CharlieHebdo

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  • Posts: 7,653
    bondjames wrote: »
    Getafix wrote: »
    The US and British response to 911 and the whole tragic debacle in Iraq is one of the biggest tragedies in recent history.

    Absolutely TRUE

    The US squandered all the good will it had after 911 and turned a position of moral strength into a moral quagmire. I am pretty sure history will judge Bush and Blair very harshly.

    sadly true, worst was the If you are against us you are one of them attitude that estranged so many sympathisers and allies

    911 actually presented the west with an incredible oppportunity to move the world forward in a positive way, and the US and UK chose to walk straight into Bin Laden's trap instead.

    In this instance I consider Bin Laden the victor of a long term stratagy that is hurting our economy and freedoms.

    Very true. I think their judgement was obviously clouded by fear, some of them (Bush in particular) were not very intelligent, and they had bad advisors. It is those advisors and intellectual commentators that I hold accountable. Those so called 'smart men' that gave Bush and Blair cover.

    NO clouded by fear, I always felt that it was an clever exuse for the war industry to get some decent production and money out of governments. They are actually the only winners as the initial wars have long since then have spun horribly out of control. And made it much easier for Islam leaders to point out our shamefull behaviour sometimes vocally aimed at hate of the Muslim. We western world are easily the best recruiter for the Jihadi parties in our politics. THAT SCARES ME MUCH MORE!!!

    That is why people like Hitchens have a very large burden to bear in history. They in particular should have known better. They are the ones who are supposed to read the tea leaves and properly predict what the implications are down the road of one's actions. All the implications.

    Hitchens has stated many things in which he is right and he gets crucified for his few mistakes, which is always easy for people that do not like Hitchens and his kind. One thing he never was is conservative anybody calling him that should pick up a few books written by him.

    The attack on CH was a religious act of terrorism [remember the ALLAH AHKBAR when they killed the cartoonists] which does not make the average Muslim guilty of anything awefull and they should not publicly distance themselves. Most Muslims I work with call them nutters that misuse a religion for their own purposes. And I agree with that assesment.
  • Posts: 15,229
    I may add that Hitchens was attacked when he was right too, just as vehemently. Sometimes more so.
  • edited January 2015 Posts: 11,425
    We do all make mistakes, but the Iraq war was a collosal mistake. Sometimes one decision - either good or bad - overshadows everything else.

    Churchill would have gone down in history as a footnote if not for one key decision - to continue the war against Hitler. Many of his other views and actions are things I don't agree with, but for me and most other people, his (crazy in many ways) determination to stand up and continue the fight makes him a true great. Whatever his other mistakes were (and he made many), that is insigniciant compared to the one really big thing he got right.

    Blair, who I think actually did a lot of good in many ways, will always be overshadowed by his catastrophic decision on Iraq.

    Hitchens may not have actually made the decision but he was an influential and vocal cheerleader for war.

    Harold Wilson is an interesting case. Not considered particularly significant in world historical terms, but he did make a crucial decision (for the UK) that Britain would not join the Vietnam War. Lyndon Johnson went ballistic on him for that decision. But it was the correct one. If he'd decided to join the war his legacy would have been that of the idiot who took us into Vietnam. He deserves some credit IMO for that decision at least.
  • bondjamesbondjames You were expecting someone else?
    edited January 2015 Posts: 23,883
    Very true. Politicians are often defined in history by one major decision that they make. That becomes their legacy.

    Blair did do a lot of good, but his mistake is deservedly something that tarnishes his legacy, because it was apparent to many of us at the time that he was wrong - and even the way he explained/sold it at the time ("it's the right thing to do") showed wrong headed, almost possessed thinking at the time.

    People like Hitchens are held to a higher standard by commoners like myself. If a memeber of the intelligensia like himself can't properly articulate a cohesive, balanced view that doesn't involve obvious forseeable collateral damage to thousands and possible reprisals and animosity for years to come, then he is a bigger idiot than the politicians imo. Their excuse is that they need to win elections and therefore can be beholden to fear mongery & the military/corporate doners. People like Hitchens should not be beholden to anyone but their intelligence/curiosity.
  • Posts: 11,425
    bondjames wrote: »
    Very true. Politicians are often defined in history by one major decision that they make. That becomes their legacy.

