Jump to content

How to defeat political Islam


Hans de Vries

Recommended Posts

This is a thread that should cover the wider range of issue than the ISIS thread.

 

By defeating political Islam I mean either destroying the movement completely or at least weakening it to such a degree that it is not able to attract a significant number of followers, and therefore, unable to seize power anywhere.

 

The main discussion should be global strategy - i.e. the one that can be used on a wide scale. But discussion about "tactical" level (limited to one contry or even a single region of some country) are welcomed as well.

 

The timescale about 2015-2050 - what to do and what not to do. We may also discuss the current "war on terror" and it's consequences - positive and negative.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Education can help defeat political Islam. Boko Haram, which is often called "Western education is forbidden", is really "Education if forbidden". Religions don't like science and math. When people are well educated in sciences, they become more skeptical of religions, consistent with the "Theory of Santa Claus". Religions do not encourage critical thinking, but rely totally on FAITH, and encourage "group think".

 

Moderate religious people are moderate because they have a healthy agnosticism and are educated so they can see that religion is mostly a social structure and a group delusion for wishful thinking. Freedom of religion is really freedom to live within a delusion.

 

The leaders of ISIS must be fairly intelligent people because they are able to manipulate their sheep. So they are probably skeptical and agnostic about Islam, but they teach their sheep to follow Blind Faith.

Edited by Airbrush
Link to comment
Share on other sites

“You can lead a horse to water but you can’t make it drink” is an illustration of the concept that control is illusory; you can’t force anyone to agree with your views, you can request, you can persuade but you can’t defeat faith with force.

 

The danger in trying to defeat faith is that you simply reinforce it and in doing so you strengthen the opposition “one often meets ones destiny on the path one chooses to avoid it”.

Edited by dimreepr
Link to comment
Share on other sites

“You can lead a horse to water but you can’t make it drink” is an illustration of the concept that control is illusory; you can’t force anyone to agree with your views, you can request, you can persuade but you can’t defeat faith with force.

 

The danger in trying to defeat faith is that you simply reinforce it and in doing so you strengthen the opposition “one often meets ones destiny on the path one chooses to avoid it”.

We can defeat some people with force. Faith without people doesn't exist. We use force against terrorists and terrorist faith.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

We can defeat some people with force.

 

 

Only by killing them but that won’t kill the idea or force compliance.

 

 

Faith without people doesn't exist.

 

 

 

Really?

 

 

We use force against terrorists and terrorist faith.

 

 

 

That doesn’t seem to be going so well.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

 

Only by killing them but that won’t kill the idea or force compliance.

 

 

 

 

Really?

 

 

 

 

That doesn’t seem to be going so well.

Of course animals can have faith but we don't consider them now.

Murder of terrorists is more effective than your offers.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It NEEDS to. Political Islam (at least in it's current form) is not something akin to political Christianity in the US that organizes anti-gay protests and lobbies for creationism. Political Islam actively kills everyone who dares to oppose it - and that's how it's practiced in Saudi Arabia, Iran, Pakistan etc.

 

That's why any coexistence with this ideology simply isn't an option. It must be smashed. Return to 1950-60s style secularism is the bare minimum that the Middle East should acheive. Back then most people did not care about religion and Islamism was limited to a very tight circle of theologians and was not a popular movement.

Edited by Hans de Vries
Link to comment
Share on other sites

My hierarchy looks something like that

 

Islamist dictatorship<secular dictatorship<secular democracy

 

Secular authocracy is of course preferable. But the process of "defeating" cannot consist solely of replacing one political elite with a different one. There must be a situation that the overwhelming majority (>95%) of people in Muslim counries actually supports democracy, freedom of religion and all other things associated with civilized societies.

 

Why do theocracies still persist in Saudi Arabia and Iran? Why is Pakistan more theocratic now than it was 60 years ago? That's because nobody in these countries puts enough pressure for changes to start. Neither the masses nor the political elite is interested in any secularization.

Edited by Hans de Vries
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Lebanon is not a good example, it's 40% Christian. Turkey is.

 

Of course it would be best if all of ME turned into France-like states - completely secular, with overwhelming majority of the population being either atheist, agnostic or just nominal believers not caring much about religion at all.

Edited by Hans de Vries
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I am not sure what you mean, Lebanon has religious (including but not exclusive influence in its politics, though to lesser degree than other countries in the middle east but to higher degree than Turkey. And again, Syria is a secular state, so should other countries in that region aspire to that?

 

But if we expand on the religious elements: According to a Pew poll In the US, asking people whether the bible or will of people should take precedent in laws, 63% responded with the people's will. This is quite a bit off from 95%. Also, 32% responded that the bible should take precedence. Yet there is obviously no denying that the US is a free, democratic state. Also, as has been mentioned a few times in various posts here, a large majority of Muslims responded that religious freedom is a good thing, though the values vary significantly between countries.

 

My point is there is not a singular thing like political Islam. In different countries the influence of Islam on politics, law and society is very different, and if we conflate everything into a simple term all we are discussing is a caricature of the real thing. For example, Turkey is overwhelmingly Muslim, is a secular state and as such has severe restrictions on religious freedom (GRI 6.4, the higher the more restrictive). On the overall democracy index it is somewhere in the middle worldwide (rank 88 2012, between Sri Lanka and Ecuador; as reference,Norway is 1, France 28, Russia is 122, Singapore 81, Serbia 66). Turkey also has abolished Islamic law courts.

