- Sep 16, 2010
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Great read and also strongly takes the position of marginalizing those who claim Isis doesn't represent Islam. On the contrary echoes the comments many of us have made that they represent Islam quite fervently, that what they do is backed clearly by writings in the Koran. To be sure they have a unique approach but it is indeed an Islamic one.
That was very informative. Thanks OP. :thumbsup:
A very informative read, filled with information that I hope Western nations will heed. Most interesting was the idea that ISIS cannot go underground; it's forced by its unassailable requirement that it uncompromisingly follow its ideology to expand and conquer. So - as the author recommends - a strategy of containment (not wholesale attack), combined with the self-evident observation that those under ISIS rule are suffering great deprivations rather than thriving, will slowly undermine its claim to being the true Caliphate and dry up its stream of new recruits. At least I hope so.
A very informative read, filled with information that I hope Western nations will heed. Most interesting was the idea that ISIS cannot go underground; it's forced by its unassailable requirement that it uncompromisingly follow its ideology to expand and conquer. So - as the author recommends - a strategy of containment (not wholesale attack), combined with the self-evident observation that those under ISIS rule are suffering great deprivations rather than thriving, will slowly undermine its claim to being the true Caliphate and dry up its stream of new recruits. At least I hope so.
I think everyone should read that article.
The poll of European attitudes towards the group, carried out by ICM for Russian news agency Rossiya Segodnya, revealed that 16% of French citizens have a positive opinion of ISIS. This percentage increases among younger respondents, spiking at 27% for those aged 18-24
Most other religions had a reformation and simply ignore those parts now. It is now mainstream to ignore old testament stuff for Christians. Somehow, it needs to be mainstream to do the same in Islam.
Good luck with that. You saw the chilly reception Egypt got for even broaching the subject of reformation. http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/56682e1e-9bd7-11e4-b6cc-00144feabdc0.html#axzz3S1FXUYdA Virtually no major Muslim groups welcomed it, and Sisi may have felt blowback even within his own circle for making that speech, because he stepped back from that weeks later: http://www.americanthinker.com/arti...difies_stance_on_islamic_reform_at_davos.html
Islam is very pro-fundamentalist because one of the tenets of the faith is that the Quran is the perfect word of God. Other than some dearly held sunnah and hadiths, any tampering with interpreting the Quran would be heretical innovation.
Much of the same could be said for Christianity back in the day too. I would argue that the old testament is more brutal than sharia law. The Inquisition was no cakewalk. You are right in that its very unlikely, but it is possible.
Well said. Personally I think we should be offering free flights to Syria for anyone in Western countries wanting to support ISIS; we just don't let them back in.ISIS and its caliphate is a sorting tool at this point. A billion people are going to have a lot of crazies in their group. If you look at some polls, you can see that ISIS has a lot of support in western countries.
http://www.newsweek.com/16-french-citizens-support-isis-poll-finds-266795
That is crazy high. These are countries that are modern, and yet it seems to do very little. Most of the major religions like Christianity and Islam have foundations for these types of acts. Most other religions had a reformation and simply ignore those parts now. It is now mainstream to ignore old testament stuff for Christians. Somehow, it needs to be mainstream to do the same in Islam.
As an atheist, I would rather not have any religion, but I also admit that some are not nearly as bad as others. I would much rather have Islam act like Buddhists than Christians, but Ill take any improvement really.
This is true, and why it is so difficult to reform Islam. The universal agreement is that where the Quran has internal contradictions or Muhammad acted in ways he had previously proscribed, G-d obviously changed his mind; Muhammad being perfect, there is no other possibility. (The Quran could have been a lot shorter were G-d only as perfect as Muhammad, so that He could have known what was going to happen just a few years later.)Good luck with that. You saw the chilly reception Egypt got for even broaching the subject of reformation. http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/56682e1e-9bd7-11e4-b6cc-00144feabdc0.html#axzz3S1FXUYdA Virtually no major Muslim groups welcomed it, and Sisi may have felt blowback even within his own circle for making that speech, because he stepped back from that weeks later: http://www.americanthinker.com/arti...difies_stance_on_islamic_reform_at_davos.html
Islam is very pro-fundamentalist because one of the tenets of the faith is that the Quran is the perfect word of God. Other than some dearly held sunnah and hadiths, any tampering with interpreting the Quran would be heretical innovation.
That is a really long article to say that he thinks they are a genuine religious movement vs some people using religion to grab power (although I don't actually see him present evidence other than testimonials from recruiters which would be playing the religious angle regardless).
He also seems really naïve to believe that you can end such a movement by showing a contradiction in the beliefs of the movement. He points out that they require territory which actually would make them a target that we could actually attack and declare victory against but then advocates not doing it and rather to target a tenant of belief instead.
It seems he doesn't understand the flexibility of faith to let you believe whatever you want in order to feel like you have it right. I am quite sure that the movement will start moving goalposts as soon as its required. All working only on containment does is keep their foreign recruitment alive and make life miserable for the people they are ruling over.
