Are you serious?

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crono1224

Question: If you're not tolerant of people who don't share your belief about being tolerant of people who don't share your beliefs, are you actually being tolerant of people who don't share your beliefs?
Aka is it intolerant to be intolerant of the intolerants, or is it wrong to be intolerant of bigots/racist.
 
It seems like a lot of people here are still making the assumption that everyone not thrilled with this happening is a racist/bigot. While some may be, and some probably are, at least statistically speaking, I just don't understand how exactly you all know what is in these peoples hearts and minds.
 
S

Soliloquy

Is it intolerant to be intolerant of the intolerant?
That's a much better way of putting it, yeah.

It's actually an interesting question, when you think about it. If one of your primary beliefs is in the idea of tolerance, but you act inflammatory towards people who are bigoted towards those who don't share their primary beliefs... are you really any different, tolerance-wise?

I guess this all comes down to asking: what is tolerance, anyway? Does tolerance mean always agreeing with everyone? Or keeping quiet when something's going on when you don't agree with? Or can you vocally oppose ideas without being intolerant of them?
 
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crono1224

I think it is understanding where they come from, I think how you are raised can have a huge affect on how you view the world. You grow up in a town of 1000 only white, with racist relatives, you may not be able to easily accept other races/religions. If you hear for say 5 10 15 years about how bad something is its hard to be dissuaded from that belief, especially from people who maybe seen as outsiders.

That leads me to tolerance, simply calling everyone bigots and what not does not help any more than what they are doing, sometimes it really isn't their fault, it takes a lot to break bad habits/beliefs.
 
Question: If you're not tolerant of people who don't share your belief about being tolerant of people who don't share your beliefs, are you actually being tolerant of people who don't share your beliefs?
I got a similar question for you.

If you go back in time and kill your grandfather, how can you exist to go back in time to kill your grandfather? Hmm? HMMMM?!

EDIT: This topic's ad gives me singlemuslim.com
 
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Chazwozel

I think it is understanding where they come from, I think how you are raised can have a huge affect on how you view the world. You grow up in a town of 1000 only white, with racist relatives, you may not be able to easily accept other races/religions. If you hear for say 5 10 15 years about how bad something is its hard to be dissuaded from that belief, especially from people who maybe seen as outsiders.

That leads me to tolerance, simply calling everyone bigots and what not does not help any more than what they are doing, sometimes it really isn't their fault, it takes a lot to break bad habits/beliefs.

New York City has a huge diverse population. I'm sure most of the protesters, like myself, have no issues with Islam or Muslims. It's the principle of the thing. The terrorists were Muslim extremists. It's a slap in the face to build a Mosque-type place where in the past it was commercial real-estate. It's almost as if you're honoring the fact that they were Muslim. There are already a bunch of mosques in lower Manhattan. I don't see a reason for why this needs to be built, other than stir up some shit and bad memories with the local populace.


There are a shit ton of churches all over Manhattan, vastly outnumbering the number of any other denomination's worship center. One could argue that this is adding more diversity. Why not add more diversity around Central Park East or North? Why build right were it's still raw for most people? I can't argue against the churches because many of them have been there since the foundation of the city itself.
 
Is it intolerant to be intolerant of the intolerant?
That's a much better way of putting it, yeah.

It's actually an interesting question, when you think about it. If one of your primary beliefs is in the idea of tolerance, but you act inflammatory towards people who are bigoted towards those who don't share their primary beliefs... are you really any different, tolerance-wise?

I guess this all comes down to asking: what is tolerance, anyway? Does tolerance mean always agreeing with everyone? Or keeping quiet when something's going on when you don't agree with? Or can you vocally oppose ideas without being intolerant of them?[/QUOTE]
Be tolerant of people, not of actions. I'd even say be tolerant of speech/ideas in terms of letting them be voiced, but also strongly voice your own opinion.

