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Author Topic:   Reasons why the NeoCons aren't real Republicans
Faith 
Suspended Member (Idle past 1472 days)
Posts: 35298
From: Nevada, USA
Joined: 10-06-2001


Message 196 of 301 (224336)
07-17-2005 11:33 PM
Reply to: Message 178 by Silent H
07-17-2005 2:59 PM


Re: Steve has his cake and eats it...
Why should he have to answer you if it's clear you just inhabit completely different viewpoints and neither is going to change his mind? Isn't that place to agree to disagree?
I have already explained this in an earlier post. In order to agree to disagree the two parties must agree on the facts and that they can lead to either conclusion, or are inconclusive in and of themselves.
I read that but I thought it strange. Agreeing to disagree is just something people do when they are locking horns about anything, and that can be about facts too. I don't remember the context but there are always different collections of facts people have in mind in coming to their conclusions and accepting YOUR collection can't be DEMANDED of somebody. Sure, in a scientific paper one would be expected to muster them all, but this conversation is about politics.
We can agree not to kill each other and be civil regarding how we handle our disagreement, but there is no possibility of agreeing that they can disagree. Indeed I find it quite ironic that people who argue for absolutes and the nontruth of relativism are arguing that people can agree to disagree like its possible that both could be right, or that it should be treated as such.
Maybe that's the problem, you think it means agreeing that both could be right. I've never seen it that way. Both believe they are right and the other wrong and stop at that point. All it means is that you agree to leave the argument at the point you leave it as it is unresolvable, both sides being convinced of their own view.
Why is one always attacked in emotional terms for having a clear intellectual understanding of Islam?
He used emotional terms, not me. Or at least I only used them to explain his argument in short hand. If I had a long thesis on the history of Xians killing children and then said the logical conclusion is that most if not all Xians are incapable of rearing children normally and are likely to kill them, I think you'd understand that despite my well worked out position, it is still insulting. It would be slighting them by generalizing to the point of stereotype.
He argues from a position more or less like the one I argue from and it's not a stereotype at all, it's a matter of historical fact. You are reading things into it. That's what always seems to happen. There is an emotional commitment people have to the idea that all religions are the same. Islam is not. This is not an attack on Muslims as most Muslims don't follow their religion to the letter, it's a statement about what the religion actually promotes as written when it is lived out as written and not spiritualized. I think it is remarkable that Steve understands that Christian fundamentalism leads in the opposite direction than Islamic fundamentalism does. These are all matters of fact and calling people bigots and the like for trying to spell them out is what I meant by emotional and unfair.
I defy you to show where he has defended his understanding of Islam, much less shown it is clear and intellectual. He has dismissed facts and refused to answer direct counterexamples.
I think you misinterpreted along the lines I just described. What you call a fact may be simply your acceptance of propaganda as he did say in other words a couple of times. I don't want to go back over the same ground.
I didn't see him say he's not.
============
My error. I was using Xian and fundamentalism in a way that included Judaism. He would have not necessarily understood that, and so when he rejected the label of Xian and indeed tried to describe atheists as holding the same view he had, I leapt to the errant conclusion he was saying he was atheist... which would of course include Judaism.
This mistake was wholly my own.
OK. I've never heard Judaism described as fundamentalism myself. Even the orthodox differ from Christians in how rigorously they hold to the historicity of Genesis 1-11 for instance.
he didn't say that Christianity was the SOURCE of liberal democracy. He took pains not to say that. He said Chrsitanity is compatible with it and it flourished in Christian society.
I used the term "source" to encapsulate his rather lengthy argument of exactly how Xianity and liberal democracy are connected. I don't see any better descriptor for it. It cannot be fully described as "compatible" and "fluorished within".
But the problem is that when you say "source" you end up accusing him of denying that it began in Greece when all he's saying is that it ought to be obvious that democracy never got a foothold anywhere on earth except in the Christianity-saturated West, whatever problems it may have encountered there as well, which aren't much considering how well established it in fact did ultimately get. He's making a lot of sense. I'm personally not all that big on democracy. I like the Representative Republic idea of the American Founders myself, the Electoral College, and other constraints on democracy, which I do sometimes argue derived from the Christian philosophical background of the Founders whether or not they were all literally Christians themselves. And if you count the hundreds who had a shaping role in the founding, most of them WERE literally Christians -- the secularist argument is always tendentiously weighted on the main names who were Deists, and especially the two, Jefferson and Franklin, who were practical atheists. Even the Enlightenment derived from Christian philosophy, simply cut loose from the religious aspects, and couldn't have come from any other intellectual foundation.
He said "It was in the Christian world and no other that liberal democracy arose, at a time when the vast majority was what you would call fundamentalist." But this is factually errant in every possible way, and argues a position beyond what you describe.
I really can't grasp what frame of reference you have in mind. His statement seems indisputable to me.
Democracy did arise in Greece, but when Christianity came along the Roman Empire was running things, including Greece.
