, which brought higher tax revenue than expected. You think that if Dubya didn't win, there would be no recession triggered by the dotcom bust? Deficits wouldn't be high? Fed wouldn't slash rates to near zero to keep the americans endebted to their eyeballs spending?
    Tax cuts were not a good idea but it makes no sense to blame them for everything. Average voter was complacent, even quite happy he could flip houses bought with no-down loans and get rich quick during the housing bubble flipping real estate.

    Yes, being rich and knowing the right people in the circles of power is good for business but...
    You seriously underestimate the amount of money promised to tens of millions of people, even if the numbers are modest per capita. The hole in the US budget is 1-1.5T, every year. If you tried to confiscate everything the rich own, you would have funded the expeditures for few months, maybe few years if you were particularly meticulous in your hunt... and then you are back to square 1. Entitlements still have to be paid, but there is nothing to pillage.

    SoSec taxes went up because it became perfectly clear, that the low rates from the early times where 1 retiree was supported by 10-20 productive people don't work, when the structure reflects the demographics and it's let's say 1:4 now. Assuming you need 1000 bucks/month to live and there are 4 employed for 1 retiree, math is simple - on average each of them has to fork over 250 bucks/month right off the bat, before any other taxes. What if population ages even more and you get to 1:2? 500 bucks and the wages are not going to skyrocket any time soon to make it easier to make ends meet.

    SoSec is an unethical scam because it ignores reality and locks whole generations into a scheme that is very sensitive to demographic changes. Everything is fine with exploding population, which is why the whole thing quacks like a ponzi scheme.
    Get below the fertility rate of 2.1 and no amount of wishful thinking will help you. Aging population spells doom to the system (afaik US is at 2.05, still not too bad). In EU the rate is in 1.3-1.6 range in many countries. This can't work no matter how you slice it. In 20 years avg worker will have to fork over the half of his earnings (again, before any other taxes and fees) because the largest block of voters (the elderly) will democratically reintroduce indentured servitude

  139. Christians in the US have had their own by Quila · · Score: 1

    Pierce v. Society of Sisters in the 1920s affirmed the right to enroll in private schools instead of public. The Protestants who ran Oregon were worried about the influence that Catholic schools would have on society, so they passed a law to ban them, directing all children to the Protestant-run public schools where they used the Protestant Bible. Banning Catholic schools would be too direct and obvious, so as is usual they tried to work around that, banning private schools in general (some exceptions, of course).

  140. What a nutter! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What is blasphemy? To me, it looks like an introlerant dictat, that makes religion immune to any criticism, and immune to examination of the basis of its facts (or actually its total lack of any facts)
    Pakistan is a failed state, run by religious extremists. I hope our own governments have enough spine to publically ridicule this extremist suggestion.

  141. roflmao by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Thomas Jefferson viewed this as freedom of conscience, that is the state has no authority to dictate a person's thoughts and beliefs. Men have this freedom by their nature. The state cannot remove it.

    The inscription on the Jefferson Memorial reads "I have sworn upon the altar of god eternal hostility against every form of tyranny over the mind of man."

    Ultimately this tyranny is what the Pakistan minister intends be enforced by international law.

    We should not be supporting or in fact have any relations with a society such as this"
    Or with any society that does.

    Sometimes you have to put your money where your mouth is or like I believe America is all talk.
    There should be International laws governing the freedom from religion.
    We dont even have that in America.
    Our religious are no different than there theirs.
    And who know what is going to happen when we elect a cult leader.

  142. Same with the Democrats by Quila · · Score: 1

    Our two-party system has encouraged both parties to polarize at opposite ends. Crazies and fringe elements? It doesn't get much crazier than Sheila Jackson-Lee or Cynthia McKinney, both Democrats.

  143. I'm a Pakistani by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And I'm sorry about this whole $hytestorm. Not only do I not want blasphemy laws internationally, I want the ones in Pakistan abolished. We want freedom of expression.

  144. Best car analogy ever! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you weren't already at +5, I would ask for mods to mod you up..

    kudos.

  145. Re:Sick of Seniors getting a free ride by mcgrew · · Score: 1

    Fine, I've been paying SS tax for 45 years and intend to collect what I put in. You want to get rid of SS? Fine, give me back all the money I've been paying for decades, with the highest interest rate that was charged while I was earning it (and interest rates were damned high in the eighties).

