Dandyman
In London village.
Not sure if anyone has ever read "The Secret Agent" by Joseph Conrad. It was written in the Edwardian (?) era of the early 1900's and shows terrorism is rather older than people sometimes think.
Easy 10 said:As always there are 2 sides to every argument, and I won't pretend to know exactly how many of the anti-Western arguments you list above are actually accurate. Clearly attacks such as 9/11 and Madrid are not without motive, not without Cause, and there's always a queue of people lining up to criticise who's sold arms to who in the past, who's funded this, who's trained who etc etc, as a reason to justify why innocent civilians keep getting blown up in retaliation.
All I would say is this - NO cause is justifiable by murdering innocent people who are just going about their daily business. Suicide bombers, and the perpetrators of acts which destroy innocent lives, are scum of the highest order. Whether they be black, white, Arab, Basque, whatever. Not one single life is worth any political agenda or statement to make a point.
Exactly. I know which I prefer.Or if western secularism hadn't been invented.
Ex Shelton Seagull said:If this is all revenge for decades of repression and exploitation then I want to know what all those hundreds of Africans who died in the embassy bombings in Nairobi had to do with it. Or the Turks who died in the bombing of the HSBC building in Istanbul? The people in power are never touched by this stuff, it's always us poor bastards in the middle who get it. Same thing goes for al-qaeda, you don't see their "commanders" donning the explosive belts, they always get some poor kids who think they've got nothing to live for and will die a "heroes" death. If it's so heroic why don't their commanders put on the bombs?
Duncan H said:To me this is a fight between religion and secular democracy - i.e. Western values. The way to win such a fight is to promote the ideals of human rights, and secular legal systems. Obviously you can't stop determined terrorists if they want to create violence, but you can turn the general climate of public opinion in places where terrorism is tolerated against such actions.
To do this you need to blunt the edge of religious fanaticism, removing the drive that encourages people to kill themselves believing that some "god" will reward them, and treat people fairly. Obviously giving equal rights to the Palestinians would be a good start for this, but I don't believe it's the root cause of the conflict. The problem is that some people believe that religion is more important than human rights, which we in the west believe is wrong.
Duncan H said:To me this is a fight between religion and secular democracy - i.e. Western values. The way to win such a fight is to promote the ideals of human rights, and secular legal systems. Obviously you can't stop determined terrorists if they want to create violence, but you can turn the general climate of public opinion in places where terrorism is tolerated against such actions.
To do this you need to blunt the edge of religious fanaticism, removing the drive that encourages people to kill themselves believing that some "god" will reward them, and treat people fairly. Obviously giving equal rights to the Palestinians would be a good start for this, but I don't believe it's the root cause of the conflict. The problem is that some people believe that religion is more important than human rights, which we in the west believe is wrong.
bhaexpress said:Should mention one thing. Moslem suicide bomers are not martyrs as we know it because their religion makes them believe that they are going to their version of heaven where a number of virgins are waiting for them to carry out their every whim. Let's say that they have some incentive.
Still, I've always wondered what female suicide bombers get ......
Duncan H said:Exactly. I know which I prefer.
Duncan H said:While I don't like the American war machine and aggressive attitude at all, and I'm not impressed with Blair in any way either, I do consider myself on the same side as them when it comes to global politics - i.e. the side of western secular values. I don't know if you've read the original constitution of the United States, but it is something worth fighting for IMO. To me, the terrorists are the forces of conservatism.
It's probably true of some of them, but they certainly are all in favour of human rights within their own contries - which is more than can be said for many Muslims (or we wouldn't have Sharia law in places like Nigeria).but our leaders believe in global influence, economic strength and military power way before human rights
Duncan H said:I just think that the first step is to have a constitution that puts government above religion. Like the Americans have been trying to do in Iraq.
US Seagull said:
Totally agree there. Religion is the problem and that's why Bush, seemingly trying to turn the US into a christian theocracy, is not the right man for the job. Fighting their extremists with our own extremists will just lead to decades of bloodshed (see Israel).
But the American constitution is. I know that the Republican Party has been hijacked by fundamentalist Christians, but I think you over-estimate the extent to which America is a theocracy. It is not like Iran, or Saudi Arabia - it's a different scale entirely.There is no way either of these administrations are remotely secular.
I was being slightly disengenious there as I agree that the Americans are after a pro-American government first. However, it does occur to me that they are also trying to make it democratic - they're not suggesting that a dictator be installed (this time) - which to me is something worth aiming for.Sorry but again I disagree totally. The only thing America is trying to do with the government in Iraq is install an administration that will be sympathetic to American (and other western) companies
Duncan H said:they are also trying to make it democratic