Greece was a democracy. Rome was a Republic, which is to some extent the same thing (though they sometimes faltered and took on all powerful emperors as the French did at one time and it appears we are now flirting with).
Jews were in conflict with democracies, and Xians were advocating kingdoms.
But you are confusing time periods aren't you? For one thing when were the Jews ever in a position to be "in conflict with democracies" in any sense that involves the historical development of democracy in the West? Kingdoms were what developed later in Europe, after the Roman Empire had been abolished by barbarian hordes from barbarian Europe -- it was a natural outgrowth of the tribal situation in Europe without the influence of the Empire. In what sense did Christians "advocate" this situation or in what sense was there any possibility of any other political system at the time? Christianity in fact had a liberalizing effect on the whole show, civilizing kings and tribalism in general. I guess they went too far with their idea of the divine right of kings, thinking of God as putting all government into power as in fact the Bible says, and forgetting that God never meant to passively tolerate tyrannical kings or unjust government. Monarchy is compatible with Christianity, certainly, but I don't see how Christianity as such defended monarchy over democracy when it became possible to develop more democratic political systems. Where do you get that idea?
When Constantine converted Xianity rose to power. What followed was a consolidation of the monarchical view of leadership, and rejection of civil, or democratic lawmaking bodies. When these would arise in towns and cities they would be crushed, to make way for feudal domination.
I don't get this at all. Can you refer me to the historians who have this view? Feudalism seems to me to be the natural practical outgrowth of the tribalism of barbarian Europe, which the Roman Empire hadn't succeeded in civilizing, and even so, it was in the process of being civilized by the Church throughout the Middle Ages, however corrupt the Church did eventually become.
I am trying to understand where you believe Xians allowed or encouraged democratic govts and legislative bodies? They did not even allow free thinking about xianity by the masses, until the rise of Protestantism. Do you need me to look up names of societies existing back then which tried legislative assemblies?
Are you simply focusing on the period of the "Holy Roman Empire" or the period when the Roman Church was corrupt and basically running Europe? YOu have to understand, if so, that as a Protestant I view most of that as the opposite of Christian, and the movements that overthrew it as more truly Christian in spirit. The people were mired in superstitions closer to paganism than to Christianity under the influence of the Roman Church before the Reformation and yet there were still Christian philosophical influences and genuine Christianity in various pockets of Europe and the liberalizing movements of the time came from the inspiration of Christianity. The Magna Carta was forced on a nominally Christian king by other Christians for instance. You couldn't have HAD a democratic uprising that WASN'T Christian in inspiration in Europe. EVERYBODY was soaked in the basic Christian teachings of the Church despite the domination of superstition. Sorting all that out isn't a matter of declaring one side Christian and the other not, but if it were then I'd reverse the sides myself.
And what societies "rebelled?" I really don't follow you.
I'm sorry this I cannot believe. You never heard of the American and French revolutions? Those were the first in the western world to fully throw off the last vestiges of "power comes from God" monarchical govts, and institute secular "power comes from those governed" govts.
So now we're up to post-Reformation times? OK. The American Revolution was debated on both sides by Christians and it was a very reluctant revolution, people not wanting to go to war with their own British fatherland, and the Americans were on the defensive not the aggressors, and not disposed against monarchy as such but against a particular tyrant of a monarch. The freedom that became the foundation of American government was a freedom that had been simply de facto in the American colonies for the previous century and a half. They were used to it and wouldn't yield it to any kind of tyranny and sought a government form that would preserve it. What happened in the French Revolution was something entirely different, ugly, brutish and sheer evil from the point of view of most Americans, who resented all attempts to conflate it with what had happened in America. The French Revolution had more in common with the Bolshevik Revolution which issued in totalitarianism and murder, than with America. That France settled down into something civilized after that may have to do more with its liberal Christian European traditions than its overthrow of God. It's debatable at least.
That "greatest period of ignorance" was a period when Europe was still sparsely populated, still quite wild and tribal and dominated by a myriad of small kingdoms fortified behind castle walls that were frequently at war with one another.
I'm sorry, but this was directly after the rise to power of Xianity and the subsequent fall of Rome. It was the dark ages and middle ages and these are without question the ages dominated by Xian rule. Your description is accurate and I might add what is highly analogous to many Islamic nations today.
The Church was still extending its influence in the early part of the Middle Ages wasn't it? Europe was still mostly pagan during the early period. Certainly Christianity was gradually influencing people's thinking but where are you getting "rule?" When the Roman Empire fell so did the Christian "rule" through it. Christian "rule" I guess you could say grew with the Church's association with political power, which was the corrupting influence that finally destroyed it, but that took time. The Church didn't really "rule" anything until the later Middle Ages.
