Democrat Drops MN State House Run After Tweeting 'ISIS Isn't Necessarily Evil' (startribune.com) 519
An anonymous reader writes: Dan Kimmel, who works for U.S. Bank in its technology and operations section, dropped out of the race for a Minnesota House seat after unleashing a firestorm of criticism. The controversy erupted after Kimmel tweeted, "ISIS isn't necessarily evil. It is made up of people doing what they think is best for their community. Violence is not the answer, though." The tweet rapidly led to harsh criticism on twitter and spread from there. The DFL Party Chair issued a statement saying that Kimmel's "views have no place in our party. On behalf of the Minnesota DFL, I strongly condemn his comments. ..." The House Minority Leader for the DFL called for Kimmel to end his campaign. Kimmel issued a written apology and withdrew from the race.
Real smart fella (sarcasm) (Score:3, Interesting)
Chopping people's heads off to make a point and to recruit more crazies is not necessarily evil... uh huh. And Aristotle taught us that violence IS the answer. "We make war so that we may live in peace". This "violence is never the answer" is just a meaningless feel good politically correct statement to appease the liberal left. There is violence for the right reasons, and violence for the wrong reasons. We need more violence for the right reasons because war, after all, is a contest of violence. These crazy people must be rooted out and dealt with.
Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) (Score:5, Insightful)
I agree with you about violence. But on evil, he's right of course, but as a politician he's a fool to have imagined a cerebral point about moral relativism wouldn't be misinterpreted by the people at large, or misrepresented by his enemies as support for ISIS.
ISIS are evil by my definition of evil, and I'd gladly see them all hang. By their definition of evil, I'm evil, and they'd gladly see me hang. So, I bomb them, and they abduct and decapitate me.
I still think I'm right - I'm not saying that I think there's any moral equivalence between me and them. But I'm able to see that they have exactly the reverse position, and thus that in their minds, they're not just not evil, but even rigtheously good.
Saying "ISIS aren't evil" as a shorthand for all that is not likely to get people's votes. Hell, even saying all that is likely to piss off people who see the world in simplistic black and white (as I believe the majority do).
Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) (Score:4, Insightful)
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You have to remember that individual expression is bad to them. Conformity in worshipping Allah and serving those ranked higher than yourself is the only moral way to live. That's how it was in Mohammed's time, that's how he lived, so to them it's the ideal.
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Moral relativism and moral equivalence are separate things to me. Moral relativism is to say that different people have different morals, which seems obvious to me. Equivalence is to say that therefore you cannot say anyone is wrong. I'm not saying that. I'm saying that ISIS are wrong.
Re: Real smart fella (sarcasm) (Score:3)
And Aristotle taught us that violence IS the answer. "We make war so that we may live in peace".
Aristotle made many dubious claims (and many good ones). An improvement over Plato, to be sure, but not always.
Augustine echoed the same sentiments later, setting the stage for the "Just War Theory" that the Jesuits still push forward today - even Bush the Second used Augustinian rationalization to go to war in Iraq.
Modern ethics understands that the means are what's important - not the ends. Just ends can be a
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"Modern ethics understands that the means are what's important - not the ends."
Then modern ethics - read "liberal" values - are full of shit. The means might be important but the end is far more so unless its trivia like a kids egg and spoon race. The whole "he played fair but lost, what a good chap" ethos fails miserably in war if by playing fair you and your whole family end up dead.
"Violence has only one place - in response to unprovoked aggression"
So you think terrorists should be allowed to commit an a
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So you think terrorists should be allowed to commit an act before they're captured or killed then?
Personally I think it's hard to try someone for a crime they haven't done yet. The criminal always has the initiative. But there is common sense and warning signs that can let you catch them at the "conspiracy" stage. And you don't let mullahs go around in the mosques you let build in your country preach "death to the West".
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Sorry idiot - if you're plotting to kill people that make you a terrorist , whether or not you get to carry the act out.
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Violence has only one place - in response to unprovoked aggression.
And I say there's no such thing as unprovoked aggression because I am sure the side doing the aggression will list any number of excuses to justify their action. The ideal solution to all these problems is education. Only education has shown its ability to reduce religious fanaticism. But we don't live in an ideal world. Education takes time and political stability, neither of which we have. So we are left with one option - to defend our values and way of life, by force if necessary.
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Wait, doesn't the leader of ISIS have a PhD? Didn't like 8 of the 9/11 attackers have engineering degrees?
I think we can toss "education" on the does-not-work pile.
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Wait, doesn't the leader of ISIS have a PhD? Didn't like 8 of the 9/11 attackers have engineering degrees? I think we can toss "education" on the does-not-work pile.
I'm pretty sure the leader of ISIS is not doing any shooting or suicide bombing. He's the one who is good at manipulating the others into doing stuff for him. Hell he probably doesn't even believe in Allah or Mohammed - but he sure as hell gives the impression he does. I'm talking about the poor fool who agrees to be sent on a suicide mission in the hope of a better life. He's the one who needs education.
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These crazy people must be rooted out and dealt with.