    I have a better idea -- how about we stop using SS and Medicare taxes for the general fund? How about removing the income cap on taxes paid while retaining a maximum amount you can get back? I'm sick of subsidizing rich people; you want to talk entitlement mentality? The only people I've met who weren't actually entitled (like old people, damn you, if I pay for a thing I'm entitled to it) are the rich.

    Get your priorities straight, you stupid kid. Good luck on that 401k bullshit... how was your retirement looking in 2008?

  146. Freedom of Expression is more important by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Freedom of Expression is more important than Freedom of Religion for the simple fact that some, all too many, religions demand the destruction of freedom of expression. I have no respect for those who have such disrespect.

  147. No no no, listen: this is *PERFECT*! by PurplePhase · · Score: 1

    The UN takes their proposal and outlaws blasphemy.

    That means that all religions MUST ACCEPT everything anyone else has to say: they cannot treat anything as blasphemy!

    Please, can we vote this in today?!

    8-PP

  148. Why do they call him a hatemonger? by Quila · · Score: 1

    He's a Copt. These Egyptian Christians are used to being oppressed and murdered at will by the Muslim majority. It seems that every time some group of Muslims gets mad, they go kill some Copts.

    It appears this one didn't take the high road kumbaya non-threatening approach of his local Egyptian brethren, which is kind of necessary for them to prevent being completely wiped out. Instead, he probably has some pretty justified hate for what they did to his people.

  149. Message to Pakistan's Prime Minister Raja Pervez by hemo_jr · · Score: 1

    To quote Brigadier General Anthony McAuliffe after the German demand to surrender of Bastogne,: "NUTS!".

  150. Muslim blasphemy works only one way by Vince6791 · · Score: 2

    I think there is part of the brain that the supernatural, deity worshiping, resides in. As a child I believed in the supernatural, alternate universes, life after death, etc... But I grew up and realized you have only 1 life so don't FUCK IT UP. I also had compulsive disorder issues.

    The Blasphemy works only 1 way and it's the Islamic way, well it's today's Islamic way. Only Muslims can discriminate, rape, murder, insult other non-muslims because they are God's chosen people. This was true with the Jews in the beginning. Basically, they are behaving like they are in kindergarten or worse high school. Look at the shit muslims have done to copts in egypt, they burned their churches and sometimes burned the copts themselves to death, so you must understand why this coptic christian made the movie.

    In evolution age, we humans, are more like 5 year olds mentally, we still need to evolve. Maybe in a thousand or 2 thousand years humans will look back at this time line and see what a bunch of fucking, evil, mass murdering fuck heads we were. Some of us Atheist might not believe in a deity but there are some who actually worship government or celebrities which is pretty damn sad.

  151. How about this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Evil" is any human action that creates suffering in humans without necessity or consent.

  152. Re:Ok. -so let's talk about the text. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Always thought religions were only in it for the money, reckon that about proves it.

  153. Absolutely NOT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since for many Mohamed is the final Prophet an the Koran is the last word or God, period.
    I blaspheme if:
    1, If I say there is no God
    2, If I say that Jesus Christ is the Savior.
    3, If I say that Thomas S. Monson is a living Prophet.
    4, If I say that the Bible is the Word of God

    So I cannot say anything that contradicts the Koran or Mohamed or any crazed Imam.
    NO, NO, NO.
    No blasphemy laws.

  154. Blasphemy is effective vs Islam by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    The one thing that Islamic extremists cannot stand is blasphemy. It just makes them go ballistic. I propose that there needs to be a nonstop smear campaign against Islam until these extremists go and blow themselves all up. Seriously, fighting wars is ineffective, the only way to hurt these morons is to ridicule them.

  155. This Re:Message to the intolerant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mod parent up please.

    This post (the parent) gets it and should be modded up into the stratosphere. NOT all those other posts mentally masturbating about the relative merits of religion, belief, non-belief, hypocrisy, semantics or all the other useless bullshit few people except the writers themselves care about. The parent post also answers why it's so often islam that gets the limelight in this fashion and why it won't change as long as islam remains what it is.

    In turn this betrays the danger and constant threat islam poses in just the same way as your neighbourhood thugs (who in many parts of the world now "just happen" to be "moslem") wouldn't let you walk away if they wanted a confrontation. Islam is begging for war, declares war, commits war, ceaselessly and in every form from the subtle to the overt, and will at some point get it quite possibly making the Holocaust look like nothing more than a DUI offense in comparison.