I don't see any analogy with Islam myself. The Middle East is tribal because there is nothing in the history of the culture or the religion to change it from being tribal, and it's already reached its peaks of influence in the past from which it didn't develop out of its tribalism, but rather retreated, and if it does eventually become democratized it will only be from foreign influence because the religion itself is inimical to democracy as Steve said.
That is why I find CS's casting of Islam as opposed to certain things, because they haven't reappeared yet, as they went on to reappear in Xian nations after their dark ages, a bit hypocritical.
But your comparison is false. The situations are not in any way similar. Islam IS in its fundamental ideas inimical to democracy. While Christianity may have favored monarchy at times, and made the mistake of aligning with political power, which is deadly to the Church, it doesn't oppose democracy in its fundamental ideas as Islam does. Islam prescribes the identity of religion and state. Christianity does not. These are simply facts.
You can hardly blame its growing pains on the Church.
Ah, but we can blame Islam... correct?
For what? Islam is a COMPLETELY different worldview, holmes, utterly the opposite of Christianity. This attempt to blur it with Christianity is intellectually corrupt, the product of emotionalism.
As for science, it is simply a fact that it was MONKS who started empirical science. Roger Bacon was a monk. I'd have to look up the others. The Church was, however, quite corrupt in the late Middle Ages, was following Aristotle more than the Bible, and persecuted Galileo because of Aristotle rather than because of the Bible, so goes one argument I think is very plausible, but I'm no historian.
The first statement is factually inaccurate, as most of the scientific method, and many of our key initial developments in modern science, came from Islamic scholars. Western scientists had to slowly import the new knowledge which was resisted by the church.
Well, that's an interesting piece of revisionist propaganda you are going to have to defend with a great deal of documentation.
Your second has already been dealt with and was shown to be factually inaccurate. They burned people for practicing real science, as well as people advocating power from the masses, instead of from divine right.
On the basis of the pagan Aristotle's view of the universe, not one derivable from the Bible. That was part of the deep corruption of the Roman Church which had long since left Christianity for pagan superstitions, and the uprisings that finally overthrew its influence had more true Christianity in them.
It took the Protestant Reformation to start the liberalizing trends that launched modern science.
In this we are agreed. Just as conservative and militant Islam is wrestling with the moderates, so too did the Church wrestle with the moderate Xian factions.
What you are not getting is that the more TRULY Biblical Christianity is, the more liberally and democratically -- and scientifically --inclined it is. The problem with the Roman Church was that it was no longer Biblically Christian, for the last few centuries before the Reformation. WHEREAS the more fundamentalist Islam is, the more it adheres to its fundamentalist interpretations, the more violent and tyrannical it is. This has to do with the fundamental nature of the religion itself.
Again that is why it is nothing but hypocrisy to hang Islam as being inherently opposed to something, as Xianity cannot be conceived of as just what the Church was like back then.
It is not hypocrisy at all, it is the conclusion one comes to from thinking about the actual facts of the situation rather than appealing to a sentimental notion based on extremely superficial similarities that have entirely different historical and philosophical sources.
I really don't know how much the Enlightenment had to do with that, some no doubt. The first scientists were enthralled with the idea of understanding GOD'S CREATION. It's certainly not that society had to be secular for science to flourish.
The enlightenment was powerful, which is why ID theorists and some Evangelicals openly blast it as something abhorent. You are correct that scientists were not necessarily atheist, and many saw their work as peering into the true nature of God and his universe. The important aspect is that they championed REASON and EVIDENCE as the only viable method to discovering that nature, rather than faith and ignorant obedience to priests or dogma.
YOu have a very skewed understanding of the history of these things. The Enlightenment is rejected by Christians because it jettisoned religion itself, but its principles for the most part nevertheless DERIVED from Christianity. John Locke for instance was more of a Deist than a Christian but he developed the principle of religious tolerance from the work of John Owen, who was dean at Oxford when Locke was a student there, and Owen was a Puritan of the deepest Biblical faith. That trend of thought is now thoroughly secularized but its origin was Christian.
Neither reason nor evidence contradict Christianity and empirical scientific principles DID develop from the belief in the rational God of the Bible who created a lawful universe, which was hardly the view of Aristotle or any pagan philosopher. There was no need to pit Reason against the Christian religion, it was simply human fallen nature that chose to do that and declare itself free of God. Eventually Reason will destroy the human race BECAUSE humanity is fallen and reason cut free from God is no longer reasonable.
You are right that societies did not have to be secular, but scientific methodology had to be.
No it did not. It merely had to be objective. Evolution has challenged the Bible, but evolution is bogus. Eventually this will be shown SCIENTIFICALLY.
Societies also did not have to be secular to have good democratic govts, but the govts had to be secular.
Well, let's see where secularism takes us. I know there's little chance of stopping it now. Oh I'm totally for separation of church from state but that never meant to me the secularization of the nation. Funny that this "secular" government the Founders created began with prayer in the Constitutional Congress that created it and established prayer in all its functions thereafter. But I'm not up to that argument now.
This message has been edited by Faith, 07-17-2005 11:42 PM

