Skip navigation
Sidebar -

Advanced search options →

Welcome

Welcome to CEMB forum.
Please login or register. Did you miss your activation email?

Donations

Help keep the Forum going!
Click on Kitty to donate:

Kitty is lost

Recent Posts


Qur'anic studies today
by zeca
Today at 06:07 PM

Dutch elections
by zeca
Today at 05:04 PM

Random Islamic History Po...
by zeca
Today at 04:14 PM

Lights on the way
by akay
Today at 06:36 AM

اضواء على الطريق ....... ...
by akay
November 13, 2024, 05:18 PM

AMRIKAAA Land of Free .....
November 07, 2024, 09:56 AM

Do humans have needed kno...
November 04, 2024, 03:51 AM

The origins of Judaism
by zeca
November 02, 2024, 12:56 PM

New Britain
October 30, 2024, 08:34 PM

Marcion and the introduct...
by zeca
October 22, 2024, 09:05 PM

Tariq Ramadan Accused of ...
September 11, 2024, 01:37 PM

France Muslims were in d...
September 05, 2024, 03:21 PM

Theme Changer

 Topic: The heart of the EDL army is online, not on the streets

 (Read 54694 times)
  • Previous page 1 ... 16 17 1819 20 Next page « Previous thread | Next thread »
  • Re: The heart of the EDL army is online, not on the streets
     Reply #510 - November 16, 2011, 05:31 PM


    What do you think it means?


    "we can smell traitors and country haters"


    God is Love.
    Love is Blind. Stevie Wonder is blind. Therefore, Stevie Wonder is God.

  • Re: The heart of the EDL army is online, not on the streets
     Reply #511 - November 16, 2011, 06:49 PM

    Depends on the individual. But getting down to basics, a Muslim is someone who accepts the shahadah, the failures thereafter are sins but still Muslims. But we wouldn't consider that practising would we?

    Is praying Jummah enough? Unlikely.

    I would say, if someone does the 5 pillars, then we couldn't call them non-practising, therefore they would be practising.

    Before Jesus was, I AM.
  • Re: The heart of the EDL army is online, not on the streets
     Reply #512 - November 16, 2011, 07:15 PM


    Parsing the precise qualification to be called 'practising' isn't vital to the point. Lets use the word 'believing' instead. A believing Muslim believes there is an essential, unchangeable, 'real' Islam contained in Quran, hadith and sunnah. This allows for an encompassing of different levels and extents of practise and outward observance. You could be a non observant, or semi-practising Muslim and believe this - in fact you 'have' to - to be a Muslim in this sense you have to believe the Quran is the literal word of Allah, amongst other things.

    There are variations in practise and different technical emphases, but that remains.

    This only means it is Islam's sense of itself, and what it teaches - to accept that is to accept its own terms of reference, which we do not have to, of course. To accept Islam's sense of itself would mean, amongst other things, to accept direct, total deterministic causation between 'real' Islam as it asserts itself, and individuals who are nominally 'Muslim'.





    "we can smell traitors and country haters"


    God is Love.
    Love is Blind. Stevie Wonder is blind. Therefore, Stevie Wonder is God.

  • Re: The heart of the EDL army is online, not on the streets
     Reply #513 - November 16, 2011, 08:56 PM

    Muslims believe there is an 'essential Islam' that's unchangeable?

    Isn't that just saying Muslims believe Islam exists?

    As opposed to Christianity and Judaism that have no essential principles to their religion?

    Islam only exists via the conduit of people. There are Christians trying to find evidence of the Flood, Jews wanting to build a Third Temple to prepare for their Messiah and Muslims trying to make a pan-Islamic Caliphate.

    If a Messianic Jew, Rapture ready Christian and Islamists were asked if there is a
    REAL version of their religion. They'll all give the answer that their books are 100% literally correct.

    The Bible has the disadvantage of including in it's footnotes examples of tampering.

    Islam has in it's narrative excuses to explain discrepancies. Abrogation, copies differing in dialects not meaning and admitting in it's text that some things are not supposed to be understood.

    So to tackle Islamic beliefs, different methods need to be used from the Bible.

    Namely, the lack of evidence.