They aren't crazy. You're failing to understand their motivations, which means you're failing to combat those motivations. Escalating the "kill a few, create a thousand" strategy of fighting terrorists will have predictable results, and maybe the next dead civilian will be someone you care about. We've tried stupid reactionary wars. It was called the Bush administration, and it got us where we are today. Lets try being smarter about it instead of doubling-down on stupid.
Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) (Score:5, Interesting)
I just had this conversation last night. I'm Muslim, at least culturally. I don't really believe anymore.
I don't know too many people who think people who join ISIS just like to kill people.
Yes, they want their way of life, and they get their people to join their fight.
We have our way of life, and we get our people to join our fight.
Yes, people have reasons.
Yes, the leaders rally people around causes, sometimes even with bad/alterior motives.
Yes, the average person normally just wants to live their life.
But in the end, what does this all matter?
They're killing, raping, enslaving people.
Does it matter what made someone a monster? I don't think so.
Even if someone is born purely genertically a sociopathic murderer, that is what they are.
You can do what you can to prevent that kind of person from being born/created, but once there, that is what they are.
People in ISIS are killing people on mass, enslaving people, raping young girls and women, all the while thinking they have a right as per their religion.
What is evil? What is moral? You don't need to get all philosophical. It's been had 1000 times before. In WW2, the Germans bombed London. But the allies did the same to Germany. Who is really evil?
I'm going to opt out of that discussion for this post.
When my relatives sit there and blame everything on the US. The US created ISIS they say. The US created Al-Queda and Sadaam Hussein. It's all done for oil and Israel...
Unless you're a real libertarian/anarchist, you should come to accept one simple rule in life. You will be living under someone's rule. And being in charge is freakin hard. When Syrians were rising against Assad, the demand on our world leaders was to support the rebels. Well turns out that gave the opportunity for ISIS to rise as rebels. What a mind-fuck of a choice. I personally tend to be a little isolationist in these respects for that reason, but it has to be acknowledged that it means I'd let a Rawandan Genocide happen. Unless you're preapred to be the boss and take over and rule a region for a century or massively invest in it, don't jump in. In these global conflicts, all you can do pick the best/least bad ruler.
Just like in WW2, you have to kind of put the tactics used on the backburner. Not totally of course ,but you enter a blackhole of immorality. War is sick and depraved and it reduces all of us. You can't be Ghandi about things. Non-violence only works against nice enemies like colonialists, and even then, backrupt colonialists who were pulling out anyways :P
All you can ask yourself is would you rather have had the Nazi ideology win or the Allies?
Would you rather be ruled by Putin?
Would you rather be ruled by ISIS?
Would you rather be ruled by Saudi Arabia?
Would you rather be ruled by USA.
I'm not even American, but the choice is pretty plain to see in my eyes. At this point in history, give me American Rule any day of the week.
Although, I'll say the Chinese are winning me over to some extent.
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There's a lot of ideal things.
But when there are multiple powerful entities vying for power, you have to deal with that.
I'm under no illusions as to the actions of America. They do some pretty messed up things. They also live all at the expense of others.
But you need to go one step further and ask. If they're not 'in charge' what would the other empire in charge look like?
I'll still put my money with the Americans right now. It could change in the future of course.
There are a lot of countries that just don'
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Are you telling us that you really think both Germany and Canada are completely free of overarching American influence?
I think you'll be bitterly disappointed when reality hits you in the face as if that were true then people like Snowden would be sat quite comfortably in a German or Canadian neighbourhood right now.
Instead he's stuck in Russia, because the only way to escape American influence is to live in one of the countries opposed to it.
He isn't saying some countries are better than others, he's makin
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We've tried stupid reactionary wars.
Bush toppled a government and occupied a country. He created the instability that led to ISIS. But he did not engage ISIS. So spare us your flawed arguments especially since you are not offering any sort of solution. The motivation of those who wish to see you dead are quite simple. They wish to see you dead [youtube.com].
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Well, ISIS doesn't consider it evil. The rest of us think it's batshit crazy evil.
Getting back on topic, it's one thing for a western politician to argue that ISIS doesn't see their actions as evil; knowing your enemy should always be an input into your engagement strategy, and showing awareness of your enemies twisted viewpoint demonstrates you're not a complete moron.
But to phrase it they way he did o
Re: Real smart fella (sarcasm) (Score:2)
The US human rights record... (Score:3)
Saudi Arabia beheads people almost every month.
And many of the state governments in the US routinely execute people (some innocent) plus the federal government kills innocent people all the time with drone and missile strikes while trying to assassinate people they deem terrorists. You really want to compare the human rights and execution record of the US with Saudi Arabia? It won't be pretty on either side of the ledger.
When asked about it, the State Department calls it unfortunate, not batshit crazy evil.
