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Member Run Boards >> Islam >> More islamic groups forcing their wants http://www.ozpolitic.com/forum/YaBB.pl?num=1215443280 Message started by sprintcyclist on Jul 8th, 2008 at 1:08am |
Title: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by sprintcyclist on Jul 8th, 2008 at 1:08am "Indonesia facing fresh religious unrest Print By Karen Michelmore | July 08, 2008 INDONESIA is at risk of fresh religious unrest as hardline Islamic groups gain increasing influence over the government, a new report warns. Brussels-based think-tank, the International Crisis Group (ICG), says radical Islamic groups are waging intensive campaigns to influence Indonesian government policy. And they are winning, enjoying a level of influence disproportionate to the support they have in the wider community, the ICG says. A recent Indonesian government decree restricting the activities of the controversial minority Islamic sect Ahmadiyah was the result of five years of lobbying, it said. "We find it a matter of some concern that some of the radical groups have become so influential, out of proportion to their numbers or the support that they have in the wider Indonesian population," said ICG's South East Asia project director John Virgoe. "Some of the hardline groups have become very effective at advocating for their point of view - some of the techniques they use are classical civil society organisation or lobbying techniques. "The danger is that more mainstream segments of society are not organised in the same way and don't have the same effectiveness as advocates." Under the decree, Ahmadiyah members face jail terms if they do not "stop spreading interpretations and activities which deviate from the principle teachings of Islam". Some Islamic leaders have branded the sect "deviant" and "blasphemous" because it disputes the central Islamic concept that Muhammed was the final prophet. The ICG says the decree "increases the likelihood of religious vigilantism," with government officials saying the public will act as the "watchdog" to ensure the decree is enforced. At least part of the radical groups' success is attributed to the Indonesian government's "unthinking support" of the conservative Indonesian Islamic Scholars Council (MUI). The ICG says leading members of the MUI also represent hardline groups, meaning there is a "direct line to policy makers". "We think the government should think quite hard about the influence which they have permitted the MUI," Virgoe said. "We see in the Ahmadiyah decree how that influence can be used to start turning Indonesia into a less tolerant society or less tolerant government than it traditionally has been. "The hardliners have other agendas as well and other minority religious groups may find themselves the next target. "There are other areas of public life which the hardliners are interested in influencing. "The hardline groups have an agenda which is ultimately around the imposition of Sharia law in Indonesia. "They have shown ... that they are effective at pursuing that agenda. "Having won this victory, they'll look for others." http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,23986073-12377,00.html Malik, I and others like having Abu and you here. Despite our differences we do appreciate your time and effort. But things like this article are a regular thing, for as long as this sort of thing happens, we will probably disagree. |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by abu_rashid on Jul 8th, 2008 at 1:14am
We will disagree as long as you can't accept the simple fact that Muslims should be able to run their own countries the way they like.