    For me personally, it was the concept of eternal hell. I never once felt ok with it. Just put it aside and thought God is just and good and merciful.

    Even tried to see if the Arabic for "forever" could also mean a long time. But it didn't.

    Also the MASSIVE focus of God on sending 25 major prophets to within a few hundred square miles. The pointlessness of a LAST messenger. The problem of creating everything, including Satan. And finally, the whole idea that a perfect deity gets angry at humans who think differently.

    It's like computer rage, except that we don't torture a hard drive. Well I do, but that's me.

    The most common answer for hell is that "only God decides this!" To which I respond: "Then why do Dawah if you don't claim to know the consequences?"

    Ah well...it's emotional for most. Religious people grow up expecting to reunite with family after death. It's hard to let go, I personally for 20 years KNEW that to be true.

    For people who have already lost loved ones, it's worse because the essence of their belief is hope. Most hope that it's true. If they truly believed, they would be praying and doing dawah, and nothing else.

    Before Jesus was, I AM.
  • Re: The heart of the EDL army is online, not on the streets
     Reply #514 - November 17, 2011, 06:52 AM

    This first:

    Quote from: post human
    Jew is someone who follows Judaism, as laid out in the Old Testament, their Holy Book.


    Wrong, there is ample reason to suppose that "The Jews" or The Children of Israel existed before judaism. Although the Jewish sense of identity has always been intimately bound up with their religion it is not WHOLLY PREDICATED on it as is the identity "Muslim". We can therefore talk about "secular Jews" or "non-practicing Jews" without encountering a contradiction in terms as with "secular Muslim". This would explain why the Jews have been so much more successful in creating a secular state than Muslims.

    Quote
    :thnkyu


    For what?

    The mosque: the most epic display of collective douchbaggery, arrogance and delusion
  • Re: The heart of the EDL army is online, not on the streets
     Reply #515 - November 17, 2011, 06:55 AM

    I often think I have no semblance of a life. Then I see DH's posts, and I feel slightly better.
  • Re: The heart of the EDL army is online, not on the streets
     Reply #516 - November 17, 2011, 07:00 AM

    Quote from: post human
    Trapped!


    You have been for some time.

    Quote
    Now tell me, what is REAL ISLAM? Real Islam, singular term...does not allow for variance. You've now admitted there is variance, so you have a HUGE problem now.


    You have a poor grasp of logic don't you? Imagine if Allah had ordained "eat a large orange every day". As a particular size had not been specified this would lead to a variety of oranges of various sizes being eaten by Muslims. IE there would be VARIATIONS in the PRACTICE of the command. However, the Muslims would still be LITERALLY interpreting the command. Get it? I am well aware that there are certain differences in the major schools of Islamic law on certain matters. However, this is not a result of "literal" as distinct from "non-literal" interpretations.

    Quote
    Comparing Wikipedia to an image gallery, gets you a second giant douche award. First you said Salah is in the Qur'an


    I didn't "fail". I said I would find the relevant passages if you insisted. You didn't insist.

    Quote
    then after you failed, you said it's in Hadeeth. You are lazy, and cite nothing.


    Do you want the relevant hadith?

    The mosque: the most epic display of collective douchbaggery, arrogance and delusion
  • Re: The heart of the EDL army is online, not on the streets
     Reply #517 - November 17, 2011, 07:01 AM

    I often think I have no semblance of a life. Then I see DH's posts, and I feel slightly better.


    Ah Mr Ad Homoman (geddit)?

    The mosque: the most epic display of collective douchbaggery, arrogance and delusion
  • Re: The heart of the EDL army is online, not on the streets
     Reply #518 - November 17, 2011, 07:45 AM

    Yes, you think homosexuality is demeaning. Wouldn't expect any less from you.

    Also, you still don't seem to know what an ad hominem actually is. This continues to amuse me.

    Also, get a life. Jheezus Christ I can't believe I have to tell someone that.
  • Re: The heart of the EDL army is online, not on the streets
     Reply #519 - November 17, 2011, 08:07 AM

    Don't you get it, homosexuality is cool now that the Islamists oppose it, it shows one way that "we" are better than they are. Unless we oppose it, then it's for totally Jesus Christ reasons and immoral but still not as bad as those other people. 