This message is a reply to:
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Replies to this message:
 Message 198 by crashfrog, posted 07-17-2005 11:37 PM Faith has replied

CanadianSteve
Member (Idle past 6500 days)
Posts: 756
From: Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Joined: 06-06-2005


Message 197 of 301 (224339)
07-17-2005 11:35 PM
Reply to: Message 191 by bobbins
07-17-2005 10:15 PM


One article, amongst many, on BBC bias
BIAS at the BEEB (BBC)
Posted: 5/18/2005 10:21:00 AM
Author: Melanie Phillips
Source: http://www.standwithus.com
May 16, 2005
Bias at the Beeb (BBC)
Daily Mail, 16 May 2005
Fairness, impartiality and objectivity are the essence of public service broadcast journalism. This understanding is enshrined in the BBC’s charter and provides a key justification for the licence fee.
Now, however, an explosive insider’s account threatens to blow this cosy assumption clean out of the water as a fraud upon the public. Robin Aitken, who spent his entire career as a BBC journalist, has written a book accusing the BBC of institutionalised leftism.
This is by no means the first time such an accusation has been levelled, but generally such critics have been dismissed as parti-pris. This is why Aitken’s book, ”Taking Sides: Bias at the BBC’, is so significant.
For 25 years he chalked up solid experience across the board as a BBC reporter, covering some of the biggest stories of the day. In other words, he is BBC man through and through. So when someone like this lifts the lid on newsroom culture, it carries weight. And his message is that BBC journalism is as bent as a corkscrew.
In Aitken’s words, there is a centre-left consensus at the BBC that colours its entire output and undermines its impartiality. Dislike of US Republicans, he says, is close to being an article of faith. The flagship Today programme failed to present a balanced view of Iraq; it was hostile to the very notion of a war simply because it couldn’t bear the fact that President Bush was both a Republican and an evangelical Christian.
Its unshakeable belief in the moral authority of the UN means it will not entertain any scepticism about that corrupt organisation. And its prejudice against Ulster Protestants meant that when a former IRA terrorist who turned informer told Aitken that Pat Finucane, the Belfast solicitor murdered by loyalists, was a senior figure in the IRA, he could not persuade the BBC to run the story.
This picture of a corrupted BBC culture that is ideologically skewed towards the left is blindingly obvious to anyone who does not share those assumptions. It is a far deeper problem than the political partisanship recently let slip by Today presenter Jim Naughtie when he inadvertently referred to the Labour Party as ”we’.
With a few honourable exceptions, the BBC views every issue through the prism of left-wing, secular, anti-western thinking. It is the Guardian of the air. It has a knee-jerk antipathy to America, the free market, big business, religion, British institutions, the Conservative party and Israel; it supports the human rights culture, the Palestinians, Irish republicanism, European integration, multiculturalism and a liberal attitude towards drugs and a host of social issues.
Every day, its relentless bias rolls across the airwaves to shape the assumptions of our society. Who can be surprised at Britain’s current anti-Americanism when the BBC starts from the premise that President Bush is a dangerous extremist?
Thus it describes Republicans opposed to his controversial UN nominee John Bolton as ”moderate’. On News 24 the other night, after scenes of ecstatic Georgians praising President Bush for supporting their quest for freedom, the presenter declared that America was interested in Georgia only in order to grab its oil.
Who can be surprised at Britain’s visceral hatred of Israel when, having all but ignored such atrocities as the two decades of genocide in southern Sudan or the systematic Muslim persecution of Christians worldwide, the BBC obsessively transmits a twisted view of the Arab war against the Jewish state which presents genocidal Hamas terrorists as heroic freedom fighters and Israeli attempts at self-defence as unwarranted aggression?
On issue after issue, the BBC throws impartiality to the winds. When abortion recently resurfaced as a controversy, TV’s Newsnight featured a discussion between two pro-abortion campaigners ” Sir David Steel, the architect of the current Abortion Act, and the feminist writer Suzie Orbach ” with no-one to put an anti-abortion view.
On another occasion, when Prince Charles sounded off about an educational culture which encouraged everyone to think they could all achieve the dizzying heights of fame and fortune, Newsnight not only sneered at his own privileged background and education but also misrepresented what he had said to put him in the worst possible light. And so on, and endlessly on.
The terrifying thing is the BBC’s inability to acknowledge that there is a problem. Senior BBC executives appear anxious to produce impartial journalism. But presented with example after example of bias, they are baffled. They can’t see the prejudice ” because they themselves share it.
Even more alarmingly, they think their position represents the centre ground. They therefore think that those who oppose it are extreme. So their idea of balance is utterly unbalanced, and they subscribe to a thought system that is closed.
That is why the BBC can produce such grotesque aberrations as the Today programme item last year about definitions of terrorism, which involved a discussion between Leila Khaled, the erstwhile Palestinian plane hijacker, and Danny Morrison, the erstwhile Northern Ireland Republican terror detainee.
I write this as someone who is often asked onto such programmes to provide ”balance’. But with the exception of the Moral Maze on which I am a panellist, where a cross-section of opinion is essential to the format of the programme, such appearances amount to little more than tokenism.
It is quite common for BBC discussions to pitch two or three participants against one ”or indeed, no-one at all ” on the other side with the dissenter presented as an extremist.
On programmes like Radio Four’s Any Questions or TV’s Question Time, such a hapless participant may be up against not only an unbalanced panel and a hostile studio audience but the Dimbleby brothers each subtly conveying supercilious distaste.
The obvious remedy is to bring on presenters and journalists who do not share the closed thought system of the left. Flagship programmes like Start the Week or other current affairs programmes are rarely fronted by anyone outside this consensus.
The BBC regards its departing political editor, Andrew Marr, as a star although his apparent closeness to New Labour too often made him seem like a mouthpiece for Downing Street.
His departure is an opportunity to replace him by someone outside the left-wing tent. But the gossip is that the job may go to someone very much inside it, Newsnight’s Martha Kearney, because the governing imperative is apparently to ”get a woman’.
The BBC chairman Michael Grade appears to be genuinely concerned about lapses in journalism standards. In a lecture last week, he passionately upheld the BBC’s ethic of impartiality.
To his credit, he set up a review of his journalists’ attitudes to the EU which found that they were unbalanced, and he is setting up a similar review dealing with the reporting of the Middle East. But he has an uphill battle to get his senior managers to put this right, because so few are themselves outside this all-embracing consensus.
BBC journalism is trusted around the world ” which is why its bias is of such momentous importance and has such potentially devastating consequences. Mr Grade needs to insist on changing the faces the BBC presents to the world and thus levering open its closed thought system, if its tattered kitemark of impartiality has any chance of being restored.
Page not found | MelaniePhillips.com