Just remember, if we can't run our own countries because of foreign interference, we'll come and take yours over 'under the table' :) |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by sprintcyclist on Jul 8th, 2008 at 1:14am This is in total agreeance with the thread I posted on muslim %ages and with the initial posting in this thread. "IT may begin with a chuckle, but it could easily end in tears. At least, if we are not careful. One may be tempted to scoff at the demand to legalise polygamy made recently by Khalil Chami of Sydney’s Islamic Welfare Centre. But with the recent announcement by Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams that the adoption of sharia law in Britain seems unavoidable, the joke may turn out to be on us, Brett Mason. Britain provides an instructive lesson on the interaction between increasingly radicalised sections of the Muslim diaspora community and its Western host society. From Dundee to Dover, traditional British values, already weakened to the point of collapse by a decades-long elite infatuation with mushy multiculturalism and cultural relativism, cannot provide resistance against the growing tide of extreme demands by radical self-styled community spokesmen. The same way that the claim of racism has been used to shut down any debate on cultural identity, immigration and social cohesion, so is Islamophobia increasingly used to silence dissent. To merely raise certain issues is to give offence, and offending sensibilities is a hanging offence in our postmodern times. While radicals agitate, a politically correct establishment, at pains to prove how enlightened and tolerant it is, even if it means tolerating the intolerance of others, usually stands on the sidelines, if not actively cheering on another challenge to the ostensibly oppressive, hegemonic Western culture and polity. In January last year, Britain’s Channel 4 television broadcast a documentary on jihadi incitement in mosques throughout England. The material revealed by this undercover investigative report was quite incendiary in nature. One Saudi-trained imam called for British Muslims to “dismantle democracy” by “living as a state within a state” until they are “strong enough to take it over”. Another Islamic radical praised the Taliban for killing British soldiers and argued that women who declined to wear the burka should be beaten into submission. After the program was aired, British authorities wasted no time springing into action. The West Midlands Police lodged criminal charges, not against the extremist imams but against the TV network. Responding to a complaint by the Muslim Association of Britain, the police accused Channel 4 of inciting racial hatred by means of an ostensibly distorted documentary that demonised Islam. When the Crown Prosecution Service ultimately declined to pursue the matter, police referred the complaint to the British government broadcast oversight agency, OFCOM. Earlier this year, an officer from the Wiltshire Police ordered a motorist to remove England’s flag of St George from his automobile because it was “racist towards immigrants”. Stand-up comedian Ben Elton recently asserted that fear of “provoking the radical elements of Islam” caused the BBC to censor jokes about Muslim clerics. “There’s no doubt about it,” Elton said, “the BBC will let vicar gags pass but they would not let imam gags pass.” http://blogs.theaustralian.news.com.au/yoursay/index.php/theaustralian/comments/western_societys_war_within/ The west is a naieve idiot to give one inch on any muslims demand within any western society. If they don't like it, they can leave. |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by sprintcyclist on Jul 8th, 2008 at 1:16am
thanbks Abu,
I have been aware of that for some time. Quote:
I am aware it is every muslims goal to make islam the single control over the whole world. It is in the koran. |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by abu_rashid on Jul 8th, 2008 at 1:20am
True.
If only all Christians weren't as smart as you at catching us out :) |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by Malik.Shakur on Jul 8th, 2008 at 1:21am
so when the Catholics were massacring the Protestants for believing something different and vice versa that was ok?
We don't accept people trying to change our religion and we certainly don't accept false prophets.. Do you accept Joseph Smith as a prophet too? He claimed to be. What if a person called themselves a Christian and said that they believe Muhammad was the last prophet and that Jesus pbuh wasn't the massiah, the son of God nor God? Would they be a Christian? If you answer yes, your a lying sack of manure, if you say no.. then you understand the position that the Muslims are in, we wont call someone a Muslim if they don't fit the criteria and believe in prophets after Muhammad pbuh as it's not Islam.. |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by sprintcyclist on Jul 8th, 2008 at 1:26am
Abu - sorry mate :)
malik - I would not murder anyone who wanted to leave christianity. Nor would any christian. But many muslims are keen as mustard to cut their own brothers neck open to prove their "sincerity" You got any brothers ? |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by Malik.Shakur on Jul 8th, 2008 at 1:28am Sprintcyclist wrote on Jul 8th, 2008 at 1:16am:
And we'll start by raising taxi fares at $50 a km and kebabs served after 10pm at night charged at $100 each.. That way we'll control your country economically very quickly. If you don't comply there will be: NO KEBAB FOR YOU!! |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by Malik.Shakur on Jul 8th, 2008 at 1:29am Sprintcyclist wrote on Jul 8th, 2008 at 1:26am:
Answer the question... Would you accept Joseph Smith as your prophet because he said he was and would you accept someone as a Christian who doesn't believe that Jesus is God, son of God or the Massiah? |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by sprintcyclist on Jul 8th, 2008 at 1:33am
malik - probably not.