    So once again I'm left with the classic Irish man's dilemma, do I eat the potato or do I let it ferment so I can drink it later?
    My political philosophy below
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bwGat4i8pJI&feature=g-vrec
    Just kidding, here are some true heros
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dBTgvK6LQqA
  • Re: The heart of the EDL army is online, not on the streets
     Reply #520 - November 17, 2011, 08:26 AM

    This first:

    Wrong, there is ample reason to suppose that "The Jews" or The Children of Israel existed before judaism. Although the Jewish sense of identity has always been intimately bound up with their religion it is not WHOLLY PREDICATED on it as is the identity "Muslim". We can therefore talk about "secular Jews" or "non-practicing Jews" without encountering a contradiction in terms as with "secular Muslim". This would explain why the Jews have been so much more successful in creating a secular state than Muslims.

    For what?


    Read Shlomo Sand's the Invention of the Jewish People.

    What you said, is a reality of the last 100-200 years, before which, being a Jew was something you convert into and out of. Racialist thinking turned them into a race, along with Zionists.

    They've tried many ways to prove Jewish races, namely genetics, unfortunately, the majority of people with the 'Jew' gene are Arabs. Also a bit hard to use it for political reasons considerig the BENCHMARK of Jewishness is a comparison with Palestinian Arabs.

    Quote
    This would explain why the Jews have been so much more successful in creating a secular state than Muslims.


    Turkey is way more secular than Israel.

    Find me a news story like this in Turkey.

    http://www.haaretz.com/news/national/top-rabbis-move-to-forbid-renting-homes-to-arabs-say-racism-originated-in-the-torah-1.329327

    Why are practising/Orthodox Jews exempt from military service for religious reasons?

    Why in a "secular country" does a party exist that advcates "It demands civil marriage (although it has opposed a bill to enact it in March 2004), the operation of public transportation, businesses, theaters, etc. on Shabbat, removal of laws concerning selling and importing non-kosher food, drafting of ultra-orthodox Jews into the IDF, and a halt to payments to yeshiva students."

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shinui#Ideology

    If I converted to Judaism, over a few years, why does it get me national rights in a country I have nothing to do with?

    Secular, go learn what it means before talking shit.

    Before Jesus was, I AM.
  • Re: The heart of the EDL army is online, not on the streets
     Reply #521 - November 17, 2011, 08:37 AM

    Quote
    You have a poor grasp of logic don't you? Imagine if Allah had ordained "eat a large orange every day". As a particular size had not been specified this would lead to a variety of oranges of various sizes being eaten by Muslims. IE there would be VARIATIONS in the PRACTICE of the command. However, the Muslims would still be LITERALLY interpreting the command. Get it? I am well aware that there are certain differences in the major schools of Islamic law on certain matters. However, this is not a result of "literal" as distinct from "non-literal" interpretations.


    I didn't ask you about literalism, re-read the question.

    And answer the following:

    1 -  Which is real Islam? Stoning or flogging.

    2 - Fourth request for your evidence on your claims about Turkey.

    3 - According to you, killing other Muslims is anti-Islamic, given the list of Muslim victims of 9/11, either acknowledge it was anti-Islamic, or admit your interpretation was literal YET wrong.

    4 - Confirm whether you think suicide bombs against Muslim, in Karachi, or Mosul etc. is anti-Islamic given the above.

    5 - The methodology of Salah is not found in hadith in FULL, you will find PARTS of it, but to know it fully, both the Qur'an and Hadeeth are not enough. The Qur'an mentions the number of times, and prostration etc. The hadeeth cite some other rules, but neither is enough to complete it.  

    Before Jesus was, I AM.
  • Re: The heart of the EDL army is online, not on the streets
     Reply #522 - November 17, 2011, 11:50 AM

    Quote from: Prince Spinoza
    Yes, you think homosexuality is demeaning.


    I was paying you a compliment via a pun.

    Quote
    Also, you still don't seem to know what an ad hominem actually is. This continues to amuse me.


    I don't carry a dictionary definition around in my head but my use of it to describe your above post adequately falls within the bounds of correct useage. I am sure there is also a fancy latin term for your feining of  sardonic amusement to mask your inability to meaningfully contribute to this discussion.

