Death penalty has been called "state sanctioned violence" but I don't agree with the term because the name seems to imply a kind of purging that is evil or in the vein of terror, neither of which is the case in most countries. For example, in the U.S., we have the death penalty for murder or cases of terrorism in some states (though obviously not for homosexuals), and I wouldn't agree to the labeling of the death penalty as "state sanctioned violence."State sanctioned violence against homosexuals is a practice that I am opposed to, just as I am opposed to any form of violence against them.
I respectfully disagree.State sanctioned violence also legitimises unofficial violence.
As you, however, acknowledge, the two are not the same. Laws do not equal justification for vigilante justice; vigilante justice happens in every country, whether in Western countries or Eastern countries. There are people also, for example (in the same vein of the earlier example that I've given above), that have killed persons who they found sexually molesting their children, but that does not mean that that is a burden deserved to be carried by people or the state whether as associative guilt or in terms of accountability for having laws against persons who sexually molest children. Penal code's existence is not ever an invitation for anyone to commit extrajudicial violence.It's far easier to be a member of that crowd throwing stones at bodies of gay people who have recently been thrown off a high building, in the name of someone's version of Islam, when you are aware that several Islamic majority countries enact similar laws in an official manner.
May I ask why you've recently come to this conclusion? I ask because obviously I think your conclusion is wrong. I think your conclusion has probably been shaped by Daesh, and I do not see why that should be the case. Just as Hitler, who has been unfairly critiqued at times as an atheist, when he was a Christian, does not represent Christianity, so do Daesh not represent Islam. Just as Mao and Stalin do not represent atheism.I'd like to know on what grounds you think it preconceived. I've been gathering information during the decade or so I've been interested in Islam and have only recently come to this conclusion.
Did you notice something? It is something that I noticed about myself as well. Why do we say "I'm not gay" if we did not pick up some unconscious bias about what being "gay" means in the world? You're an atheist. If you were gay, would it/should it matter for the purposes of your position? It does not. But you still said that "I'm not gay" just as in a previous thread I'd felt compelled to point out something to the effect of "I'm not gay." Why? I think it bespeaks of unconscious biases we do have against gay persons in the world even when we're not gay ourselves because we understand that being gay does mean something sometimes to some people with which we unconsciously or maybe consciously don't want to be associated.I am opposed to violence against gay people. I'm not gay myself, but I can see absolutely no reason for persecuting people who are.
I'd say that sentence needs amending to say that sometimes Islamic scriptures are somewhat a contributory factor in some types of persecution of gay people in the world.My claim is that the Islamic scriptures are a contributary factor in the persecution of gay people around the world.
Islam is a primordial call to submission to God and in such submission is a means of inducing peace in the heart, and that is true for persons regardless of whether they identify as heterosexual or homosexual. Iran follows a Shia version of Islam. Majority of the people, however, in the world are Sunni, and Pew Forum estimates Sunni population to be 87-90% of all Muslim population whereas Shia pulation is estimated to be 10-13% of the population. I can't really say anything about Iran but I do know that they engage in practices that Sunni populace consider unIslamic and haram (forbidden) such as temporary marriage known as mutah. So, I'm not sure holding Iran as an example works because there are also texts and fatwas (rulings) that emerge from Shia version of Islam with which Muslims have historically disagreed and continue to disagree.We are constantly told that Islam is a religion of peace, but how can that be true for a gay person? Over 4000 people have been executed in Iran since 1979 on charges of committing homosexual acts, because of the Iranian state's version of Islam. How can you claim that Islamic scriptures have nothing to do with this?
I have never complained about anything Search does. It was simply an observation.
Say you're in a relationship and you have a very bad boss and a very bad day after you come from work. So that day you're having a conversation with your girlfriend and you say something like, "I just hate him. I wish someone would just kill him. He's a waste of an oxygen space." So, your girlfriend (desiring to please you) then goes and kills your boss expecting you to be pleased. But wait, are you pleased? Or do you think she's a psycho? Here, no reasonable person would assume that you're actually expecting your girlfriend to kill your boss. So, I disagree with you; it does take mental gymnastics because a simple instruction is not that that simple even it is interpreted in such a way by delusional, simplistic, or simple-minded persons. Similarly, the hadith (prophetic tradition) you presented earlier in the post about active and passive participants in homosexuality also has a context, and the context is specific to judges or positions of authority who are able to make that judgment in Islamic law after due process of a trial at the stage of sentencing; no reasonable person would assume that that is an actual instruction to kill for just any Muslim Tom, Dick, or Harry.It doesn't take much in the way of mental gymnastics to follow a simple instruction to kill a homosexual. Even if the killer has interpreted the wider context of the scripture wrongly, the end result is the same.