 

Lebanon has more religious freedom than Turkey, is less secular and score worse on the democracy index (99, between Bosnia and Cambodia). Its legal system is based on Civil, Sharia and Ottoman laws.

 

Similar to Lebanon the secularity of Israel is ambiguous, at best. There are laws drawn from orthodox Judaism and Sharia Laws that are applied to Muslim citizen. Again, undoubtedly due to the unique elements of this country. Freedom of religion is low (6.5), but democracy is relatively high (rank 37, between Chile and India).

 

Syria is secular, but again went a different route than Turkey. It combined secularism with a strongly authoritarian system and as consequence has some of the least religious freedom and democracy in the world. Although it should be stated that current affairs are skewing the results a fair bit.

 

Obviously we also have secular states with low degrees for religious freedom and democracy such as China (GRI 8.6, democracy rank 142 and Russia (GRI: 7.7, 122) to add another issue on top.

 

Or we can move out of the Middle East and add Indonesia, another predominantly Islamic state with low religious freedom, but somewhat decent democracy (between Argentina and Bulgaria). So just using a few (two, actually) values we see a bit of a spread in countries in the Middle East and it is only getting more complicated once we delve into politics and laws. Elements such as freedom of religion, human rights and democracy are realized in different patterns based on historic, societal and socioeconomic challenges and realities.

 

Even if we look at a single aspect such as gender equality, things are complicated. The voting right for women was in some middle eastern countries established pretty fast, especially compared to many European countries (if accounting when voting was established, even for men). And looking at Pew polls the majority of asked Muslims (polled countries Lebanon, Turkey, Pakistan, Tunisia, Egypt, Jordan) state that women should have the same rights as men. Highest number Lebanon and Turkey (93/84%) Lowest Egypt (58%). When asked whether men are better political leaders 32%! in Lebanon Agreed, 42% in Egypt, with the highest numbers in Pakistan and Tunisia (75%/62%).

There are also hugely mixed attitudes in the decision of who should choose the husband, family, women or both, ranging from 11% -85% women, 5-59% family and 9-49% both.

So the spread on even a single issue is huge, how can we assume the same situation in every region and, even worse, propose the same solution? Sure there are certain things that will always work. Better access to education, improvement of socioeconomic situation, improve urbanization and overall standard of living. Promote regional and political stability. The whole works, really.

Edited by CharonY
Link to comment
Share on other sites

No amount of sharia law in the legal system is acceptable. I want to see 100% secular countries all around the Middle East. By secular I mean countries in which most of the population either does not believe in God or are only nominal believers and in which religion plays no role in politics.

 

So I want to see liberals/libertarians and leftists dominating the political scene. No salafists, no Muslim Brotherhoods and no no clashes between so-and-so branches of clergy like in Iran.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Europeans are barely religious. The most irreligious places in the world are located in Europe (former DDR, Czech Republic, Nordic countries).

 

Maybe we're making things more complicated than they really are? I started this thread to discuss possible strategies of defeating Islamism. So far we're discussing about what exactly constitutes secularism. Aren't these two a bit different?

 

CharonY, what's exactly your opinion on Sharia law? Not legal systems that employ elements of sharia bu sharia as a whole, in it's purest form.

Edited by Hans de Vries
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Well, in the EU about 50% state that they believe in god and a further 2xish% in some supernatural powers.Atheists are at around 20%. I would not state that to be barely. Also religion does have influence, ranging from parties that cater to certain confessions to certain limitations of freedom such as same-sex marriage in certain countries. There is the issue with Church taxes in Germany for example. Also the role of church in ethical issues including abortions.

Claiming that Europe is not religious n any way is simply not true. Also note that the lack of religion in some Eastern countries was not the result of Western enlightenment, but the influence of Soviets. Even so traditionally very religious countries such as Poland believe from 80-95% in a god. While the influence in religion is waning on average it is still going strong in many countries (and has made a comeback in some cases). It is also used in popular politics quite a bit while referring to European vague Judeo-Christian values. So yeah, you are off the mark a bit again.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

No amount of sharia law in the legal system is acceptable. I want to see 100% secular countries all around the Middle East. By secular I mean countries in which most of the population either does not believe in God or are only nominal believers and in which religion plays no role in politics.

 

So I want to see liberals/libertarians and leftists dominating the political scene. No salafists, no Muslim Brotherhoods and no no clashes between so-and-so branches of clergy like in Iran.

 

 

This reminds me of Jon Stewart’s “bullshit mountain” where they try to solve complex problems with simple incorrect answers.

 

Solving this problem with force, however shocking and awe inspiring will simply exacerbate the problem in the long run; a conquered people are never at peace.

 

India rose up with force against the British the following retribution was bloody and savage (arguably more so than IS). It was only the emergence of a learned man who advocated peaceful protest that the problem was solved; leaving behind a stable democracy. The same pattern was mirrored in South Africa, with the same result.

 

Can the allies honestly say they left a stable democracy in either Afghanistan or Iraq?

 

“Violence begat violence” only through understanding does this problem have the same result as India and South Africa.

Edited by dimreepr
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.