The graph you posted doesn't say anything about religion.
The West in general is the least religious and also the most accepting?
If you want one just based on religion then
http://www.neogaf.com/forum/showpost.php?p=206955096&postcount=5344
The graph you posted doesn't say anything about religion.
That Walmart example is the worst example I've seen in defence of bigotry.
Hating people is bad, of course, but hating bad ideas can be a good thing. That's how we make progress.
He also pledged allegiance to Hezbollah, which are kind of contradictory statements. It's also clear that he didn't have any particular contact with any terrorist groups, nor do the people close to him describe him as particularly religious. It sounds more like an excuse for violence than a proximate cause. I am not sure given all the information we have why people would treat that call with particular credence.
It strikes me that this guy was filled with anger and hate, and felt disconnected from others, much like a hundred other mass shooters in America. The difference is that those mass shooters were white and nominally Christian, and this guy was Afghani and nominally Muslim.
I don't see any bigotry in this thread. You just appear to be personally offended because people are criticizing your religion (based on what I've observed in your posts).
The religious connection is clear as day, and I fear that if good liberals say nothing about it, you only push people towards far right demagogues who are then perceived as "being honest" because they're the only ones even willing to talk about a very real problem in the religion.
Of course I do. From the very start of this thread, people like you have tried to make sure that the focus of the discussion was singularly on the need for gun control, and to convince us that the shooter's religion and the homophobia inherent to Islam was somehow irrelevant to the debate that needs to be had in the wake of this attack. So now it comes out that the shooter was possibly gay, and so to say that Islam and its condemnation of homosexuality had plenty to do with his motivations is one possible and perfectly reasonable conclusion. But you and others won't have that.Say what?
I hope you honestly don't believe this.
This is a point I didn't even fully digest before reading your post. If people perceive a problem that isn't being discussed they'll be drawn to the only people who are even talking about it.
Of course I do. From the very start of this thread, people like you have tried to make sure that the focus of the discussion was singularly on the need for gun control, and to convince us that the shooter's religion and the homophobia inherent to Islam was somehow irrelevant to the debate that needs to be had in the wake of this attack. So now it comes out that the shooter was possibly gay, and so to say that Islam and its condemnation of homosexuality had plenty to do with his motivations is one possible and perfectly reasonable conclusion. But you and others won't have that.
Yeah it is probably all the Christians and Jews in Egypt making up for the 95% negativity towards homosexuals.
The West in general is the least religious and also the most accepting?
If you want one just based on religion then
http://www.neogaf.com/forum/showpost.php?p=206955096&postcount=5344
I'm sure most Muslims don't want all gay people to be killed, but trying to say Islam (and religion in general) doesn't have a problem with homosexuality is just not true.
Oh I'm not offended in the way that you imply. And what does it matter even if I were?
I see people dead. And I see fedora tips.
Again, that doesn't say anything to support your original statement:
I'm not dismissing or disagreeing with your sentiment by the way, I just think that if you are going to make such statements then you need to be using data that is more conclusive to back it up.
As somebody born in the UK whose family hails from Jamaica, I can tell you that prejudice and non acceptance of LGBT individuals is as much of a cultural and social issue as it is a religious one.
i.e. Just because somebody who doesn't accept LGBT individuals is highly religious it doesn't necessarily mean that their beliefs are 100% due to their religion. Can religion be an influence? Of course. Can it be a big influence? Of course. Will it be the ONLY influence? That, I'd find difficult to believe.
Of course religion isn't the only reason people are homophobic but trying to say that its not a major and most likely the most important reason is just not using logic.
You have the basis of 3 major religions in the bible and quaran straight up saying gay people should be killed. You have several countries around the world having laws allowing the execution of gay people using their religion as a justification and you have even more laws allowing jailing of gay people based on religion.
Going away from those extreme examples you have plenty of people from ordinary people to lawmakers straight up saying they believe in "traditional marriage" based on thie interpretation of the bible and that's why gay marriage is wrong.