  156. Fuck You! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Fuck Pakistan! Fuck Islam! Fuck moHAMed! I will fight you lousy fuckers to the death! I will work to have my government and military Nuke the entire Middle East before I let you take away my freedom of speech and religion. I've got nothing against any religion or person until the try to shove their backwards beliefs down my throat, then I say come out fighting. To the death! Lousy pieces of shit!

  157. Religious intolerance. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's where some whackjob priest comes up to a family's funeral and chants "God Hates Fags" and similar, right?

  158. So does the christian bible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And you don't hear of any christians throwing out these christians who shag kids, shoot doctors or set car bombs.

    Heck, the RCC never talked shit about Hitler.

  159. universal blasphemy laws? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I once came across some Christians who quietly pointed out that Islam is itself blasphemous. They then said that this was a matter for God, not them.

  160. Dear Mr. Prime Minister by imikem · · Score: 1

    I hereby cordially invite you and all like minded folk to go fuck yourselves.

    --
    Perscriptio in manibus tabellariorum est.
  161. Not going to happen by manu0601 · · Score: 1

    Religion about faith, not rational thinking, therefore it is impossible to define blasphemy in an objective way. Faith of some are the blasphemy of others.

    It is possible to define blasphemy against some major religion(s) in a given country, but a global blasphemy law seems unlikely to happen.

  162. Stupid nigger by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    n/c

  163. The World is Not Your Mosque by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Keep it to yourselves, Muslims.

    MY religion deems blasphemy against prophets to be a sacramental act, honoring God over human poseurs.

    Don't you dare try to convince the UN that your religion deserves precedence over mine.

  164. Just absurd by formfeed · · Score: 1

    for example, the muslim world has tons of hate against judaism and christianity which isn't punished. nevermind that mobs of jews and christians aren't threatening death and destruction because of it

    That's what makes this suggestion so funny - or rather absurd. Arrest every Muslim who says something against a Baha'i, then arrest people eating meat balls for showing disrespect towards FSM. And the Wickans can sue the Catholics for their parody of the mother goddess of Ephesos.

  165. Nonsense, most Muslims want women educated by billstewart · · Score: 1

    Yes, there are some sets of Islamic right-wingers who don't want women to be educated, just like there are American right-wingers who think a woman's place is barefoot and pregnant in the kitchen.

    But there are lots more Muslims who want all of their kids to be educated, and who want everybody else's kids to be educated as well, and want their kids to grow up to be educated adults. And even most sexist pigs who want their wives to stay home in the kitchen still want them to be educated enough to educate their kids, which is a job that happens at home as well as school, and want their daughters to be able to get the best husbands they can so they'll have good grandchildren and take care of their parents in their old age. And they want their wives to be able to help run the farm or the shop or whatever they're doing.

    And the people who move off the farm and out of the village and go to the big city, like most of the world's population is doing? All of them realize that education is the key to survival.

    --

    Bill Stewart
    New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
  166. Pakistan - a nation of hateful intolerants by Taco+Cowboy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If you do not know much about Pakistan, the following story may of help ---

    A Christian girl with mental retardation was accused of blasphemy to Islam, by her next door neighbor, coincidently, happened to be an Islamic Imam.

    According to that Islamic Imam, that Christian girl had burned pages from the so-called "Holy Quran" - and because of that, the girl was jailed on the charge of "Blasphemy" - and if convicted, can be put to death.

    Immediately the whole nation of Pakistan was up in arm. Muslims threatening to kill the minority Christians, Christian churches were attacked and burned, and entire Christian community had to be vacated due to the threats.

    After much twists and turns, it was reported that the "burned pages of Quran" was the making of that so-called "Islamic Imam".

    That "Islamic Imam" was the one who framed that Christian girl, by putting burnt pages of Quran into the girl's bag.

    And because Pakistan is a nation filled with hatreds, the minority Christians are still being threatened, and that Christian girl is still under the official charge of "Blasphemy", although a court granted her a bail.

    That Christian girl still face immense danger. She could still be killed by the angry Islamic mob, or the Pakistan authority itself.

    A nation like that wants the world to follow suit?

    --
    Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
    1. Re:Pakistan - a nation of hateful intolerants by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right. I find it disturbing that actual killings of people is considered less blasphemous than a really bad movie on the intertubes. The fifth commandment is a pretty good rule I think: Thou shall not kill.