This message is a reply to:
 Message 191 by bobbins, posted 07-17-2005 10:15 PM bobbins has not replied

crashfrog
Member (Idle past 1494 days)
Posts: 19762
From: Silver Spring, MD
Joined: 03-20-2003


Message 198 of 301 (224340)
07-17-2005 11:37 PM
Reply to: Message 196 by Faith
07-17-2005 11:33 PM


Sure, in a scientific paper one would be expected to muster them all, but this conversation is about politics.
You always act like empircism has such a narrow application that its utility lies only in the field of very technical science. How on Earth do you come to hold such a ridiculous view? What makes you think the burden of evidence and rigorous argumentation is any less simply because the discussion is not about physics or biology? For that matter haven't you ever heard of political science?

This message is a reply to:
 Message 196 by Faith, posted 07-17-2005 11:33 PM Faith has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 199 by Faith, posted 07-17-2005 11:45 PM crashfrog has replied

Faith 
Suspended Member (Idle past 1472 days)
Posts: 35298
From: Nevada, USA
Joined: 10-06-2001


Message 199 of 301 (224342)
07-17-2005 11:45 PM
Reply to: Message 198 by crashfrog
07-17-2005 11:37 PM


Nobody can HAVE all the facts about history and politics, it's a matter of reality, not empiricism. Even science may have a problem keeping all its facts in order, but at least there they are available to be found, unlike in the messy areas of history and politics.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 198 by crashfrog, posted 07-17-2005 11:37 PM crashfrog has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 200 by crashfrog, posted 07-17-2005 11:48 PM Faith has replied

crashfrog
Member (Idle past 1494 days)
Posts: 19762
From: Silver Spring, MD
Joined: 03-20-2003


Message 200 of 301 (224343)
07-17-2005 11:48 PM
Reply to: Message 199 by Faith
07-17-2005 11:45 PM


Nobody can HAVE all the facts about history and politics, it's a matter of reality, not empiricism.
C'mon, that's stupid. There's only one history. You can't have competing facts about one single occurance.
History, and even politics, is just as amienable to empirical inquiry as anything else that happens. You only suggest otherwise because its a necessary foundation for your constant attempts to promulgate perverted revisionist history.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 199 by Faith, posted 07-17-2005 11:45 PM Faith has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 206 by Faith, posted 07-18-2005 1:20 AM crashfrog has not replied

bobbins
Member (Idle past 3641 days)
Posts: 122
From: Manchester, England
Joined: 06-23-2005


