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Is it really Islam's teachings that make Musllims violent?

Does anyone think without western involvement in the history of Middle East that anti western feelings would be so intense there?

That certainty explains why Muslims invaded Europe in the 8th, then stopped by Charles Martel. Or in the 17th Century, then stopped by Jan Sobieski. Or the enslavement of millions of Europeans up to the 19th Century, then stopped by Stephen Decatur.
 
Does anyone think without western involvement in the history of Middle East that anti western feelings would be so intense there?

That certainty explains why Muslims invaded Europe in the 8th, then stopped by Charles Martel. Or in the 17th Century, then stopped by Jan Sobieski. Or the enslavement of millions of Europeans up to the 19th Century, then stopped by Stephen Decatur.

No, it just explains some of the feelings today. 8th Century emotions have diminished somewhat.
 
When discussing the impact a religion has on a populace its not simply what's written in the holy texts. Its also what's taught in the pulpit. Since these holy books are so large, often contradictory, and use nebulous poetic language, its what they are taught by their leaders that counts.
When you consider how-OFTEN the Bible has been copied (as a jobs-program; pre-Gutenberg), I've often wondered what the chances were....that some monk (who'd had a little-too-much o' "the grape") might have announced...."HEY!!!! Look at what I'd made THIS one say!! HA HAAAAAA!!!"


The Bible; So Misunderstood
December 23, 2014

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"They wave their Bibles at passersby, screaming their condemnations of homosexuals. They fall on their knees, worshipping at the base of granite monuments to the Ten Commandments while demanding prayer in school. They appeal to God to save America from their political opponents, mostly Democrats. They gather in football stadiums by the thousands to pray for the country’s salvation.

They are God’s frauds, cafeteria Christians who pick and choose which Bible verses they heed with less care than they exercise in selecting side orders for lunch. They are joined by religious rationalizers—fundamentalists who, unable to find Scripture supporting their biases and beliefs, twist phrases and modify translations to prove they are honoring the Bible’s words.

The Bible is not the book many American fundamentalists and political opportunists think it is, or more precisely, what they want it to be. Their lack of knowledge about the Bible is well established. A Pew Research poll in 2010 found that evangelicals ranked only a smidgen higher than atheists in familiarity with the New Testament and Jesus’s teachings. “Americans revere the Bible—but, by and large, they don’t read it,’’ wrote George Gallup Jr. and Jim Castelli, pollsters and researchers whose work focused on religion in the United States. The Barna Group, a Christian polling firm, found in 2012 that evangelicals accepted the attitudes and beliefs of the Pharisees—religious leaders depicted throughout the New Testament as opposing Christ and his message—more than they accepted the teachings of Jesus.


No television preacher has ever read the Bible. Neither has any evangelical politician. Neither has the pope. Neither have I. And neither have you. At best, we’ve all read a bad translation—a translation of translations of translations of hand-copied copies of copies of copies of copies, and on and on, hundreds of times."
 
That certainty explains why Muslims invaded Europe in the 8th, then stopped by Charles Martel. Or in the 17th Century, then stopped by Jan Sobieski. Or the enslavement of millions of Europeans up to the 19th Century, then stopped by Stephen Decatur.

No, it just explains some of the feelings today. 8th Century emotions have diminished somewhat.

Islam has always been on the warpath to a greater or lesser degree. Why do you figure it has to be due to a variety of external causes rather than the nature of their religion?
 
No, it just explains some of the feelings today. 8th Century emotions have diminished somewhat.

Islam has always been on the warpath to a greater or lesser degree. Why do you figure it has to be due to a variety of external causes rather than the nature of their religion?

And the crusades were christian, the US fight every war on God's side (just ask 'em) and the kamikaze pilots were buddhist.

what is your point?
 
and the kamikaze pilots were buddhist.

Mostly Shinto actually. And those who were buddhist didn't do it in the name of budhism. Pointing to their Budhism would be like pointing at Stalin or Mao's atheism. It wasn't why they did what they did and they didn't use it as part of their message or justification for their actions.
 
I think it's beyond question that Islamic terrorism really is a thing and it's a problem? My question is:

Is Islam really more violent than other religions and is it really the philosophy/theology of Islam that is the problem?
Nope.

The problem is actually that until the 20th century most Muslim counties were consolidated under the Ottoman Empire, in which their religious and social institutions were more or less stable and productive. When the Ottoman Empire collapsed, so did those institutions. European colonialism stepped in to fill the power vacuum, in most cases failing miserably; fifty years of effective anarchy finally gave way to various forms of despotism and/or Islamofascism of the kind that usually reaps a harvest of widespread misery, poverty, radicalism and other pathologies commonly found in failed states.