    2. Re:Pakistan - a nation of hateful intolerants by cthulhu11 · · Score: 1

      Not to diminish what happened here, but WTF would a non-Islamic family want to live there in the first place?

    3. Re:Pakistan - a nation of hateful intolerants by DirtyLiar · · Score: 2

      Not to diminish what happened here, but WTF would a non-Islamic family want to live there in the first place?

      Stupid reasons like: Place of their birth. Land of their forefathers. Where their friends are. Where their community is. Where their loved ones are. Where their lives are. etc.

      You know, total wackjobs.

      --

      THINK! It's patriotic

    4. Re:Pakistan - a nation of hateful intolerants by RockDoctor · · Score: 2
      What makes you think that they've got any realistic choice about which country they live in? If you're an un-skilled labourer, try getting a settlement visa for any other country in which you don't already have relatives who are willing to act as your guarantors of good behaviour, and to support you while you become economically productive.

      I've got the whole of Europe to choose where to live in ; as a half-globe trotting specialist in the oil industry, I anticipate working on any continent at the drop of a hat. I've got enough languages and nouce to not have any real concern about being dropped in any airport in the world with a contact phone number and address to go and find my way to the client. I seriously doubt that a settlement visa request from me for most countries in the world would be turned down (though Spain, Canada and Oceania are the only credible ones where I might actually apply).

      Don't expect the freedoms that we expect in the first world to apply to the overwhelming majority of our conspecifics.

      --
      Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
    5. Re:Pakistan - a nation of hateful intolerants by Taco+Cowboy · · Score: 2

      Before Islam invaded Pakistan, people there were of the Hindu and Buddhism religion.

      Christianity had reached Pakistan (and Iran and Afghanistan and India) way before that pedophile "profart" was born. One of the 12 disciples had gone to that region to spread the Word, and was later put to death by a local chieftain.

      --
      Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
    6. Re:Pakistan - a nation of hateful intolerants by Arker · · Score: 5, Insightful

      What I took away from the story was that the authorities in Pakistan are actually deserving of a little faith. This so-called Imam, representing the powerful majority faith, set this poor girl up and in the sort of country the pakistan-bashers paint, it would have worked. It didnt. That Imam, last I heard, is the focus of police investigation, and is likely to be arrested, tried, and convicted of the crime of blasphemy for which he attempted to frame the girl.

      If that's how it works out, then it's hard for me to see how the Pakistani authorities could possibly have handled it better.

      --
      =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
      Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
    7. Re:Pakistan - a nation of hateful intolerants by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They should arrest him for attempting to frame the girl, not blasphemy. Two wrongs don't make a right.

    8. Re:Pakistan - a nation of hateful intolerants by philip.paradis · · Score: 1

      Many moons ago, I spent four years as a strict vegetarian on ethical grounds, but have long since recovered. These days, I prefer the approach of killing my own game, so I can be directly assured the animal wasn't treated inhumanely prior to its death, that its death was swift, and that its body will be used to the fullest potential possible.

      In case you weren't actually interested in a direct response to your post, please familiarize yourself with the word pedantic. Have a nice day.

      --
      Write failed: Broken pipe
  167. Islam vs. Hinduism and Blasphemy Laws by billstewart · · Score: 1

    Yeah, blasphemy laws are pretty strongly religious intolerance - even though blasphemy laws are also strong protections against religious intolerance (for some religions. Probably not yours.)

    In Saudi Arabia, it's illegal to teach polytheism. Christianity and Judaism may not be treated well, but they're tolerated as religions that worship the same One True God that Abraham worshiped even though they haven't yet accepted that Mohammad came to teach the world more about God, and even though the Muslims think the Christians have really strange ways of counting up to "One". But the Middle Eastern pagan pantheons that predated monotheism are Right Out, and Hinduism is also polytheist (even with the "everything is really All One" parts of Hinduism.) And Islam is even more insistent on banning idols than 16th and 17th-century Protestants were in the Europe's religious wars.

    For the most part, Hinduism isn't as hung up about blasphemy as the monotheistic religions are, unless you happen to run into the Shiv Sena on a bad day, but if they're going to pass any blasphemy laws they'd probably include banning preaching monotheism and certainly include a ban on disrespectfully destroying statues of the gods and shrines to the gods.

