ska invita
back on the other side
I made this point in the past and was shouted down - I take some small comfort in that the Stop THe War coalition stand by the same position.
Here is their statement
Arguably Bush is following a "Chrisitian fundamentalist" foreign policy. However this would be overstating the case in much the same way as blaming Islam.
Religion is at most a source of strength and inspiration to follow through on your beliefs but it is not religion that is causing extremism, it is politics.
Here's a test:
-remove religion from the equation (imagine it didnt exist) you would still have radicalised extemists motivated politically to act, as terrorists and in other ways.
-remove the political situation from the equation (imagine hundreds of years of colonial aggression/history didnt exist) you would not have radicalised extemists motivated to act.
The fact that mullahs may inspire actions is because politics is discussed in the mosque.
Religion may add heat to the flames, but it doesn't start the fire - I am of the opinion that "Islam" and "Muslim" are words that should be rarely if ever heard in relation to the actions of "extremist militants" (a more accurate term).
Here is their statement
STWC said:We reject the view that terrorism is rooted in Muslim fanaticism. It is no more real than saying that George Bush is following a "Chrisitian fundamentalist" foreign policy.
Blair's talk of an "evil ideology" will create a backlash against Muslims. Attacks on Muslims have already increased by 600%. It must be said loud and clear: neither Muslims nor Islam are the problem. Terrorism is rooted in real problems here on Earth."
Arguably Bush is following a "Chrisitian fundamentalist" foreign policy. However this would be overstating the case in much the same way as blaming Islam.
Religion is at most a source of strength and inspiration to follow through on your beliefs but it is not religion that is causing extremism, it is politics.
Here's a test:
-remove religion from the equation (imagine it didnt exist) you would still have radicalised extemists motivated politically to act, as terrorists and in other ways.
-remove the political situation from the equation (imagine hundreds of years of colonial aggression/history didnt exist) you would not have radicalised extemists motivated to act.
The fact that mullahs may inspire actions is because politics is discussed in the mosque.
Religion may add heat to the flames, but it doesn't start the fire - I am of the opinion that "Islam" and "Muslim" are words that should be rarely if ever heard in relation to the actions of "extremist militants" (a more accurate term).