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Author Topic: Islamic / US relations
HRE
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This is an interesting piece I stumbled across on the talk.origins board. Now, it talks a bit about religion and a bit more about politics, but that isn't the meat of this article. Let's try to move past those few sentences and discuss the true message.

quote:
I mentioned a few months ago that I had the opportunity to sit next to a young Pakistani cardiologist on a flight to Austin. I'd like to talk about that some more...let's call the Pakistani doctor, Ben.

Ben is a middle child in a large Pakistani family of moderate means. His home had no electricity or running water, yet he was considered middle class in his culture simply for having a home at all. His family did laundry for a hotel and sold carpeting/sheeting on the side. He worked as a hotel maid to earn money for night classes, in addition to his high school classes, to prep for college. During this time, he took classes in mathematics, physics, chemistry, and BTW, English, French, and German (he's currently taking night classes for Chinese). By the time Ben graduated High School, he could do multiple integrals in polar co-ordinates and write his answer in three languages. In college, he worked a full time phone center job while earning a 3.8 GPA in pre-med. NYU I think it was, but not sure. He also got married and started a family, one child after another virtually every year, for five years. During this time, he went on to Stanford, earned his MD, did his residency in an LA emergency room while raising those five kids. He specialized in cardiology, took some additional classes and internships for that specialty, and now has a partnership in a thriving cardiology practice in Orlando, Florida. Incidentally, Ben is 29 years old!

I asked him how he pulled all that off coming from such a disadvantageous position. He replied somewhat haltingly that he was very.. religious... "I don't know...I'm a religious fellow" he said guardedly, as if worried I'd think he was a nut, "and I think that helped. I owe Allah a great debt for my health and my children and my own life. I know that sounds crazy to you being an American, but that's how I see it..."

I did mention that he didn't sound crazy at all. In fact, he's the most polite, intelligent, thoughtful, and rational person I've ever struck up an impromptu flight conversation with. And I told him so. He was so polite he soon began asking me what my interests were, feeling he had been doing all the talking. Well, I was afraid to bring it up, but I wanted to be honest. So I told him one of my hobbies was fighting pseudo-science and advocating real science; like creationism vs. evolution. His response caught me off guard. It was something like "I understand. The US leads science, but I meet people who really think the Earth is 6000 years old, or that evolution never happened. Why is that?"

I couldn't believe it. I asked him how his religion (Islam) meshes with evolution. He explained that basically there is no problem, as evolution could have been the method employed, and added that only a fool would deny evolution given the evidence. Although he didn't state it exactly like this, his view seemed to be that truth (evolution) cannot contradict truth (Islam). So there is no conflict with evolution and Islam. Simple as that.

So here is a deeply religious Muslim, worked his tail off in the name of Allah, gives like 10% of his income to his temple, he won't even own bonds or interest-bearing instruments for crying out loud because interest income violates some kind of Islamic principle (he can own dividend paying stocks or private ventures which pay out earnings, but no preferreds or yield vehicles). And he accepts evolution BECAUSE of the evidence.

And what's more is I think there are plenty of Bens out there in the Islamic world. Just as we have rational Christians on this board, and a few nutters, there are guys like Ben, ...and well...Jam on AOL for the token Muslim nutter. What's so very sad is that we as a country are not doing well with these rational Muslims. We're in fact p***ng them off and driving them away.

What does creationism represent? Ignorance. Dogma over analysis, fiction over fact. Credulity. I would even say it represents stupidity in some cases. It's certainly at times silly or funny, and at other times tragic, as we witness an eternal parade of creationist victims spouting the same endlessly recycled crap on this forum day after day. Murphy AKA Sockpuppet, Ed C, Pagano, these are trolls who are not only ignorant, they're proud of their ignorance and wear it like a badge. Creationism in the face of evidence represents some of the greatest flaws in humanity's psyche. It's our propensity to believe gone awry. It's symptomatic of the same kind of mindset found in Holocaust deniers, or Scientologists. It's disturbingly similar to the kind of thinking that leads to a Jonestown, or a Heaven's Gate.

