MIGNAL":5xcs9650 said:
RogerS":5xcs9650 said:
One thing is for certain and that is that there are very very very few Christians who are going around killing and maiming in the name of their God.
Not many. They did all that a few hundred years ago. Torture, burning, death. Countless thousands. None of it pleasant.
A few hundred...? I seem to recall the IRA blowing people up in the street as recently as - what, fifteen to twenty years ago? If you want to look at the problems stemming from the middle east so simplistically as to call them a religiously-motivated problem, then you should also look at the problems in Northern Ireland equally simplistically and call them a Catholics-versus-Protestants fight. We're not - as a people - in any way special or magically morally superior.
Religion is used as the
excuse for a lot of wars, but in reality it's very rarely the actual reason people fight. People who start wars care about power, territory and resources... and rarely anything else. (People who
fight wars will sometimes fight them for religious reasons, of course, but they're not the ones who decide who fights whom and when.)
The most interesting article I've seen recently on the topic was written in 2001 in response to the 9/11 attacks (no idea why it's on LinkedIn in particular):
Why They Hate Us - Cass Sunstein
The point it makes is, I think, very important. If we want to end the seemingly-continuous threat of middle-eastern Islamist terrorism, we have to take a long, hard look at why people embrace such a perverse ideology in the first place. Fight the extremists there and you'll never have to fight them with bombs and guns and you'll never have to fight them on the streets of our major cities. For anyone who's been following the various incidents of campus unrest in the US that are starting to infect British universities, you can see exactly the same psychological groupthink taking root in those populations, just with differing goals and justifications.
Like the problem in Northern Ireland, however, the roots of everything in the middle east go back a long way and aren't easily disentangled. Plenty of cases of people X who hate people Y because Y's grandparents stole something from X's grandparents, regardless of whether the present Y ever did anything wrong. Look at the cack-handed slicing up of Kurdistan for a really obvious example - I read just the other day that the Turks today are bombing the Kurds more than ISIS, despite the psychopaths of ISIS being literally right on their doorstep and having a published plan to invade and take over Turkey, thanks to this century-old disagreement that has the Turks bizarrely seeing the Kurds as more of a long-term threat.
Not to say that we shouldn't bomb the faeces out of ISIS - just to say that we should recognise while we're doing it that it's only a short-term solution at best. In the long term, the only proven, repeatable method of getting rid of terrorism is sitting down at the negotiating table with it - however much our maxims like to pretend we don't do that sort of thing.