Because of practical Realpolitik [wikipedia.org] reasons. Not as if the US government has its hands clean. If it was politically expedient for the
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Note that 'violence is not the answer' was directed toward ISIS folks, not to our response to ISIS. Note that ISIS is much much larger than the folks that speak and control the rhetoric. The crazy people are empowered in part by our inability and/or unwillingness to make a compelling counter perspective to the folks that get caught up in ISIS nonsense. If there was news that snipers took out a group of people widely believed to be accomplices of ISIS, there would be cheers. That's how ISIS recruits view
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I think he phrased that wrong. What he probably meant to say is, that ISIS does not regard itself as being evil. For them, we are evil, with our pornography, homosexuality, atheism, idolism, liberalism and other lack of "morals". They consider themselves the righteous defenders of the one true faith, doing the right thing by punishing the unbelievers.
I think a large part of what is happening these days with islamic extremism can be attributed to "culture shock". Many people underestimate the importance of c
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And you seem at least as necessarily evil as ISIS is.
How so? Are you seriously comparing silly quotes from historically insignificant people to von Clausewitz and Aristotle? You think blowing up and shooting random people is equivalent to eliminating those who are sworn to do this? Sorry but you are the one who is misguided. If I tie you to a table, knock you out and stick a knife in you, that could be assault with a deadly weapon or surgery. It depends on the reason. THE MEANS DOES NOT JUSTIFY THE END.
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raging & foaming at the mouth is bad, be it ISIS, be it American religious nutjobs
Because, in your feeble mind, they are equivalent?
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Third: I cringe watching how those stupid terrorists are killing our open society "by proxy" -- the dirty job being taken up by all you right-wing nutjobs. Go get a life. Go to Syria or Irak and enjoy your phantasies.
The right wingers just want to go kill the stupid terrorists. It's the left wingers who won't "let a good disaster to go to waste" (taking away rights) and actively seek such disasters when no options present themselves (growing ISIS via inaction).
Did he really think (Score:3)
True enough (Score:2)
ISIS is completely unnecessarily evil.
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Re:True enough (Score:4, Interesting)
There are many reasons for targetting Paris. It's a world-class city, it's streets are alive with locals and tourists, giving gunmen lots of easy targets. The French are very proud of their history as standard-bearers of liberty and freedom, ideals detested by fanatics that treat women like dirt and anyone that does agree with them as candidates for death. And France itself does not have clean hands. Its colonialist past, most recently in Algeria, resulted in a lot of carnage back home.
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It might be that ISIS knows that Israel has no qualms about sending the lot of them straight to hell if they get involved.
Or perpahs it is becuase they don't need Israel as an enemy. Most of the people in ISIS held territory already hates Israel and wants them dead. Spending resources attacking them won't provide any new converts.
Now, attack France, UK, United States, Russia... the response will be bombs dropped from the sky... which ISIS actually needs. This is how they create new terrorists in those count
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Also, given time, both Japan and Germany's peoples realized that they were wrong. I don't think these Daesh assholes will ever figure it out.
But I am sure people said that about the Japanese 70 years ago.
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"ISIS is completely unnecessarily evil."
Unless you are the government of the USA and need a powerful Sunni militant group to facilitate your goal of regime change in Syria, counter the Shiite Muslim influence in Iraq and undermine the Hezbollah movement in Lebanon.
But why is this on /. (Score:2)
How is this news for nerds?
and its only stuff that matters to the people who would have been voting for him
Politicians... The epitome of Stupid. (Score:2, Insightful)
Honestly all this does is serve to prove that the people running for any office are some of the absolute dumbest people in our society. Because smart people don't want to have anything at all to do with it because you have to deal with the general population and that is the largest collection of dumb there is.
Utter BS. (Score:2)
You could almost say this of Daesh even a few years ago, when they kept their antics mostly confined to their own territory. You'd still be wrong, because that argument requires you to ignore both the sheer enormity of the things they do to inside that territory and the blatant expansionism they practiced and continue to practice, but the argument could at least be considered semi-reasonable.
But that was before they started going after their own refugees: people who were outright running away. Quarrel or no
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Yeah. And the SS was a bunch of nice fellas ... (Score:4, Interesting)
I guess I've heard shit like that before. From my German-side Grandpa.
I think there is a distinct area in which people and their views can be placed that is undoubtedly evil. Holding abysmally absurd theo-fascist views, chopping peoples heads of whilst chanting praises to your utlitmate-dictator-in-the-heavens god, preaching and trying to practice genocide, believing in truth by revelation rather than insight and forcing that truth to others at gunpoint, etc. pretty much puts people smack center of the 'evil' designation in my book. And in most other peoples book aswell, I would presume.
Give us an effin' break - please.
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pretty much puts people smack center of the 'evil' designation in my book.
What about in the book of an ISIS fighter?
That's the thing about evil. It doesn't have an absolute definition, and it is entirely dependent on the point of view. They are evil in my book too, so was Hitler, but don't forget that Hitler got to power via popular vote.
If ISIS isn't evil, who is? (Score:3)
In the real world, "evil" people almost always think they do what they think is best for something.
If ISIS cannot be considered evil, then true evil only exist in fiction, and even then, it's only when writers don't put much thought into their villains.
Maybe that's actually the point : there is a bit of good in all of us, even the worst.
