Originally posted by Serial_Apologist
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Paris, anyone?
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI would say that the disparagement is inherent in the stereotyping, with the implication of viewing a person not as an individual but as an otherwise faceless representative of a racial group.
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostThe principle of free speech implies the possibility of saying what you like about anyone or anything you like (although in France holocaust denial is illegal so there are at least some exceptions) but many apologists for Charlie Hebdo appear to interpret this as some kind of duty to do so.
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostOne should surely attempt to improve things by one's own example, which is precisely what Western military advantures in the Middle East are perceived as not doing; rather it is promulgating the idea that might is right and that people's lives, larticularly if they are dark-skinned people, are worthless. If we weren't invading countries and bombing wedding parties with drones we might be listened to a bit more sympathetically on subjects like women's rights.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by french frank View PostTo brand this as 'racism' is to trivialise
Originally posted by french frank View PostThat doesn't mean that it is a majority, or significant minority, view. Some people may think it a necessity, others not.
Originally posted by french frank View Postthere might be an argument that the West retaliates to the 'adventures' of others.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostFrom watching street-conducted vox populi in various parts of the world since Charlie Hebdo on telly, it has been striking how many asked this question, individually off the tops of the heads instantly reply, "We love Muhammed more than our countries or even our families".
If I say “I love Schubert” it would be understood that I mean I love his ideas (music)
Similarly, if someone says that they love Muhammad are they really loving his ideas or do they really mean they love the actual person?
If the former it must mean Muhammad’s claims and ideas are so important to them that they would sacrifice their country and family in order not to have to give them up. But the illustrations of Muhammed don’t put anyone anywhere near that hypothetical dilemma.
So why is the strength of their love relevant? Indeed, surely it is case that the stronger your conviction the less criticism should matter to you.
It would be reasonable (at least from a muslim perspective) to see the cartoons as the product of ignorance (we are all ignorant of most things) But I don’t understand why an acceptable reaction to ignorance is taking ‘personal offence’ - that puts you in a place where it is more difficult to dispel the ignorance.Last edited by Ian; 15-01-15, 16:42.
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Originally posted by Anna View PostAnd, to understand the ingrained enmity that North African Muslims feel towards the French Jews (which has caused the rise of antisemitism in France) can I urge people to read this article: http://www.theguardian.com/news/2015...to-france-jewsbong ching
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostWith regard to Kosovo, the historical record shows that brutality by the Milošević regime increased when the NATO bombing began, and, as Cockburn and St Clair point out in their book Imperial Crusades, while on the one hand NATO bombing "destroyed much of Serbia’s economy and killed around 2,000 civilians", on the other: "Although surely by now investigators would have been pointed to all probable sites, it’s conceivable that thousands of Kosovar corpses await discovery. But as matters stand, the number of bodies turned up by the tribunal’s teams is in the hundreds, not thousands, which tends to confirm the view of those who hold that NATO bombing provoked a wave of Serbian killings and expulsions, but that there was and is no hard evidence of a genocidal program." So there is a strong case for looking critically at both sides of the story.
Some will say that Living Marxism won the "public relations battle", whatever that is. Others will cling to the puerile melodrama that ITN's victory in the high court yesterday was that of Goliath over some plucky little David who only wanted to challenge the media establishment.
and the furore over the Guardian interview with Noam Chomsky when the latter supported Diana Johnstone's revisionist book which inter al claimed that Srebrenica was not really a massacre:
The only relevance this has really to the present discussion is that some of the people only too ready to talk about Islamophobia now in the context of offending Muslims were just as ready to belittle and diminish the sufferings of Bosnian Muslims when it suited their agenda, even though the genocidal events in Bosnia really could be categorised as Islamophobia. It is I think a shameful episode of intellectual betrayal.Last edited by aeolium; 15-01-15, 17:02.
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Anna
Originally posted by eighthobstruction View PostI wonder how much this might be to do with many many of the immans in France (and UK) do not come from the indigenous country....and thus could have a different (more ancient/traditional) attitudes and motives, interpretations....and of course in some cases : more radical....often with a lack of the indigenous language complicating teachings/interprations even more....
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Originally posted by Ian View PostYes, I know and I’m wondering what they mean:
If I say “I love Schubert” it would be understood that I mean I love his ideas (music)
Similarly, if someone says that they love Muhammad are they really loving his ideas or do they really mean they love the actual person?
If the former it must mean Muhammad’s claims and ideas are so important to them that they would sacrifice their country and family in order not to have to give them up. But the illustrations of Muhammed don’t put anyone anywhere near that hypothetical dilemma.