Message 201 of 301 (224344)
07-18-2005 12:11 AM
Reply to: Message 195 by CanadianSteve
07-17-2005 11:12 PM


Re: Steve has his cake and eats it...
The post you replied to asked for evidence, do not repeat the assertion blindly and do not assume my politics.
The far left bias you ascribe to the BBC is lost to any who watch and listen to the BBC on a daily basis. In the middle of writing this you have posted your evidence. Hmmm. A self-proclaimed 'middle of the road conservative' quoted in a right-wing newspaper. The same newspaper that advocates a scrapping of the licence fee that funds the BBC and removing all privileges given to BBC re coverage of Parliament. So no hidden agenda there. And one of many examples. Bring them on. Hopefully not from the same source or a Murdoch owned media outlet (who also, as owner of the next biggest broadcaster in the UK, advocates scrapping of the licence fee and removing of all broadcast privileges bestowed on the BBC). The article even suggests that radio presenters should be changed because The Daily Mail says so.
Please quote an independent source, one who has no axe to grind (or bury between the shoulderblades).
Admittedly re the second point, not so much at the moment but a look at history will tell you that christianity is not above any of those things. (maybe not flying planes into buildings).

This message is a reply to:
 Message 195 by CanadianSteve, posted 07-17-2005 11:12 PM CanadianSteve has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 202 by CanadianSteve, posted 07-18-2005 12:47 AM bobbins has replied
 Message 204 by Faith, posted 07-18-2005 1:03 AM bobbins has replied

CanadianSteve
Member (Idle past 6500 days)
Posts: 756
From: Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Joined: 06-06-2005


Message 202 of 301 (224349)
07-18-2005 12:47 AM
Reply to: Message 201 by bobbins
07-18-2005 12:11 AM


You are unable to see it
because you share its bias, you assume its bias is, in fact, objective, fair perspective. And you assume that any who see a left wing bias, in so doing, reveal their own (right wing) bias. Thus you will not consider any opinion of bias against the BBC as being without bias itself. In fact, its bias is legendary these days around the world, amongst all those who do not share its view point. You can find, perhaps, 100 or more references to this with a quick google search - all biased, of course. Apparently, even churchill noted it, when the then head of the BBC refused to allow him to broadcast any warning about the gathering nazi threat in the 30's - because Churchill's opinion was too biased to be worthy.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 201 by bobbins, posted 07-18-2005 12:11 AM bobbins has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 203 by NosyNed, posted 07-18-2005 12:53 AM CanadianSteve has replied
 Message 205 by bobbins, posted 07-18-2005 1:13 AM CanadianSteve has replied

NosyNed
Member
Posts: 9004
From: Canada
Joined: 04-04-2003


Message 203 of 301 (224351)
07-18-2005 12:53 AM
Reply to: Message 202 by CanadianSteve
07-18-2005 12:47 AM


Source for the churchill problem?
...when the then head of the BBC refused to allow him to broadcast any warning about the gathering nazi threat in the 30's - because Churchill's opinion was too biased to be worthy.
Please supply a source for this. Thank you.

This message is a reply to:
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Faith 
Suspended Member (Idle past 1472 days)
Posts: 35298
From: Nevada, USA
Joined: 10-06-2001


Message 204 of 301 (224353)
07-18-2005 1:03 AM
Reply to: Message 201 by bobbins
07-18-2005 12:11 AM


Re: Steve has his cake and eats it...
Admittedly re the second point, not so much at the moment but a look at history will tell you that christianity is not above any of those things. (maybe not flying planes into buildings).
Christianity does not prescribe taking the world by swordpoint for God, Islam does. Moderates in Islam simply spiritualize that part of their religion. The more Biblical the Christian, however, the less violent. You are doing the usual false conflation of two utterly disparate worldviews, based on nothing but an emotionalized ideology that says without the slightest reality to support it that all cultures and religions are equal.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 201 by bobbins, posted 07-18-2005 12:11 AM bobbins has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 207 by bobbins, posted 07-18-2005 1:36 AM Faith has replied

bobbins
Member (Idle past 3641 days)
Posts: 122
From: Manchester, England
Joined: 06-23-2005


Message 205 of 301 (224354)
07-18-2005 1:13 AM
Reply to: Message 202 by CanadianSteve
07-18-2005 12:47 AM


Re: You are unable to see it
I think you will find that Churchill's opinion did not find many takers in his own political party let alone the BBC. Using Churchill as an example is going back some in your effort to find an unbiased reference to bias. The same BBC was condemned as being a puppet of capitalism by communist countries in the eastern bloc, a communist puppet by Franco, the British Bolshevik Corporation by Norman Tebbit (the man who came up with the cricket test for national identity) and threatened recently by the labour government over its coverage of the Hutton report. Now looking down the list of google entries for 'BBC left bias' I count several Daily Mail entries, several Daily Telegraph entries and some blogs that want the licence fee scrapped. Now lets get this straight, much of the air-time given for claims of bias are themselves biased. The sound of an axe to grind. I will concur to a North American, in the light of Mick's post, that the BBC to you may look left wing biased. To me I see a national broadcaster that does not toe any party political line, does not bow to nationalistic ideas and gives a fair crack of the whip to any that care to involve themselves without bowing to the prevailing political wind.