How would you murder your brother if he was to become a nonmuslim? No kebabs is pretty rough !!! |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by Malik.Shakur on Jul 8th, 2008 at 1:37am Sprintcyclist wrote on Jul 8th, 2008 at 1:33am:
My brother did become a non Muslim actually.. He's still alive and well and I love him dearly. Probably not? That's not an answer Sprint, are they Christian or not? Is Joseph Smith a Prophet of God and is a person who calls themself a Christian but believes that Jesus wasn't God nor the son of God nor the Massiah? Answer yes or no.. I want a definite answer, not something vague.. |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by abu_rashid on Jul 8th, 2008 at 1:38am Quote:
I always find myself in tears (of laughter obviously) when I hear these kinds o statements. All of a sudden the West becomes this great bastion of traditionalism and conservative values... Quote:
Come on, don't you wanna have another Spanish Inquisition?? It'll be fun really :) |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by sprintcyclist on Jul 8th, 2008 at 1:48am
malik - good on you. You are one of the muslims that believe one way, others believe the other.
"probably not", that is my answer. You can work it out. Abu - the west is the bastion of freedom of speech. neither would any xian I know or who has lived for quite some time !!!! |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by Malik.Shakur on Jul 8th, 2008 at 1:56am Sprintcyclist wrote on Jul 8th, 2008 at 1:48am:
probably not is not a definitive answer, it means that you most likely wont.. but aren't ruling it out.. not a very devout bible believing christian aren't u mate? the fact is that no christian would ever accept that.. in fact to a Christian it's blasphemy.. the ahmadiyyas try to change islam and pevert the faith with having extra prophets and other things.. the catholic church has always killed false prophets in history, in fact the romans killed the muslim messengers when we sent them word that Muhamamd pbuh was the messenger of God.. in islam we don't accept people trying to pervert the faith by introducing extra prophets into it thus we don't consider them muslim in the first place, and if they call themselves muslim and their religion islam then we will take action against them.. terrorists and those who pervert the faith with such blasphemy are both guilty of serious crimes.. |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by sprintcyclist on Jul 8th, 2008 at 2:10am
So who is right ?
The ahmadiyyas, the saudis or you ? Or just whoever kills the others first? Seems to be the idea behind that quote i gave about one brother being happy to kill the other. |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by mozzaok on Jul 8th, 2008 at 8:30am
I could not help but notice the above report emanates from a "Think Tank", here is a funny video of Bill Maher's view on think tanks.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VcJohfS4vTQ |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by Malik.Shakur on Jul 8th, 2008 at 9:13am Sprintcyclist wrote on Jul 8th, 2008 at 2:10am:
Who was right when the catholics and protestants were massacring each other? When whole populations were murdered. The Ahmadiyyas are completely wrong because they believe in another prophet. It clearly takes them out of the fold of Islam and the saudis are extreme based on cultural and tribal practices, the very thing that the prophet pbuh came to get rid of. in addition to that, sprint you are in no place to talk.. according to your own book the God of the OT who is your saviour, Jesus pbuh ordered for the little children of samaria to be cut in pieces and the pregnant women to have their wombs ripped out and brutally murdered along with their unborn babies.. those are Godly actions according to your own book.. now i see the justifications from the side of the catholics and protestants when they started trying to wipe each other off the face of the planet. |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by mozzaok on Jul 8th, 2008 at 9:31am
You have convinced me Malik, believing in the Bible is crazy.
You also have convinced me Sprint, believing in the Koran is crazy. If both of you were as reasonable as me we could all shake hands and laugh about it. I used to believe, WHAT?? I must've been pissed. |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by freediver on Jul 8th, 2008 at 11:25am
We will disagree as long as you can't accept the simple fact that Muslims should be able to run their own countries the way they like.
Does that include outlawing sects that teach things you don't like? You think they should do that? What if a person called themselves a Christian and said that they believe Muhammad was the last prophet and that Jesus pbuh wasn't the massiah, the son of God nor God? Would they be a Christian? They wouldn't be banned. There's a difference between refusing to call someone a Christian or a Muslim, and putting them in jail for blasphemy. in islam we don't accept people trying to pervert the faith by introducing extra prophets into it thus we don't consider them muslim in the first place, and if they call themselves muslim and their religion islam then we will take action against them.. terrorists and those who pervert the faith with such blasphemy are both guilty of serious crimes.. What is the penalty under Islam? Should they be stoned to death? |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by sprintcyclist on Jul 8th, 2008 at 11:42am
malik - I have no idea why you keep on banging on about that.