I'd like to actually challenge you intellectually on this matter because I want you to think about this more deeply. While I agree with you that ideas and people are distinct and require different treatment, I also see a potential problem with this type of simplistic thinking. Because I think it's more complicated than simply saying that you think that Islam is "false" and "dangerous" but simultaneously "[h]atred for Muslims" is a bad, wrong, and maybe an undeserved thing. The reason I say this is because we're voluntarily identifying ourselves as a Muslim, which is a consequential choice to endorse also the defining ideas, values, politics and actions that are inherent to the founding documents of Islam. Since "Muslim-ness" is a trait that's not biological and entirely a distinct matter of choice and entails actions that impact individuals, society, and the globe, you're literally ceding room for Islamophobes to engage in demonization and punditry and then also inviting others similar-minded to have a "quarrel" with Muslims and [h]atred for Muslims." That is because our allegiance to Islam will not be interpreted in a vacuum and so in an anti-Islam environment our "Muslim-ness" will also be seen an overt hostile act that merits evaluation and subsequent devaluation. Add to that the misinformation that exists currently about Islam, war propaganda for involvement in Middle Eastern countries, and bombardment of negative media coverage (of various instances of criminal behavior in Muslim communities or terrorist organizations) even on slow news days, I'd say you're actually literally at that point making an argument for a clash of civilizations and the solution, whether you perceive this as such or not or agree with the perception or not, will be seen as erasure of Muslim identity which I already see happening in Western Europe in present-day. Also, this perception lends itself into the rightness of making inroads into generally making it impossible for Muslims to ever politically have power in any region of the world and annihilation of Muslims across the globe, as that's what will be seen as best action to undertake to stop a "false" and "dangerous" religion and its perceived ignoble adherents.I thought you knew my quarrel is with Islam, not with Muslims.
If you think secularism or democracy will protect Muslims in Western Europe, you're wrong. I have always believed and said that "perception is king" because perception is a value judgment that does not take into account its own rightness or wrongness. The prescription, for a "false" and "dangerous" religion as you now consider Islam to be, will never be to let Muslims simply be. It is in fact impossible within the parameters of even reasoned perception because a "false" and "dangerous" thing must always be opposed, and since ideas cannot be killed, Muslims will be; and even if they're not, they will become this idea's victims in other ways.Far more dangerous and blameworthy than what, exactly?
Wishing you peace as well,Peace
Again, I am not sure where you are going with this because if you're talking about Islamic texts describing punishments for sodomy, I will not deny that that has to do with Islam.
However, if you tell me that people today are committing acts of violence against homosexuals because of Islam, I will disagree with you on that.
I wouldn't agree to the labeling of the death penalty as "state sanctioned violence."
Penal code's existence is not ever an invitation for anyone to commit extrajudicial violence.
May I ask why you've recently come to this conclusion? I ask because obviously I think your conclusion is wrong. I think your conclusion has probably been shaped by Daesh, and I do not see why that should be the case.
If you were gay, would it/should it matter for the purposes of your position? It does not.
Like you, however, I'd also like to emphasize that I don't agree with any harassment or violence against gay persons and would stand with you on that point.
I'd say that sentence needs amending to say that sometimes Islamic scriptures are somewhat a contributory factor in some types of persecution of gay people in the world.
That being said, I hope you understand that all major religions in the world carry some type of condemnation for sodomy being committed between two males;
Also, I note that virtually all cases of violence against LGBT community have a common denominator, and it isn't any religion but the male gender generally perpetrating the persecution.
Also, czgibson, I've told this to you before, and I repeat here again, you are basing your judgment of any penalty based on simply the worldly perspective; however, this obviously leaves you great spiritual room to massively err as you're not factoring in the existence of God into the equation of what we should be doing for ourselves and others as persons who are compassionate and merciful for those struggling with their desires whether that be in a homosexual or heterosexual vein.
I'd like to actually challenge you intellectually on this matter because I want you to think about this more deeply. While I agree with you that ideas and people are distinct and require different treatment, I also see a potential problem with this type of simplistic thinking. Because I think it's more complicated than simply saying that you think that Islam is "false" and "dangerous" but simultaneously "[h]atred for Muslims" is a bad, wrong, and maybe an undeserved thing.
If you think secularism or democracy will protect Muslims in Western Europe, you're wrong. I have always believed and said that "perception is king" because perception is a value judgment that does not take into account its own rightness or wrongness. The prescription, for a "false" and "dangerous" religion as you now consider Islam to be, will never be to let Muslims simply be. It is in fact impossible within the parameters of even reasoned perception because a "false" and "dangerous" thing must always be opposed, and since ideas cannot be killed, Muslims will be; and even if they're not, they will become this idea's victims in other ways.