When you force a large group of people into a state of profound social and economic deprivation, it should be expected that a certain number of them will resort to violence as a reaction to their circumstances (bandits, thieves, gangsters, etc). If that deprivation is localized in a slum district or a ghetto, you get "bad neighborhoods" where crime, corruption and gang/mob violence are increasingly common. When you then expand that deprivation to include nation-sized tracts of land that encompass entire ethnic groups, you get "bad countries," the core of which forms the heartland of international terrorism.

It has to be remembered that the overwhelming majority of terrorist violence is actually directed at local politics. Western media draws attention to the tiny handful of Muslim terrorists but is virtually silent on the millions of Muslim victims.

The problem, then, isn't with Islam as a religion so much as it is Islam as a society. Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent, and incompetence runs rampant in the leadership of Islamic society.
 
There was more Western involvement in Africa and far more brutal occupation there. And yet the terrorism against the west is by and large coming from the Middle East and the Muslim African countries. Where are the Christian Africian countries engaging in terrorism against the west, those that were former colonies and suffered brutally in servitude/quasi-slavery?

I think that can be explained simply by the Middle-Eastern countries have historically been more stable than the African countries. African identity is a hell of a lot more over the map than Arab identity. I don't think Africans has the same monolithic us vs them thing going as the Arabs. So African religious terrorism is more likely to be targeted against other Africans. Which is exactly what is happening.
But that's what's happening with Arab terrorism as well. It's only a handful of Jihadist terrorist organizations in the world that even have the capability to attack western targets, let alone the motivation. Most Jihadist organizations spend almost the entirety of their energy machinegunning school girls, blackmailing local politicians and decapitating unfriendly journalists.

The Rwanda genocide was Christian vs Christian. Yes, religion was used to motivate those attacks.

But the genesis of the Rwandan genocide was good old fashioned racism; religion became a factor only inasmuch as the racists were also deeply religious.

Interestingly, Rwanda's ethnic racism actually originated from European colonialism when the colonial government arbitrarily chose the Tutsis to be the "favorite" and elevated them unilaterally over the Hutus.
 
Christians don't get their morals from the Bible and Muslims don't get their morals from the Koran. Religion just tries to take credit for people's natural desire to be good.

The Koran says that it's OK for Muslim men to have multiple wives, yet many (if not most) Muslim countries mysteriously have laws that make polygyny technically legal, but virtually impossible to achieve. They may give lip service to the Koran as the source of all morality and may even believe it, but as with Christians culture seems to be a greater source of morality than religion.

Muslims make all kinds of excuses for not killing infidels. The details of their excuses don't really matter. The fact that they seek and find such excuses in the first place proves that their morals are coming from themselves rather than the Koran, and it proves that they are more moral than the Koran. Just like the fact that Christians find excuses to ignore the bad advice about slavery in the Bible is proof that Christian morals come from Christians, not the Bible and that Christians are more moral than the Bible.

Does religion exacerbate our inherent human tendency for tribalism and all that us-vs-them nonsense? I think so.

Does religion's promise of moral superiority make people less likely to question their own moral decisions? I think so. In fact this may be the biggest problem. Muslims live in a culture in which no one ever ever ever questions Islam to even the tiniest degree, which makes the illusion of moral certainty/superiority that much harder to shatter and makes people that much more likely to decide that any decision they make is moral just because they're Muslim. With such illusions in place, you could be a good person or a monster and you would not know the difference.
 
Is Islam really more violent than other religions and is it really the philosophy/theology of Islam that is the problem?

I assume that if they kept sending armies over here to straighten us out, then we'd have plenty of terrorists acting out. People would be asking, "Why don't those Americans denounce their violent radicals?"
 
Is Islam really more violent than other religions and is it really the philosophy/theology of Islam that is the problem?

I assume that if they kept sending armies over here to straighten us out, then we'd have plenty of terrorists acting out. People would be asking, "Why don't those Americans denounce their violent radicals?"

The most muslim terror is towards other muslims. It doesnt matter how important you want US to be, US warfare per se is not the cause of muslim terrorism.
 
I think it's beyond question that Islamic terrorism really is a thing and it's a problem? My question is:

Is Islam really more violent than other religions and is it really the philosophy/theology of Islam that is the problem?
When you force a large group of people into a state of profound social and economic deprivation, it should be expected that a certain number of them will resort to violence as a reaction to their circumstances (bandits, thieves, gangsters, etc). If that deprivation is localized in a slum district or a ghetto, you get "bad neighborhoods" where crime, corruption and gang/mob violence are increasingly common. When you then expand that deprivation to include nation-sized tracts of land that encompass entire ethnic groups, you get "bad countries," the core of which forms the heartland of international terrorism.

....AND, when people are already struggling with that deprivation....and, their ONLY hope (in their minds), for the future, is a life in the hereafter....it's probably best not to marginalize their faith. When that's the only hope they have....it's best not to rub-their-collective-noses in the possibility their faith is misplaced/wasted.

