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- Mar 19, 2008
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All a bit strange, why would a guy presumably trying to stay under the radar have a fake ID with that name? Might as well have used Saddam bin Laden.
It's called The Bell Curve. Murray is a co-author. Richard Hernstein is probably more important to the work, but since Murray is the only living of the two, it falls on him to defend it from universal odium.In terms of the culture war, The Bell Shaped Curve, by Charles Murray.
In portuguese, the name he picked means "will kill".All a bit strange, why would a guy presumably trying to stay under the radar have a fake ID with that name? Might as well have used Saddam bin Laden.
Here we go again...What that guy did is not allowed in Islam. Fyi.
I've seen a lot of responses, will try to answer some of them here. Without offending the Shiite community I don't see their teachings in the true fold of Islam (they don't follow the 3 Caliph's before Ali). So no, I don't think Khomeini is Islam. The Qur'an and Hadith are Islam. I follow the Qur'an and Hadith. And in the Qur'an and Hadith what this guy did is not allowed in Islam.Here we go again...
Again, religion is the common denominator. There's no away around this. It's impossible to divorce religion from attacks such as this along with the cartoons / school curriculum in Europe. It simply cannot be done.I've seen a lot of responses, will try to answer some of them here. Without offending the Shiite community I don't see their teachings in the true fold of Islam (they don't follow the 3 Caliph's before Ali). So no, I don't think Khomeini is Islam. The Qur'an and Hadith are Islam. I follow the Qur'an and Hadith. And in the Qur'an and Hadith what this guy did is not allowed in Islam.
As for throwaway comments by colodo and Thierry mainly, lots of debasement that I don't want to get into.
To paraphrase Pablo: here I don't want to go again.
To some extent it depends on whether the perpetrator is acting in accordance with his religion or not. Or can be said to do so in accordance with his interpretation of that religion or the religious group he is affiliated with.Again, religion is the common denominator. There's no away around this. It's impossible to divorce religion from attacks such as this along with the cartoons / school curriculum in Europe. It simply cannot be done.
But religion is the springboard. Sure it might be a perversion of a religion, but one has to be part of that religion to pervert it. Talking platitudes doesn't change that.To some extent it depends on whether the perpetrator is acting in accordance with his religion or not. Or can be said to do so in accordance with his interpretation of that religion or the religious group he is affiliated with.
I don't disagree with that at all. Personally I think monotheistic religions are inherently completely bigoted which breeds a intolerant culture which is why I find it bemusing that simply disliking the worlds soon to be biggest religion stamps you with bigoted label of islamophobia as if you don't like at all you must have got it wrong.But religion is the springboard. Sure it might be a perversion of a religion, but one has to be part of that religion to pervert it. Talking platitudes doesn't change that.
Not to mention that all religions are just completely perverted forms of whatever they originally were anyway. The Jesus of the new testament who preached the virtues of poverty and ascetism would spin in his grave at the ostentation of the Catholic church through most of history and things like the prosperity gospel. It can be moulded into absolutely anything, up to and including the exact opposite of the original message.But religion is the springboard. Sure it might be a perversion of a religion, but one has to be part of that religion to pervert it. Talking platitudes doesn't change that.
https://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/loc...n-suspected-in-salman-rushdie-attack/3822984/State Police Maj. Eugene Staniszewski said the motive for the stabbing was unclear. A preliminary law enforcement review of Matar's social media accounts shows he is sympathetic to Shia extremism and Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps causes, a law enforcement person with direct knowledge of the investigation told NBC News. There are no definitive links to the IRGC but the initial assessment indicates he is sympathetic to the Iranian government group, the official says.
Before getting too deep, according to the Quran and Haddith Salman Rushdie should be stoned to death because he went from being a Muslim to being an apostate. It's very clear in Islamic Fiqh that anyone who does that should be executed and there's no argument about it. Go and ask any credible Islamic scholar if Rushdie would be executed in an Islamic State for rejecting Islam after being born into a Muslim family, he flat out would be. Your local imam may lie to you and say he shouldn't but anyone following the Fiqh will tell you the truth.The Qur'an and Hadith are Islam. I follow the Qur'an and Hadith. And in the Qur'an and Hadith what this guy did is not allowed in Islam.
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I appreciate you mansplaining my religion to me and covering bases if the imam 'lies to me'. Since we've both our minds up no point discussing further.Before getting too deep, according to the Quran and Haddith Salman Rushdie should be stoned to death because he went from being a Muslim to being an apostate. It's very clear in Islamic Fiqh that anyone who does that should be executed and there's no argument about it. Go and ask any credible Islamic scholar if Rushdie would be executed in an Islamic State for rejecting Islam after being born into a Muslim family, he flat out would be. Your local imam may lie to you and say he shouldn't but anyone following the Fiqh will tell you the truth.
You don't follow Quran and Hadith at all. You don't read them otherwise you'd know you're talking untruths.