So why is the strength of their love relevant? Indeed, surely it is case that the stronger your conviction the less criticism should matter to you.
It would be reasonable (at least from a muslim perspective) to see the cartoons as the product of ignorance (we are all ignorant of most things) But I don’t understand why an acceptable reaction to ignorance is taking ‘personal offence’ - that puts you in a place where it is more difficult to dispel the ignorance.
I tend towards explanations more along the lines that Richard Barrett puts forward - namely that historically more recent events and international power relations, most of all the US and its allies territorial exploitation of the "developing world" for its own strategic purposes in turn expressing its mercantile interests, and the tendency for the disempowered people affected and let down by their own ruling classes - in one way or another US puppet regimes - to turn back to traditions predating Western hegemony along with its business empires, guns and bibles. Such a viewpoint might treat the love of religious figureheads you mention in Freudian terms of displacement and substitution for the "missing" father figure, common to all the monotheistic religions.
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by aeolium View PostThe only relevance this has really to the present discussion is that some of the people only too ready to talk about Islamophobia now in the context of offending Muslims were just as ready to belittle and diminish the sufferings of Bosnian Muslims when it suited their agenda, even though the genocidal events in Bosnia really could be categorised as Islamophobia. It is I think a shameful episode of intellectual betrayal.
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Originally posted by Anna View PostIt would appear that is exactly the case, from what I heard on R4 with an interview of a French imam - that very few of the imams attached to French prisons are in fact French, the majority are from N. Africa. It seems that the prisons are where radicalisation, and conversion to Islam, is taking place. Couliblay was not born into a Muslim family but converted whilst inside, and the two brothers never showed any interest in religion until they too served sentences. French authorities don't break down data into ethnic groups but it is believed that 70% of the prison population are from immigrant backgrounds. (Will have to try and confirm that percentage)bong ching
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Originally posted by Anna View PostNo, couple of days ago I think, possibly Monday (?) on the Today programme. I'll see if I can find it.
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there are some reductive and non-substantive issues to do with human cognition that should perhaps temper the use of 'stereotype' .... we do see things for what we think they are on the basis of a prototypical view and then just proceed as if the unique object is simply an instance of the category and we do this for human, animal and inanimate objects ... it shortens the time between recognising the tiger and running &c ...
we can require that a social process or procedure be fully rational and deliberative ere it comes to judgement but us poor primates jump afore we think ....
i was disturbed at how little attention was given by the media and BBC News to the funeral ceremonies of the main victims and how Netanyahu had captured the limelight ... seems to me that the essence of the incidence was the attack on journalists/cartoonists and the delicate balance between freedom of faith and freedom of thought
i am afraid that i have no respect for theocratic faith at all and dispute any claim based upon 'faith' in any deity or spirit and certainly strongly object to being asked to respect beliefs and practices that are mere superstitions in my view .... it just boils down to not wanting to hurt feelings and good manners and not much else really until the precepts and practices are urged for general adoption ..... the French concept of 'Laïcité' seems the ideal to me ....According to the best estimates of astronomers there are at least one hundred billion galaxies in the observable universe.
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Cornet IV
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostWe aren't going to agree on this, I can see; but I don't think it is trivialised thereby, and I would go so far as to say that the events in Paris would tend to support this view.
Obviously. But some of that minority have their hands on a printing press, as we see.
If there is I would like to see it! - very many of the problems we see in the world have their roots in European colonialism and its aftermath.
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Originally posted by aka Calum Da Jazbo View Postthere are some reductive and non-substantive issues to do with human cognition that should perhaps temper the use of 'stereotype' .... we do see things for what we think they are on the basis of a prototypical view and then just proceed as if the unique object is simply an instance of the category and we do this for human, animal and inanimate objects ... it shortens the time between recognising the tiger and running &c ...
we can require that a social process or procedure be fully rational and deliberative ere it comes to judgement but us poor primates jump afore we think ....
i was disturbed at how little attention was given by the media and BBC News to the funeral ceremonies of the main victims and how Netanyahu had captured the limelight ... seems to me that the essence of the incidence was the attack on journalists/cartoonists and the delicate balance between freedom of faith and freedom of thought
i am afraid that i have no respect for theocratic faith at all and dispute any claim based upon 'faith' in any deity or spirit and certainly strongly object to being asked to respect beliefs and practices that are mere superstitions in my view .... it just boils down to not wanting to hurt feelings and good manners and not much else really until the precepts and practices are urged for general adoption ..... the French concept of 'Laïcité' seems the ideal to me ....
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