    Blair did do a lot of good, but his mistake is deservedly something that tarnishes his legacy, because it was apparent to many of us at the time that he was wrong - and even the way he explained/sold it at the time ("it's the right thing to do") showed wrong headed, almost possessed thinking at the time.

    People like Hitchens are held to a higher standard by commoners like myself. If a memeber of the intelligensia like himself can't properly articulate a cohesive, balanced view that doesn't involve obvious forseeable collateral damage to thousands and possible reprisals and animosity for years to come, then he is a bigger idiot than the politicians imo.

    It's a bit of a tragedy what's happened to Blair. He was a force for good in many respects. He gave Britain a sense of optimism and positivity that it's lost since. But yes, his one big catastrophic error will always overshadow the success.

    In my parallel universe histroy of the world, Blair would have persuaded Bush not to invade Iraq and instead waged an intensive diplomatic and espionage assualt on Al Queda and its network of financial backers around the world. There wouln't have been any big 'wars' - just perhaps the occassional special forces operation - mainly below the radar and not even in the media. Slowly but surely (a la Mosad's response to the Munich Olympics attack) the key players would have been taken out. Secret service agents would have infiltrated and destroyed these organisations from within.

    Without the oxygen of war and the recruiting sergeant that was the illegal invasion of Iraq, the jihadis would have largely withered and died by now.
  • bondjamesbondjames You were expecting someone else?
    edited January 2015 Posts: 23,883
    I think Blair (and many a British politician) was concerned about being compared to Neville Chamberlain in the history books - appeasement is still a dirty word in some circles. The Americans probably reminded him of this.

    Now ironically politicians will be wary of being compared to Blair.
  • Posts: 15,229
    bondjames wrote: »
    I think Blair (and many a British politician) was concerned about being compared to Neville Chamberlain in the history books - appeasement is still a dirty word in some circles. The Americans probably reminded him of this.

    Now ironically politicians will be wary of being compared to Blair.

    And yet I find Tony Blair far closer to Chamberlain than Churchill. He sure was an appeaser in the episode of the Danish cartoons. He may have been gung ho in Iraq, he was never keen on defending the faithless and the blasphemers. Not sure what his response to the terrorist attacks in Paris were, but ten years ago he was nothing short of pathetic.
  • bondjamesbondjames You were expecting someone else?
    Posts: 23,883
    Ludovico wrote: »
    bondjames wrote: »
    I think Blair (and many a British politician) was concerned about being compared to Neville Chamberlain in the history books - appeasement is still a dirty word in some circles. The Americans probably reminded him of this.

    Now ironically politicians will be wary of being compared to Blair.

    And yet I find Tony Blair far closer to Chamberlain than Churchill. He sure was an appeaser in the episode of the Danish cartoons. He may have been gung ho in Iraq, he was never keen on defending the faithless and the blasphemers. Not sure what his response to the terrorist attacks in Paris were, but ten years ago he was nothing short of pathetic.

    That may be because he is a deeply religious man. I read that somewhere (not sure where), and certainly in his arguments for the Iraq war ("It's the right thing to do....the just thing to do" etc.) there was an element of almost possessed righteousness.

    It could also be that he was concerned about what hornet's nest he had wrought in Iraq and was trying to prevent further upsetting Muslims - this Danish incident was after the 7/7 attacks in London I think.
  • Posts: 15,229
    bondjames wrote: »
    Ludovico wrote: »
    bondjames wrote: »
    I think Blair (and many a British politician) was concerned about being compared to Neville Chamberlain in the history books - appeasement is still a dirty word in some circles. The Americans probably reminded him of this.

    Now ironically politicians will be wary of being compared to Blair.

    And yet I find Tony Blair far closer to Chamberlain than Churchill. He sure was an appeaser in the episode of the Danish cartoons. He may have been gung ho in Iraq, he was never keen on defending the faithless and the blasphemers. Not sure what his response to the terrorist attacks in Paris were, but ten years ago he was nothing short of pathetic.

