Dynamite Shikoku
Congratulations, you really deserve it!
Another productive day for these geniuses.
Cultural decline seems to coincide 1) Mongol Invasion 2) Colonialism, 3) US-backed coups. Countries need to start learning to stop interfering with other countries' internal affairs.
This happened in my city today too (Amman, Jordan). Crowds were marching towards the French embassy and demanding to end cooperation with governments that allow insults to Islam to be published. There were clashes with police and arrests.
Slightly ironic considering our king and queen marched in Paris earlier this week.
source (Arabic)
Soon around 1700s, man by the name of Abdul Wahhab was born in the present day Arabia. He dispensed a strict, austere version of Islam that was a complete political antithetis to the Turkish Caliphate's more grandoise, liberal Islam.
For some reason i thought hijabs wouldnt be common in Jordan since the Queen doesnt seem to like wearing one.
too many ugly bitches in that crowd
For some reason i thought hijabs wouldnt be common in Jordan since the Queen doesnt seem to like wearing one.
Except, you know, no one did.Just turn the other cheek. You get used to people nonchalantly calling for your non-existence.
You never actually provided a delineation as to why something cannot be considered both. If it's size, what's the threshold to become a religion. If it's "legitimacy" who decided what's legitimate.Well, get used to the idea that Islam isn't a cult.
How is it an anti-religion crusade to be critical of all manner of religion when criticism is warranted?Well don't let me stop you on your anti-religion crusade. You're no more better an arguer* because you seemingly shit on everyone. It just means you're not discriminatory about it.
edit: on reflection, maybe it does make you slightly more ethical.
Except, you know, no one did.
You never actually provided a delineation as to why something cannot be considered both. If it's size, what's the threshold to become a religion. If it's "legitimacy" who decided what's legitimate.
My understanding (I could be wrong) of a cult is that it is an exclusivist membership to a group that has secret, or hidden religious rituals and practices. By being more inclusive and public, it no longer remains a cult. Islam does not fit this description, but Scientology does.Except, you know, no one did.
You never actually provided a delineation as to why something cannot be considered both. If it's size, what's the threshold to become a religion. If it's "legitimacy" who decided what's legitimate.
too many ugly bitches in that crowd
too many ugly bitches in that crowd
Decided to do a little research based on one of the names in the article.
Jamaat-e-Islami, the group who organised the protest and presumably created those charming banners, are a social conservative, and Islamist political party. Its objective is to make Pakistan an Islamic state, governed by Sharia law. It was founded in India but moved (?) to Pakistan after Indian independence.
In Pakistan, The party came under severe government repression in 1948, 1953, and 1963. In other words, presumably because the leadership in Pakistan were not in favour of their aims, but later during the early years of the regime of General Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq, they served as the "regime's ideological and political arm". So suddenly they found a political leader open to supporting them.
Who is General Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq? He was the sixth President of Pakistan from 1978 until his death in 1988. Aided by the United States and Saudi Arabia, he systematically coordinated the Afghan mujahideen against the Soviet occupation throughout the 1980s. He rose to power following a coup and the removal of Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto from office.
The United States, notably the Reagan's Administration, was an ardent supporter of Zia's military regime and a close ally of Pakistan's conservative-leaning ruling military establishment. The Reagan administration declared Zia's regime as the "front line" ally of the United States in the fight against the Communism.
Many of Pakistan's political scientists and historians widely suspected that the riots and coup against Zulfikar Ali Bhutto was orchestrated with help of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and the United States Government because United States growing fear of Bhutto's socialist policies which were seen as sympathetic towards the Soviet Union.
Former U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark widely suspected the United States' involvement in bringing down the Bhutto's government, and publicly accused the United States' Government after attending the trial.
So now we have a bit of an insight as to how a fringe, far-right fundamentalist political party was able to gain a foothold in Pakistan.
Quite a web, eh? Politics, intrigue, double dealing, coups, CIA, Reagan.
But of course it's only about religion. A lot of posters here have it figured out.
This happened in my city today too (Amman, Jordan). Crowds were marching towards the French embassy and demanding to end cooperation with governments that allow insults to Islam to be published. There were clashes with police and arrests.
Slightly ironic considering our king and queen marched in Paris earlier this week.
source (Arabic)
The cultural and ethnic diversity is an interesting delineation. Although under such would something like Anglicanism be pervasive enough to be excluded from being a cult.
On exclusivity, would the openness of Jediism then make it no longer a cult. Or is it then excluded because of its relative size.
My understanding (I could be wrong) of a cult is that it is an exclusivist membership to a group that has secret, or hidden religious rituals and practices. By being more inclusive and public, it no longer remains a cult. Islam does not fit this description, but Scientology does.
too many ugly bitches in that crowd
too many ugly bitches in that crowd
I wonder if they protested when a schoolful of people got killed in their own country? Probably not....
I... Oh dear, I'll never understand religion.
Cultural decline seems to coincide 1) Mongol Invasion 2) Colonialism, 3) US-backed coups. Countries need to start learning to stop interfering with other countries' internal affairs.
Just another day in Pakistan I guess..
It's amazing to see how some cultures forever seem stuck in medieval mentalities.
Maybe their next gen will see some light.
It Hebdo backed down after the violence then they are essentially announcing that terrorism is the way to get what you want.As much as i understand the motives of the Charlie Hebdo cartoonsits, they really are just fanning the flames
Sure youre entitled to freedom of speech, but at the expense of your own life? Your families life? Your colleagues lives?
Seems pretty silly. They groups they are pissing off arent the kind to just rally arnd protest
They can, will and have instigated brutal attacks
while not capital punishment (up to 3 years though) in germany blasphemy is a crime as well.
Uhh?too many ugly bitches in that crowd
Indeed, Pakistan (like other countries) is victim of shady governance that utterly disrupts their society.What the hell, this isn't Pakistani culture.
Religion fascinates me and absolutely terrifies me.
Depends on where they live. People in the larger cities receive far more, where there are major universities. People in the tribal and regions bordering afghanistan receive comparatively very little. Youth are on average more educated than older generations.
The overall literacy rate is pretty low due to the rampant poverty. The people with the money are the ones who can afford the most education, which is why the system there is pretty fucked. They need to invest in education asap.
Indeed, not all of Pakistan is there. My reaction is mostly based on the other fact, the fact their political and religious leaders condemned the cartoons.Don't be so ignorant. Not all of Pakistan is there.
FFS, stop generalizing a bunch of guys to a whole nation and calling them "morons". For the last time, the whole fucking country is not like this. It fucking sucks when I see people using news like this to judge the whole country.
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-30848689
Images from article in Swedish: http://www.dn.se/nyheter/varlden/valdsam-protest-mot-charlie-hebdo/
I was referring to these protesters specifically. That's usually what "they" is used for.Who says there wasn't any protests? Are international media outlets interested in covering that?
Fucking idiots. I can't imagine what kind of life you must have when your number one concern is that someone in another country drew a picture of an old dead man.
A well placed JDAM would sort that shit out in short order.
I feel like there's a joke I'm missing here.too many ugly bitches in that crowd
...A well placed JDAM would sort that shit out in short order.
A well placed JDAM would sort that shit out in short order.
200 people protest and it gets a 10 page thread with 36,000 views on neogaf. smh