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Brussels Attack


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2016 Mar 22, 7:27am   35,076 views  146 comments

by Dan8267   ➕follow (4)   💰tip   ignore  

http://www.theguardian.com/world/live/2016/mar/22/brussels-airport-explosions-live-updates

Back in the 1950s, then president Eisenhower commissioned a study to determine why the Middle East hates America. It's conclusion was that they hate us because we set up puppet governments to suppress them and steal their natural resources, and the study concluded that was exactly what we should do because it was in our economic and military interests.

The idiots in the military who did that cost-benefit analysis got it way wrong. Modern terrorism is the direct consequence of their faulty business plan. They didn't have the intelligence to foresee all the hidden costs of using military force for corrupt interests. It's time we rethink this strategy.

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135   Heraclitusstudent   2016 Mar 24, 4:22pm  

YesYNot says

Creating enemies out of thin air or overstating the perceived threat is what corrupt or paranoid leaders do.

Or maybe you can stop denying reality in your desperate attempts to reduce Islam to a "religion of peace" and willingness to cling to moderate Muslims as our allies.

- PM Erdogan of Turkey (an 'ally' of the US and Europe) often praised for being a 'moderate': "The Term “Moderate Islam” Is Ugly And Offensive; There Is No Moderate Islam; Islam Is Islam"
http://www.thememriblog.org/turkey/blog_personal/en/2595.htm
The jihadists who carry out terrorist attacks in the service of ISIS are merely following the commands in Quran 9:5, "Fight and kill the disbelievers wherever you find them..." and Quran 8:39, "So fight them until there is no more fitna [strife] and all submit to the religion of Allah."

- Yusuf al-Qaradawi is an extremely influential Islamic cleric and jurist. He is the spiritual leader of the Muslim Brotherhood, as well as chairman of the International Union of Muslim Scholars, president of the European Council for Fatwa and Research, and the host of a popular Al-Jazeera TV program about sharia. Qaradawi has stated that,

"the shariah cannot be amended to conform to changing human values and standards. Rather it is the absolute norm to which all human values and conduct must conform."

- Teun Voeten: http://www.politico.eu/article/molenbeek-broke-my-heart-radicalization-suburb-brussels-gentrification/
"the most important factor is Belgium’s culture of denial. The country’s political debate has been dominated by a complacent progressive elite that firmly believes society can be designed and planned. Observers who point to unpleasant truths such as the high incidence of crime among Moroccan youth and violent tendencies in radical Islam are accused of being propagandists of the extreme-right, and are subsequently ignored and ostracized."
"If there is to be any hope of fighting the terror threats against the West, and actually bringing public life back to a semblance of normality, at an absolute minimum the politics of willful ignorance, political correctness, and denial will have to go."

136   Heraclitusstudent   2016 Mar 24, 4:47pm  

curious2 says

I return to my suggestion that we should offer everyone a free one-way ticket to Mecca

I think in the case of Europe, the case is more serious.
I would make people (everyone) sign an extensive declaration that they believe in European values (respect of others, respect of human life, separation of church and state, equality of men and women, and with a special clause for Muslims that they renounce violence and beliefs such a stoning or otherwise killing others).

If they refuse, I would not offer a one way ticket to Mecca. I would strip them of citizenship and deport them on the spot to closest African shore.

But right now we are so stuck in denial that the battle is against ourselves.

137   Strategist   2016 Mar 24, 5:01pm  

Heraclitusstudent says

- PM Erdogan of Turkey (an 'ally' of the US and Europe) often praised for being a 'moderate': "The Term “Moderate Islam” Is Ugly And Offensive; There Is No Moderate Islam; Islam Is Islam"

He is right, there is no moderate Islam. There are moderate Muslims, those who don't practice the crap in Islam.

138   curious2   2016 Mar 24, 5:28pm  

Heraclitusstudent says

I think in the case of Europe, the case is more serious.

Yes, definitely, especially in the countries that are nearly 10% Muslim (e.g. Belgium and France). They are approaching the tipping point, and could go the way of Lebanon.

Heraclitusstudent says

But right now we are so stuck in denial that the battle is against ourselves.

You have a point there, but our solutions have to be consistent with our own laws. Islam says to go Mecca. It doesn't say go to the closest shore of Africa. Being nice can be more effective than being mean: you attract more flies with honey than with vinegar; as a Christian would say, you must love your enemy.

Offering a free ticket is nice. Be generous even with who those say they want to kill you: smile as you offer them a free ticket to go away; then, if you must fight them, do it at a safe distance. In any conflict, the battleground suffers most. If you want to protect your own country, or Europe, then that task becomes much easier if your adversary leaves voluntarily.

Your declaration might have some effect, but as long as the believers remain, even those who sign your declaration, the effect would likely be weak and temporary. Even if they read your declaration aloud every day and sign it every day, it won't match the power of a cancer diagnosis or the death of a spouse or the loss of a job. Even the San Bernardino terrorists could have signed your papers: one had just cleared her background checks to immigrate, and the other had a steady government job, but they planned their attacks and checked out when their child was born. (The new father was reportedly "triggered" and ejected prematurely after somebody allegedly made fun of his beard.) With paradise waiting just around the corner, your meager pieces of earthly paper won't mean as much.

