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What is it with Radical Muslims and beheadings?

Shadow Link

Active Member
Extremism of all kinds. Now we have the rise of right-wing extreme populism with the rise of hate crimes of all kinds. The latest set of headlines I've seen are multiple anti-Semitic attacks, neo-Nazi attacks and groups that are ready to start a civil war if Trump is no longer President.
Well, when you have systems of education that limit the teachings of Stoicism...
 

9-10ths_Penguin

1/10 Subway Stalinist
Premium Member
To play devil's advocate, isn't a similar argument used against gun control supporters?
By idiots, maybe. Guns kill a heck of a lot of people.

People may also have a personal connection to an issue: if someone had a loved one killed in a firearm homicide or suicide, then it's understandable that they'd be personally invested in the issue. AFAIK, though, @Landon Caeli 's only personal connection to the issue of ISIS beheadings is prejudice.

Maybe I'm wrong - maybe he had a loved one beheaded by ISIS. But if he did, I'd think he would have opened with that.
 

columbus

yawn <ignore> yawn
Fine then, but I'd not want to make a bloody spectacle of the beheaded.
Do you remember the initial phase of the invasion of Iraq?
It was called Shock and Awe.

A huge spectacle of violence intended to intimidate the Iraqi people as the USA invaded their country. Public beheadings are generally the same, on a vastly smaller scale.
Tom
 

Kangaroo Feathers

Yea, it is written in the Book of Cyril...
Do you remember the initial phase of the invasion of Iraq?
It was called Shock and Awe.

A huge spectacle of violence intended to intimidate the Iraqi people as the USA invaded their country. Public beheadings are generally the same, on a vastly smaller scale.
Tom
Shock and awe, specifically, to instill terror. But the tribal right reaaally doesn't like it if you point out that this qualifies as terrorism by virtually all working definitions of the term, so I guess we won't mention it.
 

9-10ths_Penguin

1/10 Subway Stalinist
Premium Member
Can't you see the moral difference between ruthlessly sawing off innocent people's heads, and random occurances?
Motor vehicle collisions especially are hardly random occurrences. Many of them are even the direct result of morally culpable acts, such as deciding to drive distracted or impaired.


...There is a reason people feel especially abhorrent about beheadings. One who doesn't feel that, might want to go get evaluated.
If it's deliberate, premeditated brutal killings that are your focus, fair enough. Still, even with that motivation, why would ISIS beheadings be your focus? The number of people executed by ISIS every year is still less than the number of brutal deaths on a bad day by Mexican drug cartels.

You brought up one potential reason for focusing on ISIS: racism. Do you have any other motivation to skip over much worse problems to make that your focus?
 

9-10ths_Penguin

1/10 Subway Stalinist
Premium Member
The vast majority of gun-related deaths in America are deaths by suicide, which were deaths of people who wanted to die.
Suicidal ideation isn't generally a matter of clear-headedly "wanting to die;" it's a symptom of a mental health crisis.
 

Cooky

Veteran Member
People may also have a personal connection to an issue: if someone had a loved one killed in a firearm homicide or suicide, then it's understandable that they'd be personally invested in the issue. AFAIK, though, @Landon Caeli 's only personal connection to the issue of ISIS beheadings is prejudice.

Maybe I'm wrong - maybe he had a loved one beheaded by ISIS. But if he did, I'd think he would have opened with that.

Ad hominem fallacy. Try again using actual logic.
 

Kangaroo Feathers

Yea, it is written in the Book of Cyril...

SigurdReginson

Grēne Mann
Premium Member
Meh. What's with Christians burning people at the stake, Jewish people stoning folks to death, and Norse pagans cutting blood eagles into people's backs? It's barbaric, but it'll go away sooner or later. The world doesn't exist in a vacuum, and traditional punishments can only be enforced in a progressive world for so long before they must modernise as well -especially if they want to participate in that progressive world. I just wish that progression would happen sooner.

As for what beheadings have to do with islam, I notice extreme punishments doled out by followers don't really have much to do with their religious teachings. Where in the bible does it say that people should be burned at the stake? Christians have always seemed fond of that method throughout history.
 

Evangelicalhumanist

"Truth" isn't a thing...
Premium Member
Why does a religion need to kill at all?
Or a state, for that matter?

Canada abolished capital punishment in 1976 (44 years ago), but our last execution was in 1962 (58 years ago). I am personally happy that this is so, and always fight the occasional conservative campaign for us to reinstate it and get back to the "godly work" of killing people.
 

Cooky

Veteran Member
Or a state, for that matter?

Canada abolished capital punishment in 1976 (44 years ago), but our last execution was in 1962 (58 years ago). I am personally happy that this is so, and always fight the occasional conservative campaign for us to reinstate it and get back to the "godly work" of killing people.

I wouldn't go so far as to call it "godly work" when certain religions, like Catholicism, reject it.
 

dianaiad

Well-Known Member
Maybe Islam will learn in another few hundred years, hopefully sooner

Only by taking away the political power that Muslims currently enjoy in many nations will that change....and even then, it's dicey. See, I have a problem in that I belong to a religion that, first, freedom of religion is important, whether those believers agree with us or not. This is encoded in what most people would call our 'creed,' our Articles of Faith. Because that is so, it's not possible for us to punish, corporeally or legally, those who commit 'blasphemy,' or leave, or disagree with us. Because that is so, our religious beliefs and our political beliefs are absolutely separate. Why, we even have liberals.

Even our ideas of the 'Second Coming' have government and religion separate.

However, we do seem to be a bit 'odd man out' in that area...most religions, and atheists for that matter, are so sure that their way is the only right way (well, so are we, actually...) that they feel justified in forcing their ways upon everybody else, period. We just figure that the choice should be 'theirs,' not 'ours.' Even if we think that "they" are being terminally stupid in those choices. (shrug) Still their choice.

the problem here is that Muslims SEEM to be having more of a problem with this than some...like that recent poll that indicates that a huge percentage of Muslims in the USA think that Sharia Law should trump the Constitution. That attitude needs to be dealt with.
 

Cooky

Veteran Member
If it's deliberate, premeditated brutal killings that are your focus, fair enough. Still, even with that motivation, why would ISIS beheadings be your focus? The number of people executed by ISIS every year is still less than the number of brutal deaths on a bad day by Mexican drug cartels.

You brought up one potential reason for focusing on ISIS: racism. Do you have any other motivation to skip over much worse problems to make that your focus?

I'm not focusing on ISIS Though... That's your error. I'm focusing on *all* the radical Islamist groups, and the nations too.

You would like it if we could squeeze them all into the little 'ISIS' box, but that's just not the reality of it.
 
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