    --

    Bill Stewart
    New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
  168. Motivation for the Crusades by billstewart · · Score: 1

    Maybe they started because of fear, but greed was a big factor as well. Lots of cool stuff to steal if you invaded the Middle East.

    And "Arab" isn't necessarily the right term - much of the Muslim invasion of Europe was done by Turks, who aren't Arabs.

    --

    Bill Stewart
    New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
  169. Sensible, Non-Crazy Muslims by billstewart · · Score: 1

    Sensible non-crazy Muslims get tired of being blamed for all this crap. And when they do speak up and try to do something long-term about it, like Feisal Abdul Rauf, crazy non-sensible Muslim-haters go all Pam Geller on them and accuse them of building terrorist victory mosques. (Hint, Rauf's a Sufi - the attacks made about as much sense as attacking Quakers for supporting terrorism.) (Not that that stops the FBI from infiltrating Quaker peace groups, of course, or Al-Qaeda and their Wahhabi buddies from tearing down Sufi shrines, or Persian imams from declaring fatwas against Salmon Rushdie or the Baha'is.)

    --

    Bill Stewart
    New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
  170. Sensible Non-Crazy Muslims on Fox News by billstewart · · Score: 1

    There have been some sensible, non-crazy Muslims being interviewed on the radio in the past week, and while they haven't been boring, they've been on National Public Radio, which is the wrong network to listen to when you need your fix of crazy.

    The real question you should be asking yourself, punk, is why aren't there any sensible non-crazy Muslims standing up on Fox News and denouncing these lunatics.

    --

    Bill Stewart
    New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
  171. Re:Note that their interpretation of "Blasphemy" i by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's not forget that the "ally" of the US, Saudi Arabia, executes people for sorcery.

  172. Your Faith Reassures Me... by 0-9a-f · · Score: 1

    Until you demand appeasement, or else violence.
    Your Faith does not deserve my false words.
    And your violence will destroy us all.

    --
    With each breath in, a flower somewhere opens; with each breath out, a flower withers away. In between lies beauty.
  173. International Murder Laws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seeing as we already have international murder laws, which are clearly not being obeyed here, why do they think international blasphemy laws will have any effect?

  174. I'll stop blaspheming when.... by ogdenk · · Score: 1

    I'll stop making fun of their 2,000+ yr old fairy tales and children's stories (Koran, Bible, Torah, etc) when they stop calling me a sub-human, infidel, hellbound dog. The Christians are just a little nicer about it.

    If you call me a piece of sh!t worthy of going to the worst place in [non]existence because I refuse to share your backwards ignorant beliefs in a magical "god".... personally I find that arrogant and amusing and your whole belief system suddenly becomes fair game.

    The Abrahamists need to relax. If I'm going to Hell, just think, you'll have eternity to laugh about it in Heaven. If Allah/Jehovah existed, he certainly wouldn't need *YOUR* help with the smiting.

    F*ck Islam. Eat bacon! Wanna burn my house down yet?

  175. Screw the beast by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Fuck Islam, Satan's religion.

    Fuck the pedophile Mohammad.

    There, you muslim bastards. How's that for blasphemy?

  176. Dont look at what I'm doing...... by Pyrotech7 · · Score: 1

    Silencing the critics of a religion (or anything for that matter) is open license to do whatever you want in that religion.

    So many wars and tragedies throughout history have been because of, or in the name of religion. Given the possibilities of interpreting and misinterpreting the Bible, Koran or whatever guiding principles you have in order to justify your actions, is a recipe for disaster when there are no critics. Reason and moderation go out the window.

    IMHO all religions need to tolerate criticism and other religions. There will always be other views and beliefs and they must be tolerated.

    "Pay no attention to the man behind the curtain"

    1. Re:Dont look at what I'm doing...... by Ego_and_his_own · · Score: 1

      There is a huge difference between criticizing and insulting. And some intentionally dont want to make a difference, only blind man cant see that. Its a insult for the sake of insult and nothing more. And usually those are Anonymous Coward's. They hide behind their country, behind their nation, behind privileges that are meant for honorable people, behind like cowards. They dont care who will pay for it. They surely wont.

  177. Re:Sick of Seniors getting a free ride by tehcyder · · Score: 1

    You belong to the generation that experienced the standard of living no other generation will experience ever again so don't whine.

    And, like he said, he paid his taxes/social security along the way. If your government wasn't so determined to wipe out the middle class and return to a state of Very Few Rich and Very Many Poor there is no reason why your standard of living shouldn't continue to rise.