    That may be because he is a deeply religious man. I read that somewhere (not sure where), and certainly in his arguments for the Iraq war ("It's the right thing to do....the just thing to do" etc.) there was an element of almost possessed righteousness.

    It could also be that he was concerned about what hornet's nest he had wrought in Iraq and was trying to prevent further upsetting Muslims - this Danish incident was after the 7/7 attacks in London I think.

    Blair also said in an interview (with Parkinson I believe) that he spoke to God and took his decision accordingly. hearing him saying something so abysmally stupid, my first thought was that he needed a straightjacket and lithium.

    As for his reaction to the Danish cartoons, I doubt anything could have been as bad as the Iraq war, which he started, to provoke Muslim's anger. The Danish cartoons happened before 7/7, and even if they had happened afterwards, his cowardice was no excuse. Feeding the crocodile hoping he'd eat him last was what Blair did.
  • Posts: 11,425
    Ludovico wrote: »
    bondjames wrote: »
    Ludovico wrote: »
    bondjames wrote: »
    I think Blair (and many a British politician) was concerned about being compared to Neville Chamberlain in the history books - appeasement is still a dirty word in some circles. The Americans probably reminded him of this.

    Now ironically politicians will be wary of being compared to Blair.

    And yet I find Tony Blair far closer to Chamberlain than Churchill. He sure was an appeaser in the episode of the Danish cartoons. He may have been gung ho in Iraq, he was never keen on defending the faithless and the blasphemers. Not sure what his response to the terrorist attacks in Paris were, but ten years ago he was nothing short of pathetic.

    That may be because he is a deeply religious man. I read that somewhere (not sure where), and certainly in his arguments for the Iraq war ("It's the right thing to do....the just thing to do" etc.) there was an element of almost possessed righteousness.

    It could also be that he was concerned about what hornet's nest he had wrought in Iraq and was trying to prevent further upsetting Muslims - this Danish incident was after the 7/7 attacks in London I think.

    Blair also said in an interview (with Parkinson I believe) that he spoke to God and took his decision accordingly. hearing him saying something so abysmally stupid, my first thought was that he needed a straightjacket and lithium.

    As for his reaction to the Danish cartoons, I doubt anything could have been as bad as the Iraq war, which he started, to provoke Muslim's anger. The Danish cartoons happened before 7/7, and even if they had happened afterwards, his cowardice was no excuse. Feeding the crocodile hoping he'd eat him last was what Blair did.

    Scary stuff.
  • Posts: 4,617
    the thread as drifted into a debate about Hitch and the invasion of Iraq which is a shame. Re the video link I posted of Hitch supporting free speech in the face of the threat of violence, is it not possible to deal with that debate rather than get side tracked by the fact that the argument came from Hitch?
  • Posts: 15,229
    patb wrote: »
    the thread as drifted into a debate about Hitch and the invasion of Iraq which is a shame. Re the video link I posted of Hitch supporting free speech in the face of the threat of violence, is it not possible to deal with that debate rather than get side tracked by the fact that the argument came from Hitch?

    Agreed. That is the argument he brought forward in this debate that matters. Dismissing it because of his stand on Iraq is ad hominem.
  • Posts: 11,425
    I listened to some of the debate but found the messenger obscures the message - Hitch highlights through his own hubristic and arrogant personality what is wrong with so much of the west and it's attitude to Muslims.
  • edited January 2015 Posts: 4,617
    If I say that all Muslims are delusional regarding their religious beliefs, is that statement so arrogant (or perceived to be) that the arrogance becomes a boundary to the discussion about it's accuracy? Many people who have come up with ideas that go against the grain have been accused of being arrogant and that accusation has got in the way of a proper debate. Some people are arrogant and it does help if you are making an argument that goes against the majority. Its hard to be humble and shy whilst at the same time stating that all religious people are deluded. I think perhaps that arrogance is a pre-requisite for open and honest thinking whilst not giving too much thought to mainstream opinion.
  • Posts: 15,229
    Getafix wrote: »
    I listened to some of the debate but found the messenger obscures the message - Hitch highlights through his own hubristic and arrogant personality what is wrong with so much of the west and it's attitude to Muslims.