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In the real world, "evil" people almost always think they do what they think is best for something.
Yeah, best for themselves. You think a thief isn't pissed when he's robbed? The bully when he's beaten up? I don't think your average criminal believes he's got any moral high ground, he simply has the power and is using it for personal gain. A few might because they believe it serves the greater good or divine will or whatever ranging from civil disobedience to jihadists, but that's the exception not the norm.
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I see more of the corollary - there's a bit of evil in all of us, and as soon as we're willing to commit atrocities in the pursuit of a "higher good", the distinction between us and the evil we fight becomes theoretical.
Another Twitter case study (Score:4, Insightful)
You know, sooner or later people might get it through their heads that using Twitter is a strategy for fools.
You have two choices with Twitter: either you tweet some meaningless groupthink post, guaranteed not to offend anyone, OR you post something that offends someone, somewhere. And if you offend enough people, suddenly your life and career are in tatters when the Internet mob turns on you.
You'd think that enough peoples' lives have been ruined by thoughtless tweets that the lesson would have been learned. But it seems there's always another fool just waiting to make an example of him/herself.
Perfectly in line with Democrats' thinking (Score:2)
Oh, the pompous Democratic assholes — the above-quoted view was perfectly in line with the party's (including government officials [conservativetribune.com]) thinking until last Friday.
Maybe, not all of the party, but hardly a far fringe — the man was endorsed by the same Star Tribune [startribune.com], which is now reporting on his dropping out [startribune.com]. The whole i
Evil is a childish world (Score:3)
In other news (Score:2)
One too many cultural anthropology classes? (Score:2)
His point could make for interesting academic discussion but in a political context in the U.S. it was moronic.
Perhaps a showcase example of being so smart you look stupid.
"evil" vs "different morals" pragmatically differ (Score:2, Interesting)
I think that his point is that if someone is "evil", it carries a connotation that, there is an agreed upon morality, and they are doing something that is not only wrong, but that they agree is wrong, and that the simple wrongness of the act is in large part the motivation behind it.
This is opposed to differences in the accepted morality arising from cultural norms or otherwise.
This has a lot of practical considerations with how to deal with the person. If there are mere cultural differences, it may be pos
Re: Sigh (Score:5, Insightful)
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Then you cling to the 4th, and 5th amendments, among others even.
Of course none of these protect you from being a fool.
Re:Sigh (Score:5, Insightful)
Another circumstance where the court of public opinion rules political correctness to be a greater virtue than the first amendment.
Because the first amendment is supposed to prevent people from judging political candidates based in part on what they say?
Re:Sigh (Score:5, Insightful)
Well duh, you're only supposed to judge them by how much money they can scrounge together.
If we judged politicians by their words or actions, both Trump and Hillary would be in jail (and poor Bernie would be sedated in a looneybin somewhere).
r u srs (Score:4, Insightful)
Well no. He was able to speak his mind. Now he's dealing with the consequences of not pandering to morons
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So the view of "morons" is that ISIS is dangerous?
Re:r u srs (Score:5, Insightful)
So the view of "morons" is that ISIS is dangerous?
The view of "morons" is that the world is broken down into the simple black and white camps of the good guys (us, obviously) and the bad guys (anyone with whom we have an armed conflict.)
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The view of "morons" is that the world is broken down into the simple black and white camps of the good guys (us, obviously) and the bad guys (anyone with whom we have an armed conflict.)
While the world and its politics are often indeed nuanced more often than not, in this case there isn't too much gray area when it comes to the whole ISIS/ISIL movement.
Sure, we can argue all day long as to their genesis, their ultimate goals, their strategies... but in the face of a tsunami of verifiable fact concerning ISIS' actions? Only a sophomore, equivocator, or (let's just put it out there) coward would describe their organization as anything less than the very face of evil.
Even in the all-too-pande
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Even for the most ambivalent of moral relativists, it should not be too difficult to call out as evil mass beheading, forced sexual slavery, and simultaneous murder-by-explosives/demolition-of-antiquity.
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The true view of "morons" is that the world is not broken down into the simple black and white camps of the good guys and the bad guys.
Evil is not good. If you are uncomfortable with that reality, at least do not prevent others from protecting themselves from evil, and you also if they choose to.
And if you cling to the notion that the world cannot be divided into neat camps of 'good' and 'evil', you are partly correct. There is the third camp, 'neither', which when confronted with evil may cringe and fr
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Is it your position then that these people and these actions are just misunderstood? That "evil" is a false label for these behaviors?
Re:r u srs (Score:5, Insightful)
My only issue with that is that I don't necessarily really know that ISIS is about irrational bloodthirsty marketing campaigns.
In Western media we never actually get to hear the other side of the story and I certainly don't speak Arabic or Farsi and so even if I had access to the other side I wouldn't be able to understand their message.
I could certainly see that from a certain perspective it might look like Western nations are warmongering resource hungry invaders who indiscriminately bomb civilians. So when we get bombed it's terrorism but when we bomb them and kill innocents it's not? I don't think we're quite as 'white' as we claim to be.