    Quote
    Also, get a life. Jheezus Christ I can't believe I have to tell someone that.


    Going by our comparative attendance and activity at this forum since we respectively joined I think that is a piece of advice you should have long ago directed at your good self!

    The mosque: the most epic display of collective douchbaggery, arrogance and delusion
  • Re: The heart of the EDL army is online, not on the streets
     Reply #523 - November 17, 2011, 12:04 PM

    Quote
    Going by our comparative attendance and activity that this forum since we respectively joined I think that is a piece of advice you should have long ago directed at your good self!


    Get a life!  dance

    Before Jesus was, I AM.
  • Re: The heart of the EDL army is online, not on the streets
     Reply #524 - November 17, 2011, 01:31 PM

    Ah Mr Ad Homoman (geddit)?



    DH - Smite 1 for the use of Homophobic abuse


    "we can smell traitors and country haters"


    God is Love.
    Love is Blind. Stevie Wonder is blind. Therefore, Stevie Wonder is God.

  • Re: The heart of the EDL army is online, not on the streets
     Reply #525 - November 17, 2011, 01:35 PM

    Quote from: posthuman
    I didn't ask you about literalism, reread the question


    The main bone of contention is regarding billy's distinction between "literalist" and "non-literalist Islam". YOU brought up the matter of "variations in prayer", along with other red herrings, I am sure with the intention of burying  the issue under a pile of irrelevence ie:

    "Methodology of salah, as performed by Muslims today, is not in the Qur'an. That is why there are variations."

    You made the assertion with, I assumed, the implication that it had some relevence to whether "non-literalist" Islam is a meaningful term. Thus my statement that a "variation" in the practice of a qur'anic command is NOT the same as a "non-literalist" practice of one. As you broached the matter of "variations in prayer" I merely asked you to prove it. I did not deny it. I also took issue with your statement "practice of salah is not in the Qur'an". I offered to demonstrate to you that you are wrong, an offer which you ignored. Furthermore, even if it was true the question must be "so what"? The "vast majority of Muslims" also accept the hadith as a valid source of guidance to the implementation of Qur'anic verses. I pointed out that as YOU had already made reference to the hadith as a source of guidance then the standard manner of Muslim prayer is clearly laid out therein and must therefore - contrary to what the wikepedia page you linked asserted - be regarded as the primary source of:



    Whenever debating Islam with Muslims I steer clear of the hadith because of the common Muslim habit of questioning their authenticity when presented with something unedifying. I have no doubt that if I had been the first to bring hadith into the discussion you would have resorted to a similar tactic. However, YOU first invoked them to support your assertion that modern warfare could be deemed "unIslamic" because it involves people getting burned - supposedly countermanding a "prophetic" order not to punish disbelievers with fire. As YOU have established the hadith as a valid reference to support arguments then the alleged "fact" that the standard mode of Islamic prayer is not in the Qur'an is irrelevent. It's clearly laid out in the hadith. End of story.


    Quote
    Answer the following


    Fully understanding, of course, that it is YOU, rather than ME, who is the one who does not answer questions and resorts to diversionary tactics.

    Quote
    What is real Islam? Stoning or flogging.


    Both would at first sight be LITERALLY "submitting to the will of Allah" -  in the latter case to obey the "prophet" and emulate him as the "best example". So, at first sight, either/both would be "real Islam". However, a "non-literal" interpretation of "pitilessly flog-stone" as "mercilessly plaster the adulterers with a hundred kisses" would certainly NOT be "Real Islam". Remember, my contention was with the notion that one "variety" of "Islam" equally warrants the term as another, which you are obviously keen to propagate.

    Quote
    Fourth request for your evidence on your claims about Turkey.


    Remind me of the request.

    Quote
    According to you, killing other Muslims is anti-Islamic,


    I don't remember stating this but according to the Qur'an whosoever kills a BELIEVER with deliberate intent TO KILL A BELIEVER will indeed burn in hell (4:93). However, "believer" does not include a munafiq ("hypocrite") who Allah certainly likes to see killed at the hands of believers.

    Quote
    Given the list of Muslim victims of 9/11, either acknowledge it was anti-Islamic, or admit your interpretation was literal YET wrong.