    --
    To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  178. Agnostic Atheist OR Theist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You are not> using proper definitions for agnostics. Agnostic is not incompatible with Atheist.

    - Agnostic-Atheist: does not believe any god exists, but doesn't claim to know whether this is actually true

    - Gnostic-Atheist: believes that no god exists and claims to know that this belief is true

    - Agnostic-Theist: believes a god exists, but doesn't claim to know that this belief is true

    - Gnostic-Theist: believes a god exists and claims to know that this belief is true

  179. No Power by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He's asking for somehting that can't possibly be achieved by the UN or any other international forum. There is no way of legislating unilaterally on behalf of the world.

    The Pakistanis are either very foolish or simply playing for their audience/electorate. I'm going with the latter.

    However there was a similar case a few years back when the Muslim member nations of the UN wanted to include zionism as racism or something similar in a [racism] charter that would be shared by the whole world. Now, that wasn't going to get passed, and certainly not implemented [in the West] no matter what, but they can try all they like.

  180. how many laws do we need by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    it would be very pathetic to make laws to protect a "god" I am a christian however i feel people have the right to decide for themselves what to believe.. the problem chrisitanity has is that we forget what Jesus taught... when we start judging others we need to remember we have more fingers pointing back at ourselves than we point at others. Show love and you will be loved. show respect and you will be respected. forgive so that you will be forgiven (that is a hard one for me) . the ones that rant and curse on chats about "no God" well... i too was their and i understand where you come from however the peace and forgivness Jesus has is worth the sacrafice of a little pride.

  181. 19 Dead in Day of Love by jep305 · · Score: 1

    There's a great "The Onion" article that pretty much sums up the situation:

    http://www.theonion.com/articles/no-one-murdered-because-of-this-image,29553/

    --
    In Reason We Trust
  182. Right to be an Idiot by Ego_and_his_own · · Score: 1

    hey people have a right to be Idiots! I would suggest a Law that if anyone wants a right to insult anyone he needs to do it face to face. That would be right, so why hole States need to be a victim of an idiot that wants to insult others? Freedom of speech is not to be ill used and abused. Go there and then show your courage. But you will not do that for sure! Go outside and start insulting people on the street, and then you will find your rights right away.

  183. And they wonder... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    As these idiots continue to make fools of themselves they wonder why the world doesn't take them seriously.

    If these idiots were not so dangerous they would be laughable.

    I can't speak for the politicians... but the man on street in the "West" has just about had enough of "Islam".

    At one time Islam was viewed in a sympathetic light. Now... sympathy has turned to contempt.

  184. The so called prophet Muhammad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Really? They want anti-blasphemy laws? OMFG! This has got to be one of the most ridiculous things I've heard in some time now. Granted this guy has to take a aggressive stance if he wants to keep his job (Or his head knowing those animals) but to think the international community would even consider such a thing is beyond the scope of reason. HELLO! Not everyone believes in religion let alone this so called prophet Muhammad. And, if this religion and the people who subscribe to it believe that their religion is so weak that something someone says or does can somehow offend a GOD or someone long dead and gone (Muhammad) should just be disfranchised and sent on their way. F**k Islam, F**k Pakistan and F**k anyone that feels differently.

  185. Bull by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The UN has no business passing any laws that interfere with US laws and Constitution. Also, defining what is Blasphemy quickly becomes a slippery slope. The definition can be arbitrary. Keep Shira law out of the US, if Muslims want to live here, they are subject to the laws of the US, and none other.

  186. As an atheist... by xkpe · · Score: 1

    I'm ok with it as long as it says "you can not make any reference to any god I don't believe in"

  187. I read by NewYork · · Score: 1

    Pakistan' PM Demands Control Internet Laws from UN.

  188. oh yeah. and impose religious laws via UN. WTF by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    no. stay the fuck out of UN. put your bounties or what not, i dont care. but stay the fuck away from UN. Use your national laws.

  189. The Actual Problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How someone takes something is their own business. There is a call for international laws as the result of a group of people, who in my opinion, are breaking international laws that already exist as mentioned in the article: 'The UN's Human Rights Charter mentions protection from 'religious intolerance' but also in the same sentence 'freedom of opinion and expression.'"' So far as I'm concerned, people should be allowed to do whatever they like so long as they don't take value from others. Expressing an opinion is not taking value. Rioting, destruction, and death ARE taking value. It's ironic that the call for a solution to a problem is the result of the actual problem itself. What we put out into the world is a direct reflection of what is inside of us and how we perceive the world.