Now, the reason I think we need to forge a healthy relationship between the West and the moderate Muslim world, the Bens of the planet, is not because I think they're swell guys who would be a blast at a bachelor party. It's because the alternative could spell the end of our culture. These guys are smart. They have nukes. They have WMDs for real. And you don't want an Islamic fanatic (or an Evangelical fanatic, or any fanatic for that matter), who ardently believes in an Islamic version of the Rapture, with his finger on the nuclear button. You want Ben in charge of stuff like that. Hell, you'd rather have Saddam Hussein or Stalin in charge of stuff like that because, despite being ruthless, cunning killers, they happen to WANT to stay alive and in power. The fanatic views the Earth as a sort of a temporary camping trip before going back home to the luxury of Heaven.

Ben told me something else; he said that in Pakistan, Osama bin Laden is perceived like a living Luke Skywalker, mysticism and all. And you can guess who plays the Evil Empire. Meanwhile, back in the real world, Osama is consolidating his power in Pakistan, the home of some of the brightest nuclear scientists in the world, and Saudi Arabia, the world's energy source. And what are we doing about it? We're....occupying Iraq...p***ing off more Muslims, losing men and women, committing heinous acts against Iraqis randomly collected, and bleeding money like a stuck pig. A buddy of mine just got his tour extended for the THIRD time. Right now the Evil Empire is busy ticking Muslims off and proving their darkest fears about our morals and methods.

Anyway, in the mind of a rational Muslim, I gather Osama is kinda like O. J. Simpson was/is to a black ghetto dwelling LA resident who has been hassled by the cops all of his life. The blacks know OJ did it and that what he did was terribly wrong, they just hate the system that has crushed them for so long that they're happy to see OJ 'get one over on The Man'. When black people were jumping up and down after OJ was acquitted shouting 'we won, we won' they didn't give a rat's *** about OJ. They meant THEY as black people finally got the same privileges for a wealthy black guy that wealthy white guys have been getting for centuries. Namely, getting away with murder.

Al Qaeda is kinda like that in some Muslim minds apparently. The rational Muslim knows that 9-11 was wrong, it violated about every principle of Islamic theology imaginable, and they would turn people in if they suspected they were planning an attack, even fellow Muslims. But it did get one over on 'The Man'.

We need to configure a policy for dealing with Ben that WORKS, because his brethren are incredibly smart, highly motivated, and there are a LOT of them. Right now our policy is built on prejudice and oil, and it isn't working. They can contribute a great deal to our science and technology. They WANT to like America. But for some odd reason, when dealing with the Middle east, the US suddenly acts like an imbecile bullying *******.

Example: The biggest obstacle to a large Islamic state spanning from the Mediterranean to the Pacific Ocean is Iran. Iran does not hang well with Sunni fundies. They're becoming more progressive and moving away from fundamentalism. They had a legit revolution, brought America to its knees, without killing a single American. Iran has nukes, and they are willing to fight hard. Iran has a credible government which couldn't get sucker punched by any of Osama's "they're western puppets" stuff that plays so well, and so true, for some Arab states. Iranians are highly educated, and, I think, delightful people. They're deserving of our respect and they would make a formidable ally, or a terrifying enemy. They're smack dab in the middle of the theocratic empire Osama wants to carve out.

So wouldn't you think we'd snuggle up to Iran, admit how bad we screwed them, and be pals? Well no, of course not. Iran is part of the "Axis of Evil". As much as it pains me to note, a lifelong Republican, we have to eject Bush and let Herman Munster take a shot at the helm. See, I'd rather have Ben on my side than against me. And if Ben and I, a devout Muslim and an American atheist, can agree on evolution, we can agree on coexistence as well. For both are rational. Vote wisely, my friends.

~DS~



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TMedina
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Interesting.

And are we to cast Israel adrift? It seems our continued support of the Zionist state is as much a stickler as any interest in oil.

-Trevor

Edit: And are you sure you want to compare a religion versus a country?

[ August 15, 2004, 10:19 PM: Message edited by: TMedina ]

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Icarus
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linky?
Never mind . . . found it.

[ August 15, 2004, 10:42 PM: Message edited by: Icarus ]

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