The irony of someone trying to complain about 'mansplaining' when both the Quran and Hadith state you can rape the female slaves you have in your possession. When the Hadith state Muhammed commited genocide against a tribe, tortured their leader in order to find his wealth and then got angry with Bilal because he let the leaders daughter see this. He then later raped the leaders daughter. This is all in your hadith. How about Aisha being 9 when their marriage when their marriage was consumated according to your hadith. Would you care to mansplain those hadith to me?I appreciate you mansplaining my religion to me and covering bases if the imam 'lies to me'. Since we've both our minds up no point discussing further.
Good thing they're going to have nukes within a decade.Tweet
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A little pointed in your first assertion. It’s probably how I changed it above.On the one hand, people who don't like religion will leap on this to bash the religion.
On the other, people will try to claim that the people who do this misinterpret the book as if, there isn't that sort of stuff in there.
Depends on who you ask. For highbrow people it's very good.Is the book any good?
It’s always been a muddled area to be honest, at any point in the timeline. The first recorded biographies make no mention of it either (ibn Hisham, ibn Ishaq) but then it is mentioned by at-Tabari (a bit later). Even the Middle Ages ulema were divided. Ibn Taymiyyah was probably the highest authority who believed it happened at that time with Ghazali on the other side.Little bit off-topic, but here is the central argument of a book I read a while back on how Muslims have understood the so-called Satanic verses:
Not if Tom Cruise has anything to say about it!Good thing they're going to have nukes within a decade.
In that regard, the author of the above book writes:The first recorded biographies make no mention of it either (ibn Hisham, ibn Ishaq) but then it is mentioned by at-Tabari (a bit later).
What that guy did is not allowed in Islam. Fyi.
Iranian media =/= Islam"In this attack, we do not consider anyone other than Salman Rushdie and his supporters worthy of blame and even condemnation," the spokesman said during his weekly press conference in Tehran.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-62546469
Salman Rushdie: Iran blames writer and supporters for stabbing
It is not "Iranian media". It is the state spokesperson.Iranian media =/= Islam
Do people quote the Daily Mail and Daily Express when pointing out the flaws of Christianity?
It's not really hard to look up what the consensus is on the punishment for being an apostate. ThierryFabregas already touched on this above. So no its not a "this has nothing to do with Islam moment".And the person who issued the fatwa was Ayatollah Khomeini. The religious leader, the supreme leader of Iran.
Not a random low level politician or priest. There is a huge difference.
Khomeini is certainly not a figure to be dismissed in this, but it is generally accepted that his ruling was made outside the normally accepted procedures according to mainstream Sunni and Shi'i doctrine, in which the accused should be tried and given the opportunity to defend himself and repent. That Khomeini issued his ruling without regard to the standard process suggests his motives were basically secular*, and most likely concerned his desire to exert Iranian leadership and authority in the Islamic world at a moment when he had just exposed Iranian vulnerability by agreeing to a truce with Iraq. It's also likely that he heard about a section in the novel in which a figure quite clearly based on him is portrayed in an unflattering light.And the person who issued the fatwa was Ayatollah Khomeini. The religious leader, the supreme leader of Iran.
Not a random low level politician or priest. There is a huge difference.
Khomeini is certainly not a figure to be dismissed in this, but it is generally accepted that his ruling was made outside the normally accepted procedures according to mainstream Sunni and Shi'i doctrine, in which the accused should be tried and given the opportunity to defend himself and repent. That Khomeini issued his ruling without regard to the standard process suggests his motives were basically secular, and most likely concerned his desire to exert Iranian leadership and authority in the Islamic world at a moment when he had just exposed Iranian vulnerability by agreeing to a truce with Iraq. It's also likely that he heard about a section in the novel in which a figure quite clearly based on him is portrayed in an unflattering light.
By the ulama who have acted as guardians of the Islamic jurisprudential tradition for centuries."Generally accepted" by whom? Not by the State of Iran, obviously.
And if I am not mistaken, the government of Iran is an Islamic theocracy, which means that the "State" and the "Islam" is basically the same thing in Iran.
i think this was his motivation. the novel makes a caricature of him personally.It's also likely that he heard about a section in the novel in which a figure quite clearly based on him is portrayed in an unflattering light.
I can imagine that Rushdie flying to Iran to stand trial for being an ex Muslim and satirising Muhammed was never ever going to happen even if Khomeini offered it.Khomeini is certainly not a figure to be dismissed in this, but it is generally accepted that his ruling was made outside the normally accepted procedures according to mainstream Sunni and Shi'i doctrine, in which the accused should be tried and given the opportunity to defend himself and repent. That Khomeini issued his ruling without regard to the standard process suggests his motives were basically secular*, and most likely concerned his desire to exert Iranian leadership and authority in the Islamic world at a moment when he had just exposed Iranian vulnerability by agreeing to a truce with Iraq. It's also likely that he heard about a section in the novel in which a figure quite clearly based on him is portrayed in an unflattering light.
*(edit): should add, I don't think Khomeini himself would have conceived of his motives as secular, or that he would have understood a secular/religious distinction to even exist.