  190. I declare Pirate Jihad on spaghetti vid or pix by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

    On behalf of all Pastafarians, I declare a Pirate Jihad on anyone who uploads cartoons, pictures, or videos of spaghetti and meatball dinners who is not of the Faithful!

    Also ... cartoons of Feathered Dinosaurs! Everyone knows that dinosaurs wear Pirate Hats and nothing else but a toothy smile!

    --
    -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
  191. You've got to be kidding by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    When Muslims quit criticizing Christians and Jews, and quit maiming and killing infidels, perhaps I'll consider not criticizing Islam. Until then F__K YOUR BOGUS RELIGION AND MUHAMMAD TOO!!

  192. Sorry guy, we're not intolerant enough to enact... by DirtyLiar · · Score: 1

    ... blasphemy laws just yet.

    You'll have to wait a few more years yet.

    Though I doubt that you'll appreciate the ones that we're most likely to enact even then.

    In the mean time, why don't YOU enact and enforce some laws protecting religous minorities and punishing hate crimes against them?

    Or do YOU believe Allah and his prophet to be too weak to withstand a few words and a few nonbelievers?

    --

    THINK! It's patriotic

  193. ideas are only ideas by fredthomsen · · Score: 1

    Ideas whether offensive or not, are just that, ideas. People can express these ideas, but no one has to listen or even acknowledge them. They cannot help or harm you unless acted upon, which is why there should be no laws against expressing them.

  194. "Demand"? by iq145 · · Score: 1

    Pakistan isn't even a member of the U.N. yet. They can't "demand" anything! Besides, i saw an article just last week with the headline: "Pakistan beginning to look more like 'enemy' of U.S."

  195. Message to the thick-headed by AlanS2002 · · Score: 1

    You have no right to expect me to respect your belief in imaginary friends.

    --
    Not all conservatives are stupid,
    but it is true that most stupid people are conservative.
    - Hume
  196. Fight non-sense with education by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I keep hearing comments regarding how islam is so violent and a detriment and an urge for non extreme muslims to stand up and speak out. As if such a young religion will awake tomorrow and be aligned with the evolved majority christian tolerant teachings. One things that people seem to ignore is that christianity had an extremely violent extremist past which till exists today - it is no better than islam. Here are a list of atrocities committed by christians throughout the ages and compare them to what islam has done http://bit.ly/JMmvi.

    The fact is that all of it is non-sense. All religion is as believable as Santa clause and way less believable than I believe that snoopy is a real dog. I learn the same lessons from the Three Little Pigs as I did the bible. The only way to learn/teach tolerance is with education: ie facts, math, physics, chemistry, etc. If you want to derail non-sense, fill it with knowledge.

  197. The Life of Mustafa by turgid · · Score: 1

    Someone needs to make a film, and call it, day, "The Life of Mustafa."

    You see, he's not the Holy Prophet (Peace be Upon Him) - he's a very naughty boy.

    It could start off with him being woken from his slumbers (together with his young wives) by his mum knocking on his door.

    All through the film he could be followed by mindless morons worshiping him by mistake, while the real Holy Prophet (Peace be Upon Him) ascends directly to Heaven on his horse in a brilliant shaft of white light. Note that we never see the real Holy Prophet's (Peace be Upon Him) face so there will be no need for riots and murders.

    I won't charge any would-be film makers for the use of this idea.

  198. grow up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    grow up Raja Pervez Ashraf and deal with it.

  199. Dear Pakistan, we are going to have to nuke you. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, seriously, we are going to actually have to bomb every single square inch of your country, find all your expats and expel them back to the radioactive crater of the former Pakistan, or imprison them for life.

    Your country is really that much of a threat.

    It surprises me to say this, but unless you outlaw islam, give up all nukes, and stop hosting terrorists, you are a clear and present danger to us.
    I mean, shit, you don't even try to hide it anymore!

    It's over, dude. Your country is irredeemable, and is one giant nuclear armed hate group. If you so much as twitch in our direction, you are gone. I, personally, don't believe in religion, but if there ever was a devil, you are him.