    There may be a lot wrong with the West, but freedom of conscience and freedom of speech are not among them. As for Hitchens attitude towards islam, it is no different than his attitude towards Christianity. And at the core, the problem reside in the believer: his belief can be criticized, questioned and mocked. And if he claims to revealed truth and universal truth, the burden of proof resides on his side. I'm not Muslim, Mohammed is not my prophet, I don't have to abide by Islamic rules or obey their taboos.
  • Posts: 4,617
    Hitchens was an Anti-theist and, as such, yes, there is a burden of proof to show that religion on the whole is a bad thing and I personally think he gave it a pretty good shot in the short time he focused on that issue. As for atheists, there is no burden of proof required from any atheist.
  • Posts: 15,229
    patb wrote: »
    Hitchens was an Anti-theist and, as such, yes, there is a burden of proof to show that religion on the whole is a bad thing and I personally think he gave it a pretty good shot in the short time he focused on that issue. As for atheists, there is no burden of proof required from any atheist.

    Well yes, as the person making the positive claim has the burden of proof. If any person of faith claims revealed truth AND that we should accommodate this belief, then he has to show evidence for his claims. And if he can't, well that's not our problem.
  • bondjamesbondjames You were expecting someone else?
    edited January 2015 Posts: 23,883
    Ludovico wrote: »
    patb wrote: »
    Hitchens was an Anti-theist and, as such, yes, there is a burden of proof to show that religion on the whole is a bad thing and I personally think he gave it a pretty good shot in the short time he focused on that issue. As for atheists, there is no burden of proof required from any atheist.

    Well yes, as the person making the positive claim has the burden of proof. If any person of faith claims revealed truth AND that we should accommodate this belief, then he has to show evidence for his claims. And if he can't, well that's not our problem.

    Amazing isn't it.

    The one thing that probably more people in the world (billions+) believe other than death (which is quite verifiable) and taxes (also proveable) is something for which there is absolutely no hard evidence except the collective belief of these said individuals.
  • edited January 2015 Posts: 11,425
    Ludovico wrote: »
    Getafix wrote: »
    I listened to some of the debate but found the messenger obscures the message - Hitch highlights through his own hubristic and arrogant personality what is wrong with so much of the west and it's attitude to Muslims.

    There may be a lot wrong with the West, but freedom of conscience and freedom of speech are not among them. As for Hitchens attitude towards islam, it is no different than his attitude towards Christianity. And at the core, the problem reside in the believer: his belief can be criticized, questioned and mocked. And if he claims to revealed truth and universal truth, the burden of proof resides on his side. I'm not Muslim, Mohammed is not my prophet, I don't have to abide by Islamic rules or obey their taboos.

    Part of the problem with Hitch is that he attacks 'Muslims' and 'Islam'. That's a very big, diverse group of people. For many Muslims around the world, their religion is a cultural thing - not a big deal, just something they 'are', because their parents were. They probably don't even go to the mosque. They might even drink. They perhaps observe Ramadan half heartedly, and celebrate Eid with a blow-out feast. In other words, most Muslims are probably like most Christians, Hindus, Jews etc. Their religion is not something they spend a lot of time thinking about - it is just there, part of their identity. In fact it's not really an issue at all until it's actively threatened or attacked by others.

    So Hitch attacking 'Muslims' and 'Islam' and people publishing cartoons of Mohammad is all perceived by a lot of Muslims not as really having much to do with free speech, and having a lot more to do with a Western attack on a specific religion and culture. An attack that has historical echoes in the Crusades, the reconquest of Muslim Spain, and colonial wars of oppression and subjugation by western powers across the Muslim world.

