9/17/2006 1:17:53 PM
Therefore, Islam is okay.Just because you hate Christianity doesn't mean you should fellate Islam, you fucking idiot. Radical Islam is a huge fucking problem -- one that should be eradicated.
9/17/2006 1:20:34 PM
9/17/2006 3:54:21 PM
whatever mohammad
9/17/2006 3:56:40 PM
9/17/2006 3:57:40 PM
9/17/2006 4:02:13 PM
9/17/2006 4:49:31 PM
^ haNEIN
9/17/2006 7:55:06 PM
9/17/2006 11:49:24 PM
9/18/2006 12:12:22 AM
9/18/2006 12:33:13 AM
these events make Ganesh cry
9/18/2006 11:57:27 AM
sounds like the pope and bush have set the stage for the modern crusadeanyone else not learn a lesson from kingdom of heaven?
9/18/2006 12:07:14 PM
This thread needs a pope update.
9/18/2006 12:20:20 PM
9/18/2006 12:22:52 PM
9/18/2006 12:28:46 PM
9/18/2006 12:43:12 PM
9/18/2006 12:44:41 PM
9/18/2006 2:01:36 PM
^
9/18/2006 4:35:02 PM
In what way does that justify the Muslim response to the Pope's speech?
9/18/2006 4:36:18 PM
In exactly the way it was intended to.
9/18/2006 4:42:27 PM
In absolutely no way?
9/18/2006 4:46:07 PM
Correct.
9/18/2006 4:49:10 PM
Just wanted to 'hear' you say it.
9/18/2006 4:52:53 PM
9/18/2006 5:04:33 PM
OMF YOU MEAN THEY'RE NOT LIKE ARMY MEN?
9/18/2006 5:07:02 PM
kinda ironic that after being called a violent religion that muslim fanatics respond with, yep, VIOLENCE
9/18/2006 5:47:35 PM
Apparently they don't have the intellectual capacity to realize they're acting in a manner that's contradictory to what they assert about themselves.[Edited on September 18, 2006 at 5:51 PM. Reason : .]
9/18/2006 5:50:55 PM
Much like many philosophical hypocrites I've met in life.
9/19/2006 1:25:09 AM
Just What Did the Pope Actually Say? Here's the transcript & explanationlink: http://www.lewrockwell.com/featherstone/featherstone62.htmlvia digg: http://tinyurl.com/kxzb6
9/19/2006 2:01:59 AM
9/19/2006 2:03:02 AM
Frankly, the context of the Pope's speech about injecting reason into religiosity, which has been largely glossed over by the sensationalism-driven media frenzy over a few lines in it (note the snickers of both GWB and Clinton supporters), was an insightful, relevant, and important element of discourse worth being debated academically.Naturally, the media isn't reporting on the speech. But a few words in it. The market doesn't demand civilized discourse. The government sees no interest in civlizing it. And therefore, the media is free to act sensationally according to the whims of its audience AND its organizational interests.I call the outgrowths of this phenomena, which you're free to call what you want, and what it represents Cue Card Culture. I see us debate about on the Soap Box repeatedly with very little changing of ideological territory because our understandings are blurred by the inability to internalize the fact that others can ultimately be as rational as us, and yet come to radically different conclusions about the functioning of the world.If a message doesn't fit on a cue card, nobody will listen to it. That's why the messages we hear encourage us to believe everyone else (who is somehow not like us) is stupid and doesn't know anything. They're reduced and reduced until they represent charicatures, not real people. The beliefs are expressed in a way that is too condensed to properly represent the content of a person's intellectual, spiritual, or historical experiences in life.[Edited on September 19, 2006 at 11:51 AM. Reason : ...]
9/19/2006 11:49:38 AM
I really can't believe that he's getting this much flack for what he said.
9/19/2006 12:53:10 PM
A lot of people leave the Soap Box wondering the same thing a lot of time. Including me.