Thought muslims thought the bible was incorrect anyway ? Thought muslims think allah was God. thought you would know the OT is for jews, the NT for xians ?? the catholics and prodestants ended their issues long ago, about when many of them could read. Not the case with muslims. Any suicide bombs last night in the name of allah ?? mozzaok - you write great posts. Congrats. |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by Acid Monkey on Jul 8th, 2008 at 3:09pm Malik Shakur wrote on Jul 8th, 2008 at 1:56am:
While I may agree with many of your assertions with regards to Islam, Muslims and trans-faith hypocrisies I'll have to disagree with the direction your assertion is heading with this. In a live and let live attitude, tolerance and/or acceptance works both ways. While Christians believe that the last prophet was Jesus and don't accept Mohammad they should accept the Islamic faith and allow its practice without Western interference. This I believe is what you and Abu have been arguing for. Freedom of religion within Australia and freedom from state interference for Islamic nations. I certainly agree with that right. However, it works both ways. Muslims may not accept the teachings of Ahmmadiya but they should accept their right to practice it. They too have a freedom to practice as they see fit without interference. |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by Acid Monkey on Jul 8th, 2008 at 3:16pm Sprintcyclist wrote on Jul 8th, 2008 at 1:48am:
Sprint, you are constantly harping Malik to give you definite yes or no answers. And yet when he asks the same you refuse - not very benevolent of you. |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by Acid Monkey on Jul 8th, 2008 at 3:27pm
The Branch Dividian was a minority Christian group whose leader claims to be Christ re-intergrated into this material world. However ludirous this sect was, it was not banned because of the freedom to worhip. They were investigated only after it was alledged to sex with minors and other felony charges.
Koresh: "What is Christ revealed as, according to the fourth seal?" FBI: "Pale... a rider on a pale horse." Koresh: "And his name is what?" FBI: "Death." Koresh: "Now, do you know what the name Koresh means?" FBI: "Go ahead..." Koresh: "It means death." |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by abu_rashid on Jul 8th, 2008 at 7:28pm Quote:
Ahh, so those guys calling themselves Catholics and Protestants in Northern Ireland, who have been going around bombing the hell out of eachother for the last few decades aren't really Catholics and Protestants? |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by freediver on Jul 8th, 2008 at 7:46pm
They are British and Irish.
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Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by Malik.Shakur on Jul 8th, 2008 at 7:54pm freediver wrote on Jul 8th, 2008 at 7:46pm:
That's not true at all, the UDF are Irish Protestants and the IRA etc are Irish Catholics and they fought each other. |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by abu_rashid on Jul 8th, 2008 at 8:22pm
They're all Irish, it's just that the Protestants are loyal to Britain and want British rule over Northern Ireland.
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Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by mozzaok on Jul 8th, 2008 at 8:31pm
Ireland.
It was never a religious struggle Abu. It was primarily a class struggle, based in an independence movement. Yes they have moved on, and put the violence behind them, ironically by the dual forces of an economic upturn, and the last great act of barbarity shaking them to their senses. The violence can only flourish with the acquiescence of the community, when that was lost, the violence had to stop. |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by Malik.Shakur on Jul 8th, 2008 at 9:22pm mozzaok wrote on Jul 8th, 2008 at 8:31pm:
Thats not true the Real IRA are still resisting and haven't given their weapons up. So what defines a class struggle and religious struggle? In Islam we are obligated to defend our lands. That means that if Australia was attacked and occupied by an oppressor I'd fight the oppressor because not only is it my civic duty, but I'd do it for the sake of God and it'd be considered a Jihad and my obligation to defend this land against tyranny. By those standards, while the Iraqi's and Afghanis are fighting to free their land from occupiers, it's still their obligation to God to do so.. Thus a war of liberation. |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by freediver on Jul 8th, 2008 at 9:36pm
Who are the Iraqis fighting to liberate their land from?
