Keep in mind that I don't agree with them, I just understand them enough to know what was done was illegal in muslim law.
Also, like I said, there's a big difference between naming a child in honor of the prophet and naming an inanimate object after the prophet.
Finally, sorry, I just felt like you were more putting those questions towards me since you quoted my post and it seemed like a response to that. None the less, it's all good.![]()
Keep in mind that I don't agree with them, I just understand them enough to know what was done was illegal in muslim law.
So what? That's my question. So it's illegal. Does that mean she's in the wrong or they are? In my book, the fact that it's illegal is a black mark against the law makers, not the people who break the laws.
You ask, does that make them or her wrong...
Well in the UK that makes them wrong but in Sudan it is her that's wrong.
Hasn't that always been the most basic dilemma to what is right and what is wrong?Since when was right and wrong determined by where you're standing?
Even though I think they are in the wrong, I can't say this woman should not be subject to the laws of the land in which she walks.
Hasn't that always been the most basic dilemma to what is right and what is wrong? If you ask me, right and wrong have always been a matter of where you were standing
Just to clear things up, I fully recognize that you don't agree with their laws.
How can you believe in a concept like "inalienable human rights" and say the above? I know I'm breaking an internet rule here, but to take an extreme example, if Nazi's say it's legal to kill jews, does that make it right? Even if they're in Naziland?
The fact of the matter is that you CAN say that the laws in another country are wrong - that they're objectively wrong. Justice isn't a matter of opinion.
Not if you believe in human rights. The concept of human rights is at odds with a subjective view of justice.
Edit: A subjective take on justice isn't just at odds with rights. It's also at odds with common sense. Why should something suddenly become just if you're standing on one piece of dirt instead of another? Because the local culture has decreed that it should be so? Check my signature. Individual rights are not subject to vote. It doesn't matter what the local culture is.
I'm all for respecting the locals, attempting to live by their customs, even abiding by their laws - even if it's strictly from a self-preservation, common sense, practicality point of view. But that doesn't mean that the victims of their laws are necessarily in the wrong.
I never said it should, I said it was. Again, real world vs the ideal.Why should something suddenly become just if you're standing on one piece of dirt instead of another?
I'm not talking about whether this woman should or should not have been punished.
I'm talking about whether this woman would or would not be punished.
Now, ignoring the idea that we could be considered arrogant for saying we know best and this is right and this is wrong...
You see, when I say she "I can't say this woman should not be subject to the laws of the land in which she walks." I'm not talking about whether the laws are right or not, I'm talking about whether the laws will be enforced or not.
Fact is, I believe in inalienable human rights but that doesn't blind me to the fact that I have no control over what other people believe.
However, I wouldn't be so foolish as to think that because I know they are wrong it would be OK for a Jewish person to go into Nazi germany and expect to not be killed.
This isn't about what should and shouldn't be, this is about what is and what isn't.
Right now, the woman shouldn't be in jail and the law shouldn't be what it is. However, she is in jail and in the Sudan the law is what it is (which is right in the hearts and minds of the Sudanese).
I never said it should, I said it was. Again, real world vs the ideal.
KentEven though I think they are in the wrong, I can't say this woman should not be subject to the laws of the land in which she walks.
danoffWhen you used the word "should" in the second quote, I clearly misunderstood your point
In response to...I never said it should, I said it was. Again, real world vs the ideal.
As seen in this postWhy should something suddenly become just if you're standing on one piece of dirt instead of another?
That's rediculus and I'd hope you understood it better than that based on the context of the discussion.danoffWhat do you mean by OK? And what do you mean by expect?
By "OK" do you mean "permissible", or do you mean "smart".
By "expect" do you mean "entitled", or "anticipate".
A bit personal eh? I mean, I did use the term "WE" in a hypothetical pre-text to the discussion.danoffagain. Justice is not subjective. Call me arrogant if you want, but it's wholly misguided.
That seems to me like a great contradiction to your speech regarding rights.danoffAgreed, not that it matters what is right in the hearts of the Sudanese.
You've applied the wrong responses to the wrong questions...
I said...
In response to...
That's rediculus and I'd hope you understood it better than that based on the context of the discussion.
A bit personal eh? I mean, I did use the term "WE" in a hypothetical pre-text to the discussion.
Further, I think you need to think about what arrogance is and remove yourself from the position of "I am right" before you get worried about whether my hypothetical pre-text is misguided.
Asserting you are unfallible in your understanding of right and wrong is by nature "misguided" and arrogant (although well intended and in line with my beliefs as well).
Also, since my view of the discussion is clearly unappreciated and "nothing interesting" I'll be headed on to other topics.
DanoffAgreed, not that it matters what is right in the hearts of the Sudanese.
That seems to me like a great contradiction to your speech regarding rights.
DanoffBut I will point out that it doesn't matter what other people believe. All that matters is what's right, objectively.
DanoffJustice is not subjective.
Yes, when in rome. But!!! There is such a thing as human rights. There is such a thing as an inhumane law. Justice is independent of region. What happened to her is unjust - regardless of what the local laws are.
Legal != Just.
I agree completely.
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correct me if I'm wrong (though I don't need to type that, do I?)
But in Islam isn't calling you child Mohammed/Muhamed/etc seen as a way of going to heaven, I remember reading something like that on the BBC website. Though it seems Kent has answered this.
Well its an over reaction to say the very least. True that in Islam blasphemy against the Prophet is to be severely punished, but I am a great supporter of people using some common sense when it comes to these things, but apparently that's asking for way too much. For children to name their teddies after a name that is very common in that region and that being deemed blasphemous is ludicrous.
In my personal opinion, it has less to do with children naming their teddies and everything to do with the teacher being an outsider. In many cultures, getting help from an outsider is considered dishonorable, and the people who lit this fire were probably looking for a reason to screw her over anyway.
Why didn't she say...
"Sorry kids, but we can't call the teddy bear Mohammed"
?
Her? HER? HER?My school has just bought a new hamster.
I'm calling her Mohamed.
My school has just bought a new hamster.
I'm calling her Mohamed.
So you'd like to kill anyone who likes to see people be killed for their beliefs? Well, it's been nice knowing you Alex.I would persnally like to collect each and every single muslim person, and sort the honest hard working muslim people from the ones who like to see people killed for their beliefs. The latter should all be set on fire.
Exactly. Ignorance of the law is never a good thing, but it is a moral imperative that the punishment should fit the crime. You will hopefully agree that there are occasions where people can unwittingly break the law - especially if you are a foreigner or simply unfortunate enough to not know or appreciate the stringencies of foreign laws or customs.Go to foreign lands, go by foreign laws, however stupid they seem to us.
Yes, when in rome. But!!! There is such a thing as human rights. There is such a thing as an inhumane law. Justice is independent of region. What happened to her is unjust - regardless of what the local laws are.
Sudan's President Omar al-Bashir pardoned her after a meeting with two British Muslim peers, Lord Ahmed and Baroness Warsi.
Hey, at least she's a hamster. She could have been a pot-bellied pig...
Respond with the same brain-dead intolerance and play into the hands of those who want a fight, or respond in the way that intelligent and just people should - with decency, common sense, and ultimately with reason.
Well... she is a hamster.