Read The Intercept's drone program report and you'll see that when we bomb someone on very iffy intelligence (because 3rd world countries) we automatically classify any incidentally killed people as enemy combatants until such a time after the fact as they can be verified as innocent civilians and then they're reclassified.
I might be off a little on specific terminology but not on the gist of it.
We're assassinating bad guys in other countries because there is no law system to coordinate with but we're also murdering innocent people at the same time.
We're not exactly paragons of moral excellence there.
Note that I'm not trying to apologize for ISIS. I think the mostly likely answer is that they are religiously fanatical people who are attempting to take advantage of a power vacuum created by the Syrian civil war, the weakening of governments by the Arab Spring in the North African region, and the effects of removing a dictator from power in Iraq.
But I don't really know. In my experience, our mainstream entertainment-based media is better at twisting the truth to get viewers than actually informing people in an unbiased fashion.
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My only issue with that is that I don't necessarily really know that ISIS is about irrational bloodthirsty marketing campaigns.
Just look at all the videos they post showing beheadings. They LOVE their bloodthirsty marketing campaign - it gets them recruits from the wacko population and inspires fear and outrage in their enemies.
Re:r u srs (Score:4, Interesting)
So when we get bombed it's terrorism but when we bomb them and kill innocents it's not? I don't think we're quite as 'white' as we claim to be.
There is a big difference between waging war against military targets, making a great effort to target them intelligently to minimize civilian casualties...and deliberately targeting civilians.
I do not support any government that indiscriminately kills civilians (ie Israel) and I hold my own accountable when accidents happen.
If we wanted to end this war quickly we could carpet bomb that entire part of the world into non-existence - which is what ISIS would do to us, given half a chance, and yet we do not - and THAT is the difference between our sides.
Re:r u srs (Score:5, Insightful)
The unfortunate thing is that I think his short, misguided message shows signs of a thoughtful nuanced consideration of the circumstances. ISIS does something and it rapidly degenerates into a broad set of racist generalization and apathy toward the innocent near ISIS.
In the wake of an ISIS attack that indiscriminately kills innocent civilians a lot of the knee-jerk is to respond in kind, to the point of many loud folks wouldn't mind 'carpet bombing' known places of ISIS gatherings, being completely thoughtless of the collateral damage. Innocents dying on the other side then contributes to escalation, as more people on both sides become more and more desperate to see vengeance carried out.
Now the military activity seems to be currently controlled by folks with cooler heads with a focus on trying to be precise and minimize collateral damage, but the state of public rhetoric is enough to push haste that could cause mistakes, or mis-characterize a precision strike effort as a 'carpet bombing'. which could dangerously rile up candidates for ISIS recruitment. It's worth taking a moment to be very precise about who the enemy is, and how they came to have enough power to carry out the evil stuff that's happening. The answer must acknowledge that not every person that they manipulate to their cause is evil or even particularly aware of the big picture, acting only on their perception of events shaped by ISIS propaganda.
Unfortunately, just because not all of them are evil, that makes them no less dangerous. However if you acknowledge that not all are evil, you may be able to get the big picture narrative far enough to win over a few ISIS aligned folks or at least mitigate risk of others joining. That's not to say to do say in lieu of military action, but if you can get that narrative so pervasive that it touches folks you don't even know are connected to ISIS, there's at least some chance for upside, but not much chance for downside. The problem is that such a nuanced approach doesn't sit well. Acknowledging the peaceful method and doing military action against them at the same time means you are humanizing them and killing them at the same time. This is and has been the reality of war from the beginning of man, but to acknowledge that reality is a huge problem for the way we are wired emotionally.
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"you may be able to get the big picture narrative far enough to win over a few ISIS aligned folks or at least mitigate risk of others joining"
So long as ISIS and other groups have leaders who intend to oppress others, and are able to recruit replacements to fill their ranks, the evil continues.
First, call them out for what they are. Evil.
Then, kill or imprison them to at least stop their evil actions.
Finally, call out their beliefs that they use to justify their evil actions.
Pretending they should be under
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Evil, not dangerous.
People like this unrealistic ideal that anyone they don't like is some kind of irredeemable demon whose entire life revolves around punching babies and kicking puppies by pure reflex. The truth is people largely fall into groups, march with the group mentality, and develop fears and prejudices and all kinds of other things revolving around their sense of security--including their sense of entitlement, whereby they feel others are attacking them by not giving them what they rightly des
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Nobody ever said they aren't dangerous. But the word "evil" is strictly used to stir people up. And everybody still ignores that big ol' elephant in the room. You all like to scream about all this religious bullshit, and completely overlook the big pile of money and weapons, courtesy the four friendly empires that are propping these people up for their own "needs". Convince ISIS to point their guns the other way, and will suddenly become "allies", just like Al Qaeda is now. There's lots of horse trading [yahoo.com] goi
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Huh? Did he get arrested over this? Or was this just a case of a politician saying something that caused the electorate to decide not to vote for him? I wasn't aware the first amendment was able to protect you from that.
