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15:03
I'm gonna link that whenever someone says Islam is the cause of all terrorism
@M.A.R. Indeed, that statement is completely historically inaccurate.
see, e.g., Ireland
It's hard to claim that Islam is not a cause, or an inspiration/excuse for, an appreciable fraction of modern terrorism, however.
IMO, anyways.
15:27
i think that's a fact
A lot of people definitely overreact/overgeneralize from that perception/observation, though.
the religion isnt the problem, its the people misinterpreting it
No, it's not even people misinterpreting it
however, even if you take away islam, people will still find something to misinterpret
or distort
or whatever word you want to use
People practicing religions is rare these days
Read what I linked
It links to an MI5 report that quotes the reasons in the study not being religion at all
I'm a thug. I wanna rationalize my heinous crimes and I link it to some religion or sect
But the real reason is I just wanna kill and stab
15:31
Hm - so, are you arguing that Islam is just the 'lowest hanging fruit of excuses for violence' at this point in time?
@hBy2Py The committers of terrorism are usually either born in the West, or raised in the West. They're also commonly changing religion, meeting prostitutes, and not practicing the religious thingies they should be practicing
> Over the past decade since the MI5 research was first leaked, more and more studies have challenged the conventional and lazy wisdom on the role of religion in the radicalization process. In recent years, I have spoken with a range of leading experts — anthropologist Scott Atran, psychiatrist Marc Sageman, historian Lydia Wilson — all of whom have interviewed “jihadi” terrorists, from the battlefields of Iraq to the prison cells of the United States, and all of whom agree that faith, Islamic or otherwise, is not the key driver of this latest wave of global terror.
"Terrorism is really political violence, first and foremost"
Absolutely
So, what's the political motive of things like this?
But having a backlash at Islam or whatever isn't Western is typical xenophobic remarks used by extremists to legislate silly rules
Westminster, trucks in Nice and Berlin, etc.
@hBy2Py I think these people tend to think they need to prove themselves in an imaginary group of jihadists
15:37
Let's go to another room
When Mr. Arab Name explodes himself up in public, he's probably picturing himself spoken of as a legend in the darker corners of wherever he's imagining his friends gather
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@hBy2Py Edit this
15:38
@M.A.R. To remove the link?
So, where were we
Mhm
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All in all, I, as a guy from the East who can access internet, see what Westerners think and sigh
Mutually, guys from the East have this suspicion when treating people from the West
Do you see radicals in Africa and the Middle East as also just using Islam as an excuse for violence and self-inflation?
Same as people doing it in the West?
@M.A.R. Long history of not-so-friendly interactions, for sure.
@hBy2Py Yes. TBH, the really radical Islamic people, who want to preach Islam every chance they get, don't like Westerners at all but never commit anything as close to terrorism
In fact, quite the contrary.
15:44
The difficulty for the West, as I see it, is telling the types of fervor apart
A very common feeling people that do value Islam get is that "Life isn't worth all the wars and stuff, and you should just detach yourself from the world"
Not nihilism, but apathy
Huh, almost more Buddhist, then?
Yes, very close
As opposed to someone seeking power, influence over the world ... for whom Islam (or some facade/mockery thereof) is a convenient tool?
We have a lot of poems expressing the above
@hBy2Py Yep. They don't like power
15:47
Huh.
They even sometimes counsel/oppose those who're after power
"You're going after materialistic life, and ignoring the much longer afterlife that comes afterwards"
Well, one challenge from the Western perspective is that it's hard for the layperson here, in pretty substantial ignorance of the subtleties, to tell the difference between a genuine, impassioned faith that leads to introspection, reflection, etc.... and one that's just exploiting the name of Islam for violent ends.
@hBy2Py Exactly, and for a regular Middle Easterner it's hard to tell whether Americans are racist jerks who don't care about browns in the slightest, or people trying to help defeat IS
While all of this would be fixed if the Westerner met the Easterner
Lack of communication, and the fact that I'm made to assume things about you, is why there's so much hostility around
And Trump is not helping the situation by bombing civilians
@M.A.R. Huh, so there are plenty of "good guys" on both sides; just each side can't be sure who they're dealing with on the other side, in any particular instance?
@hBy2Py There are more than two sides here. o.o
15:51
@M.A.R. Heh, good point
One side is you, AKA bystander Westerner
One side is me, AKA bystander Easterner
@M.A.R. I've wondered all along if Obama set him up for that, frankly. You mean the attack in Yemen, right?
One side is the poor Iraqis now being bombed by Americans and tortured by IS
AKA victims
<nod>, so many people caught in the middle.
@hBy2Py Yeah, and apparently he also bombed Iraqi civilians recently
One side is IS
One side is US politicians, who have never been so good at departing from their own people
The IS side is all jerks
The bystander sides are mixed, just like any other society
There are jerks, and there are a damn lot of good people
The victims, unlike what some US politicians like to think, don't like IS, and tend to hate Americans too
15:54
What could the West (U.S. especially) do to start to heal the breach of historical distrust?
@hBy2Py Make Trump resign?
???
Obama was better?
In all seriousness, I don't think it can be fixed
Not this easily
Would need a couple of decades, at least
And people should change -- The good and bad news is change is constant
People should start accepting cultural differences, and not become defensive against anything that doesn't sound native
And well, considering the current politicians on both Iranian and American sides, I don't think this will happen
@hBy2Py He was indeed better, but well, how much difference can a single POTUS make? I was joking by the Trump-should-resign message
The travel restrictions have upset a lot of people, I would guess.
Currently, politicians on every side except the IS side -- Which doesn't have visible politicians anyway -- are just waiting for some news to bandwagon on
"See? Told you Americans/Islamists/Muslims/Brits/French/etc etc etc are jerks"
"Islam, religion of peace"
And on and on and on
16:00
Deepening the us vs them narrative?
Yep, closing in, building walls
Right now, it's one of the most dangerous periods
My impression of the people in the US, if the media and what I've read adequately point out the social problems, is that people have now grown tired of not being jerks
So Trump's era is a chance to act like jerks for a little while
Let the figurative belt loose
The people in middle America that voted so strongly for Trump are tired of DC and other coastal decision-makers moving policy in a way that enhances the aggregate US economy, but that leaves them in the dirt.
Foreign trade absolutely enhances the US economy overall
If you pass this without wrecking havoc in some country and worsening it than what it already has become, I guess they will return to anti-racism in a little while
But there's a huge fraction of the population that'd basically be starving to death, if not for welfare programs.
And it's miserable
There's a horrific drug abuse epidemic in rural areas -- people have nothing to do and no hope for a better life, so they do what they can to brighten things up for a while.
Our education system badly mis-serves students
The underlying philosophy is hosed
I'm confident that any foreign policy fallout of Trump is incidental, not intentional, for most of his supporters
"Foreigners take our jobs and want to blow us up"
I suspect is a common, and badly and problematically oversimplified, perspective on things.
But it is what it is.
oh well
grass is not greener on your side
16:09
Everywhere's got problems
Some are more violent/deathy than others.

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