    Ditto my previous. Furthermore, any "Muslim" who wantonly and knowingly flouts the commands of Allah is in fact a de facto apostate kafir in the eyes of the all-knowing psycho  and is certainly no believer subject to the protection of surah 4:93. The 9-11 plane-missile flyers had clearly satisfied themselves that no TRUE BELIEVERS were in the WTC. Perhaps they were wrong and there was ONE true believer in the WTC. However, as they went out to kill the enemies of Allah in large numbers they could not be accused of killing a true believer deliberately.

    Quote
    confirm whether you think suicide bombs against Muslim, in Karachi, or Mosul etc. is anti-Islamic given the above.


    Depends on whether any of those killed fitted the Koranic definition of "True Believer" and whether the bombers set out with the intent of killing THEM. Can you demonstrate this situation? Furthermore, a true believer would be quite happy to be martyred in a military operation to slaughter Kafiroon and Munafiqun.



    Quote
    5 - The methodology of Salah is not found in hadith in FULL, you will find PARTS of it, but to know it fully, both the Qur'an and Hadeeth are not enough. The Qur'an mentions the number of times, and prostration etc. The hadeeth cite some other rules, but neither is enough to complete it. 


    Which bits of current prayer practice are omitted from:

    1) The Qur'an

    2) The hadith
    ?

    The mosque: the most epic display of collective douchbaggery, arrogance and delusion
  • Re: The heart of the EDL army is online, not on the streets
     Reply #526 - November 17, 2011, 01:38 PM

    Get a life!  dance


    Ah...Douché.

    The mosque: the most epic display of collective douchbaggery, arrogance and delusion
  • Re: The heart of the EDL army is online, not on the streets
     Reply #527 - November 17, 2011, 01:49 PM


    DH - Smite 1 for the use of Homophobic abuse




    I am surprised that you of all people, billy, would resort to such a threadbare justification to push me towards getting banned again.

    The mosque: the most epic display of collective douchbaggery, arrogance and delusion
  • Re: The heart of the EDL army is online, not on the streets
     Reply #528 - November 17, 2011, 01:52 PM


    No decisions made with regard to warnings and smites are arbitrary or at the discretion of an individual moderator.


    "we can smell traitors and country haters"


    God is Love.
    Love is Blind. Stevie Wonder is blind. Therefore, Stevie Wonder is God.

  • Re: The heart of the EDL army is online, not on the streets
     Reply #529 - November 17, 2011, 02:02 PM

    Quote from: billy
    No decisions made with regard to warnings and smites are arbitrary or at the discretion of an individual moderator.


    No not arbitrary. Selective and inconsistent would be a better description.

     

    The mosque: the most epic display of collective douchbaggery, arrogance and delusion
  • Re: The heart of the EDL army is online, not on the streets
     Reply #530 - November 17, 2011, 02:04 PM

    Quote
    The main bone of contention is regarding billy's distinction between "literalist" and "non-literalist Islam". YOU brought up the matter of "variations in prayer", along with other red herrings, I am sure with the intention of burying  the issue under a pile of irrelevence ie:


    The main issue of contention is in fact, REAL ISLAM.

    YOU brought up the issue of literalism. Not me. By saying REAL ISLAM is whatever Muslims literally believe the things they read. The problem is there are multiple schools of thought, which makes it complicated by default - you don't want this complication that EXISTS.

    In other words - denial.

    Quote
    You made the assertion with, I assumed, the implication that it had some relevence to whether "non-literalist" Islam is a meaningful term.


    I have never once said anything about "non-literalist" Islam, nor implied it, nor assumed it. Precisely because it's meaningless, the last few pages are showing you why it's meaningless, not whether it's right or wrong. It's like asking whether Zeus has a green feather in his cap, I'm trying to explain to you why it's irrelevant, not saying he doesn't or does.

    Quote
    Thus my statement that a "variation" in the practice of a qur'anic command is NOT the same as a "non-literalist" practice of one.


    A meaningless statement considering I never argued that people interpret Salah to mean cheese grating.

    Quote
    As you broached the matter of "variations in prayer" I merely asked you to prove it. I did not deny it.