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Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by Malik.Shakur on Jul 8th, 2008 at 9:40pm freediver wrote on Jul 8th, 2008 at 9:36pm:
The West.. |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by Aussie on Jul 8th, 2008 at 9:41pm
Buggered if I know FD.........as far as I know the West wants to get out of there.
Over to you Malik? |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by abu_rashid on Jul 8th, 2008 at 9:41pm
freediver, where have you been for the past 6 years?
Who are they fighting?? ;D |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by abu_rashid on Jul 8th, 2008 at 9:43pm
Aussie,
Don't you mean now they've secured the oil, and setup a puppet government, they want to evacuate their troops, of course, nobody likes having to keep so many troops garrisoned inside their new acquisition. |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by freediver on Jul 8th, 2008 at 9:49pm
From what I can tell they fight each other just as often - eg sunni vs shiite. The US has given them democracy. They may not like it, but they just have to vote to get whatever they want. Maybe they are just really stupid and haven't figured out how it works yet. The sooner they stop blowing things up, the sooner the US will leave. We don't actually want to be there, holding their hands.
Or, more likely, the Iraqis support what the US has given them. |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by Aussie on Jul 8th, 2008 at 9:51pm abu_rashid wrote on Jul 8th, 2008 at 9:43pm:
Well, if they've done all that....yes, I agree they should piss off. Why haven't (us) they? |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by Malik.Shakur on Jul 8th, 2008 at 9:52pm
The funny thing about this is that it's not just Muslims fighting in Iraq against the occupiers, My friend went to Iraq as a part of the Australian Army and said that in addition to Muslims fighting, that it's also Iraqi Christians and Jews fighting against the occupiers too.
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Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by freediver on Jul 8th, 2008 at 9:55pm
it's also Iraqi Christians and Jews fighting against the occupiers too
Are they Baathists? |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by Malik.Shakur on Jul 8th, 2008 at 10:07pm freediver wrote on Jul 8th, 2008 at 9:49pm:
Democracy? That is the biggest load of crap that I've ever heard. The US has given them a shamocracy just like it did with so many of it's puppet regimes in Latin America in history. Most Iraqi's, in fact more than 80% want the US out, if they had democracy do you think the US would still be there? In addition to that, the West has been directly implicated in fuelling the civil war in Iraq, with 2 UK SAS soldiers caught at a police road block with Arab clothing on and wigs who then shot the police officer and then were captured by the police. In addition to that we know that the British fuelled the war in Northern Ireland and provided UDF forces with names and addresses of Irish Catholic's sympathetic to the Irish cause, having them tortured and executed. The West has always tried dividing and conquering people, they did it in WW1 and haven't stopped since. |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by Malik.Shakur on Jul 8th, 2008 at 10:13pm freediver wrote on Jul 8th, 2008 at 9:55pm:
Everybody was a Baathist in Iraq, you couldn't get any simple job, not even a job as a teacher unless you were a Baathist. Baathists are secular, not an Islamic organization. |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by abu_rashid on Jul 8th, 2008 at 10:16pm Quote:
It's really quite amusing that you still think they're there for us. They're there for themselves and themselves only. That's why the price of petrol has skyrocketed since they seized control of the oil fields. And guess what? US oil companies profits have skyrocketed since they went there too, and we, the poor little Aussies are now paying about twice as much for tol fill our tanks. Where do you think our money is going to? At least Rudd kind of realised Australia has been duped, and has pulled some troops out, Howard would've kept us there for the long haul, just so he could visit the ranch in Texas and get his photo taken next to his hero. |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by abu_rashid on Jul 8th, 2008 at 10:21pm
I don't think there's a single baathist let in Iraq. The Baath party was a secular party that was brought to power by none other than the USA, and they supported it for many decades, even whilst they were gassing the Kurds and Iranians.
