


*says the chinese chick in the burqa*
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mrswdk wrote:There is Islam as practiced by modern Britons such as Sadiq Khan and there is medieval Islam as practiced by Ayatollah Dukasaur and his fellow mods.
The asylum wrote:mrswdk wrote:There is Islam as practiced by modern Britons such as Sadiq Khan and there is medieval Islam as practiced by Ayatollah Dukasaur and his fellow mods.
Ah bless you, you think there's a type of Islam practiced by modern Britons. Got to love and cuddle special people like you. Hopefully the real world will never taint your beautiful naïveté
mrswdk wrote:Khan got 56.9% of the final vote in a city where 12.4% of the population is Muslim. It's most likely that the vast majority of people who voted for Khan were non-Muslim.
Religion hasn't been used at all during the mainstream mayoral campaigns. Once it became clear Goldsmith wasn't managing to overtake Khan in the polls he and his campaign started trying to smear Khan about having spoken alongside extremists in the past, but there was never any suggestion that Khan's religion made him unfit for office.
mrswdk wrote:ANYHOO
The point is that the role played by religion in the London mayoral elections was minuscule at most. The only party which attempted to play the religion card was Britain First (who ran on an anti-Islam platform), and they ended up with 1% of the vote. The majority of people in London simple don't care what religion/ethnicity their politicians are.
thegreekdog wrote:mrswdk wrote:Khan got 56.9% of the final vote in a city where 12.4% of the population is Muslim. It's most likely that the vast majority of people who voted for Khan were non-Muslim.
Religion hasn't been used at all during the mainstream mayoral campaigns. Once it became clear Goldsmith wasn't managing to overtake Khan in the polls he and his campaign started trying to smear Khan about having spoken alongside extremists in the past, but there was never any suggestion that Khan's religion made him unfit for office.
With your statistics above, you didn't actually prove anything. You would also need to show how many Londoners voted.
ANYHOO
The point is that the role played by religion in the London mayoral elections was minuscule at most. The only party which attempted to play the religion card was Britain First (who ran on an anti-Islam platform), and they ended up with 1% of the vote. The majority of people in London simple don't care what religion/ethnicity their politicians are.
Yeah, is it really notable that a Muslim was elected? I suppose if this was like rural Alabama in the United States it would be noteworthy.
mrswdk wrote:True, turnout is important. Turnout was 45.3% of eligible voters.
mrswdk wrote:In the context of how prominent the demonization of Muslims is throughout much of Western Europe and North America, it is notable that a Western European's capital city has just elected a Muslim as its leader. While it's not particularly notable in the context of an enormously diverse capital city, it still sends quite a visible message to others.
thegreekdog wrote:mrswdk wrote:True, turnout is important. Turnout was 45.3% of eligible voters.
You had me at 45.3% of eligible voters... you had me at 45.3% of eligible voters.
In the context of how prominent the demonization of Muslims is throughout much of Western Europe and North America, it is notable that a Western European's capital city has just elected a Muslim as its leader. While it's not particularly notable in the context of an enormously diverse capital city, it still sends quite a visible message to others.
Frankly, I think the demonization of Muslims is overblown especially in a place as cosmopolitan as western Europe and specifically London. If we were talking about some small town in rural Alabama, then maybe I would be more moved (but even then it probably wouldn't be that shocking).
If we sit here on May 9, 2016 and say "but TGD! Look at the popularity of Trump in the United States!", my response would be - Okay, Trump is the erstwhile anti-Muslim candidate here in the US I suppose. And let's assume the reason he's winning the Republican nomination is because of that and not because of other things (like the media spending 98% of their time on him or his very isolationist economic policies). But he's not getting more than 50% of the Republican vote in any polls and we all like to think Republicans are all anti-Muslim bigots. Nevermind that he's not polling close to future president Hillary Clinton in national polls. So even here in the backwards United States, I'm not sure I understand where the idea of demonization comes from with respect to Muslims. I admittedly do not fully understand western Europe's association with or treatment of Muslims, but given their views on the Trump campaign and the United States generally (i.e. they think we are all insane, even though the vast majority of us never voted for Mr. Trump... but that's neither here nor there), I would think western Europe is much less likely to demonize Muslims than the United States, which I think I just demonstrated is not really demonizing Muslims.