  200. Actually by DarthVain · · Score: 1

    Close. The US is ruled by an elected 18% majority system. They just happen to be totally controlled by the .1%

    Big differance. Fixed that for you.

    The 0.1% don't want to rule, thats tedious and boring. They just want to make sure those that do, know their place.

  201. Easy by DarthVain · · Score: 1

    Because I find the idea of an entire empire comprised of nothing but foot stools to be utterly ridiculous!

  202. The Bible and the Koran by sonamchauhan · · Score: 1

    Consider if such a law was implemented...

    • The Koran considers the claims of Jesus, as recorded in the Bible, to be blasphemy!
    • http://www.letusreason.org/islam11.htm

      In Sura 10:68-70 They say: “God hath begotten a son!” -
      [...]
      then shall We make them taste the severest penalty for their blasphemies.”

    • The Old Testament in the Bible (1 Kings or 2 Kings) records the prophet Elijah blaspheming Baal, the Caananite God.
    • According to the New Testament, the Jews considered Jesus' claim (that he was God's son) to be blasphemous and the prime reason for his crucifixion.
  203. My god hates cigarettes by tepples · · Score: 1

    I hate fags, as in cigarettes. The spirit-creature behind my faith says don't intentionally harm yourself (with smoke) or others (with secondhand smoke). See Matthew 22:39.

  204. Details vs. principles by tepples · · Score: 1

    As I understand it, with the coming of Jesus Christ, the old laws (from the Old Testament) were basically thrown out

    The Mosaic Law served its purpose at the time, keeping the Jews as an example of cleanliness to the nations. By the first century CE, sanitation in general had improved, rendering most of the dietary laws obsolete, and God let Peter know that (Acts 10:9-16). Still, some parts of the Law are useful as a historic expression of the principles on which Jehovah God operates. For example, blood sausage and shooting up blood are still unclean (Acts 15:29) because of the principle that a creature's life is in the blood (Leviticus 17:11). Though the details may change, the general principles don't.

  205. God invented robes; man invented pants by tepples · · Score: 1

    What gave it away; was it the dudes hanging out with each other out in the desert, wearing nothing but flowing robes?

    I don't follow about what's wrong with men wearing flowing robes. After Adam and Eve sinned for the first time and became aware of their nakedness, God made clothes for them. Genesis 3:21 identifies these as tunics, or shirts long enough to cover at least the kneecaps. (Some English translations use imprecise terms in this verse, such as "coats" or "garments", but the Hebrew word is kethoneth which means a tunic.) Centuries later, man would invent trousers, but only for riding horses. But even given Deuteronomy 22:5, there's nothing wrong with men wearing masculine styles of flowing robes.

  206. Fags vs. faggotry by tepples · · Score: 1

    God also hates pork and shellfish, but you never see Christians talk about it.

    Acts 10 shows that God no longer intended the Jewish dietary laws to apply under the new covenant. Romans 1:27, on the other hand, shows that homosexual acts were still abhorrent to God. God doesn't hate fags; he just hates faggotry.

  207. Food at the proper time from the faithful servant by tepples · · Score: 1

    Serious question, something I'm struggling with in my own spiritual life: Without regularly meeting with other believers, how is one supposed to get spiritual "food at the proper time" (Matthew 24:45)?

  208. Light on Day 1 vs. light sources on Day 4 by tepples · · Score: 1

    Furthermore the account of creation has the sun being created on the fourth day of creation. How do tell were there three "days" prior to the sun existing?

    First of all, for the avoidance of doubt, I should clarify that these "days" are metaphorical eras of creation; some were billions of years long. Now to this specific question: The sun existed since Day 1, when God said "Let light come to be" (Genesis 1:3). Day 4 is when the atmosphere cleared up enough that light sources, or "luminaries" as some translations put it, could be distinguished.

  209. Judge Knott by tepples · · Score: 1

    The proper context is Judge Deborah Knott.

  210. so the Pakistani police by mjwalshe · · Score: 1

    will arrest the next person to burn the American flag :-)

  211. Mohammed is a fart-faced shitcock by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mohammed is a fart-faced shitcock.
    I peed in your koran!

    Haha, fuck off Pakistan, Saudia Arabia, and Egypt. We will pee in your cornflakes AND in your fruitloops/mohammed gay vagina cereal, and you will like it. We wipe our hairy ass with pages of your koran, and stick the shit-encrusted pages together and then toss the fetid, stinking mess into a pigsty.