Sigh (Score:5, Insightful)
Another person who doesn't understand the first amendment. The first amendment says that the government can't mess with your free expression. They can't put you in jail because you say something they don't like, they can't shut down a news paper for reporting on things they don't want, and so on. It does NOT say that people have to listen to whatever you say, like it, and not respond in any way.
This guy didn't have his rights violated at all: He said something extremely stupid, and people then used their first amendment rights to express that he's a jackass. His political party decided that because he'd pissed off lots of voters, they weren't interested in supporting them. They aren't required to support anyone, the choose the candidates they like. He realized he'd fucked up, and had no chance of wining, and so withdrew.
Nothing improper here. You seem to think that the first amendment should mean speech without consequence. Of course that doesn't work without infringing on the rights of others. If you say something I don't like, I have to be free to say I don't like you for it, or my freedom of speech is being infringed upon. I have to be free to refuse to talk to you, do business with you, etc or my freedom of association is being infringed upon.
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Not exactly that clear cut.
The government also makes laws that states you could be fired from your job for expressing an opinion, which just a proxy, much like the US government not being legal in snooping into your affairs without a warrant, but is perfectly cromulent to authorize a foreign government to do the snooping. Doubt you would be as sympathetic if you were fired for expressing your love of kittens. After all, it was just consequences of your speech. The government wasn't involved at all, except
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"I have to be free to refuse to ... do business with you ..."
Yeah we lost that one already. It was for a good cause, civil rights in the 60s and all, but we gave that right up long ago.
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What's politically correct about pointing out that ISIS are a bunch of murderous selfish thugs that qualify as 'evil' by almost any definition of the word, and mocking the fuckwit that claimed otherwise?
Re:Sigh (Score:5, Insightful)
I think perhaps the real issue here is that he's grossly under educated on a subject and he opened his ignorance hole on the subject. Because (so far) murdering 10,000 non-combatant Men, Women and children for not following Islam is totally just trying to protect their community, right?
Disclaimer: There is an application of sarcasm here. Please read carefully.
Re: (Score:3)
Actually, it may be even more than that. According to the Atlantic article What ISIS Really Wants [theatlantic.com], the goal of ISIS is to bring about the apocalypse and thus end the world. So maybe, they want to be evil, with a capital E. Because, I don't think you can get much more evil than wanting to kill everybody everywhere.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
It seems like he was actually trying to be PC. He reflexively put out a PC-type spin on a tense situation to try to look wise.
Re:Sigh (Score:4, Insightful)
This first amendment gives him the right to tweet whatever he wants. It gives the rest of us the right to say we don't approve! The right to vote gives the rest of us the right to make it clear to him he might as well not bother standing for election.
Re: (Score:2)
The first amendment means government can't pass a law prohibiting free speech. They didn't in this case.
That does not imply that if you say stupid things which cause outrage that you have no consequences from that.
So, you are free to say any stupid shit you want to. You are not free from the public telling you that what you said was stupid.
Free speech is not freedom from consequences and the reaction of other people, and never has been. You are legally free to say any stupid crap which you choose. And o
How the first amendment works (Score:3)
Another circumstance where the court of public opinion rules political correctness to be a greater virtue than the first amendment.
I think you don't understand how the first amendment works. Allow me to clarify:
1) The first amendment protects you from the government, not from private citizens or companies in most cases so long as they don't violate the law in response to your speech.
2) The first amendment does not protect you against all possible consequences of saying something stupid or offensive.
3) People have as much right to say they don't like what you say as you have to say it. You have the right to be offensive but it might c
Re: Religion (Score:5, Insightful)
Maybe you were modded down for false equivalency.
Re: Religion (Score:5, Insightful)
Except for the religion which says Death to the Infidels... then those who don't use violence are wrong. Those evil moderates.
There is a reason why there seems to be a common theme amoungst the daily occurrence of violence. Psychedelic drugs and Islam.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Extremists of any dogma who use violence are wrong.
Fixed it for you, religion like any other dogma is what leads to the extremists views. When any authority lays down a set of principals that are believed to be true by a group of people. Then all others are wrong and if they dont accept it they must be punished in some way. It does not matter if the dogma is religious, (IE: Christian, Muslim, etc) or national pride (IE: Natzies, communism, socialism, or even Americanism)
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
" religion like any other dogma is what leads to the extremists views"
And Christian extremist views are, what, advocating for different things, the verb being 'advocate', not 'engage', as in 'engage in violence'?
Christian - inspired violence is so rare as be not merely exceptional, but aberrant. Christians are, sadly, humans, and do engage in violence, but such violence is rarely in the name of their faith. Most other organized religions are also largely non violent, and like Christianity are so because th
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
Christian - inspired violence is so rare as be not merely exceptional, but aberrant.
At this point. Kinda. Not necessarily so in the past. We both know the burinings of heretics, gays and presumptive witches, and the crusades. And while there is some nasty ass stuff in the bible about killing all of your enemy except for the little girls, which might be though a tad odd these days.
But yeah, there is no doubt that the Muslim religion uses violence as a core competency.