You have people all around the world saying its because of their religions, citing their religious books. And then you have people saying no they are lying its not because religion, those straight up quotes from religious books are just out of context, those people straight up saying religion is their reason are just all lying. And I really just don't understand why.
Pardon me for being sick of people sweeping religion's homophobic, violence-inciting influence under the rug every fucking time another religious nut murders people. How far do these faith addled psychos have to go before people like you will acknowledge the obvious: that religion often plays a significant and even central role in violent expressions of intolerance?How utterly disgusting to find the anti-religious gaf lot positively backslapping themselves over this. Who on gaf is saying it had nothing at all to do with religion like all of you seem to be implying?
So you're right. What do you want? a medal?
"Phobia" covers irrational aversion, not just fear, so the term homophobia is apt.BTW, homophobia is really a terrible word for the phenomenon we're discussing because it implies fear when the actual emotion is hate. I use it like everyone else does because it is understood as the label used for anti-gay behavior but it is an unfortunate term. It seems reminiscent of the "gay panic defense" as if attackers are so afraid they react violently.
You're embarrassing yourself. I'm targeting filthy, hate-steeped, mendacious religious dogma. Religious people who are in touch with their own human decency, in spite of homophobic religious teachings, are my allies.That's exactly what this sounds like:
No generic anti-religious bigotry at all. Sounds like self-congratulatory backslapping to me.
Of course religion isn't the only reason people are homophobic but trying to say that its not a major and most likely the most important reason is just not using logic.
You have the basis of 3 major religions in the bible and quaran straight up saying gay people should be killed. You have several countries around the world having laws allowing the execution of gay people using their religion as a justification and you have even more laws allowing jailing of gay people based on religion.
Going away from those extreme examples you have plenty of people from ordinary people to lawmakers straight up saying they believe in "traditional marriage" based on thie interpretation of the bible and that's why gay marriage is wrong.
You have people all around the world saying its because of their religions, citing their religious books. And then you have people saying no they are lying its not because religion, those straight up quotes from religious books are just out of context, those people straight up saying religion is their reason are just all lying. And I really just don't understand why.
I'm not tipping my fedora or fishing for a medal or any other stupid meme. But it bothers me when people say "Oh well, religious texts contain homophobia, but what are ya gonna do? Just let it go!" The discussion is multi-faceted, and this is the part of it that has meaning to me.
I'm sure most Muslims don't want all gay people to be killed, but trying to say Islam (and religion in general) doesn't have a problem with homosexuality is just not true.
If their wasn't religion the hate will still be around. I am Catholic but I don't have that hatred. I am not the only one. Religion is just stories about morals and lessons. Might not be real but I believe.
If their wasn't religion the hate will still be around. I am Catholic but I don't have that hatred. I am not the only one. Religion is just stories about morals and lessons. Might not be real but I believe.
Also, without religion, hate wouldn't spread so readily. Religion primes people to discriminate by neutralizing their defenses against bad ideas. Religion would have you accept unverified and even debunked claims. Any system that promotes faith must at the same time discourage reason, intellectually honest curiosity, and the willingness to reevaluate beliefs based on evidence.Yes there would still be hate, but it would be called hate, not religion, and wouldn't have the cover that organised religion provides. Not all religious people are hateful, but they do provide cover for those that are, unintentionally maybe, but it exists all the same.
The spread of homophobia throughout the world is almost exclusively attributable to Christianity and Islam. Take off the blinders and learn your history.
Lady Gaga gave a beautiful speech today at a Vigil and I'm just crying in response to it. What if this happened when I went out with my boyfriend to the local gay club? What if it happened to my friends? None of these people deserved any of this. None of those people that lost their lives in a place where they could 100% be nothing other than themselves. None of their friends and family should be going through this. None of the LGBT community deserves to live in fear because of shit like this. I'm still so mad and upset.
I'm not going to do your research for you, having seen months if not years of posts where you display a totally incurious attitude and a knee-jerk hostility toward the slightest implication that mainstream religion may have a negative influence in society.Be assured that it's on my to do list. What books do you suggest?
What do you think are the roots of homophobia? I mean before religion. On a human level.