    Shaf'ee school raises hands between rukuh and sajdah, Hanafi school doesn't. That's one variation. If you have no idea what I'm talking about, then once again, pick a subject you have SOME knowledge about to avoid repeat fails.

    Quote
    I also took issue with your statement "practice of salah is not in the Qur'an".


    Perfect strawman! Correction: "methodology of salah is not in the Qur'an."

    Quote
    I offered to demonstrate to you that you are wrong, an offer which you ignored.


    I didn't ignore it, you proved yourself wrong by admitting the hadith are necessary.

    Quote
    Furthermore, even if it was true the question must be "so what"?


    So literalism only matters when there's multiple ways to look at things.

    Quote
    The "vast majority of Muslims" also accept the hadith as a valid source of guidance to the implementation of Qur'anic verses.


    Then I don't see any reason why you are continously avoiding answering basic questions above, I mean literalism is the easiest and simplest way to read anything.

    Quote
    I pointed out that as YOU had already made reference to the hadith as a source of guidance then the standard manner of Muslim prayer is clearly laid out therein and must therefore - contrary to what the wikepedia page you linked asserted - be regarded as the primary source of.


    Read this page, on ONE variation.

    http://www.mathabah.org/20101129313/hanafi-prayer-salah/raising-hands-before-and-after-ruku.html

    Read ALL OF IT. After you have done so, come back and LOL at this:

    Quote
    I pointed out that as YOU had already made reference to the hadith as a source of guidance then the standard manner of Muslim prayer is clearly laid out therein and must therefore - contrary to what the wikepedia page you linked asserted - be regarded as the primary source of.


    So I don't have to.




    Before Jesus was, I AM.
  • Re: The heart of the EDL army is online, not on the streets
     Reply #531 - November 17, 2011, 02:16 PM

    Quote
    Whenever debating Islam with Muslims I steer clear of the hadith because of the common Muslim habit of questioning their authenticity when presented with something unedifying. I have no doubt that if I had been the first to bring hadith into the discussion you would have resorted to a similar tactic. However, YOU first invoked them to support your assertion that modern warfare could be deemed "unIslamic" because it involves people getting burned - supposedly countermanding a "prophetic" order not to punish disbelievers with fire. As YOU have established the hadith as a valid reference to support arguments then the alleged "fact" that the standard mode of Islamic prayer is not in the Qur'an is irrelevent. It's clearly laid out in the hadith. End of story.


    No, my usage of hadith was not to posit the impermissibility of modern warfare, or any position. The usage was to show that people can do it, and people may choose the opposite, like YOU did. Which means, literalism, IS meaningless.

    You showed it was meaningless, I just helped you out.

    Quote
    Both would at first sight be LITERALLY "submitting to the will of Allah" -  in the latter case to obey the "prophet" and emulate him as the "best example". So, at first sight, either/both would be "real Islam". However, a "non-literal" interpretation of "pitilessly flog-stone" as "mercilessly plaster the adulterers with a hundred kisses" would certainly NOT be "Real Islam". Remember, my contention was with the notion that one "variety" of "Islam" equally warrants the term as another, which you are obviously keen to propagate.


    Thank you for proving your ignorance. The verse on lashes existed afterwards, after one person got stoned, they used the Torah for a penalty because there was nothing 'revealed' yet for the punishment. So if there's a "real" Islam, it would in fact be lashes, after being witnessed by 4 people simultaneously.

    If you understand the underlying psychology of this, it is obvious that they believed stoning was God's law, but they didn't like it, so they changed it to something less, using harsh words, to appease the pro-stoning camp, but establishing almost impossible conditions for the punishment to be carried out. And add to that, ANOTHER condition, that if one accuses wrongly, then that accuser is subject to lashes. That's the reality of politics, and the reality of human beings. Both of which you completely ignore.


    Before Jesus was, I AM.
  • Re: The heart of the EDL army is online, not on the streets
     Reply #532 - November 17, 2011, 02:22 PM

    Personally I think adultery is awesome. If you do it well, everyones happy. Afro

    I wonder if in those days if I got 100 lashes for adultery would I still have to sleep on the couch when I get home? Now that's harsh. Huh?