Ideas should be open and heard, and consequently shouted down by others as well. Free speech is my limit of tolerance. The rest is simple evaluation: is this threatening to your self/group/person/whatever, and why? "Tolerance" itself I see as a misnomer in any topics beyond free speech. The rest is covered by laws (my freedom to move my fist ends where your nose begins, etc).
 
I'm glad to see some folks have already dealt with the freedom of religion portion of our program.

A couple more things:

First, there are not "a lot" of downtown Mosques, at least not major ones. Q&A with Sharif el-Gamal about Park 51, NYC - City of Brass

To wit:

6. Why was the site's proximity to Ground Zero considered a "selling point" [3] ? What other locations in lower Manhattan, if any, were considered that could serve the same purpose?

We are not at Ground Zero. In fact we're as close to City Hall as we are to Ground Zero. Lower Manhattan is pretty small. You can't see Ground Zero from our current building and on completion of our planned building some years from now, there won't be any views of the Ground Zero memorial from the building. To honor those who were killed on September 11th, we have planned for a public memorial within our future facility as well as reflection space open to all.

Let me tell you a little bit about the history of this project. We'd been looking for at least seven years to find a space to accommodate the growing population of Muslims in lower Manhattan. We found this site in January of 2006 and getting to the finish line and acquiring the real estate was proof that persistence pays off. We had also been eager to contribute to the revitalization of lower Manhattan, in part because this is our area of business and also because as New Yorkers we wanted to give back to our city and help make it a better place to live.

Prior to purchasing our current facility at 45 Park Place, there were two mosques in lower Manhattan - although Park51 is not affiliated with either of these mosques. One was Masjid Farah, which could fit a maximum of approximately 65 people, and had to hold three or four separate prayer services on Fridays just to fit the crowds.

The second mosque, at Warren St., accommodated about 1,500 worshippers during Friday prayers - people had been praying on sidewalks because they had no room. They lost their space around May 2009. We made the move to buy 45 Park Place in July 2009 in part to offset the loss of this space. Currently, our space at 45 Park Place, accommodates around 450 people every Friday. We are also easily accessible from many different parts of Manhattan, Brooklyn, and Staten Island, which was an important consideration.
At the same time, we thought, why not give back to lower Manhattan and fulfill a pressing need? We looked for a building that could grow into a community center. In Lower Manhattan, the biggest community center is at Bowery and Houston and it's in a basement. There are new residential towers going up in lower Manhattan as we speak. Four Seasons is planning the tallest residential tower in the city a block away from our site. If you think of all of the community centers in Manhattan, they are further north. Residents need services, investment in the neighborhood, activities and opportunities. Community Board 1, which represents the residents of lower Manhattan, acknowledged the needs we were fulfilling when they gave us their clear support on two separate occasions.
Second, the zoning issue tends to be misrepresented, whether on purpose or through ignorance. NYC has three zoning classifications - Residential, Commercial, and Manufacturing. These classifications are based on bulk proportions of the buildings in the district, as determined by the applicable zoning board. Specifically, you can have residential buildings and community facilities in 6/7 types of Commercial zones. The old Burlington Coat Factory building, where they're building the center, is one of those (C6-4, looks like).

Furthermore, surrounding commercial districts, not even counting the special Battery Park City district, include residential high-rises, St. Paul's Chapel, and the NYC High School of Economics and Finance, to name a few.
 
and in 10 years, restaurant owners in the area who sell pork will be the target of criticism and violence because they don't respect the muslims.

As it's happening right now in Lyon, Bruxelles, Paris, Amsterdam (? i know the anti islam movement is pretty damn strong in the NL).

I may sound intolerant and I probably am becoming it more and more but Islam IS becoming a problem in major european cities. I don't care about muslims way of life but they do care about mine and want to change it.

I know, i know. Most muslims are open and tolerant dudes... Their leaders most certainly are not.
 
and i will gladly apologize for that. This is how it is depicted here in Belgium tho.