It's one hell of a delivery mechanism for fear, ignorance, and hatred. Scapegoat wrongly implies that religion is innocent.Religion is the scapegoat used to cope with the fact that human beings are terrible. We all know that taking away religion tomorrow would just result in new and probably more creative reasons for killing and oppression.
The problem with saying "it's all down to religion" is that you are ignoring other factors which in many cases would be easier to influence. It will always be difficult to persuade someone to change their religion. Socioeconomics, education and an individuals general life experiences have big parts to play in all of this.
You can find people who are athiest but will be highly intolerant of LGBT individuals. Why? That person might be an ignorant, uneducated and untraveled individual who has happened to grow up in a lower socioeconomic area and has never left. Their views come from the belief that "anything different is bad".
At the same time you can have highly religious people who are highly tolerant of LGBT individuals. Why? Whilst these people might have once have had shared beliefs on this topic with the athiest I described above this might have changed through traveling, education and general life experiences. Potentially rubbing shoulders with people in the LGBT community and realising that they are no less a human being than themselves.
We will get closer to a solution to this and many other problems in societies around the world if people took a step back from blaming religion and looked at all of the other factors in play. It's easy to blame religion, even somewhat ignorant in itself. If we are ever going to solve this problem then societies need to start removing barriers, promoting inclusion, providing more support and education where necessary, and most importantly promoting critical thinking.
A lot of societies issues and conflicts will be solved if we successfully manage to remove ignorance, not religion.
Literally Google "homophobia in religion" and start there. This subject is hardly a new invention.
Dude that is literally what I did. And even wiki is more nuanced than you. You were all religion is exclusively to blame. So I wanted to know what you read.
But like I thought, you're no help.
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/report-orlando-nightclub-shooter-visited-222620444.html
A former classmate of Mateen's told The Palm Beach Post he believed Mateen was gay, and that Mateen once asked him out romantically.
Chris Callen, who performs at Pulse under the name Kristina McLaughlin, told The Canadian Press and CNN's Anderson Cooper that Mateen had been going to the bar one or twice a month "for at least three years."
An Orlando man told MSNBC's Chris Hayes on Monday that he had seen photos of Mateen on the gay dating apps Grindr, Adam4Adam, and Jack'd over the last several years. At least two of the man's friends had been contacted by Mateen on the apps.
"He was very creepy in his messages, and I blocked him immediately," the man said.
Kevin West, another regular at Pulse nightclub, told the Los Angeles Times that he chatted with Mateen on and off for a year on the gay dating app Jack’d, but had never met him in person. Incredibly, West said he met him for the first time as he was dropping a friend off at Pulse on Saturday night.
The classmate, who did not use his name, said he, Mateen, and other classmates would sometimes go to gay bars after classes at the Indian River Community College police academy.
He told the Post he thought Mateen was gay, but not publicly. He added that Mateen was "awkward" and other members of their friend group felt sorry for him.
"He just wanted to fit in and no one liked him," he told the Post. "He was always socially awkward."
He was so insecure and ashamed of his sexuality that he goes off on a rampage and takes his anger, frustration and self loathing out on innocent people. The media can talk about gun control, terrorism and religion all they want, but this is truly a case of a man that hated himself so deeply that he could not stand seeing others live an open, honest and happy life within the LGBT community. This attack was loosely inspired by ISIS, but it was also a targeted hate crime orchestrated by a closeted homosexual that knew he would never become the man his religion glorifies. He wasn't a fucking terrorist, not even close. He did not kill those people because of an ideology. He was a low life security guard, shitty father and abusive husband that lived in a dump ass town in Florida who decided to commit a heinous act for reasons that we will never truly know. He was a confused, mentally ill and unstable coward who could not cope with the petty life problems we all face as humans.
The white mother who was on the local stations looking for her son, who knew her son's boyfriend got shot, do we know if her son is okay?
Just saw Anderson Cooper reading the names of the victims. It was hard to watch - especially so with a guy as professional as he. He always keeps his composure, and he nearly lost it at times. He was in a place with bullets and rocks flying around, went in to remove a kid that had been struck in the head - and continued on unfazed. And this almost did him in. Damn.