Apophenia:seeing patterns or connections in random or meaningless data.
Pareidolia:vague or random stimulus being perceived (mistakenly) as recognisable.
Ramsey Theoryatterns may exist.
Whoops!

This message is a reply to:
 Message 202 by CanadianSteve, posted 07-18-2005 12:47 AM CanadianSteve has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 214 by CanadianSteve, posted 07-18-2005 8:42 AM bobbins has not replied

Faith 
Suspended Member (Idle past 1472 days)
Posts: 35298
From: Nevada, USA
Joined: 10-06-2001


Message 206 of 301 (224355)
07-18-2005 1:20 AM
Reply to: Message 200 by crashfrog
07-17-2005 11:48 PM


I'm NOT suggesting otherwise, we ARE arguing this based on facts. The point was simple: nobody is in charge of all the facts of history. Perhaps the main issue a matter of interpretation rather than facts, but in any case, my ONLY point was that you can't force the opposition to accept YOUR view of a particular set of facts when theirs has been arrived at by another route. We're all arguing here from the barest outline knowledge of history anyway as none of us are historians. If you think you can muster every relevant fact to explain the history of Europe, let's see you try.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 200 by crashfrog, posted 07-17-2005 11:48 PM crashfrog has not replied

bobbins
Member (Idle past 3641 days)
Posts: 122
From: Manchester, England
Joined: 06-23-2005


Message 207 of 301 (224356)
07-18-2005 1:36 AM
Reply to: Message 204 by Faith
07-18-2005 1:03 AM


Re: Steve has his cake and eats it...
I have a sneaky feeling that the crusades tried it, the Spanish conquest of South America tried it. The inquisition tried it on its own people. The schism sparked by Martin Luther, The English Civil War, the bombing of innocents by protestants and catholics in Northern Ireland and mainland UK, the civil war in Lebanon, and the list could include biblical support for slavery and racial separation in South Africa and the southern states of the US. Your interpretation of the bible may not excuse these, but the bible was used by someone. For Islam the same. The difference is the Islamic struggle/dichotomy is more current, just not much different. As for the tone and content of your post - is that english? Brad! A translation please!
Ps.Deuteronomy chapter 12 verse 25 onwards has some things to say about dispossesing those of other faiths, of their lands, and I do not think it means when asked nicely.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 204 by Faith, posted 07-18-2005 1:03 AM Faith has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 208 by Faith, posted 07-18-2005 2:30 AM bobbins has replied

Faith 
Suspended Member (Idle past 1472 days)
Posts: 35298
From: Nevada, USA
Joined: 10-06-2001


Message 208 of 301 (224357)
07-18-2005 2:30 AM
Reply to: Message 207 by bobbins
07-18-2005 1:36 AM