The day Saddam's regime fell, there was not a single Baathist left in the country. The Yanks tried convincing us the insurgency was mostly Baath loyalists, but once Saddam was captured that fallacy became a little useless. |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by sprintcyclist on Jul 8th, 2008 at 10:39pm
Abu you conspiracist, petrol is far cheaper than a war.
Aussie is insignificant in the world. malik - would you mind naming your "freedom fighter" aka terrorist friends ? your true colours are showing. |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by abu_rashid on Jul 8th, 2008 at 10:43pm
sprint,
I still don't think you get it. The US went to war to get control of the second largest oil field in the world (they already own the largest, Saudi Arabia). Now they possess the majority of the world's oil, all of a sudden the world oil price sky rockets, and US oil companies start posting record 4 fold profits... If they're really our friends, and they secured most of the world's oil, shouldn't the price of petrol here go down, not up? |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by Malik.Shakur on Jul 8th, 2008 at 10:47pm Sprintcyclist wrote on Jul 8th, 2008 at 10:39pm:
Which freedom fighter/ terrorist friend? |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by sprintcyclist on Jul 8th, 2008 at 10:58pm
malik -
Quote:
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Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by Malik.Shakur on Jul 8th, 2008 at 11:08pm Sprintcyclist wrote on Jul 8th, 2008 at 10:58pm:
So now Australian soldiers serving their country are terrorists now Sprint? Wow you really WOULD fit in with Al-Qaeda. It just shows that you read only what YOU want to see on the page Sprint and can't be objective even when it comes to black and white writing.. You tool... |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by sprintcyclist on Jul 8th, 2008 at 11:27pm
who are the iraqi christians and jews ?
I have chatted with aussie soldiers on the net, there is no mention of the insurgents being xians or jews. that's more like your normal terminology for me. personally abusive, aggressive and intolerant. |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by Malik.Shakur on Jul 8th, 2008 at 11:44pm Sprintcyclist wrote on Jul 8th, 2008 at 11:27pm:
I'm not sure who they were, they captured them fighting against the Coalition soldiers.. Sprint, honestly your a troll. So I'll treat you one.. You don't deserve any respect on this forum because it's obvious that you are so full of hate and poison that you're incapable of having proper beneficial dialogue. |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by sprintcyclist on Jul 9th, 2008 at 12:00am
malik, honestly, you're a classic muslim.
Come here claiming "peace peace peace" and all that crap. Get a bit of questioning, out comes the "insult" indignant response. Refuse to accept any querying of mohammad. flood any reply by the huge size of a response. Intolerant, indignant, won't assimilate. Resorts to personal insults. ad hominem I believe is the phrase. relatively rapidly resorts to islamic ideals, but a step from going the whole hog to show your committment. Go and have a steak sarnie at a pole dancers comp. |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by Malik.Shakur on Jul 9th, 2008 at 12:06am Sprintcyclist wrote on Jul 9th, 2008 at 12:00am:
Crocodile tears! Many people here have asked and queried about Muhammad pbuh.. I don't mind that at all. You do no such thing, you try and make yourself look innocent but we all know the fact remains that your only intention for dialogue is to incite hate against Islam and Muslims. You hate us and there is no denying it and the evidence is all over your posts.. Don't act like a victim mate because everybody here is well aware of your intentions.. |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by sprintcyclist on Jul 9th, 2008 at 12:39am
From the original article.
Quote:
This is normal The mainstream segments of society are being overrun . It is not the "moderates" that are of concern. Not as though moderates are that moderate anyway. Hand me my knockknock suit. In 2000, a year before the 9/11 attacks, the 57 nation Islamist supremacist organization, the Organization of the Islamic Conference, officially resolved to support the Cairo Declaration on Human Rights in Islam as an alternative document that says people have "freedom and right to a dignified life in accordance with the Islamic Shari'ah" -- an exclusionary ideology only for Muslims that denies freedom of religion and many other fundamental human rights of equality. In 2001, nearly two months before the 9/11 attacks, the European Court of Human Rights determined that "the institution of Sharia law and a theocratic regime, were incompatible with the requirements of a democratic society." |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by freediver on Jul 9th, 2008 at 11:05am
I found the original article and copied it here.