139   Heraclitusstudent   2016 Mar 24, 5:38pm  

curious2 says

but our solutions have to be consistent with our own laws.

Laws can be changed. Even constitutions can be changed.
We should not make laws a barrier to reacting to people who would use our constitutional rights and then, once in power, would turn around and burn that constitution.

curious2 says

the effect would likely be weak and temporary.

The declaration is just one part as I explained. Other parts include education, media, foreign policy, surveillance, immigration, etc...
But the declaration serves several important purposes: First it separates moderate people from extremists (so it draws a line in the sand where it should be), it may weakly influence people and separate them from seeing texts as absolute truths, and moreover it eliminates the denialist argument that we should not bother the Muslim community at all because most of them are moderates. Such a declaration doesn't target moderates and shouldn't bother them.

140   curious2   2016 Mar 24, 5:42pm  

Heraclitusstudent, as I read your comments, I can't help noticing that you don't acknowledge the areas where we seem to agree, and you seem to resort only to negative remedies with regard to addressing the problem. Why resort first to changing laws and even the Constitution, without even offering a free ticket? Amending the Constitution takes years and costs a lot of money; the founders made the process difficult precisely to prevent over-reaction to the concerns of the moment. Please don't let anger cloud your judgment. We do have a problem, but anger about the source of the problem should not distract from finding the cheapest and simplest legal solution.

141   Heraclitusstudent   2016 Mar 24, 5:44pm  

curious2 says

Why resort first to changing laws and even the Constitution, without even offering a free ticket?

Because as I said I don't believe many people would take a free ticket if it meant to never come back.

142   curious2   2016 Mar 24, 5:56pm  

Heraclitusstudent says

curious2 says

Why resort first to changing laws and even the Constitution, without even offering a free ticket?

Because as I said I don't believe many people would take a free ticket if it meant to never come back.

The believers believe that they must go. The free ticket offers them the opportunity. If you're considering going full snackbar because Islam says so, then you'd better not skip your free trip to Mecca first, because that would make you an unbeliever and ineligible for paradise. If they stay, even when offered a free ticket, then they are effectively declaring that they are unbelievers, infidels. You can repeat the offer every day, everywhere. The refusal of a free ticket is a daily declaration, with actions speaking louder than words. Every day a "Muslim" doesn't sign up for his free ticket, every waking hour he attends to other things instead of signing up, he is effectively saying he doesn't believe that he needs to go to Mecca, which means he doesn't really believe Islam, and he isn't going to do what it tells him to do. Even if he prays 5x/day, he knows the whole time that Islam says he has to go, and he has failed to go, even though he could have gone. What if he gets hit by a bus tomorrow, how will he explain his failure to go when he had the chance? The inconvenience of not being allowed back? That is but a mere earthly matter, which would not trouble him if he were a true believer and trusted that all things are the will of Allah.

143   Heraclitusstudent   2016 Mar 24, 6:23pm  

curious2 says

If they stay, even when offered a free ticket, then they are effectively declaring that they are unbelievers, infidels.

Well but tickets to Mecca aren't THAT expensive.
Most people wouldn't take a free ticket at the price of never coming back. It's much easier to go buy your own ticket, go there and come back.

So yes we can do that but I don't think it would have much effect.

Also this is a worldwide problem. You can't ignore the rest of the world. You need to go for the root of the problem. You need to fight the ideas.

144   curious2   2016 Mar 24, 6:37pm  

Heraclitusstudent says

You need to fight the ideas.

I agree about that, and I've lamented previously that two presidents in a row (R+D) have insisted on publicly expressing "respect" for Islam.

Heraclitusstudent says

It's much easier to go buy your own ticket, go there and come back.

I had already suggested the possibility of legislation saying people who choose to go to a specific list of countries that, for example, advocate the violent overthrow of our Constitutional government are thereby choosing to renounce whatever right to return they may have had. The offer of a free ticket would in itself require legislation if it is to be publicly funded. The two suggestions could be easily combined in one statute. I think such a prudent defensive measure would be more patriotic than the so-called Patriot Act using the presence of potential terrorists as an excuse to spy on everyone.

146   MisdemeanorRebel   2016 Mar 30, 10:14am  

Donald Trump Finds New City to Insult: Brussels

Note the Date of article -January 28th, 2016.

LONDON — He incensed Paris and London by saying that some of their neighborhoods were so overrun with radicals that the police were too scared to enter.

He raised Scottish tempers by threatening to pull the plug on his investments there, including his luxury golf courses, if British politicians barred him from entering Britain.

Now Donald J. Trump has upset the already beleaguered people of Belgium, calling its capital, Brussels, “a hellhole.”

Asked by the Fox Business Network anchor Maria Bartiromo about the feasibility of his proposal to bar foreign Muslims from entering the United States, Mr. Trump argued that Belgium and France had been blighted by the failure of Muslims in these countries to integrate.

“There is something going on, Maria,” he said. “Go to Brussels. Go to Paris. Go to different places. There is something going on and it’s not good, where they want Shariah law, where they want this, where they want things that — you know, there has to be some assimilation. There is no assimilation. There is something bad going on.”


http://www.nytimes.com/2016/01/28/world/europe/trump-finds-new-city-to-insult-brussels.html

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