I got bumped from The Big Questions, but they have my details, so hopefully they’ll be in touch when they’re next in London.
I’ll watch the show and post my comments.
KAFIR (noun) someone who "reject[s] and den[ies]... Allah... and His messages". This seems like the best word in Arabic, and I want to claim it: I AM someone who quite deliberately and consciously, denies that there is any truth whatsoever in Islam as a religion, or as a political system. A blog about politics, religion (especially Islam and Christianity), philosophy and science, especially as these areas intersect. I approach these issues as an atheist, liberal (nearly libertarian).
I got bumped from The Big Questions, but they have my details, so hopefully they’ll be in touch when they’re next in London.
I’ll watch the show and post my comments.
I got an email from Simon saying BBC One’s The Big Questions had invited him onto the front row in the show, but he couldn’t make it, and that he had suggested me (thanks Simon!)
I spoke to the Production Assistant, Hannah, at some length about the theme of the show: that society would be better if we all belonged to a religion. Hannah will get back to me today.
It’s been a while since I’ve done a TV show, so my fingers are crossed that they will be able to fit me in!
This isn’t on Al-BBC.
The following Early Day Motion:
That this House notes the recent advertising campaign based on London buses, There's Probably No God, the brainchild of the British Humanist Association; also notes the fact that the rationale behind it is that people can be less careful about their lifestyle choices and general approach to life's consequences by discounting the likelihood of a Creator and an afterlife; and recommends to Christian groups considering alternative advertising approaches to There's Probably No God to counter it with the simple addition of But What If There Is?
Why should “This House”, which is a body to make laws that affect everyone, need to recommend anything to Christian groups, especially considering that Christian groups have been advertising on any media available since that media was available.
Furthermore, why is it that the religious again impugn the moral integrity of atheists? “people can be less careful about their lifestyle choices”. WTF is THAT? Where is their evidence that non-religious people are more immoral, more wicked, more depraved than the devout? In fact, having to think about what is moral and what is not is good for the “soul”. The MPs who endorse this EDM simply believe that they Sky Fairy just tells them what to do and that’s that. I just hope they never come to believe that the Sky Fairy wants them to fly aeroplanes into buildings.
The Hall of Shame stands at six as at today’s date:
Conservative Party
Democratic Unionist Party
Independent
I listen to the Today programme in the mornings, and I’m struck at the way IDF or Israeli Government spokespeople and the way Hamas apologists are treated. One group is subjected to harsh, aggressive questioning, while the other is asked gentle probing questions and allowed time to develop their ideas.
A good contrast is this morning’s interview with (the excellent and calm!) Mark Regev, where he was aggressively attacked about “knowing that children were going to die” and with not a word about Hamas firing rockets indiscriminately into Israel (maybe they know that no Israeli children could possibly be harmed with those action?); and with this interview with Alistair Crooke yesterday as he defends Hamas, and blames Israel.
The question is, what does “victory” mean? And I think the Western ideas of broken houses, of headquarters destroyed, of lines of communication interrupted are one side of the picture, but the other side of the picture, one which will affect the whole region, is really of a more intangible sense of an image. Hamas, after all, is not just a group of armed men, it’s an idea, it’s a way of living, it’s a way of envisaging the future. It’s very hard to destroy that. It’s about ideas, not buildings.
Israel has made it plain that “victory” for them will not be the destroyed stuff – they’re not there to be vandals – it’s a cessation of the rocket attacks on Israel, and the damage to buildings and so on is to secure that aim. But Crooke is right about Hamas – it is an ideology, the ideology of Islamism (which is clearly laid out in its Charter. Now, there could be an interesting discussion here about the Islamist ideology of Hamas, with its hatred of Jews and it’s calls for the destruction of Israel and imposition by force of Islamic law on the whole world, but no. Apparently it’s all Israel’s fault:
Humphrys:So they’ll become, remain, a symbol of defiance in other words?
Crooke: No, I think it will be more than that, it will revert to an archetypal sort of image of Islam verses not only Israel, but Islam verses the West. It will become an iconic element of an attack first of all on Hamas, also on Gaza, also on the Palestinians and finally on Islam itself, and we see that in much of the imagery. So when people look at it, they will look at the region, the conflict, particularly the involvement of some Arab states, they will look at what has happened and they will say the uncontrolled, if you like, use of civilians in this, the uncontrolled collateral damage visited on civilians…
Humphrys: Yes
Crooke: Shows that this is unconstrained war. The implications are very serious because any Islamist will say, “Oh if we’re going down that route, if you can do this…
Humphrys: Yes
Crooke: Then we’re heading for a very bloody and protracted conflict over the future of this region. “If you’re uncompromising, then maybe we need to be uncompromising in our reaction, too”
WTF??
So no mention of the compromises made by Israel – total withdrawal from Gaza in 2005. No mention of the stand made publically by Hamas against compromise. No mention that if Hamas had not been firing rockets at Israel for YEARS then there would be no invasion. No, it’s all Israel’s fault for defending it’s people.
Sick stuff.