In 2001, nearly two months before the 9/11 attacks, the European Court of Human Rights determined that "the institution of Sharia law and a theocratic regime, were incompatible with the requirements of a democratic society." http://www.ozpolitic.com/articles/European-Court-of-Human-Rights-RefahPartisi2001jude.html On 16 January 1998 the Constitutional Court made an order dissolving the RP on the ground that it had become a "centre of activities against the principle of secularism". It also declared that the RP’s assets were to be transferred by operation of law to the Treasury. The Constitutional Court further held that the public declarations of the RP’s leaders, and in particular Necmettin Erbakan, Şevket Kazan and Ahmet Tekdal, had a direct bearing on the constitutionality of the RP’s activities. Consequently, it imposed a further sanction in the form of a ban on their sitting in Parliament or holding certain other forms of political office for a period of five years. The Court considered that, when campaigning for changes in legislation or to the legal or constitutional structures of the State, political parties continued to enjoy the protection of the provisions of the Convention and of Article 11 in particular provided they complied with two conditions: (1) the means used to those ends had to be lawful and democratic from all standpoints and (2) the proposed changes had to be compatible with fundamental democratic principles. It necessarily followed that political parties whose leaders incited others to use violence and/or supported political aims that were inconsistent with one or more rules of democracy or sought the destruction of democracy and the suppression of the rights and freedoms it recognised could not rely on the Convention to protect them from sanctions imposed as a result. The Court held that the sanctions imposed on the applicants could reasonably be considered to meet a pressing social need for the protection of democratic society, since, on the pretext of giving a different meaning to the principle of secularism, the leaders of the Refah Partisi had declared their intention to establish a plurality of legal systems based on differences in religious belief, to institute Islamic law (the Sharia), a system of law that was in marked contrast to the values embodied in the Convention. They had also left in doubt their position regarding recourse to force in order to come to power and, more particularly, to retain power. |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by abu_rashid on Jul 10th, 2008 at 12:33am
so you agree now freediver that Democracy is not just electing a head of state, it's an ideology, and by it's own admission is incompatible with Islam?
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Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by sprintcyclist on Jul 10th, 2008 at 8:59am
" In March, the 57 Muslim-state Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC) prevailed upon the United Nations Human Rights Council to adopt a resolution requiring the effective evisceration of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Henceforth, the guaranteed right of free expression will not extend to any criticism of Islam, on the grounds that it amounts to an abusive act of religious discrimination. A UN Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Expression has been charged with documenting instances in which individuals and media organizations engage in what the Islamists call "Islamophobia." Not to be outdone, the OIC has its own "ten-year program of action" which will monitor closely all Islamophobic incidents and defamatory statements around the world.
