everywhere116 wrote:Of course not. But we weren't talking about Muslims, we were talking about Islam itself.Symmetry wrote:everywhere116 wrote:Not really. While I agree that other religions (Christianity in particular) have been twisted for violent ends, it is different with Islam, mainly because you don't have to twist anything about the religion to beget violence. For example, Jesus never said that any Christians who leave Christianity should be killed. But Muhammad did say the same about Islam. (This is also why apostasy is punished with death under Sharia law.) Furthermore, the Quran itself is rife with messages about killing unbelievers and also about how Muslims who violate Islamic principles aren't true Muslims. For these and many other reasons, many Islamic sects don't consider each other to be true Muslims (although your mileage may vary on this point, depending on the sect.) This can lead to retardedly ridiculous scenarios, such as in the case of Abdus Salam, a well respected Nobel Prize winning Muslim physicist who was buried in his home country, Pakistan, with the epitaph "First Muslim Nobel Laureate" written on his tombstone, with the word "Muslim" etched out by the Pakistani government because he was an Ahmadi. Unfortunately, it also leads to the scenarios of Sunnis and Shias murdering each other through terrorist attacks and the like. It's an intrinsic characteristic of the religion which, also unfortunately, isn't going to stop being a part of Islam.Baron Von PWN wrote:everywhere116 wrote:Subjective, but whatever. The main difference is that violent religious conflict among Christians has all but stopped while violent religious conflict among Muslims is still going strong, mainly because to stop would be to go against Islamic principles.
Is the last parenthetical sentence talking about Christian conflicts being about power or money, or Muslim conflicts?
I'm sure there were people who would have said to end the wars of the reformation would have been against Christian principles. I would argue the reasons you see "religious" (many of these are ethnic conflicts wrapped in religion) conflicts among Muslim peoples is due to their forms of government, which have come about for a variety of reasons (colonial legacies, Cold war tyrants ect).
There is no reason why Islam would specifically lead to conflict as an inherent principle of the religion.
And yet Muslims are not, actually intrinsically violent.
Then I would say that being Islamic does not make a person intrinsically violent.