Shooting at French Satirical Magazine

We don't operate drone strikes and nobody is claiming to operate drone strikes under a British flag.

So they have to protest against whats been done by people in another country, but you don't have to protest against what's been done by people in another country?
 
Thousands and thousands of totally innocent women and children have been killed by drone strikes, whether they were targeted or collateral damage is utterly irrelevant to the friends and family of the dead!

If someone killed or wiped out my family I too would then become a 'terrorist' in their eyes as I would want revenge !!!

A drone is a weapon. Just like a gun or a missile or a bomb.

Just because someone does something bad with it doesn't make its use automatically immoral.
 
So they have to protest against whats been done by people in another country, but you don't have to protest against what's been done by people in another country?

Yes, if they disagree with it strongly. The reason for this is that it is being done in their name.

If they don't disagree with it strongly then of course they shouldn't protest.
 
When you cannot guarantee 100% that no one other than a legitimate target is hurt then YES the use of said weapon/device is morally ambiguous at best!!
 
We should challenge a belief when it's used to legitimise a behaviour or action involving actual harm caused.

A person holding a personal belief in a god isn't a problem, but when they take that personal belief & project it onto others - expecting them to follow the same things they do it does. (when those beliefs are a matter of opinion, not objectively the cause of suffering such as say murder/violence).

This isn't a trait exclusive to the religious, it's about projection - people don't want to sleep with men & suddenly want homosexuality to be banned, people want to be religious & abide by certain religious laws & then want everybody else to.

Freedom of religion is important, as is freedom from religion. Projecting subjective beliefs is wrong & should be stood against in whatever form it takes.

The problems within the extremist minority of Islam are so bound up with historical geopolitical, social & cultural factors is makes little sense to focus solely on the religious aspect.

Frankly it's a terrible subject to discuss, as on one side you have people too afraid to criticise certain actions/behaviours or beliefs which may cause serious social harm. On the other you have bigots/racists & halfwits who jump on the bandwagon of anything anti-Muslim under the guise of humanitarianism.

The gunmen are a prefect example of breaking the requirement of not projecting a belief, they think it's wrong to mock/Islam draw images - ergo it's wrong for others to do it. This mindset at it's core should be the focus on what to change, nobody has the right to force others to comply to a given view when no harm is caused.

Freedom of speech is an important value which at times requires sacrifice & most certainly should be fought for.
 
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Thousands and thousands of totally innocent women and children have been killed by drone strikes, whether they were targeted or collateral damage is utterly irrelevant to the friends and family of the dead!

If someone killed or wiped out my family I too would then become a 'terrorist' in their eyes as I would want revenge !!!

Personally I'd seek to forgive my enemies, but I know revenge attacks are part of Islam, especially against kuffir like me.

When you cannot guarantee 100% that no one other than a legitimate target is hurt then YES the use of said weapon/device is morally ambiguous at best!!

Interesting that you'd justify becoming a terrorist and then say something like that. Let me guess, collateral damage is only bad when the kuffir are doing it...
 
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A drone is a weapon. Just like a gun or a missile or a bomb.

Just because someone does something bad with it doesn't make its use automatically immoral.

No, but you can understand why our foreign policy and the military intervention of the west can be cited as a catalyst for radicalisation.

Indeed, I suspect that is why so many British Muslims go off and fight - they see the actions of the west as injustice.

It would be like me having a beef with your local MP and then deciding to kill most of your family because of it.

Would you be angry? Would you want justice?

Would the people in your street feel the same at the atrocity levelled at you by some foreign power who you have never wronged or done harm to?

That is the reality of 'collateral damage'. Whether it is intended or not, many people have been wrongly killed.

Two wrongs do not make a right, but I am sure you can understand why some Muslims may want to take up arms against the west.
 
No, my step father was terminally ill at the time and my mother was looking after him.

So you would've gone to a protest if they were fine?


I stand corrected, we launched our first drone strike in November.

That being said I don't have a problem with drone strikes in principal. If we launch strikes against schools or other similar civilian targets I would have an issue. Strikes against ISIS camps of similar I have no problem with.

But would you be out on the streets protesting? And if not would that mean that your silence be seen as support for children & innocent people being killed?

Only because you keep comparing Apples to Oranges.

No-one is being asked to apologise, only to publicly condemn their fellow Muslims for carrying out terror attacks in the name of their faith.

Until they do so, they will be treated with suspicion and rightly so as this is the community that sheltered and possibly those responsible for terrorist acts on British soil.

This guy isn't helping either:

https://twitter.com/anjemchoudary

Are you out on the streets protesting innocents being killed in drone strikess? And if not would that mean that your silence be seen as support for children & innocent people being killed?

So you don't believe in innocent until proven guilty?
 
Western (Christian) society is abandoning religion at a much faster rate than the Muslim world, so as the religious disparity between East and West widens so do the differences in ideology and social values - we are simply "evolving" at different speeds and are becoming increasingly incompatible as we do so.


Yes indeed, and for that reason multiculturalism will never work
 
French are all about freedom of speech and at least they are consistent.....



Actually wait a minute

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/4337031.stm

France's Catholic Church has won a court injunction to ban a clothing advertisement based on Leonardo da Vinci's Christ's Last Supper.
The display was ruled

"a gratuitous and aggressive act of intrusion on people's innermost beliefs", by a judge

15164_6401.jpg


Seems the Christians were offended too....
 
Only because you keep comparing Apples to Oranges.

No-one is being asked to apologise, only to publicly condemn their fellow Muslims for carrying out terror attacks in the name of their faith.

Until they do so, they will be treated with suspicion and rightly so as this is the community that sheltered and possibly those responsible for terrorist acts on British soil.

This guy isn't helping either:

https://twitter.com/anjemchoudary
Again, thanks for highlighting an individual... You understand my point, yes? That it's ridiculous to condemn them all because of individuals.

Also, again, it would USEFUL for them to publicly condemn these actions. But I stand with a few on here that aren't surprised that they're not out in force (and it has little to do with condoning violence)...
 
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