There are plenty of parties supposedly on both sides that a large figure of favourable responses to ISIS would suit. For starters plenty of press outlets would love a shocking headline that they don't have to make up themselves.
What about them? How would you define support in the context of Remobz's statement? Is, for example answering a survey question a threatening action to your welfare? How different is answering a survey to say handing out leaflets that advocate the cause, to say funding the organisation, to say assisting in its organisation, to holding the gun one's self? How large a survey do you think a reasonable person would require in order to fairly represent the views of ~1.5 billion people? In how many countries do you think it would be problematic for an ordinary citizen to openly declare their support for ISIS?
Support can be in many forms. I could support the death of all red-heads, but not want to do the actual killing. My ideological support normalizes the killings though, just like normalizing racism helped keep slavery around. You do not have to partake in activity activity to contribute. When people started seeing that gay people were not evil, the people stopped normalizing homophobic views and we got gay marriage here in the US.
But, if you ask people a question like, do you think someone should be killed for leaving Islam, its a pretty clear question. The fact that so many think the answer is anything other than no is problematic.
Also, the issue is not about labeling 1.5 billion people. Its understanding that those who following the same religion seem to do a lot more horrible shit than other people.
Do you believe Muslims commit more acts of terrorism?
I found these two surveys:
http://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tan...ant-muslim-populations-much-disdain-for-isis/
https://newrepublic.com/article/120...-truce-means-us-arming-rebels-syria-will-fail
I'm not going to claim that the ones I found are in any way a reasonable enough representation of "the truth" for the reasons I already specified, I'm just pointing out that things aren't as a lot of people make them out to be. On topics like this I have a rule of thumb that basically says "if you're making a sweeping statement, the more likely it is to be inaccurate as the number of people it covers increases". I can't even think of a sweeping statement that accurately represents an opinion of myself and all of my siblings, let alone 1.5 billion people (or whatever size percentage of that number that one would deem to be enough to be fairly supporting one's fear of Muslims).
Its a good thing that so many say they do not support ISIS. The problem is that you can say you dont support ISIS, but if you agree with their morality and or actions, then how to do you justify them as bad?
Also, look at how those in your link support or at least do not have an opinion on ISIS as the Muslim population grows. Strange.
Something interesting I heard on the news a while ago that I think is worthy of some consideration here. Apparently Al-Qaeda tried to create an alliance with ISIS, but they believed that the views of ISIS were too extreme for them. The best they could manage was a truce. To an outsider, they look like they have the same objectives, wouldn't you think?
Nope, they have different goals. Only someone who does not pay attention would think they have the same goals. But hey, I'm an American so I guess I keep up on this more.