    After almost a millenia, during which Islam was at the forefront of world culutre, Muslim civilisation has endured centuries of decline and humiliation. There are complex reasons for that, but one of them has doubtless been the impact and legacy of Western colonialism. So when Hitchens mounts his verbal tirades at an entire world religion, he needs to take the history and context into account and realise that a white man sitting in Washington DC, and a firm supporter of George W, most Muslims won't be looking at him thinking 'defender of free speech', they'll be thinking 'oh , here they go again, those arrogant imperialist m*****f******'.

    All I'm asking (as with the Mohammad cartoons) is what dialogue exactly did Hitchens think he was advancing? Where does his absolute belief in his own correctness take us? He accuses Muslims of being all to ready to take up violence in defence of their ideas, but the truth is, the violent extremists are a relatively small minority. And if you look at the history of the western world, right up to the present day, it's been us who have waged the endless wars, constantly invading other peoples' countries, murdering and exterminating each other and persecuting our minorities, like the Jews. However much the Arabs in the Middle East might hate Israel, they never managed a holocaust, yet we lecture the Muslim world about anti-semitism.

    The thing that sticks in your throat is the hypocrisy of people like Hitchens, defending 'free speech' but ignoring almost everything else about the context and history of the relationship between Islam and the west. The biggest threat to free speech and our liberties is not frankly a few nutter Muslim fundamentalists, but governments that want to exert ever more control over their citizens and what they do and think.
  • Campbell2Campbell2 Epsilon Rho Rho house, Bending State University
    Posts: 299
    Thinkin about Hitchens and theists and atheists fundamentalists a bit it occurred to me that for me the distinction isn't so much about believer and nonbeliever. It's more about whether somebody tries to push his belief onto others. That's where the trouble starts. As atheist I don't care what other people believe. Nor do I want to hear their politics or what agenda they have in their pocket. Only when a guy keeps yelling I believe so you must too, that's where misery starts. I agree with many of Hitchensviews on religion, but I'd not try and force my view in this debate.
  • edited January 2015 Posts: 4,617

    Hitchens made it very clear over and over again that he respected the rights of any individual to "play with their own toys" but objected to religion telling other people what to do. Ever had an atheist knock on your door with a smile and a leaflet? Ever had an atheist school telling you your kids cant attend due to their beliefs? Ever had an athiest take a perfectly healthy baby under the knife? the list goes on. In general, atheists promote knowledge, facts, thought, debate, enlightenment etc as they tend to think that, once people have all of the facts in front of them and also have free will, then people can make up their own minds. When was the last time you heard a religious leader promoting the idea of going off and reading as many books as you can from all walks of life and then think really hard about the pros and cons and then think for yourself, really think and then make up your own mind. If they were that confident and secure that their beleif system was correct, they would want people to do this. But they dont.
  • Posts: 11,425
    Yes - atheist regimes like authoritarian communist states (and arguably some fascist ones) have done all the things you describe.

    That's the idiocy of Hitchens' argument - that it's only religious believers that forcibly impose their views on others. In terms of modern history, the aetheists have been much worse.
  • edited January 2015 Posts: 4,617
    Did you watch the video, he is on the record as supporting freedom of speech and freedom of thought at individual level, he never promoted an "atheist regime" and within our current situation regarding the debate on free speech versus terrorism from religious extremists, the threat of an "atheist regime" would seem to be rather spurious at present. Perhaps we can have that debate when extreme atheists are running in the streets of Paris with AK47s?
  • edited January 2015 Posts: 11,425
    I'm saying that aetheists have presented a much greater threat to freedom of speech in the 20th century than Muslims. And I'd argue the threat from 'Islam' now is exagerated. I don't think Muslims - even the extreme ones - are motivated by a desire to limit the freedom of speech in the west. Their resentments originate primarily in perceived and sometimes real historical humiliations and economic and political set backs.