What better example than America's "christians".



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A more scientific response: Islam is a factor.

A more detailed response: Islam might be seen as a factor, but it is a post hoc conclusion in most comments I've read on FB (the online funny farm). Take another situation: Was Communism a factor in the making of Latin American 1970s/1980s guerrillas? Or lack of social justice? Or the CIA?

We can find both calls for gratuitous violence and calls for peace in the Qur'an. Just like the Bible, it depends who reads it and how it has been read and commented to you by your religious leaders and family.
 
Is Saudi Arabia a pure expression of Islam?

Much like communists they will say that Mao'z China or Stalin's USSR were not really communist.
 
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Originally Posted by DrZoidberg

Is Islam really more violent than other religions and is it really the philosophy/theology of Islam that is the problem?


I assume that if they kept sending armies over here to straighten us out, then we'd have plenty of terrorists acting out. People would be asking, "Why don't those Americans denounce their violent radicals?"

The most muslim terror is towards other muslims. It doesnt matter how important you want US to be, US warfare per se is not the cause of muslim terrorism.

I don't disagree with anything you said. In case you think you're disagreeing with me, I'll try to enlarge on my previous post:

Suppose many of us felt we were losing the culture wars. For instance, suppose American women were starting to dress in bags. And suppose when you order bacon in a restaurant, you were often told, "Sorry, we don't serve bacon. Bacon is haram." No Muslims in sight, but you still can't get your bacon because of their cultural influence. The city council meeting opens with a prayer to Allah.

A lot of Christians would have a feeling of losing, of rightness sliding away. Some of them would act out with violence. Terroristic violence, like Brownshirts. It might be Christian on Christian violence most of the time, and it might have nothing to do with Arabic armies, but it would also not require the bible to change from what it said a few years ago.

The heightened violence would result from a cultural change, not a doctrinal change.

Many Christian voices would be raised against the violence.

And now suppose further that the governor of New Jersey mouths off against Saudi Arabia effectively enough that a coalition army, including France, if you want, invades New Jersey.

My point---one of my points---is that those voices would then tend to be muted, softer, less common, more careful.

Our anti-jihad terrorists would be emboldened, and those speaking against violence would tend to become less motivated and more cautious.

And this effect would not require any specific language in the bible, just as Muslim on Muslim violence doesn't require any specific language in the Koran.

I believe that if they were mostly Christian, and we were mostly Muslim, but the cultural situation remained the same (we keep encroaching, often using armies, and they feel like history is going wrong) then they, in their frustration, would still have a lot of violence.

So my answer to the OP is this: No, it is not really Islam's teachings that makes Muslims violent. I have no reason to believe that the Koran is more violence-inducing than the bible.
 
Islam has always been on the warpath to a greater or lesser degree. Why do you figure it has to be due to a variety of external causes rather than the nature of their religion?

And the crusades were christian, the US fight every war on God's side (just ask 'em) and the kamikaze pilots were buddhist.

what is your point?

Pre-reformation Christianity was about as evil as Islam is today.

The Kamikaze pilots did it out of nationalism, not religion.
 
Is Saudi Arabia a pure expression of Islam?

Much like communists they will say that Mao'z China or Stalin's USSR were not really communist.

Not according to the most radical fundamentalists, ironically. Saudi Arabia is this weird alliance between the clerics and a monarchy (the House of Saud). Islamic purists reject rule by a monarch and see the KSA as a horrible perversion, a deal with the devil, so to speak. The United State's relationship with the KSA is was one of Osama bin Laden's main grievances with the USA, the other being the support of Israel.

In an ideal Islamic society decisions are to be made by shura of the Muslim community (the Ummah), meaning consultation by those who would be affected by the decisions. The historical reality is that this almost always meant some monarch or emir consulting with advisers. Some modern Sunni scholars have interpreted this as meaning representative democracy (with some sort of clerical oversight by religious scholars). Ironically, it is Shia Iran that comes closest to this system.
 
And the crusades were christian, the US fight every war on God's side (just ask 'em) and the kamikaze pilots were buddhist.

what is your point?

Pre-reformation Christianity was about as evil as Islam is today.

The Kamikaze pilots did it out of nationalism, not religion.

Um, post-Reformation Christianity has acted just as barbarically as pre-Reformation Christianity. Reformed Protestants merely reject the Roman Papacy. They are a very eclectic group, but many have been and continue to be quite a bit more radical and fundamentalist that the Catholics.
 
And the crusades were christian, the US fight every war on God's side (just ask 'em) and the kamikaze pilots were buddhist.

what is your point?

Pre-reformation Christianity was about as evil as Islam is today.


The Kamikaze pilots did it out of nationalism, not religion.

I believe it was post reformation Christians dropping atom bombs. What are you talking about?
It was post reformation Christians fire bombing Hamburg, Dresden, Baghdad, etc.
 
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