But there's the nexus of religion, and it is that if your god just so happens to hate everything you do, it's pretty l
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Factually incorrect.
Reality calling. It would like to remind you of:
the Lord's Resistance Army? Christian
abortion clinic bombings? Evangelical Christian
Muslim villages massacred in northern India? Nationalist Hindus
and others.
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
Factually incorrect. Reality calling.
You bubble burster you!
AC is going to have to go back to watching a weeks worth of Bill O'Reilly and Fox News to undo the damage you did to his truthiness bubble.
Re: Religion (Score:4, Insightful)
But virtually every Christian condemns abortion clinic bombings, where a terrifying number of global Muslims support terror, Sharia theocracy, death for apostates, punishment for homosexual activity, the abolition of freedom of expression in the name of suppressing images they find offensive, etc.
See: http://www.pewresearch.org/fac... [pewresearch.org] , http://www.pewforum.org/2013/0... [pewforum.org] , and virtually any other similar survey.
Re: Religion (Score:5, Insightful)
Of the hundreds of abortion clinic bombings, I've only been able to find one which resulted in a fatality. It's almost as if the bombers were carefully trying to avoid human fatalities. Which makes sense since their whole rationale for doing it was to stop what they perceive as widespread murder of unborn children. i.e. They did it because they value life; their definition of life just happens to be a superset of yours. They only resorted to bombings and arson to in their view stop a greater violence (buildings and equipment being less valuable than lives), the opposite of your implication.
The lone exception was the bombing carried out by Eric Rudolph. You may know him better as the Centennial Olympic Park bomber [wikipedia.org], so clearly he had no qualms about using indiscriminate violence in support of his beliefs. (There have been several shootings of abortion clinic workers. But shootings are targeted, not indiscriminate like bombings.)
Re: (Score:3)
Re: Religion (Score:5, Insightful)
So I got down modded for pointing out religious righteousness. Fuck you, whoever you are; probably a evangelical Christian.
Yep, the evangelical Christians are deadly.
Look at how they went on multiple murderous rampages over Piss Christ. They're STILL tossing gay men off rooftops, stoning rape victims for besmirching their family honor, cutting the hands off thieves, hijacking airliners and killing thousands, taking an entire school of children hostage then massacring them, recruiting 12-year-olds to conduct suicide bombings, beheading entire groups of non-believers.
And then there are the morons who use the events of a thousand years ago to excuse the barbaric actions of today's Christians.
I tell you, Christians are evil.
Re: Religion (Score:5, Interesting)
Some Christians certainly are evil [nytimes.com]
KAMPALA, Uganda — Last March, three American evangelical Christians, whose teachings about “curing” homosexuals have been widely discredited in the United States, arrived here in Uganda’s capital to give a series of talks.
The theme of the event, according to Stephen Langa, its Ugandan organizer, was “the gay agenda — that whole hidden and dark agenda” — and the threat homosexuals posed to Bible-based values and the traditional African family.
For three days, according to participants and audio recordings, thousands of Ugandans, including police officers, teachers and national politicians, listened raptly to the Americans, who were presented as experts on homosexuality. The visitors discussed how to make gay people straight, how gay men often sodomized teenage boys and how “the gay movement is an evil institution” whose goal is “to defeat the marriage-based society and replace it with a culture of sexual promiscuity.”
Now the three Americans are finding themselves on the defensive, saying they had no intention of helping stoke the kind of anger that could lead to what came next: a bill to impose a death sentence for homosexual behavior.
This was just business as usual, nothing new. [huffingtonpost.com]
Uganda is set to pass new anti-gay legislation with provisions calling for the execution of gay people under some circumstances. The rumor of the death penalty clause being removed seems grossly exaggerated. Dr. Warren Throckmorton, who has followed the legislation closely, indicates that some Western media are erroneously reporting that the death penalty clause has been removed. He writes that "the bill is the same bill it has always been. It cannot be amended until the committee report is presented to the floor of the Parliament." Even with the amendment the legislation remains a gross travesty of justice.
The "intellectual" fuel for this grotesque law came from Christian fundamentalists in the United States. According to The New York Times:
Much of Africa's anti-homosexuality movement is supported by American evangelicals, the Rev. Kapya Kaoma of Zambia wrote in 2009, who are keen to export the American "culture war" to new ground. Indeed, American evangelical Christians played a role in stirring the anti-homosexual sentiment that culminated in the initial legislation in Uganda.
Of course, it's also right at home in the US as well [sacbee.com]. Earlier this yesr:
California proposal to legalize killing gays hard to stop
A California initiative proposal is testing the limits of free speech. Lawyer Matt McLaughlin wants to authorize the killing of gays and lesbians. Yet legal experts say the state’s attorney general can’t block it.
McLaughlin’s plan refers to “buggery” or “sodomy” as “a monstrous evil that Almighty God, giver of freedom and liberty, commands us to suppress on pain of our utter destruction even as he overthrew Sodom and Gomorrah.” Under the proposal, “... any person who willingly touches another person of the same gender for purposes of sexual gratification (would) be put to death by bullets to the head or by any other convenient method.”