Monitoring is just the first step. Jordan's Prosecutor General has recently brought charges against Dutch Parliamentarian Geert Wilders. According to a lawsuit, "Fitna" — Wilders' short documentary film that ties certain Koranic passages to Islamist terrorism — is said to have slandered and insulted the Prophet Mohammed, demeaned Islam and offended the feelings of Muslims in violation of the Jordanian penal code. Mr. Wilders has been summoned to Amman to stand trial and, if he fails to appear voluntarily, international warrants for his arrest will be issued. Zakaria Al-Sheikh, head of the "Messenger of Allah Unites Us Campaign" which is the plaintiff in the Jordanian suit, reportedly has "confirmed that the [prosecutor's action] is the first step towards setting in place an international law criminalizing anyone who insults Islam and the Prophet Mohammed." In the meantime, his campaign is trying to penalize the nations that have spawned "Islamophobes" like Wilders and the Danish cartoonists by boycotting their exports — unless the producers publicly denounce the perpetrators both in Jordan and in their home media. Unfortunately, it is not just some companies that are submitting to this sort of coercion — a status known in Islam as "dhimmitude." Western officials and governmental entities appear increasingly disposed to go along with such efforts to mutate warnings about Shariah law and its adherents from "politically incorrect" to "criminally punishable" activity. For example, in Britain, Canada and even the United States, the authorities are declining to describe the true threat posed by Shariah Law and are using various techniques to discourage — and in some cases, prosecute — those who do. We are witnessing the spectacle of authors' books being burned, ministers prosecuted, documentary film-makers investigated and journalists hauled before so-called "Human Rights Councils" on charges of offending Muslims, slandering Islam or other "Islamophobic" conduct. Jurists on both sides of the Atlantic are acceding to the insinuation of Shariah law in their courts. And Wall Street is increasingly joining other Western capital markets in succumbing to the seductive Trojan Horse of "Shariah-Compliant Finance." Let's be clear: The Islamists are trying to establish a kind of Catch-22: If you point out that they seek to impose a barbaric, repressive and seditious Shariah Law, you are insulting their faith and engaging in unwarranted, racist and bigoted fear-mongering. On the other hand, pursuant to Shariah, you must submit to that theo-political-legal program. If you don't, you can legitimately be killed. It is not an irrational fear to find that prospect unappealing. And it is not racist or bigoted to decry and oppose Islamist efforts to bring it about — ask the anti-Islamist Muslims who are frequently accused of being Islamophobes! If we go along with our enemies' demands to criminalize Islamophobia, we will mutate Western laws, traditions, values and societies beyond recognition. Ultimately, today's totalitarian ideologues will triumph where their predecessors were defeated. To avoid such a fate, those who love freedom must oppose the seditious program the Islamists call Shariah — and all efforts to impose its 1st Amendment-violating blasphemy, slander and libel laws on us in the guise of preventing Western Islamophobia." I believe from the JEWISH World review ;) |
Title: Re: More islamic groups forcing their wants Post by sprintcyclist on Jul 10th, 2008 at 10:02am "HUNDREDS of Islamist women gathered at the radical Red Mosque in Pakistani capital today and vowed to raise their children for holy war, days after a suicide bomber killed 18 people after a similar rally. Chanting slogans of "jihad is our way", burqa-clad women, some with babies, listened to fiery speeches from the daughter of the mosque's jailed cleric on the eve of the anniversary of a commando raid on the complex in which more than 100 people died. "Our mujahideen (fighters) laid down their lives for the enforcement of the Islamic system in Pakistan. We are left behind to carry forward their mission," the daughter of cleric Abdul Aziz told the tightly guarded rally in the mosque compound. Several thousand men attended a similar rally on Sunday to mark the anniversary of the July 10 commando raid that ended a week-long siege that began when gunmen from the mosque clashed with police. Shortly after the Sunday rally ended, a suicide bomber attacked police who had been guarding the gathering killing 18 people, all but three of them policemen. The attack highlighted the danger posed by militants in nuclear-armed Pakistan, where a new coalition government has been preoccupied with what to do with the unpopular President Pervez Musharraf, a staunch U.S. ally who has been isolated since his allies were defeated in a February election. The blast in the centre of the capital also compounded gloom on Pakistan's financial markets where stocks have been sliding because of economic worries and the rupee has set new lows. The Red Mosque had for years been a bastion of militant support in Islamabad, but the clerics and their followers had waged an increasingly defiant campaign to enforce Taliban rule. They occupied a state library, kidnapped women they accused of prostitution and some policemen, and stormed music and video shops and beauty parlours, much to the dismay of the moderate majority in the capital. They also accumulated weapons and battled security forces for days after the siege began, rejecting calls to surrender. President Pervez Musharraf ordered commandos to storm the mosque and an adjoining women's madrasa to end the stand-off. The assault unleashed a wave of suicide bomb attacks across the country in which hundreds of people were killed, including former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto. " http://www.news.com.au/couriermail/story/0,23739,23994931-5003402,00.html Can "fiery clerics" be jailed permanently in solitary confinement and these women be sterilised ? |
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