Ticia wrote:
According to Juan Williams? Yes you are.
Well, I find it somewhat practical.
Ticia wrote:
Basically about this issue I agree with this guy, Glenn Greenwald
Above all else, this fear-generating "nexus" is what must be protected at all costs. This is the "troubling" connection -- between Muslims and terrorism -- that Williams lent his "liberal," NPR-sanctioned voice to legitimizing. And it is this fear-sustaining, anti-Muslim slander that NPR's firing of Williams threatened to delegitimize. That is why NPR's firing of Williams must be attacked with such force: because if it were allowed to stand, it would be an important step toward stigmatizing anti-Muslim animus in the same way that other forms of bigotry are now off-limits, and that, above all else, is what cannot happen, because anti-Muslim animus is too important to too many factions to allow it to be delegitimized.
The real danger from NPR's firing of Juan Williams
It's not slander if there's truth to it. There is a considerable connection between Islam and terrorism. Don't mistake my disdain of Islam for supporting other religions though.
I would prefer a world without religion, but I know that human nature unfortunately mandates its existence.
I don't support a specifically "anti-Muslim animus" -- I support an "anti-religion animus." If people are uneasy with public figures making connections between Islam and terrorists, then maybe the Islamic World itself needs to move further away from extremism in general.
For the time being, however, I support criticisms of Islam and of religion in general.
In truth, if there's anything that makes me feel "nervous," it's the fact that so much of humanity places faith in the unprovable and the improbable to base their lives on. Some people (like fanatical Muslims) go so far as to kill people over it.
And when you examine how Jihad is a key part of Islam, how can you not be somewhat nervous when considering the possibilities that varying interpretations allow for?
Granted, Christianity also makes me nervous for similar reasons when I see the kind of fanatics my own country produces.
The point is... Williams's anxiety is based somewhat on reality. There is a connection between Islam and terrorism. However, he even went so far as to recognize that most Muslims aren't fanatics. But that wasn't good enough for the PC patrol.
Last edited by Turquoise (2010-10-26 08:44:24)