Contarini:
Rodrigo:
Hola Contarini,
This is merely a tu quoque argument.
No, it’s a reductio ad absurdum. If your argument about Islam were valid, it could be used against Catholicism.
First of all, please show my charge of tu quoque is a reduction ad absurdum. So you know a latin phrase, but do you understand it?
Thanks for showing you don’t understand what a tu quoque means with your ‘If your argument about Islam were valid, it could be used against Catholicism’ quip.
Contarini:
Rodrigo:
It is a plain fact that Muslims in general do support OBL and terrorism against America
Provide evidence for this. The evidence I’ve seen is the other way round.
I used to live in a Muslim country and I do know from speaking to people and from countless polls. What have you got?
See those people dancing in the streets? They weren’t celebrating Eid, I can tell you.
Contarini:
Rodrigo:
Or are you saying that because the Vatican failed to stop American bishops in the 19th century perverting Christian teaching, it gives carte blanche for Muslims to support evil acts against America?
No. I’m saying that because a teaching is not enforced with sufficient firmness, that doesn’t mean the teaching doesn’t exist.
I would like to see Muslims all over the world cooperate with us in hunting down Al Qaeda. But they are unlikely to do this, because they see us as the enemy. You are trying to use that indisputable fact to show that they must be counted as supporters of everything Bin Laden does. I’m trying to show that that is a very bad argument.
My contention is that most Muslims worldwide think that the cause of opposing the U.S. and Israel (which is Bin Laden’s declared cause) is a just one, but that Bin Laden’s methods are reprehensible.
Let’s get back to the original claims, shall we? Are you saying that because the Vatican failed to stop American bishops in the 19th century perverting Christian teaching, it gives carte blanche for Muslims to support evil acts against America? Isn’t that a tu quoque?
Or do you think my charge of tu quoque is a reduction ad absurdum?
Contarini:
Rodrigo:
I will tell you that the Crusaders were in principal just, although in practice they left a lot to be desired.
I say ‘just’ solely on principal of defending Christianity against Muslim aggression.
Exactly. And that, I would suggest, is what most Muslims think about Bin Laden’s jihad. They think that defending Islam against Western aggression (and they think Israel is the most glaring example of such aggression) is a just cause. But they think Bin Laden is using unacceptable and un-Islamic methods in the service of this cause.
First of all, they are wrong in thinking that defending Islam against “Western aggression” is a just cause because what Western aggression is it we’re talking about? If it means supporting Israel’s right to exist?
Secondly, I seriously think you’re wrong when you say, ‘they think Bin Laden is using unacceptable and un-Islamic methods in the service of this cause’. Most Muslims I have spoken to think OBL is doing the right thing according to the tenets of Islam.
Contarini:
Rodrigo:
I maintain Islam has no place outside Arabia. In fact, it has no place outside Medinah.
Well, many Muslims would say that European Jews have no place in Palestine, and American soldiers have no place in Saudi Arabia (even if the government invites them).
Au contraire. This ‘European Jew’ polemic is a lie and unsupported by genetic studies. The Jews are a closed community and even the Ashkenazis are very close genetically with the ME Jews, more so than the Arabs. But you wouldn’t know anything about the genetic studies, do you?
Secondly, this ‘American soldiers in Saudi’ is a preposterous argument – how many soldiers are there in SA? And why aren’t they allowed there? Don’t you think SA being off limits is a tad bigoted? As you conceded our troops were invited there. If you have an issue take it up with the Sauds.
Contarini:
I think that their views and yours are about equally bigoted and false.
I’m telling the truth and by definition the truth cannot be bigoted or false.
Contarini:
Yours are, historically, perhaps even more preposterous. But either way, your opposition to Islam doesn’t mean that you condone the massacre of 1099. And the opposition of many Muslims to Israel and to U.S. military presence in Arabia does not mean that they condone any atrocity committed by other Muslims against the U.S. or Israel.
I freely admit the Crusaders were cruel and barbaric. Does that make you feel better now that you can use your tu quoque arguments, or think you can?
What were we talking about? I’m getting side-tracked by your tu quoques.
cont