Anyone transmitting “sodomistic propaganda” to a minor would be fined $1 million per offense, and/or imprisoned up to 10 years, and/or expelled from California for up to life. It would ban lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people, or those who espouse sodomistic propaganda, or who belong to any group that does, from serving in publ
Re: Religion (Score:4, Insightful)
California proposal to legalize killing gays hard to stop
Actually, this is a good example of the strength of a true democracy and even a civil society. The title of the article is quite misleading. The California attorney general cannot prevent the proposal writer from proceeding to the signature gathering stage. That's good, i.e., that ideas, even the crazy ones, can be stomped out by a single person. At that point, no one (including those that are anti-gay) will sign his petition, and it will die. This is exactly how the system should work.
We can only dream that such a scenario would be possible in ISIS or even most moderate Muslim countries.
Re: (Score:3)
Actually, this is a good example of the strength of a true democracy and even a civil society
I think it's an illustration about how California's initiative system is broken. It should be easy to stop an initiative that is clearly unconstitutional, but instead much time and money is wasted by letting them linger. Californians will even vote in unconstitutional initiatives and then act surprised when courts strike them down. Bad initiatives should get caught sooner.
I'm definitely not arguing that California's system is great, but in this case, it's pretty good. If you're arguing that it should be easy to stop really, really bad proposals without wasting too much time and money, then this is the poster child case for that. The only real money spent on this was the $200 paid by the guy who thought of the idea. The guy also has to foot the bill to gather 365,880 signatures. The article opines that 365,880 is a low threshold, but I would argue that this guy not only w
Re: (Score:3)
It should be easy to stop an initiative that is clearly unconstitutional,
How many times was the constitution amended by proposals that seemed to many to be controversial, even unconstitutional, at the time? Or we don't have to go that far - look at the whole gay marriage thing. Before the Supremes ruled, DOMA was the law of the land It was similarly clearly unconstitutional, as was Proposition 8. However, at the time (and even today) there are plenty of people who don't agree with same-sex marriage, and see it as the state acting unconstitutionally by violating the Constitutio
Re: Religion (Score:5, Insightful)
I guess all the Christian missionaries and religious throughout the world that are feeding and clothing the poorest of the poor should pick up their bags, go home, and be much better people as secular atheists, so they can contribute something meaningful to the world like your shitpost Slashdot comments.
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Fun fact, you probably cannot name a single Christian suicide bomber.
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the supposedly rabid atheists around here who "bravely" stand up to those "totalitarian oppressor" church-ladies on here have a huge blind spot / sick fetish for the most hard-core Islamic fascim you can think of.
Then they're not really rabid, are they?
As for me, no, I'm like quite a lot of atheists who think Islam is the problem and there's no way to "fix" the religion. Nice attempt at trying to manufacture a hypocrisy where none exists, though.
Re: (Score:2)
Well the important thing is you've found someone to hate other than just ISIS.
I like how you make up a bunch of random stupid shit that's demonstrably not true, get really angry about it and then start hating on a whole bunch of people based on your weird fantasy. Sadly it appears this fantasy is not unique to you as you've been modded insightful.
Atheists are not exactly known for being in favour of violence and murder in the name of some god, you know.
Who Would Jesus Bomb? (Score:5, Insightful)
Thank you for defending us against that straw man. Delightful of you to drag your personal conflicts into this discussion. No one is claiming that ISIS are not bad people, the point is that we should not become bad people ourselves in response. Our brains are wired to be irrational towards people we perceive as enemies (as your post demonstrates ably). We dehumanize them, we exaggerate their bad qualities, ignore the good, and so justify any malicious act against them.
In terms of human suffering, Paris was a drop in the ocean, and probably outweighed by deaths in Syria both in recent history and as a result of these retaliatory airstrikes. Interventionist policies are increasingly difficult to justify, and bombing hasn't seemed to do anything except provide welfare for munitions manufacturers.
To a rational person, this is a complicated situation. For the hawkish politician it's a great time for a power grab -- for some reason there's a tendency to want to fight fascism with fascism. By surrendering your reason to violent instinct you aid those who wish to control you, and work to spread suffering -- no matter who the villains-of-the-day happen to be. It's also not particularly Christ-like.
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Your own quote does not back you up. Analogies are not equivalencies. Furthermore, this particular analogy is apt.
Re: (Score:2)
You are an idiot. Nobody's speech was restricted in any way. Was he prevented from making his stupid statement? Nope, and many people heard it. Was he guy arrested? Nope. Did he just 'disppear'? Nope. He used his right of free speech to say something that a majority of people disagree with. Many of those people used their right of free speech to say they disagreed with him (they do have this right, don't they?) Another group of people used their right of association to decide they didn't want to b
Re: (Score:2)
He's not wrong. Christianity (and other religions) seek to turn the meaning of Bad to Evil, because their initial survival was predicated on demonizing their enemies. ISIS commits some terrible, immoral actions -- blowing up innocent civilians for political gain -- but their goal is first to create a nation-state, before world domination. Birds of a feather will flock together.