    Before Jesus was, I AM.
  • Re: The heart of the EDL army is online, not on the streets
     Reply #533 - November 17, 2011, 02:23 PM


    Quote from: DH on Today at 07:01:56
    Quote
    Ah Mr Ad Homoman (geddit)?


    DH - Smite 1 for the use of Homophobic abuse




    but the use of fucktard and cunt is all right ?



    posthuman on: November 16, 2011, 10:17:08 »
    Quote
    STFU. (incidentally they were complaining about political rhetoric, not Islamic Laws, fucktard)

    http://www.councilofexmuslims.com/index.php?topic=18422.msg533628#msg533628

    posthuman on: November 16, 2011, 09:12:48
    Quote
    But you don't, for obvious reasons, anything is better than a Muslim after all, isn't it? Cunt.

    http://www.councilofexmuslims.com/index.php?topic=18511.msg533621#msg533621

    posthuman on: November 16, 2011, 10:44:52
    Quote
    DH doesn't think of jobs, because to dehumanize a people, they can't be made to look like everyone else. That is why I call him a cunt, on a regular basis.


    http://www.councilofexmuslims.com/index.php?topic=18422.msg533699#msg533699



    Like a compass needle that points north, a man?s accusing finger always finds a woman. Always.

    Khaled Hosseini - A thousand splendid suns.
  • Re: The heart of the EDL army is online, not on the streets
     Reply #534 - November 17, 2011, 02:29 PM

    No not arbitrary. Selective and inconsistent would be a better description.


    Homophobic, racist or misogynistic insult or baiting is not acceptable on this forum.

    You've just received a smite. You are free to continue posting.



    "we can smell traitors and country haters"


    God is Love.
    Love is Blind. Stevie Wonder is blind. Therefore, Stevie Wonder is God.

  • Re: The heart of the EDL army is online, not on the streets
     Reply #535 - November 17, 2011, 02:32 PM

    I'm on DH side here in his usage of both ad homoman (there's a difference between gay jokes and homophobia, just like we make fun of Islam, but are not Islamophobic) and calling me a douche is fine with me.

    Whatever I think is right...banned or not makes no difference to me.

    Before Jesus was, I AM.
  • Re: The heart of the EDL army is online, not on the streets
     Reply #536 - November 17, 2011, 02:45 PM

    Quote
    I don't remember stating this but according to the Qur'an whosoever kills a BELIEVER with deliberate intent TO KILL A BELIEVER will indeed burn in hell (4:93). However, "believer" does not include a munafiq ("hypocrite") who Allah certainly likes to see killed at the hands of believers.


    A munafiq was someone who pretended to be Muslim, to get the latest intelligence for example, spies were pretty common on both sides, as well as other sides in other areas doing other things.

    I also find it rather disgusting that you would wriggle out of this by attempting to even imply the Muslims on 9/11 don't count as Muslims. That earns you a 'go fuck yourself' from me.

    Quote
    Ditto my previous. Furthermore, any "Muslim" who wantonly and knowingly flouts the commands of Allah is in fact a de facto apostate kafir in the eyes of the all-knowing psycho  and is certainly no believer subject to the protection of surah 4:93. The 9-11 plane-missile flyers had clearly satisfied themselves that no TRUE BELIEVERS were in the WTC. Perhaps they were wrong and there was ONE true believer in the WTC. However, as they went out to kill the enemies of Allah in large numbers they could not be accused of killing a true believer deliberately.


    The buildings and deaths were due mostly to fire. Fire is not allowed as a weapon. This was a flouting of the Prophet's command, therefore a flouting of the Qur'an's orders to obey Muhammad, therefore, the 9/11 attackers were apostates.

    See? Anyone can do anything, it depends on the person, get it now? You WANT to be a bigot, 9/11 terrorists want to kill, suicide bombers are angry/depressed or both. You are a bigot. I am a winner, I always fucking win! Crystal Ball

    Quote
    Depends on whether any of those killed fitted the Koranic definition of "True Believer" and whether the bombers set out with the intent of killing THEM. Can you demonstrate this situation? Furthermore, a true believer would be quite happy to be martyred in a military operation to slaughter Kafiroon and Munafiqun.


    True believer = one who obeys the Prophet's command not to kill with fire, or women and children unless they are a direct threat, like female soldiers for example.

