Einherjar86
Active Member
I was appealing to the fact that regardless of the Hadith's authenticity, billions of Muslims take it seriously. In the same sense, L. Ron Hubbard's writings are total nonsense and the things he wrote about his own life are greatly embellished and even outright fabricated, but Scientologists take it for truth. Now, if those writings by Hubbard promote very problematic things, does it matter that its authenticity is in question or does it matter that his followers believe it?
The objective maliciousness of Islam is not encompassed in the document, but the interpretation and belief attached to the document. If majority of a group of people hold a document to be true and in many cases violently oppose those that criticise said document, I think you have to admit I have a point here.
But plenty of Christians and Jews "believe" in the Bible, yet are able to resist amplifying its violent, homophobic, or misogynistic portions. I'm not familiar with the Koran, so I can't make any kind of textual claims beyond what I've heard Muslims say. None of what you're describing conveys "objective maliciousness." It conveys that Islam is perhaps the most convulsive and troubled modern monotheistic religion, but there's nothing objectively malicious that underlies every form of belief that Islam takes. This is what I mean by your tendency to absolutize or universalize, which you express here with the notion of "cultural baggage":
As I've stated earlier (I think), I don't say that all or even majority of Muslims are the problem, but rather the Islamic culture in its many different forms is the problem. Western Islam is a great project but culture creates pressure to conform, especially the cultures of people who are living in new host countries and are shut off from the outside. Relatively speaking, terrorism isn't such a big issue. The big issue is the cultural baggage these people bring with them. To add to this, we aren't harboring a conversation, frank and free, about Islam but rather a dichotomous narrative that it's either all Muslims who need to go vs. all Islamic violence and barbarism is un-Islamic.
What you're saying here, as I understand it, is that all Muslims experience some kind of internal torment over their religion. I don't see any reason to agree with this, and this is where I'm getting hung up on your sense of "objective maliciousness."
What I think you're talking about when you discuss its objective maliciousness is something more like the contemporary tumult of Islamic belief in the (primarily) non-Western world. There's nothing objectively malicious about Islam itself, since Islam takes many forms and there is no possible way for you to verify inherent defects or crises in the personal faith of every single Muslim.
When I resist your appeals to objectivity, I'm not trying to deny that Islam tends to exhibit violent and oppressive tendencies, particularly in non-Western countries, or that there are Islamic criminals abroad. I'm simply denying that you can attribute this to the "cultural baggage" of Islam itself. Many, many, of these crimes (especially in the West) are just as likely crimes of passion or personal matters in which Islam is invoked retroactively as a cause, or contribution. A Christian might commit a violent crime, but that doesn't make the crime itself Christian in nature; and the same must be said for Islam.
I don't have time to respond to all your comments, so I apologize; and I appreciate the link. But I honestly hope that most of what I'm saying here expresses my general perspective on your position. I did want to address this though:
Let's not also forget about the Pulse nightclub massacre. All it takes is a handful, it's not like I'm speaking from a position of pro-Christianity or pro-Judaism here, I'm still an atheist. My position is simply that Islam is the religion responsible for the most amount of violence and terror today. It was a different religion in the past. It's simply a statement of mathematics to be frank.
Sure, we can say that it's a different religion in the past--same goes for Christianity and Judaism. But the problem is that you're focusing solely on Islam in the present and using that example to claim its "objective maliciousness" as being worse than Christianity or Judaism.
If you're making appeals to the objective maliciousness of a religion, then you cannot isolate your examples strictly to a given historical moment--you need to take all of its historical development into account. This is why, when you have this debate, many of us try and introduce historical variances, which you always reject. You can't reject these details if you're going to claim objectivity. At that point you're simply making a category error.
I could make an argument that Christianity is the most objectively malicious religion because it has committed more atrocities throughout its long history (I have no idea if this is true, I'm just making a point). Your rejection of history doesn't work in this argument.
And if you say that you're talking only about modern Islam--or Islam after the Great Divergence, or something like this--then I would say that history moves at different speeds in different places. Which is an entirely separate argument.