I should have kept to what i have seen by myself.
 

Dave

Staff member
Muslims died in the World Trade Center as well (besides the terrorrists) there were probably a few Christians, Athiests, Buddhists, Wiccans and Canadians.

But people will always love to kill each other over what kind of hat to wear.
Yup. In fact....

Samad Afridi (not on the victims list)
Ashraf Ahmad (not on the victims list)
Shabbir Ahmed (I'm correcting the misspelling. Ahmed's child Thanbir and Nicholas, the son of 9/11 victim Michelle Lanza, are in the movie "Telling Nicholas")
Umar Ahmad (not on the victims list)
Azam Ahsan (not on the victims list)
Ahmed Ali (not on the victims list)
Tariq Amanullah (He worked on the website of the Islamic Circle of North America)
Touri Bolourchi (A retired nurse who emigrated to the US from Iran)
Salauddin Ahmad Chaudhury (not on the victims list)
Abul K. Chowdhury (Cantor Fitzgerald analyst)
Mohammad S. Chowdhury (Windows on the World, father of one of the first 9/11 orphans, born two days after the attack)
Jamal Legesse Desantis
Ramzi Attallah Douani (His name is spelled Doany on one list, Doani on the other list)
SaleemUllah Farooqi (not on either victims list)
Syed Fatha (54 years old; Pitney Bowes)
Osman Gani (not on the victims list)
Mohammad Hamdani (There is only one Hamdani on the list, Mohammad Salman Hamdani, who was one of the heroes of that day)
Salman Hamdani (see above)
Aisha Harris (21 years old; General Telecom)
Shakila Hoque (not on the victims list)
Nabid Hossain (not on the victims list)
Shahzad Hussain (not on the victims list)
Talat Hussain (not on the victims list)
Mohammad Shah Jahan (not on the victims list)
Yasmeen Jamal (not on the victims list)
Mohammed Jawara (MAS security)
Arslan Khan Khakwani (not on the victims list)
Asim Khan (not on the victims list)
Ataullah Khan (not on the victims list)
Ayub Khan (not on the victims list)
Qasim Ali Khan (not on the victims list)
Sarah Khan (32 years old; the list at about.com said she worked for Cantor Fitzgerald, but she worked for Forte Food Services)
Taimour Khan (29 years old; Carr Futures)
Yasmeen Khan (not on the victims list)
Zahida Khan (not on the victims list)
Badruddin Lakhani (not on the victims list)
Omar Malick (not on the victims list)
Nurul Huq Miah (35 years old)
Mubarak Mohammad (not on the victims list)
Boyie Mohammed (Carr Futures)
Raza Mujtaba (not on the victims list)
Omar Namoos (not on the victims list)
Mujeb Qazi (not on the victims list)
Tarranum Rahim (not on the victims list)
Ehtesham U. Raja (28 years old)
Amenia Rasool (33 years old)
Naveed Rehman (not on the victims list)
Yusuf Saad (not on the victims list)
Rahma Salie & unborn child (28 years old; American Airlines #11; wife of Michael Theodoridis; 7 months pregnant)
Shoman Samad (not on the victims list)
Asad Samir (not on the victims list)
Khalid Shahid (25 years old; Cantor Fitzgerald; engaged to be married in November)
Mohammed Shajahan (44 years old; Marsh & McLennan)
Naseema Simjee (Franklin Resources Inc.'s Fiduciary Trust)
Jamil Swaati (not on the victims list)
Sanober Syed (not on the victims list)
Robert Elias Talhami (40 years old; Cantor Fitzgerald)
Michael Theodoridis (32 years old; American Airlines #11; husband of Rahma Salie)
W. Wahid (not on the victims list)
So aside from zoning I see nothing wrong.
 
I once got "Date Muslim Singles" ad. It showed a girl in the head covering. So I guess she was not from France.