9/19/2006 2:58:31 PM
9/19/2006 3:15:30 PM
Sure they can do something. People will just not like having to deal with it.Political correctness is one poorly understood, and perhaps even more poorly executed attempt to solve that problem. It breaks down for many of the same reasons most ideas do, though.The current ideological war on the idea of a "biased" or "subjective" media is a philosophically important one. Even if the solution is to simply vote based on our pocketbooks, or our attention spans, as to who knows what's going on in the world, and who's just trying to sell papers. Or any relative distinction between them.[Edited on September 19, 2006 at 3:28 PM. Reason : ...]
9/19/2006 3:27:02 PM
what can they directly do to affect the way that the media behaves?i am of the opinion that generally the government should stay out of things. most of all because i think that government is so big and stupid that they will probably mess it up. wi think that something needs to be done about the way the media behaves but i think that if its going to happen it needs to come from the general public, not from the government. if they can do anything they will just mess it up.
9/19/2006 3:38:18 PM
9/19/2006 3:54:47 PM
^ No more than it was aimed at myself. And every walking philosopher I've ever met. Many, including yourself I suspect, might conclude that means it applies to everyone.I agree fundamentally that you're probably a hypocrite. It doesn't make you happy, I'm sure. But it's still probably got plenty of grains of truth behind it, and it an important distinction for you to keep in mind. The war of ideas is fought between hypocrites.That's where the fun ends.I admit to being every bit the biggest flaming hypocrite I've ever met. I just express different hypocrisies based on a lack of consideration or attention that I've paid to certain areas of ideological merit at any given time. Different people associate interactions between hypocritical belief systems reason enough to irrationally speculate beyond available data without noting the degree to which they can be wrong. I choose to do what I can to avoid being one of them.Sometimes it works, sometimes I'll buy a 60 Minutes story about Bush's National Guard Records. Sometimes I can effectively call bullshit on "faggot college freshmen" who have no idea what they're talking about AND the assholes they're usually arguing with. But I can still come at them by arguing from flawed assumptions all the same.But as you say, on many occasions, we're all hypocrites. A poet once put it this way: "I am large, I contain multitudes." I don't know necessarily that he and I agree on what he was talking about (he's dead, can't ask him), but I can see how it applies to the following fundamental questions:1) If we're all composed of a multitude of hypocrisies between competing belief systems, whom or what should we believe?2) How should we go from uncertainty to belief?The answer, in any way, hands us our own philosophical reigns in a powerful way in the form of personal responsibility. We can be our own arbiters of truth. I call a person's self concept his own "silent arbiter" because it is so infrequently taken into consideration. But upon what basis do we or should that arbiter decide to examine (or refuse to examine) the belief systems contructed around it in order to clear the fog?---
9/19/2006 4:17:00 PM
9/19/2006 4:22:40 PM
9/19/2006 4:24:32 PM
^^ Agreed. But instead of blithely recognizing obvious bullshit (like I'm accused of), can anyone discern where it comes from? Or does anyone have any ideas?
9/19/2006 4:25:39 PM
I think people will resolve their cognitive dissonance in different ways, depending on the AMOUNT of stress that it causes.This means that, when people REALLY want there to be a pleasant afterlife for themselves, they'll challenge opposing viewpoints that'll keep them up at night. Yes, even with violence and murder if the level of stress warrants it.
9/19/2006 4:28:03 PM
actually islam just needs 700 more years of growing/maturing to reach the point that christianity is at now.in the 1300's christians where pretty fuckin militant about religionthat's about the level islam is ateventually the fanatic extremists will get pushed to the side and marginalized
9/19/2006 9:02:33 PM
I like how some muslims are all like 'an apology is not enough'wtf do they want? him to cut off an arm or something?
9/19/2006 9:03:58 PM
Probably just to hear a Pope admit his dick isn't as big as some cleric's.
9/19/2006 10:21:22 PM
^^ A reparation check?
9/20/2006 7:25:05 AM
I don't think he should have apologized at all. Given the Muslim world's reaction to the comments (burning churches, death threats, burning efigies, etc.) seems like the Pope was spot on. All those idiots did was prove him right.And people need to stop living in the past. If all Islam can do is bring up the Crusades from 600 years ago, they need to move on. No one living now is responsible for that. Take responsibility for your religion's current actions.[Edited on September 20, 2006 at 10:35 AM. Reason : .]
9/20/2006 10:34:21 AM