Are you part of a religion that caused that genocide?
the religion didn't cause the genocide (just to make sure i'm clear) but I am the same religion as the people who commited the genocide.
now?
what about those who weren't brainwashed and knew what was going on but didn't fight back?
Taliban receives support because the West meddles in Mid-East affairs. What kind of knowledge does he spread in regards to that?
How does he spread knowledge to youth shacked up in the hills of Pakistan who have no access to TV, radio, and the Internet? He's not...*gasps* telepathic, is he?
I was merely saying that we as a people are a part of a plethora of groups and we can't be accountable for every decision that some in our groups make.
because that is your argument...that you are responsible for whatever the %15 in your group do.
So, you'd have no problem with the civilian casualties and the suffering that would come with it to your own innocent people?
Depends on a lot of things, mainly the intentions of the other side and their way of approach.
I think it depends on the situation. I don't think it applies in the situations you described at all. I mean, Voltaire said every man is guilty of all the good he did not do...but then who's not guilty?
if you don't attack the root of the problem, you can't solve it.
Also, you said civilian casualties are inevitable in war, and in most situations, yes. Does that make it easier for you to face the reality of killing your own people?
the religion didn't cause the genocide (just to make sure i'm clear) but I am the same religion as the people who commited the genocide.
now?
And I agree with that assesment. Hitler brainwashed the people of Germany by preying on their weaknesses. Making them believe that Jews were responsible for the problems of the society and therefore making them believe that eradicating them wouldn't be a bad thing.
While many of those people were not Nazi's themselves, they did support the Nazi's whether it was directly or indirectly by not doing them. They believed what they were told, the person telling these things based it off his own interpretations of his religion, and they didn't question it. While Hitler was a political leader and not a religious one, the same rules apply.
While many of those people were not Nazi's themselves, they did support the Nazi's whether it was directly or indirectly by not doing them. They believed what they were told, the person telling these things based it off his own interpretations of his religion, and they didn't question it. While Hitler was a political leader and not a religious one, the same rules apply.
I have a Muslim friend who pro-actively spreads change through spreading of knowledge, awareness, and an insider perspective, that if applied on a larger scale could easily bring down the support of the Taliban and would therefore combat suicide bombings.
Clearly, I don't expect someone to act like Rambo and rip the bombs of someone's chest....but it starts with KNOWLEDGE, and the awareness he spreads prevents would-be suicide bombers in the first place by giving them a different perspective.
Surely you aren't suggesting that religion doesn't bond people together on a stronger level than nationality.
because that is your argument...that you are responsible for whatever the %15 in your group do.
then hell fucking yeah I'd fight against those people that claimed to be representing the same thing I was but weren't. I'm talking on the level of serious extremists like Al Quaeda/the Taliban.
if you are Muslim are you feel that the extremists are detrimental to your religion (as MANY Western Muslims rightly do), the right thing to do would be to join forces with the other side that is attempting to quash the extremists, no?
By not being a part of the solution you are part of the problem. There's no sitting on the fence in this scenario.
not every time, but a large chunk of the time. And even when they aren't the root cause, they are a large problem in trying to solve that root cause. They don't help the situation, they hinder it even further.
Also, you said civilian casualties are inevitable in war, and in most situations, yes. Does that make it easier for you to face the reality of killing your own people?