I know I've written a lot (just as I usually do), but you should be used to me doing so by now, and most importantly your post deserved a proper response (though I do apologize for both my verbosity and repetition).
In my impression, religious people are not much up in arms about people being homosexual, or even committing sodomy, but much more so, for doing that publicly. These gay people get punished for violating some kind of social don't ask don't tell code. Since they are getting prosecuted for promoting homosexual views by acting homosexually in public, as far as I am concerned, just throw the complain off the agenda and close it with the WONTFIX status code.Yes: add that to the large list of reasons why I am opposed to them all.That being said, I hope you understand that all major religions in the world carry some type of condemnation for sodomy being committed between two males;
In my impression, religious people are not much up in arms about people being homosexual, or even committing sodomy, but much more so, for doing that publicly. These gay people get punished for violating some kind of social don't ask don't tell code. Since they are getting prosecuted for promoting homosexual views by acting homosexually in public, as far as I am concerned, just throw the complain off the agenda and close it with the WONTFIX status code.
Can anyone give me one good rational reason to be against homosexuality?
A great response by Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Sex is not just some form of entertainment. Sex fundamentally acquires its legitimacy from the fact that we reproduce with it, while homosexual behaviour does not lead to reproduction. That is clearly why homosexuality cannot have the same status.
Greetings, Search,
:?czgibson, I'm not sure how you've reached this conclusion.Wonderful. That's half of my argument conceded right there.
I don't know if you know this, but a few years ago in the U.S. there was a scare about some males impersonating officers and stopping women for presumed traffic violations but instead raping women. I am not sure how that incidence as above proves anything except that some persons have committed criminal behavior for which they themselves are responsible.There are countless examples. Here's one:
Here is a Saudi government official referring to the 2010 case of a man who had appeared in a gay video online: "The District Court sentenced the accused in a homosexuality case that was referred to it by the CPVPV (the Hai’a) in Jeddah before he was tried for impersonating a security man and behaving shamefully and with conduct violating the Islamic teachings."
Tut. Tut. Respectfully disagree with you, czgibson. The term "state sanctioned violence" seems more like sophisticated propaganda to make people wary of the death penalty, something which I've already told you I'd favored as an atheist and still do as a Muslim.What could be more violent than executing somebody? It's a perfectly appropriate label.
Again, czgibson, I disagree with you that that is not relevant. It is in fact the salient point. And I don't think having laws against specific criminal actions leads people to then commit vigilante justice; people's own impatience, fear, ignorance, or/and lack of faith in the justice system do.But people often do decide to take the law into their own hands, and if there is a law on the statute book that feeds their prejudices, it is more likely that they will do so. The fact that they are wrong to do so is irrelevant. The end result is the same.
Yes, right after I'm done writing and posting this post, I'll PM you InshaAllah (God-willing) as I'm curious about how you've reached such an erroneous conclusion, and yes, the use of the word "erroneous" is deliberate.Daesh is definitely not the only reason. I'm reluctant to answer this because of the particularly heavy-handed censorship that's been occurring around here lately. Perhaps a PM?
czgibson, I work in the legal field; if an attorney cannot support laws, what's the point of even going to law school? I don't agree with all the laws even in the United States, but I still follow them. Do you imagine that others in other countries should be exempt from following their country's laws? That's my first point.Why do you support the death penalty for homosexuals then?
Hey, Brit, and I say this fondly, I mutiny against the tyranny of your statement and presumption. Harrumph. ;D Remember you said, "My claim is that the Islamic scriptures are a contributary factor in the persecution of gay people around the world." So, I said, "I'd say that sentence needs amending to say that sometimes Islamic scriptures are somewhat a contributory factor in some types of persecution of gay people in the world." I meant, my lovely British gentleman, that you should amend your claim to reflect the truths that I've given for you to consider in your statement, not that I agreed with your claim. :facepalm:And that's the other half of my argument pretty much conceded as well. Marvellous.
:Emoji17: I think you already know what that emoticon indicates based on our previous PM conversations.Yes: add that to the large list of reasons why I am opposed to them all.
How about I apologize for all the times you've been treated badly by my gender any time in all your life. And yes, I'm totally making fun of you for doing the apologizing, not that I don't consider the genuine sentiment behind the statement and applaud it as well. But yes, on the whole, I find that apology ummThat is sadly true. It's also usually true of violent crime generally. With deep shame, I apologise on behalf of men everywhere.