Also and as well all know thanks to various expert posts on this very website, we elected a devout Muslim to the presidency in both 2008 and 2012. So there's that as well.
mrswdk wrote:It's less of a problem in a big cosmopolitan city, sure, but it's still there. Plus, I was talking about the message it sounds to people everywhere, not just to people in other cosmopolitan cities.
mrswdk wrote:Having followed the US elections relatively closely I didn't think the appeal of Trump is an anti-Islam appeal. As far as I can tell he made one comment about stopping Muslims from entering the US because of ISIS and then never revisited that idea. In the UK and other Western European countries there are political movements and parties which center around anti-Islamism (e.g. Britain First, Pegida), well-read newspapers which stoke Islamophobia, and significant (if minority) levels of anti-Islam sentiment among the general populations at large. Britain First got a bit more than 30,000 votes in the London mayoral elections - it's not much, but that's 1% of voters opting for a party with no discernible policies other than suppressing Islam. If that's 1% of the electorate who care about nothing other than chucking the Muzzies out, imagine how many people there are who harbor similar views, but have a relatively 3D range of political concerns and so vote for other parties. Compared to what members of any other ethnic minority face, Muslims get the worst of it.
riskllama wrote:he's gay too, isn't he?
riskllama wrote:he's gay too, isn't he?
notyou2 wrote:He does come across slightly effeminate. He is loved by the people and he seems like an awesome mayor.
thegreekdog wrote:notyou2 wrote:He does come across slightly effeminate. He is loved by the people and he seems like an awesome mayor.
Didn't Canada have a mayor that was a crack addict?
I think mayors in general are fascinating people. I've been in Philadelphia since the late 1990s and we've had some interesting mayors. I bet a lot of cities could say the same thing.
thegreekdog wrote:notyou2 wrote:He does come across slightly effeminate. He is loved by the people and he seems like an awesome mayor.
Didn't Canada have a mayor that was a crack addict?
I think mayors in general are fascinating people. I've been in Philadelphia since the late 1990s and we've had some interesting mayors. I bet a lot of cities could say the same thing.
notyou2 wrote:thegreekdog wrote:notyou2 wrote:He does come across slightly effeminate. He is loved by the people and he seems like an awesome mayor.
Didn't Canada have a mayor that was a crack addict?
I think mayors in general are fascinating people. I've been in Philadelphia since the late 1990s and we've had some interesting mayors. I bet a lot of cities could say the same thing.
That was Rob Ford, mayor of Toronto. He just died of cancer a month ago.
Symmetry wrote:thegreekdog wrote:notyou2 wrote:He does come across slightly effeminate. He is loved by the people and he seems like an awesome mayor.
Didn't Canada have a mayor that was a crack addict?
I think mayors in general are fascinating people. I've been in Philadelphia since the late 1990s and we've had some interesting mayors. I bet a lot of cities could say the same thing.
Oddly enough, London has two mayors. Only one has any real power though. It gets complicated to explain.
mrswdk wrote:Symmetry wrote:thegreekdog wrote:notyou2 wrote:He does come across slightly effeminate. He is loved by the people and he seems like an awesome mayor.
Didn't Canada have a mayor that was a crack addict?
I think mayors in general are fascinating people. I've been in Philadelphia since the late 1990s and we've had some interesting mayors. I bet a lot of cities could say the same thing.
Oddly enough, London has two mayors. Only one has any real power though. It gets complicated to explain.
It's not really that complicated (or, indeed, correct).
There is the Mayor of London, who has strategic governance over the whole city (i.e. all 33 boroughs of London). That's the position Sadiq Khan now holds. Then each of London's 33 boroughs also has its own mayor, who is the head of that particular borough but usually only has ceremonial duties.
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
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