12/1/2007 11:28:59 PM
I guess they got bored of genocide.
12/1/2007 11:49:59 PM
muslims are so backward
12/1/2007 11:55:21 PM
It's nothing a nuclear weapon won't fix.But really, why in the name of all that is holy would you ever, no matter how bad you felt for them, go to teach English in the god forsaken land of Sudan?I ain't saying she had it coming, but she had it coming.
12/2/2007 12:43:52 AM
i dont know... maybe some people care about the plight of the refugees and victims of the genocide campaign being waged against the people of the Darfur region of Sudan by the Sudanese government-sponsored Janjaweed paramilitaries.
12/2/2007 2:10:21 AM
So, you can't name a teddy-bear Muhammed, but you CAN name a person that...
12/2/2007 2:32:58 AM
but can you name a potbellied pig Mohammed?
12/2/2007 2:45:59 AM
I'm just saying... I'd be more worried about a PERSON being made out to be a prophet than a fucking teddy bear... But that's just me. I might name a teddy bear Jesus Christ (not really, but still...), but I'd NEVER name my kid Jesus Christ...
12/2/2007 2:47:27 AM
you might if you were Latino.I toyed with the idea of naming my kid Judas.
12/2/2007 2:50:37 AM
^ >.<But, the just name his Jesus. Not Jesus Christe
12/2/2007 2:55:44 AM
^ >.< yourselfplenty of latinos have named their kids after the full name of Jesus Christ.hell, for that matter plenty of white people have Christ incorporated into their first and/or last names.there's no difference. what's your point anyhow? do you have one, or are you just trying to express to us how pious and reverent you are?
12/2/2007 3:02:53 AM
well, at least it is ChristIAN or something, and not just Christ. Definitely a difference there.Have you seriously met a Jesus Christe? I never have, but that's just me
12/2/2007 3:04:36 AM
for one thing, it's not "Christe" it's "Cristo" or "Christo"the meaning of the name, literally, is "the anointed" or "the messiah"http://www.donquijote.org/culture/babynames/search/name.asp?id=3902of course we're familiar with spanish people named "Jesus" ( literally, "God will help" )http://www.donquijote.org/culture/babynames/search/name.asp?id=4406we have this in English too. you might know some of these people. they're called "Chris" "Christophe" or "Christopher"
12/2/2007 3:27:27 AM
With the teddy bear incident, the cartoon incident some months ago, and other recent incidents in mind, can we get past this quaint notion that Christians and Muslims today are direct analogues? I mean, something is happening in a number of Islamic sects around the world that is simply not happening in Christian denominations around the world.
12/2/2007 3:50:04 AM
(1) you avoided addressing my point on language. the use of the names of central figures to each religion has long been appropriated for common, popularly use on both sides.. but thats fine. my point has been sufficiently made.(2) your diversion, however, is misleading: Christians and Muslims are nearly analogous in many different aspects. Often uncannily so. the largest and most important difference between them is not religious, but social/political -- Christians tend to live in secular democratic states DESPITE (or perhaps DUE to) a thousand years of oppression and opposition to secular democracy by the organized Christian Church. ... whereas Muslims currently tend to be concentrated in theocratic states where the religion IS the state and therefore Sharia Law is paramount. since there is no central "islamic authority" each state's religious leaders interprets Sharia Law as they see fit.its nice for us living in a secular constitutional democracy where the law is based on social contract and majority consensus, but unfortunate for the Muslims whose every aspect of their lives are dictated by the learned opinions or subjective whims of bearded old guys in robes.but the fact is, we enjoy our secular freedoms due entirely to the people who RESISTED the longstanding Christian tradition of running governments based on the opinions or whims of some old guy in a mitered hat and robes.[Edited on December 2, 2007 at 4:23 AM. Reason : ]
12/2/2007 4:22:07 AM
^ Well, can you give me some analogies in which everyday Christians went wild in the streets over a teddy bear's name or a cartoon depiction of their god? Can you give me an analogy in which average Christians lashed and jailed a woman for being raped?And don't give me any shit from centuries ago or whatever. Be straightforward and give me something analogous from the last, say, two years.
12/2/2007 4:35:37 AM
^ the opposition to the civil rights movement in the south a few decades ago[Edited on December 2, 2007 at 8:28 AM. Reason : s]
12/2/2007 8:27:51 AM
^^ heres an analogy:Robert Mapplethorpe's Piss ChristMartin Scorcese's Last Temptation of Christif Christians had their way and the US was a Bible-Based theocracy, both of those men would have been crucified upside down on a tree.^ good one there. The lynchings and murders of southern Blacks and their white supporters is a direct example of good Christian going wild in the streets for insults against their god.[Edited on December 2, 2007 at 11:53 AM. Reason : ]
12/2/2007 11:46:52 AM
http://www.jamesnachtwey.com/jn/slides/g22.html
12/2/2007 11:57:29 AM
12/2/2007 12:03:59 PM
You guys are forgetting it took over a thousand years for Christianity to water down from a harmful, deadly, barbaric, and oppressive cult. What's going on with Islam currently is less a problem with how it fundamentally deviates from Christianity and more a problem Christianity's already been through (and took a hell of a long time and brave opposition to fix).
