Zakharra wrote:Tenshinai wrote:
Some most definitely are using force, and fewer but still some use violence as well.
In the West? I don't think so. Certainly not in the US
The various terrorist attacks on abortion clinics would suggest otherwise.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 13 guests
Re: ISIS | |
---|---|
by The E » Mon Jul 27, 2015 2:53 am | |
The E
Posts: 2704
|
The various terrorist attacks on abortion clinics would suggest otherwise. |
Top |
Re: ISIS | |
---|---|
by CSB » Mon Jul 27, 2015 6:54 am | |
CSB
Posts: 39
|
1) Opposition to abortion is not a specifically Christian political/moral position, though a substantial majority of all pro-lifers in the U.S. are likely Christians of one sect or another. 2) That's a clown comparison, bro. The scale is off by several orders of magnitude. Exactly one death in the past 15+ years? Fail. |
Top |
Re: ISIS | |
---|---|
by Tenshinai » Mon Jul 27, 2015 8:53 am | |
Tenshinai
Posts: 2893
|
The question was whether any used violence. Your reading comprehension fails. And while it is not "specifically Christian" no, but outspokenly "christian" groups are among the worst of that lot. |
Top |
Re: ISIS | |
---|---|
by Tenshinai » Mon Jul 27, 2015 9:08 am | |
Tenshinai
Posts: 2893
|
You might have had a point if it wasn´t for the fact that the "christian bible" specifically includes the old testament.
USA mainstream yes. Try looking at what is mainstream christianity in the places where you also have "islamic" thuggery. In some places the difference is complete(just as in other places, the roles are exactly reversed between christan(or hindu, buddhist etc) thugs and islamic victims), in other places there´s no real differences at all.
Then you must be trying very hard not to look. What groups are trying to push creationism into schools? And yes, the way that is done by "christian" groups in some places are most definitely force. Abusing legal loophole exploits and extortion definitely counts as force. And as already noted, violence may not be everyday occurences, but it certainly happens. |
Top |
Re: ISIS | |
---|---|
by The E » Mon Jul 27, 2015 9:46 am | |
The E
Posts: 2704
|
I wasn't making an argument about scale, but offering a refutation of the point Zakharra made (to wit, that there was no violence based on religious motivations among US christians). The anti-abortion movement in the US is predominantly christian, and violent attacks by its members (and associated harassment of people who request or perform abortions) cannot be discounted as being the work of a few isolated people. And that's before we go into violence that isn't attributable to organized movements. Here's a worst of list. |
Top |
Re: ISIS | |
---|---|
by Zakharra » Mon Jul 27, 2015 4:46 pm | |
Zakharra
Posts: 619
|
*bonks the E on the head* Context, man. Context. I admit I was wrong in that there is -no- Christian violence, but the scale of it is way WAY lower, as in nearly no existent. As CSB points out, you don't need to be a Christian to dislike abortion clinics. Are many Christians against abortion clinics? Yes. Are all of them? No.
Except that the NT is supposed to override the OT. 'Love your neighbor as yourself', not 'murder your neighbor because they don't worship the same god as you do' the OT was wont to do (the god of the OT was, to use appropriate language, a real asshole). If anyone was advocating using OT teachings in real life and trying to apply them with force, they are acting against the wishes of Christ, who was, a very notable pacifist. The most violent I heard of him getting was throwing out the money lenders from the temple (which probably broke several laws, but as far as its written, he didn't physically hurt anyone). As far as it goes, Christ told his followers to obey the secular laws 'render unto Caesar what is Caesar's'. Christians have, for the most part, left that sort of violent behavior in the past where it belongs. Society has moved on.
Extremist behavior tends to breed extremist opposition.
Oh? I was unaware that using the legal means, ie proposing laws and such, is now considered using force equal to using violence to get their way. I am unaware of ANY one or group in the US that has used force to try and get creationism into the schools. I haven't heard of anyone using a gun or the threat of physical force to try that. If you have please enlighten me, but until I have heard of that, I am calling bullshit on this claim of yours. And before you reply, remember we're discussing PHYSICAL VIOLENCE as the type of force here. You seem to be trying to skate around that by using a different definition of force (And yes I know there are different definitions of 'force', but keep this in context. The discussion here is physical force being used. NOT legal means.) |
Top |
Re: ISIS | |
---|---|
by Tenshinai » Mon Jul 27, 2015 5:07 pm | |
Tenshinai
Posts: 2893
|
That is blatantly incorrect, as otherwise, the earlier statement would not have been "are NOT using force and violence", but rather just stating violence by itself if it was the same thing. You´re the one who separated the two.
It is considered force when exploiting the craptastic legal black hole that the US court system can be made into if you have enough money or the right lawyers.
There has been several attempts to use legalese to declare creationism or religious texts as being equal to scientific theory, and then use that to push the agenda. There´s also been political scheming and skullduggery of all kinds for the same reason. And simply stated, if something is the kind of force that would have made Machiavelli tearful with pride, then it definitely counts as force. I´m pretty sure that if moslems tried to use the same venues to force all US schools to teach the koran and adhere to the praying schedule, you would call it force... |
Top |
Re: ISIS | |
---|---|
by Howard T. Map-addict » Tue Jul 28, 2015 1:42 pm | |
Howard T. Map-addict
Posts: 1392
|
I looked: those are encyclicals of Pope Paul VI,
which means that Roman Catholicism has them. I understand that most Protestants adopted much the same doctrines earlier, which means that the RCC is trailing. HTM
|
Top |
Re: ISIS | |
---|---|
by HB of CJ » Tue Jul 28, 2015 2:07 pm | |
HB of CJ
Posts: 707
|
Peace. Peace. Is there anyway we can separate the religion from the politics? I'm a ignorate agnostic and I try with some success to separate the people from their religion.
ISIS in my view are just crazy sons of bitches. Crazy. In my view they could have hung their crazy hat on any religion. I wonder about our reactions if they were Jews? Catholics? Still crazy. At what point of time are governments going to decide to eliminate all of them? Very sad decision, but necessary? A very slippery slope for sure. We must decide soon. |
Top |
Re: ISIS | |
---|---|
by Imaginos1892 » Tue Jul 28, 2015 7:46 pm | |
Imaginos1892
Posts: 1332
|
Not if we're going to discuss radical Moslems - their religion is their politics. -------------------- Deja moo: that funny feeling that you've heard the same bullshit before. |
Top |