    Thus, it can EASILY be argued that the 9/11 attackers were apostates. Or, if you're a bigot, the 9/11 victims are apostates.

    But for me, the 9/11 attackers are terrorists no matter their beliefs, and everyone in the buildings a victim, no matter their beliefs.

    Before Jesus was, I AM.
  • Re: The heart of the EDL army is online, not on the streets
     Reply #537 - November 17, 2011, 02:55 PM



    I also find it rather disgusting that you would wriggle out of this by attempting to even imply the Muslims on 9/11 don't count as Muslims. That earns you a 'go fuck yourself' from me.




    I think his implication was that the hijackers had convinced themselves that any muslim present in the twin towers were not "real" muslims (their definition of real muslim, not everyone elses) and were therefore legitimate targets, as a "real" muslim wouldn't be in a western imperialist financial building (or something along those lines).

    I've been driven mad trying to prove my sanity
  • Re: The heart of the EDL army is online, not on the streets
     Reply #538 - November 17, 2011, 03:00 PM

    Which is why you have to be dishonest to be a terrorist, as well as dishonest to agree with them. Like DH is doing.

    Before Jesus was, I AM.
  • Re: The heart of the EDL army is online, not on the streets
     Reply #539 - November 17, 2011, 03:38 PM

    The main issue of contention is in fact, REAL ISLAM.

    YOU brought up the issue of literalism. Not me.


    No No No I did NOT. References to "literalist" Islam (carrying it with the implication of a "non-literalist" variety) were made by a number of posters on this thread before I stuck my oar in on page 6 in response to billy's post:

    Quote
    he non Muslims take their cue from these ideas propounded by literalist Islam and those Muslims who believe and prosletyse these ideas.


    Quote
    By saying REAL ISLAM is whatever Muslims literally believe the things they read. The problem is there are multiple schools of thought, which makes it complicated by default - you don't want this complication that EXISTS.


    Let us suppose this "complication" does exist. What would you hope an average, say non-Muslim briton, would conclude about ISLAM and MUSLIMS by this "complication", this supposed existence of "Multiple schools of thought"?

    Quote
    I have never once said anything about "non-literalist" Islam, nor implied it, nor assumed it. Precisely because it's meaningless,


    So you would agree with me that billy and others here would be better not using the "meaningless" term "literalist Islam" with its equally meaningless implicit corollary "non-literalist" Islam?

    Quote
    A meaningless statement considering I never argued that people interpret Salah to mean cheese grating.


    But supposing a "Muslim" did this at prayer times: instead of this:.

    Should the former "version "of "Islam" equally warrant the pre-fix "TRUE" as the latter, IF the "Muslim" making "cheese salat" claimed, even genuinely believed, this was how Allah wanted things done?

    Quote
    Shaf'ee school raises hands between rukuh and sajdah, Hanafi school doesn't. That's one variation. If you have no idea what I'm talking about, then once again, pick a subject you have SOME knowledge about to avoid repeat fails.


    In other words "variations" among Islamic law schools, or Muslims in general, in understanding of the requirement of prayer are inconsequential and carry with them no significant ramifications. I put it to you that the same can be said of "variations" with regard to sharia and jihad. There may be slight differences among Madhabs but the average non-Muslim who believed "ISLAM teaches the violent conquest, mass murder and subjugation of non-Muslims" should not conclude from the alleged existence of vairiations to change this simple view. Do you agree?

    Quote
    I didn't ignore it, you proved yourself wrong by admitting the hadith are necessary.


    I didn't admit they are necessary. I said it is easier for me to provide the relevent hadith than trawl through the Koran for relevent verses. Do YOU think the hadith are necessary as your use of the word "admit" seems to apply?

    Quote
    So literalism only matters when there's multiple ways to look at things.


    If we accept your above (to say the least) questionable assertion that flogging has superceded stoning  according to the Islamic texts then there is only ONE plausible way of "submitting to the will of Allah" when it comes to the treatment of adulterers ie what it says in the Qur'an. Agreed?

    The mosque: the most epic display of collective douchbaggery, arrogance and delusion
  • Previous page 1 ... 16 17 1819 20 Next page « Previous thread | Next thread »