_______________
It came back up...

singlemuslim.*** the world's leading Muslim introduction agency.


Find your partner the Halal way.
 
and i will gladly apologize for that. This is how it is depicted here in Belgium tho.

I should have kept to what i have seen by myself.
It's k. I know that all they show on the news is this jerk:




He reminds me of Draco Malfoy.

It is sad that many countries only see this guy on the news, getting the wrong image that we actually support this idiot. In reality he only has a small following but as long as he doesn't do anything 'radical' he's allowed to continue (though he has been bordering on inciting hatred at times, I think I recall him being brought to court over that as well). We have free speech. That means even dumb people can say what he says. That doesn't mean we agree with it.[/QUOTE]

PVV has 24 chairs tho and was one of the big winners in the last elections, if i remember correctly
 
ah ok. that's the problem. Abroad, they make it sound like PVV= Geert Wilders.

Just like NVA= Bart de Wever in Belgium
 
and in 10 years, restaurant owners in the area who sell pork will be the target of criticism and violence because they don't respect the muslims.
Well, this can happen with any people group who have more rigid societal laws, but it can be dealt with and often without violence, although that depends on the people group. Here in Minneapolis we had a real issue for awhile with muslim cab drivers who would not pick up people at the airport who had dogs (think seeing eye dogs, so yeah, blind folks) or had alcohol they had bought. It ended up becoming a pretty big battle and in the end the cab companies just said, if you don't pick those people up you get fired. Your call.
They started picking people up.
I'm of the opinion that if your religion makes it so you can't do your job, don't take that job. There is a point where a job can accommodate (religious holidays, etc) but when it gets to a place where it starts to hurt the business and you can't do your job well... something has to give.
Of course Target took a different route. If you get a muslim cashier and you have pork you get to sit and wait for someone else to come put it in the bag. Not a huge deal breaker for them or their customers so I can see why the accommodated that.
 
If the RevolutionMuslim jerk-offs haven't done it yet, I think it's fairly safe to say that the children of the area's Muslim investment bankers, corporate executives, graphic designers, city hall employees, and secular school teachers aren't going to start rioting any time soon.
 
and in 10 years, restaurant owners in the area who sell pork will be the target of criticism and violence because they don't respect the muslims.
Well, this can happen with any people group who have more rigid societal laws, but it can be dealt with and often without violence, although that depends on the people group. Here in Minneapolis we had a real issue for awhile with muslim cab drivers who would not pick up people at the airport who had dogs (think seeing eye dogs, so yeah, blind folks) or had alcohol they had bought. It ended up becoming a pretty big battle and in the end the cab companies just said, if you don't pick those people up you get fired. Your call.
They started picking people up.
I'm of the opinion that if your religion makes it so you can't do your job, don't take that job. There is a point where a job can accommodate (religious holidays, etc) but when it gets to a place where it starts to hurt the business and you can't do your job well... something has to give.
Of course Target took a different route. If you get a muslim cashier and you have pork you get to sit and wait for someone else to come put it in the bag. Not a huge deal breaker for them or their customers so I can see why the accommodated that.[/QUOTE]

I got into trouble once because i was having a beer in a muslim neighbourhood in Brussels. I was insulting their beliefs, they said. Huh no, i'm on my way to a party, you fucktard.
Shops were vandalized because they didn't want to only sell Halal products in Molembeek
Belgium has forbidden Burkas and for that we were called infidels and intolerant

I find Islam to be a great doctrine, i like it's history and it's practical sense. Yet, you don't see any of it in here. More and more, We feel we are being invaded. Peacefully but invaded nonetheless. They want our country to reflect their views and there is no room for cohabitation

Our traditions, our culture are judged and refused by the very people we greeted in the country.

I don't know about the States, but in Belgium and France, something will have to give. Because what appeared as racism 20 years ago is now the program of Sarkozy in France and De Wever in Belgium
 
Well, I can't speak to your country, but I would bet that if violence or intolerance on any side is becoming the main reaction/action it's not going to end pretty.
 