He didn't make it.![]()
I don't think him or any people here said that.
I said Christianity and Islam are almost exclusively responsible for the spread of homophobia. How can you say I lack nuance when you can't even recognize it?Dude that is literally what I did. And even wiki is more nuanced than you. You were all religion is exclusively to blame. So I wanted to know what you read.
But like I thought, you're no help.
My vitriol was aimed at a run of posts above what you quoted aka others and I now regret that you may have been caught in the crossfire. And for that am I sorry. Truly I am.
As to the multifaceted discussion, you're perfectly right about. Besada said it best. There are no easy answers.
As to religion, every now and then I look up things, as anyone does I suppose. And I've come to know how much about the religion in question I did not know. And how much patience is required to really know how positions were moulded, and schools of thoughts were created. The very personalities that lie at the crux of some of the deepest divisions. Alas, I forget, and then go back, and relearn other things, and I am still no where near adept at this stuff.
Ask away and I will try to engage. But more often these days I tend to question people's knowledge, rather than answer, because people, generally speaking, know far less than they think they know. And if you know less than I, that is a poor place to be.
"Phobia" covers irrational aversion, not just fear, so the term homophobia is apt.
I think this spat has reached a suitable point of unresolution, so there's really no point in feeding it further. 50 people are dead because of a zealot with ready access to deadly weapons. That should be focus here.
I said Christianity and Islam are almost exclusively responsible for the spread of homophobia. How can you say I lack nuance when you can't even recognize it?
I think this spat has reached a suitable point of unresolution, so there's really no point in feeding it further. 50 people are dead because of a zealot with ready access to deadly weapons. That should be focus here.
That nicely summarizes my attitude toward people I disagree with. Cheers.Agreed.
As a parting word, I will say that Muslim Gaf aren't happy with the ulema, or the wider Muslim world; that much was evident in Ramadan thread, even before this. And I think with the Arab spring, we saw that neither is the wider Muslim world.
Just as in the ramadan thread, when I saw divisions, and wanted unity, I was reminded of this verse by Rumi.
Out beyond the ideas of right and wrong
there is a field
I'll meet you there.
peace out.
Can't say you're wrong. Although I'm not sure I could ever entirely overlook religion's promotion of faith over reason, and received wisdom or revealed truth over evidence based investigation. Science's way of knowing is simply better than religion's, if you're looking for an accurate view of the world.Forms of Christianity and Islam, absolutely. I think everyone agrees that perverse ideologies need to be dismantled for the sake of the damage that they cause. I think most people recognize, at least implicitly, how important education or social learning is in shaping people and further compounding our insanity in pretty much any of the worst cases. But a culture war has to be waged on the right hill, we have to be willing to distinguish good religion from bad religion, otherwise we risk alienating a lot of people that don't need to be alienated because their views are already harmonious with a sane functioning society.
Religion is the scapegoat used to cope with the fact that human beings are terrible. We all know that taking away religion tomorrow would just result in new and probably more creative reasons for killing and oppression.
Forms of Christianity and Islam, absolutely. I think everyone agrees that perverse ideologies need to be dismantled for the sake of the damage that they cause. I think most people recognize, at least implicitly, how important education or social learning is in shaping people and further compounding our insanity in pretty much any of the worst cases. But a culture war has to be waged on the right hill, we have to be willing to distinguish good religion from bad religion, otherwise we risk alienating a lot of people that don't need to be alienated because their views are already (or could be made to be) harmonious with a sane functioning society.
Can't say you're wrong. Although I'm not sure I could ever entirely overlook religion's promotion of faith over reason, and received wisdom or revealed truth over evidence based investigation. Science's way of knowing is simply better than religion's, if you're looking for an accurate view of the world.
I'm sure most Muslims don't want all gay people to be killed, but trying to say Islam (and religion in general) doesn't have a problem with homosexuality is just not true.
So essentially, he was gay? Someone on Reddit wrote it really nicely how this could be a self-loathing crime.