it’s vandalism but it’s a victimless crime as nobody was present and nobody was injured eitherway it certainly doesn’t warrant counter terrorism police and a heavy police presence to be in attendance. Police should be fine to deal with it and if they make an arrest fine.
All I want is some consistency from the police, where was the police presence during the recent Muslim protests of kids being taught about LGBT rights in school (Which coincidently happened in the same city so maybe this was a revenge attack)
“The current curriculum is an attack on Islam”
“Any attempt to get Muslim children to affirm homosexuality in a positive way will be met with reisistance”
You can’t say the window smasher has a hate driven agenda then completely ignore the hate driven agenda towards LGBT communities from Muslims. Why was no arrests made in this situation? It does get largely ignored as it doesn’t fit the current narrative.
Creating fear in a community is not a victimless crime. Attacking a community's gathering place and place of worship is not a victimless crime.
I imagine there is a heavy police presence to reassure that same community and ensure it feels safe after someone literally livestreamed the slaughter of 50 Muslims in their place of worship as if he was playing a GTA game. May be something to do with that.
So then there's a few things here, which need to be unpacked:
-I think Islam's view on homosexuality (the religion) is incredibly problematic, as is the case with the abrahamic religions if you take things literally.
-I think many Muslims' views on homosexuality are incredibly problematic.
-To say it is all Muslims who think this way is a genuinely ridiculous statement to make and I'm sure you're aware saying all Muslims have that view, when there are about 1.2 billion of them, is just silly.
-The overwhelming majority of Muslims in Western countries, even the ones who do not agree with homosexuality, go about their normal daily lives without lynching LGBT people or doing anything to them. They may not approve but they interact in a completely normal way, they work with them as colleagues, they serve them, buy from them, talk to them. Same as the overwhelming majority of oooh, I don't know, evangelicals in the USA.
-I wholeheartedly disagree with the protests by those parents (and think its great that young kids are encouraged to think of LGBTQ as a normal part of society) but unless I've missed something, protesting in this country is not illegal, whereas vandalism and killing people is so not sure what the 3 things have to do with each other? Did those protestors do anything illegal?
-Blaming the attack on those protests is dangerous. Trying to justify these attacks is dangerous. Talking about 'Islam's background' and these protests, in a thread about a mass shooting at a Mosque and then vandalism at mosques, is a very strange thing to do.