I'll rarely post on this topic nowadays, but...
That's some dodgy reasoning you got going there.
Because a few hundred years ago whole armies did some truly fucked up shit, shit that made modern-day jihadists look like petty thugs, on a consistent basis over a long time in the name of Christianity and by extension the Bible. In contrast Islamic society was far and away the most enlightened, progressive and "modern" on the planet.
Neither the Bible nor the Koran have changed significantly in the intervening years. So could not we then argue that that period proves that Christianity is a religion fucked up beyond all imagining and Islam is a wonderfully enlightened, progressive religion centuries ahead of its time?
(Of course not, I merely point out the fallacy of arguing that actions taken in the name of something automatically means the action was justified according to the something, especially when the something is as broad, complex and open to interpretation as a religion)
That 'acceptable norms' in some Islamic countries - some - would not pass as such here is beyond doubt, but I'll also note that honor killings and the like are not a phenomenon restricted to Islamic countries.
That's some dodgy reasoning you got going there.
Because a few hundred years ago whole armies did some truly fucked up shit, shit that made modern-day jihadists look like petty thugs, on a consistent basis over a long time in the name of Christianity and by extension the Bible. In contrast Islamic society was far and away the most enlightened, progressive and "modern" on the planet.
Neither the Bible nor the Koran have changed significantly in the intervening years. So could not we then argue that that period proves that Christianity is a religion fucked up beyond all imagining and Islam is a wonderfully enlightened, progressive religion centuries ahead of its time?
(Of course not, I merely point out the fallacy of arguing that actions taken in the name of something automatically means the action was justified according to the something, especially when the something is as broad, complex and open to interpretation as a religion)
That 'acceptable norms' in some Islamic countries - some - would not pass as such here is beyond doubt, but I'll also note that honor killings and the like are not a phenomenon restricted to Islamic countries.
The paradox is only a conflict between reality and your feeling what reality ought to be.
~ Richard Feynman
~ Richard Feynman