I dunno about Belgium, but the issues I've heard about in France is that it's a melting pot of racism, poverty, and resistance to integration on both sides that has lead to large, impoverished muslim ghettos strewn about the urban areas. Not too surprising, in hindsight naturally, that such an environment breed religious intolerance among people who likely feel that the "free" society surrounding them won't extend those same privileges to them.
 
C

Chazwozel

God, what is it about pigs that makes them such unholy, filthy animals?


That's a literal question to God.
 
Rough, short crappy answer, but not from God, sorry:
Basically pigs eat anything they come across if they aren't given food (generally grain, something that at the time would have meant, in hebrew lands, they would be competing for food with the humans). So for the Hebrew people, eating pork in Old Testament times, would be very dangerous. You don't know what kind of horrible stuff they might have eaten and could pass on to you. Of course over time this became less and less of a concern, and in the end Jews continuing to do so were merely doing it for religious reasons rather than practical ones.
 
Here in Canada, there have been a few incidents in Quebec about Muslim women being required to uncover their face to participate in French-immersion schools. I am horribly uninformed, and I couldn't tell you even a horribly bastardized version of the story, but it sounds very similar to what's been going on in some states in Europe (although Quebec is just a dollar store brand France in a lot of ways, so maybe they're actually trying ...)
 
P

Papillon

Here in Canada, there have been a few incidents in Quebec about Muslim women being required to uncover their face to participate in French-immersion schools. I am horribly uninformed, and I couldn't tell you even a horribly bastardized version of the story, but it sounds very similar to what's been going on in some states in Europe (although Quebec is just a dollar store brand France in a lot of ways, so maybe they're actually trying ...)
CBC News - Montreal - Niqab-wearer blocked again from class
 
Here in Canada, there have been a few incidents in Quebec about Muslim women being required to uncover their face to participate in French-immersion schools. I am horribly uninformed, and I couldn't tell you even a horribly bastardized version of the story, but it sounds very similar to what's been going on in some states in Europe (although Quebec is just a dollar store brand France in a lot of ways, so maybe they're actually trying ...)
CBC News - Montreal - Niqab-wearer blocked again from class[/QUOTE]

There it is. I read about it in Maclean's a while back, but I didn't have a link.

Also, I'd like to point out this from the article:

Potential Quebec immigrants are asked to sign a contract in which they are asked to make a moral commitment to Quebec's values, including secularism, gender equality and respect for the francophone majority, the minister said.
Does this strike any one else as one of the most obvious good ideas of the week?
 

Necronic

Staff member
Does this strike any one else as one of the most obvious good ideas of the week?
An oath of secularism should imply freedom of religion, which should mean they should be allowed to wear their burkahs in school if they want to. I don't think that is a siginificantly disruptive problem. The government should be secular. People can be whatever the fuck they want. I mean, how could a person be secular?

Also, Brussels has outlawed burkahs? See, that's the kind of thing that makes me proud to be an American. We would never do that. Or, if someone was dumb enough to pass that law it would get struck down as unconstitutional faster than you could say 'technically the words seperation of church and state aren't in the constitution'.
 
Does this strike any one else as one of the most obvious good ideas of the week?
An oath of secularism should imply freedom of religion, which should mean they should be allowed to wear their burkahs in school if they want to. I don't think that is a siginificantly disruptive problem. The government should be secular. People can be whatever the fuck they want. I mean, how could a person be secular?

Also, Brussels has outlawed burkahs? See, that's the kind of thing that makes me proud to be an American. We would never do that. Or, if someone was dumb enough to pass that law it would get struck down as unconstitutional faster than you could say 'technically the words seperation of church and state aren't in the constitution'.
Burkahs have been illegal in America since the anti-KKK laws. It is illegal to go around in a mask nearly everywhere in America.
 
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