He's saying first let's stop pretending it has nothing to do with Islam. It does. The most literal and fundamentalist interpretation in centuries perhaps, but still Islam.
Sure it has a bunch of thugs trying to justify their actions via religion but that doesn't take away from the fact that it very much is being justified by Islam and that Islam and the idea of a caliphate are very magnetic to young, poor men with poor prospects.
If they stop growing physically in size it is such a minor inconvenience that I don't see that will do anything, its such a minor move to say you are growing in numbers rather than land area. Subtle is highly ineffective unless you are trying to slowly manipulate. If a troll has successfully engaged the posters on your board would you as a mod ask everyone to stop feeding the troll and leave it at that or do you ban the troll as well?He's also saying that their strict adherence to certain tenets might be used against them. Further, if they do move goalposts that will sow discontent among them because some will hate the moving goalposts.
His tangent about how theoretically we could just annihilate their land holdings and see if that persuades some or all of them that the caliphate is dead, was not advocacy. That seems risky and expensive and he is NOT advocating that because it could backfire by drawing more crazies and feeding into their mythology.
I think he is basically advocating that we let them self-destruct. Basically a very large scale version of "let's ignore the internet troll instead of feeding it and paying attention to it." I think that is along the right track. The US is currently trying to wage digital war in clumsy ways like the "think again turn away" programs. Many of the foreign thugs are basically thugs who hate their lives and want adventure. You don't counter that with arcane theological arguments. Instead it should be indirectly supporting the message that if you go, you are joining the wrong team, you will die, be forgotten (most Muslims don't like you so don't think you'll be a remembered martyr), and God won't forgive you for harming innocents. Basically, that your shitty life in some French slum or whatever, will NOT be improved upon by joining and even shittier situation elsewhere in the world.
There is a major disconnect from what the writer is saying, vs many others that say that ISIS has nothing to do with religion. In fact, there was just a thread where a hostage was let go, and he said that ISIS did not focus on religion too much. There is an idea out there that ISIS is not about religion, but people wanting power and using Islam to legitimize their actions.
The problem is that once you dont believe religions are true, then all actions taken by them lose meaning. Once you believe god talks to people, how do you prove that ISIS is not doing gods work? ISIS is following Islamic teachings pretty closely. Its a religion founded during a time were people were assholes. All other major religions got over the assholes for the most part. The problem is that people are trying to say that ISIS is not really Islam and it very much is.
Religion can be interpreted. How you say any 1 interpretation is right over another is impossible. You would have to "know" which one is true, and that is to presuppose one is true. If you dont presuppose that one is true, then you can look and say which is more damaging. Right now, Islam has more followers that are doing terrorist activity. This does not mean that they do more illegal activities, as many other people do shit wrong that are not followers of Islam. Its also true that the internet is not being filled with Buddhists cutting off peoples heads, or Jews strapping bombs to themselves and blowing up Muslims. Both of those religions do have followers that do crazy shit too, but not as many terrorist activities. Something is there, and many say its racist to ask what, because its assumed you like one over another when you say one is worse than another. As an atheist, I don't like any religions, I just think followers in some religions are not as crazy as others.
There is a major disconnect from what the writer is saying, vs many others that say that ISIS has nothing to do with religion. In fact, there was just a thread where a hostage was let go, and he said that ISIS did not focus on religion too much. There is an idea out there that ISIS is not about religion, but people wanting power and using Islam to legitimize their actions.
The problem is that once you dont believe religions are true, then all actions taken by them lose meaning. Once you believe god talks to people, how do you prove that ISIS is not doing gods work? ISIS is following Islamic teachings pretty closely. Its a religion founded during a time were people were assholes. All other major religions got over the assholes for the most part. The problem is that people are trying to say that ISIS is not really Islam and it very much is.
Religion can be interpreted. How you say any 1 interpretation is right over another is impossible. You would have to "know" which one is true, and that is to presuppose one is true. If you dont presuppose that one is true, then you can look and say which is more damaging. Right now, Islam has more followers that are doing terrorist activity. This does not mean that they do more illegal activities, as many other people do shit wrong that are not followers of Islam. Its also true that the internet is not being filled with Buddhists cutting off peoples heads, or Jews strapping bombs to themselves and blowing up Muslims. Both of those religions do have followers that do crazy shit too, but not as many terrorist activities. Something is there, and many say its racist to ask what, because its assumed you like one over another when you say one is worse than another. As an atheist, I don't like any religions, I just think followers in some religions are not as crazy as others.
As for the rest, I would add that I am disgusted with the false equality promoted by certain people. You know what I mean: the kumbaya-all-religions-are-equal crowd. They want to live in a fantasyworld of mutual respect when in reality some of those people would rather behead those false-equality people. To push things to the extreme, are we to believe that Buddhists are as prone to violence as Muslims? How about scientologists? Satanists? What is more believable, that all religions are equally prone to violence or that there is a spectrum; variability?