It is not because of "certain supernatural beliefs" that I ever went from atheism to Islam.So, because of certain supernatural beliefs that you adhere to, you are content to see people killed because of their sexual behaviour. If you can't see how dangerous that is, then I'm not sure there's much point continuing this discussion.
Lol. Seems like it, doesn't it? But on a serious note, while I'm currently only active on this forum, I do read other forums. And this is a matter I've been recently pondering deeper myself. While I do think criticism of Islam should be allowed, because that criticism exists itself and is then subsequently answered in the Qur'an in what I believe are wonderful ways, I also believe that while you as a person are able to make a distinction between Muslims and Islam, others can't and won't. So, for example, Trumpians don't make that distinction. So, I do want you to think about this deeply and tell me what you think because I'd like to be able to hear your thoughts on this matter; sometimes, hearing other people's thoughts on a subject matter clarifies for us our own vision on what line of belief/thinking we want to adopt.So, whenever I criticise the behaviour of certain Muslims, I'm told that that has nothing to do with Islam, because Islam and Muslims are different; yet when I criticise the ideas of Islam, I am assumed to be attacking Muslims. What a convenient double standard.
But czgibson, do you really mean when you say this? For example, in U.K., one of the things that scares non-Muslims is the possibility that U.K. can be a Muslim-majority nation even though this has been debunked. But let's assume that's a real possibility. Are you then seriously saying then that you'd have no problems with shariah being the law of the land in a free society if people did on the majority stand for it?Ideas don't need to be killed when they can be debated in a free society, and they stand or fall on their own merits. Holocaust denial is also false and dangerous, but it's definitely a view that should be available for debate, with no need for violence whatsoever.
czgibson, I know that Tommy Robinson left EDL, but unless I'm mistaken, EDL still exists in the U.K. Muslims might be hypothetically allowed to believe whatever they want to believe, but practically, I don't think that translates as well because we also have certain efforts being made to erode Muslim identity with things like the PREVENT program.I don't see why Muslims can't be allowed to believe what they like in a secular society. As long as they don't expect non-Muslims to follow Muslim rules, and as long as they don't break the law of the land, then what is the problem?
Yes I'm used to your massive posts, and although I disagree with you on several things, I have never doubted your awesomeness.
In the field of software, most participants reject copyright, but only as a principle in general. We do use copyright to define copyleft, which results in exactly the opposite situation as what copyright tries to achieve. So, in that sense, we support copyright, because we can use it to destroy the very purpose and ambitions of copyright itself. In every other sense, we reject copyright. If there is no way to destroy copyright by using a countering copyleft strategy, we will not participate in the copyright system, and not recognize it.I work in the legal field; if an attorney cannot support laws, what's the point of even going to law school?
I do not "follow" such man-made laws. I only seek to neutralize these man-made laws using themselves. Man-made law is notoriously inconsistent, even if only because the underlying motivations are never to bring justice, but always to justify injustices. In that sense, it should always be possible to exploit man-made law to destroy itself and happily make money in the process of doing so.I don't agree with all the laws even in the United States, but I still follow them. Do you imagine that others in other countries should be exempt from following their country's laws?
I've been wondering about this one for a while now. I live in the Netherlands. Recently, there has been a minor incident involving some guys handing out pamphlets that were clearly against homosexuality. They had some biblical and quanic verses to back up their position. These guys have now been arrested and will be criminally charged with inciting hatred against the LGBT community.
So why are these Abrahamic religions (Judaism, Christianity and Islam) so fervently against homosexuality? Scientists have found strong leads suggesting that homosexuality is highly likely to be natural rather than to be a product from the environment (nature versus nurture). So that begs the question: why would God in all his infinite wisdom and knowledge knowingly create a homosexual only to condemn him or her later? Ask yourself how much sense that makes?
I know about the story of Lot (Loet in Islam) and the city of Sodom and Gomorra being destroyed because of the rampant homosexuality. But is this really a good argument to treat someone bad? Can anyone give me one good rational reason to be against homosexuality?
Do you know if Islam is more or less against homosexuality than against theft, or murder, or fraud etc? Homosexuality is a crime and I highly doubt the Quran and any hadith mention it more so than other crimes. Could you fill me in on that?
I want to be an apple. Can I go to the doctor and get a surgery that makes me to a human apple? Please!! I really want to be an apple!! a flying apple!! I feel the need to.. I love apples.
Don't judge me, I want to be an apple that can fly. Impossible? am I crazy? Who are you to judge me! Apple-phobic! I was born with the desire to be a flying Apple!
Allahu alam.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.