12/2/2007 12:17:16 PM
^ while that may be true, i think the problems that Islam are going through now, which Christianity has more or less gone past, are exacerbated and are more dangerous now because of how interconnected the world is. When Christianity was going through these "growing pains", i guess is what we're implying they are, it was impossible to communicate ideas throughout the world in less than many, many months. While I don't want to downplay the significance of events like the Crusades and the Spanish Inquisition, can you imagine what those events would be like if they occurred now? The world would be fucked.That's kind of what i'm saying is that the world is changing faster than their religion will allow them to. Fortunately for Christianity (and for its opponents and the rest of the world), i guess most of its major changes happened before the current communication and technological boom. The rest world now, though, is in the unfortunately position that Islam is hitting this phase in its religious evolution at a time when it is not possible for them to inflict severe damage and harm to "unbelievers" due to communications and technological breakthroughs.
12/2/2007 12:26:45 PM
12/2/2007 12:26:58 PM
12/2/2007 12:29:14 PM
12/2/2007 12:39:43 PM
12/2/2007 2:57:58 PM
a cursory google search will show that mapplethorpe didn't do this "piss christ" thingbut, you know, like you really need to get shit right to argue about nonsense like this[Edited on December 2, 2007 at 3:13 PM. Reason : .]
12/2/2007 3:12:56 PM
holy crap. i usually don't venture into the soap box, but i read the first four posts by McDanger and immediately remembered why i usually don't venture into the soap box. you people
12/2/2007 3:14:11 PM
^^ goddamit. Robert Mapplethorpe died in 1989 and his photography often involved bodily functions, causing controversy with the NEAAndrew Serrano's Piss Christ debuted in 1989 and caused controversy with the NEA....yeah, i should get the basic names correct.
12/2/2007 3:25:57 PM
do they just sit around waiting for reasons to get angry?
12/2/2007 3:32:31 PM
i know i do.
12/2/2007 4:32:53 PM
I think the comparisons between Christian and Muslim history being made here are not terribly well-founded.Islam grew explosively fast, far faster than Christianity, and still managed to maintain a large degree of tolerance, respect for science and learning, and other progressive ideas. There's no particular reason that, left to its own devices, it would not still be largely the same today.Christianity, however, once it had grown to be dominant in Europe, took a very long time to manage the same -- and, arguably, only managed it by becoming less and less influential. All this was true even when it was left to its own devices, as in German, England, and France, which, while never really threatened by a different religion, still managed to fight incredibly bloody religious wars amongst one another.Ultimately, though, Islam wasn't left to its own devices, and successful meddling on the part of Christians created the clusterfuck we see today.It has nothing to do with "growing pains." It has nothing to do with the actual tenets of either religion, these covering roughly the same interpretive range from "kill everybody" to "love everybody." It's just that white people managed to take over a lot of the brown people and not the other way around.If you don't believe me, look at the Balkans, the one place where brown people managed to take over white people for an extended period of time. Think of what a clusterfuck that place is. Not all that dissimilar from the Muslim world, is it?
12/2/2007 6:19:52 PM
^ This is pretty dead-on actually.
12/2/2007 7:14:20 PM
Amazingly, Republicans are not universally ignorant to basic historical processes.
12/2/2007 8:33:33 PM
12/2/2007 8:45:51 PM
12/2/2007 8:51:32 PM
While I basically agree with you, Grumpy, you're perhaps giving early Islam too much credit. As one would expect, it didn't take Muslims long to start fighting with each other. Christians weren't much worse in that respect. Furthermore, like Christianity, Islam spread partly by conquest, and that's always bloody.While I think European imperialism has shaped the modern Middle East, blaming all the problems of Muslim countries on Christians is a bit absurd.[Edited on December 2, 2007 at 9:14 PM. Reason : d]
12/2/2007 9:13:36 PM
another thing is that the western world succeeded in killing off most of the moderate and highly respected/educated muslim scholars throughout the last 150-200 years, leaving a huge theological vacuum and erasing vast amounts of institutional memory and tradition.its almost like we (the british primarily and the cia later) rebooted the muslim faith back to before their enlightenment
12/2/2007 9:22:30 PM
well, we need to format c:\
12/2/2007 9:27:21 PM
haha use dban[Edited on December 2, 2007 at 9:29 PM. Reason : d]
12/2/2007 9:28:33 PM
12/2/2007 9:43:09 PM
12/2/2007 10:17:01 PM
12/2/2007 10:21:23 PM
12/2/2007 10:32:35 PM
^ According to this thing here, it was a combination of the Mongols, some Western expansion, as well as some infighting between some different sects of Islam.http://www.acs.ucalgary.ca/applied_history/tutor/islam/learning/conclusion.html
12/2/2007 10:36:47 PM
12/2/2007 10:38:00 PM
12/3/2007 1:27:30 AM
12/3/2007 1:32:29 AM
^ You lose, that's not from the last 2 years.
12/3/2007 1:35:55 AM
The Balkans and Russia shit is still happening today. Seromba, I guess not.
12/3/2007 1:41:27 AM