    I just think Hitchens banging on about Muslims was barking up the wrong tree. Malligning an entire culture primarily because of the acts of a few nutters is unfair. Most Muslims also generally want free speech. In a Muslim country, there might be blasphemy laws (just as there were in the UK up until the late 20th century). That does not make Muslims fundamentally opposed to free speech. In France and the UK today there are limits on what you can do and say - racially offensive language for instance can lead to criminal convictions in the UK. That is what I mean about the danger of Hitchens' absolutism and fundamentalism - it creates artificial walls where there is no need for them and prevents discourse and the opening up of common ground when it's urgently needed. He was a dangerous fundamentalist - not a murderous one like the jihadis - but still dangerous. The road to hell is paved with good intentions, and down Hitchen's path lies world-ending culture wars and the clash of civilisations - something that is completely avoidable if we accept that we don't need to impose our views on the rest of the world in order to live peacefully in our own countries.
  • Posts: 4,617
    "I'm saying that aetheists have presented a much greater threat to freedom of speech in the 20th century than Muslims"
    well that is a very bold statement and I may not be alone in wanting some evidence to back the claim up.
  • edited January 2015 Posts: 11,425
    patb wrote: »
    "I'm saying that aetheists have presented a much greater threat to freedom of speech in the 20th century than Muslims"
    well that is a very bold statement and I may not be alone in wanting some evidence to back the claim up.

    Communism. And arguably fascism (depending on what form it took).

    Read some history books if you need more info.
  • bondjamesbondjames You were expecting someone else?
    Posts: 23,883
    Arguably it is 'ideology' that causes limits to freedoms of any kind. So whether it is a religious ideology or a political ideology, if it is rigid, then the outcome is the same. Less freedom of thought & expression.
  • Posts: 15,229
    @Getafix-The Mohammed caricatures have everything to do with free speech. It is exactly that: an idea or a person can be criticized or mocked. Islam does not get to have a special treatment and the Crusades are a poor explanation for the outrage of the believers. Because let's face it, neither Charlie Hebdo nor the Danish cartoonists had anything to do with them. They are not even part of the context, except in the twisted minds of the Islamits.
  • Posts: 725
    Getafix wrote: »
    patb wrote: »
    "I'm saying that aetheists have presented a much greater threat to freedom of speech in the 20th century than Muslims"
    well that is a very bold statement and I may not be alone in wanting some evidence to back the claim up.

    Communism. And arguably fascism (depending on what form it took).

    Read some history books if you need more info.

    My history books record Nazism as starting WW II, which was not an atheist ideology. Leaders hell bent on domination use whatever ideology, religion, or no religion, is convenient to them and serves their needs to dominate.

    Lets talk about the treats to the world today, not the last century. Atheists didn't fly those planes into the World Trade Center killing 3,000 people, atheists aren't killing off sects of Christians in the Middle East, beheading and murdering innocents who are attending schools or shopping in a mall in Africa, or shopping in a food market, or publishing cartoons in France, or whoever or whatever is offensive to their religion.

    The majority of Muslims in this world are indeed peaceful and want to just get on with their lives, but there is a cancer of extremism in the religion that is exceedingly dangerous. The extremist interpretation of the religion has always been there, but foolish interventions by the US and particularly Britain who drew much of the insane map of the Middle East as a misbegotten by product of their now dead British Empire have all helped bring us to this mess today. Now we have oil, money, social media, and modern weaponry all greatly raising the stakes. When the extremist obtain small nuclear weapons, we are all truly at the gates of hell.

    There are many Muslim leaders who know more than anyone how dangerous radical Islam is, and are struggling to contain it. Good luck to them. This is filled with irony as Saudi Arabia is now threatened by the very force they themselves helped fuel with their wealth thinking it would hep inoculate them. So talk about atheism, Hitchens, fundamentalism in the US, communism and fascism all you want, that is yesterday's news, it is radical Islamism that is putting the world on edge today and most definitely not a few nuts.

  • Posts: 15,229
    Getafix wrote: »
    patb wrote: »
    "I'm saying that aetheists have presented a much greater threat to freedom of speech in the 20th century than Muslims"
    well that is a very bold statement and I may not be alone in wanting some evidence to back the claim up.

    Communism. And arguably fascism (depending on what form it took).

    Read some history books if you need more info.

    False. Mussolini was an atheist, but Franco and Hitler were Catholics. Franco was even a practicing one. And Stalin did not kill a single person in the name of atheism. And is North Korea atheistic? The last three leaders are godly and the regime pretty much theistic.
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