Re: Steve has his cake and eats it...
I have a sneaky feeling that the crusades tried it,
Whatever the excesses and errors of the Crusades they were first of all a war to retake lands that the Muslims had taken from the indigenous Arabs, Christians and Jews in their imperialist push to take the world for Allah. Why are you taking sides against Europe when the Muslims were the aggressors, having taken Jerusalem and Byzantium and encroaching into Europe as well? They'd have taken ALL Europe except for the Crusaders.
the Spanish conquest of South America tried it.
Well, I guess you could oppose all the imperialist acts of Europe on an ideological opposition to colonization as such, but again, whatever their inequities and excesses there's a good argument to be made that overall they bettered the circumstances of the people they found -- an argument made BY those people, though the Left likes to whip up the idea that it was all evil with no benefits. Apparently they prefer the primitive Indian way of life with its constant intertribal wars, and especially the Central American religions of human sacrifice. So much for progress.
The inquisition tried it on its own people.
And the Inquisition was anti-Christian too, utterly at odds with the spirit of Christ, and persecuted true Christians, who are remembered as martyrs among Protestants.
The schism sparked by Martin Luther,
Martin Luther had no political ambitions whatever and lamented the wars that followed on his reforms. But the religious schism was absolutely necessary, as the Roman Church had long departed from anything remotely Christian in spirit.
The English Civil War, the bombing of innocents by protestants and catholics in Northern Ireland and mainland UK, the civil war in Lebanon, and the list could include biblical support for slavery and racial separation in South Africa and the southern states of the US. Your interpretation of the bible may not excuse these, but the bible was used by someone.
You are confusing a lot of things together here and I'm not enough of a historian to separate it all out, but many conflicts that had religious elements were nevertheless more political than religious. Sometimes war is necessary from a Biblical perspective and sometimes not, but as I said I don't know enough of the particulars in these cases. Racial separation is not a Christian thing at all and it is an enormous stretch to base it on the Bible with its gospel that is to go "to the ends of the earth" and its affirmation that "all are one in Christ, no Jew nor Gentile etc." Racism is an expression of human fallen nature, not the Bible. The Bible didn't affirm or oppose slavery, probably because it was a worldwide institution, it merely gives humane laws for its conduct and does urge freeing slaves under specific circumstances. Nevertheless over time it was Christianity that finally undid slavery. Nobody else worked against it. Islam promotes the enslavement of nonMuslims even today.
For Islam the same. The difference is the Islamic struggle/dichotomy is more current, just not much different.
Well, if the information given by Steve and me on this thread has not changed your mind, nothing more to say I guess.
As for the tone and content of your post - is that english? Brad! A translation please!
Excuse me? I reread it and it looks quite neutral as to tone, and what about my English do you object to? Americans don't speak British but in any case I don't know what you are referring to.
Ps.Deuteronomy chapter 12 verse 25 onwards has some things to say about dispossesing those of other faiths, of their lands, and I do not think it means when asked nicely.
Deuteronomy gives God's laws for a theocracy He established in a specific time and place for specific purposes. Ancient Israel is the ONLY theocracy God has ever founded, and it is meant to demonstrate how God deals with idolaters and other sinners, not how WE are supposed to except in the case of crimes.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 207 by bobbins, posted 07-18-2005 1:36 AM bobbins has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 210 by bobbins, posted 07-18-2005 4:03 AM Faith has replied

Silent H
Member (Idle past 5847 days)
Posts: 7405
From: satellite of love
Joined: 12-11-2002


Message 209 of 301 (224362)
07-18-2005 3:58 AM


Canadian Steve and Faith
There was way too much covered, and then followed up on by others, for me to start a response that would be satisfying.
This is not to mention the problem of both you guys using pure assertions, along the lines of "is not", and I don't know how many True Scotsman fallacies at this point. And what kills me is both of you believe in the "agree to disagree" but then turn around and say you have proof and use the same statements you said couldn't be used.
Don't you guys get that you can't say the debate is over and nothing is settled, and then use the same evidence that was already in dispute in your very next debate? There is a reason that is against EvC forum rules, it is very bad debating style. It is essentially cheating.
In any case, what I am going to do is open a new thread where we can all be nice and specific and not deal with glittering generalities. This would be good anyway, since this thread is supposed to be about neocons. The new one will be Coffee house, and I'll title it "Islam conducive to science and democracy". I will begin by using specific factual points that are in dispute.

holmes
"...what a fool believes he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.."(D. Bros)

bobbins
Member (Idle past 3641 days)
Posts: 122
From: Manchester, England
Joined: 06-23-2005


Message 210 of 301 (224363)
07-18-2005 4:03 AM
Reply to: Message 208 by Faith
07-18-2005 2:30 AM


Re: Steve has his cake and eats it...
The Incan population stood at upwards of 8 million prior to the Spanish invasion and 1.5 million 60 years later, whilst many deaths could be attributed to small pox (brought to the continent by the spanish invaders) this represents near enough a genocide. But as you say those remaining must have been pretty grateful that the christians had come to save them. Oh yes, the invasion was sponsored by the pope of the time.
You also may state the Inquisition was anti-christian. But it was perpetrated by the Vatican, so christian-on-christian violence. Martin Luther himself may not have intended any violence or wars, but , well they did happen, christian against christian.
The rest of your answers indicate that a)yes you do have a plaster for every sore. b)there might have been politics, bad religion involved but the point I was replying to implied that christianity in its many guises did not partake in such acts, that it was somehow different to Islam.
The Deuteronomy reference was just one picked up after a 30 second search, and whilst you may explain it your way, it is just as easy to interpret it the way I saw it. This is how Islamic extremists justify their actions, a few well chosen passages from the Koran and anything is allowed. The same pick and mix approach to the bible has resulted in many of the events I quoted including segregation in South Africa. At no stage did I accuse you, Faith of being a party to them but the bible is definitely there in one form or another.
And yes books do not kill, people do, but the people concerned were christians and the book they all read was the bible.
I also apologise for my glib remark, the sentence just did not read well.
And now to bed.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 208 by Faith, posted 07-18-2005 2:30 AM Faith has replied

Replies to this message:
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