Huzaifah ibn Adam
IB Expert
- Messages
- 2,252
- Reaction score
- 170
- Gender
- Male
- Religion
- Islam
That's not really any better. You're still generalizing. It's literally like someone saying 'muslims are generally terrorist". That's bad right? You're doing the same thing. It's prejudice
We would ask this person to define "terrorist", and then take it from there. You see, these days, every person has their own definition of what "terrorist" means. For some "Islamophobes", every Arab man is a terrorist. Any man with a beard is a terrorist. Any man who isn't a feminist is a terrorist. Any man who isn't a pacifist is a terrorist. Any man who believes in fighting is a terrorist. The list goes on. One person's "terrorist" is another person's "hero". It's subjective. Back in the old days in South Africa, when the apartheid was at its worst, and the African people rose up against apartheid and Mandela started a military group (yes, even Mandela wasn't a "pacifist") called "Umkhonto we Sizwe" (The Spear of the Nation), the armed wing of the ANC (African National Congress), the apartheid regime labelled him as a "terrorist" and the organisation as a "terrorist organisation". Guess who else labelled it as a "terrorist organisation"? None other than "God damned America" (to use Jeremiah Wright's favourite curse), once again. America labelled it as a "terrorist group" and did all they could to have it banned. America has always been sticking its nose where it doesn't belong. All the years. It's time someone cuts that nose off.
Anyway, they praise him now and make a big deal about him, but back then he was SA's number one "Terrorist". Old Mandela.
So, if a person says to you, "Muslims are generally terrorists", ask him to define terrorism. If by terrorist he means someone who believes in Jihaad, then yes, I am 100% a terrorist. In that case, it is compulsory to be a terrorist.
So let him define it.
Last edited: