The Inexplicable Liberal Defense of Islam

I want to be fair here. Not all liberals defend Islam. In fact, most that I know do NOT (except in the sense that they defend the rights of all humanity). But for those who do, their defense of Islam is inexplicable, considering their traditional political positions. Let's go over a few "liberal" positions for analysis, shall we?

The environment: Liberals are quick to condemn our dependence on fossil fuels in the west. They are quick to decry our environmental atrocities, while failing to hold Islamic countries accountable for the same.

Equal rights: Women are second class citizens in Islamic countries, and homosexuality is justification for murder in many villages, without  consequence from the national government.

Free Speech: Do I even have to go here?

Freedom of Religion: There is but one God, Allah, and Mohammed is his messenger.

Democracy: virtually nonexistent

Civil Liberties: The Hussein regime in Iraq was a horribly ruthless and oppressive regime. Islamic countries are constantly at the top of Amnesty International's watch lists.

Fair labor standards: Again, Islamic countries come in on the low end.

Now, I will again reiterate that not all liberals defend Islam. But for those who do, I would be interested in knowing precisely WHY you do. The United States is far from perfect, but we have made TREMENDOUS strides in ensuring liberty and opportunity for all of our citizens, while working to preserve and better our environment. Why do you not hold Islam to the same standard?

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Reply #1 Top

Feminist support Clinton.  Blacks support Byrd. Liberals support Islam.

See a pattern? How about: The enemy of my enemy is my friend.  And people still wonder how Hitler came to power.

Reply #2 Top
they do not hold Islam to the same standard as America because it does not suit there sick and twisted agenda. simple huh?
Reply #3 Top
Liberals seem to embrace anything and everything that despises America. It really seems as if they hate our nation at times, and I wish the ones who are filled with such self loathing would just find another place to live, frankly.


Exaclty. Just look at how they embrace someone like Chavez.
Reply #4 Top
I agree with you LW.....we have a local yokel here that for quite a while was very verbose in his letters to the editor on all the bad things about America. He was a liberal's liberal if you ask me. So I publicly using the same format offered to pay for a one way ticket to any communist country of his choice.

Funny......he never took me up on the offer....but we did enjoy his absense for a while.
Reply #5 Top
I agree with LW as well, but I also believe that they just like to contradict Reps. Anything Republicans believe in they believe in the opposite just to spite them. So it's mostly what LW said, about 85% and 15% what I said. JMO.
Reply #7 Top
Est-ce que vous pensez vraiment que Saddam Houssein avait besoin de l'Islam pour instaurer sa dictature ??? Je pense que c'est voir les coses par le bout de la lorgnette...

Island Dog...
Je n'arrive pas à saisir cette "appréhension subliminale" à propos de Chavez, sinon de faire de l'association d'idées à la noix...
Reply #8 Top
Est-ce que vous pensez vraiment que Saddam Houssein avait besoin de l'Islam pour instaurer sa dictature ??? Je pense que c'est voir les choses par le bout de la lorgnette...

Island Dog...
Je n'arrive pas à saisir cette "appréhension subliminale" à propos de Chavez, sinon de faire de l'association d'idées à la noix...
Reply #9 Top
mar'ouki: Chavez has a history of suspending democracy and making it illegal to "disrespect" him. Granted, it is far more Bolivar than Mohammed, but tyrrany is still tyrrany. The point was that Liberals can tolerate tyrants just as easily as anyone else, and therefore tend to tyrrany as much as anyone else.
Reply #10 Top
Je pense que quelqu'un qui a mis les ressources du pétrole vénézulien au service du bien-être de son peuple ne mérite pas d'être étiqueté de tyran... Chavez dérange autant plus que tout l'Amérique du Sud bascule ( Lula, Morales...) dans une vision qui ne colle pas avec le diktat américain...Je vous rapelle que ces 3 dernières années, six pays ont voté dans le même sens. Un vrai bouleversement politique !!! Chavez n'en est pas l'exception tyrannique. Au contraire, c'est le représentant le plus en vue de ce mouvement populaire sud-américain...
Reply #11 Top
They never hold Communistic governments accountable, either. Same pattern, different subject.

I think the true liberal supports and apologizes for Islamics simply because Islam is not Christianity. We all know what an evil and imposing force Christ has been in world history, don't we?
Mohammad, with his "kill'em all if they won't convert" philosophy is infinitely preferable to Jesus with his "kick the dust off your shoes and move on".

There's one blogger on here in particular, who always comes to the defense of Muslims and their actions whenever they're questioned. He always finds a way to speak up for the little guy.
Cool sentiment, but not when the little guy in question wants to see you dead.
Reply #12 Top
mar'ouki: on that we will have to agree to disagree. I would just urge you to look at the anti-democratic actions of the man, and realize that the mandate from his people is not at all certain. He imports "intelligence" experts from Cuba to train his people to keep the peace. Each election grows more dubious, and we will see if he doesn't eventually do away with elections altogether. He most certainly overturns other elections in his country on a whim.

We will see, but in my opinion he is another Castro in training.
Reply #13 Top
I do NOT defend Islam. How could I or any other liberal minded person for that matter, defend such a extreme right wing religious fundamentalist movement. If extreme right wing fundamentalist christians were trying to force their belief system on me or the masses and threatening violence if I/we did not comply, guess what. My back would be way up. And I'd be wading in swinging. So when exteme right wing fundamentalist muslims try and do the same thing I get just adamant that they won't succeed.

Wise up the rest of you liberals.
Reply #14 Top
I don't know if this was aimed at me - I assume it was in some ways, as by JU standards I'm fairly liberal and I have defended some Muslims - but I think there are some Muslims worth defending. Indonesian and Malaysian Muslims have made great strides in all the key liberal areas, and there seems to be a genuine desire amongst the young Muslims of those nations to further improve on human rights and the environment. It pains me to see them lumped in with dictatorships like Egypt, Syria, Saudi Arabia, Brunei, Pakistan etc.

To my mind many of the indefensible stances of traditional Middle Eastern Islam stem from the forms of their governance. It's very difficult for the people to have a say in a dictatorship, as generally only violence will persuade the leaders to change their minds. And so Islam in the region is predominately violent. South America, a staunchly Catholic area, is/was much the same. It's not an excuse, but I hope it can be seen as something of a reason behind the violence.

When the dictatorships go I forsee a corresponding decline in violence.
Reply #15 Top
I do NOT defend Islam. How could I or any other liberal minded person for that matter, defend such a extreme right wing religious fundamentalist movement. If extreme right wing fundamentalist christians were trying to force their belief system on me or the masses and threatening violence if I/we did not comply, guess what. My back would be way up. And I'd be wading in swinging. So when exteme right wing fundamentalist muslims try and do the same thing I get just adamant that they won't succeed.

Wise up the rest of you liberals.


I find that funny and sad. Right wing, and liberal. yet it is the right wing that is defying them, and the liberal trying to excuse them.

So much for labels.
Reply #16 Top
I find that funny and sad. Right wing, and liberal. yet it is the right wing that is defying them, and the liberal trying to excuse them.

So much for labels.


You read what I wrote, right? We are actually in agreement on this occasion.

I'm liberal, and I have no intention of excusing them or their savage behaviour.
I don't like having their extreme right religious beliefs forced on me with the threat of violence. I'm a liberal, yes, but I know when something is absolutely wrong. And I know when to stand and fight for my liberal beliefs. If these muslim extremists want a fight I say bring it on, I'll go them.
Reply #17 Top
You will agree that Bush and the Bushmen have not been in any sense of the word any great defendres of Civil Liberties. The Patriots Act and the on going spuying on the citizens precludes any thought that Bush is a defender od democracy. Waging War on Iraq in an wholly illegal manner and now with Iran. Islam has become the rallying point of all those who oppose this unipolar world dominated by the USA.
Reply #18 Top
They never hold Communistic governments accountable, either. Same pattern, different subject.


Communist Governments do not make the tall moral claims that the elected regimes make.
Reply #19 Top
Gideon, may I ask a question? If Liberals are defending Islam, are Conservatives then attacking Islam? It would seem implied.

Islam is generally defined as a religion, but may also refer to the people that hold to that religion. In the context of your cited arguments, it may also apply to those governments that hold to Shariya, or Islamic law. It is also a cuture.

So, which of these am I, as a Liberal, defending? Which are Conservatives attacking? Are you looking to expunge the religion? Or the Islamic people? Or just to topple those governments?

Please show me where I have erred. Everything that you say is true. Islamic law and culture is anti-homosexual, treats women as second class citizens, isn't big on Democracy or free speech, etc. Not only that, but when granted the opportunity to vote in free elections, Muslims tend to elect OTHER MUSLIMS! See Palestine and Iraq for references. So, what solution would you offer that is being held up by my opposition? Forced conversion, genocide or just toppling the governments? (I don't mean that in a "mean" way, but think about it for a moment.)

The last estimate I saw was that there were about 1.8 billion Muslims in the world. They don't seem to need my defense. I do tend to tell people that they are a fact of life and can't be ignored. Is that the defense of Islam that you are referring to?

So when I wrote that the US and Israel must negotiate with Hamas, for example, I don't think that I am being Liberal, just realistic.
Reply #20 Top

You read what I wrote, right? We are actually in agreement on this occasion.

Actually, you say you are liberal, but there has been more than one occassion where we agree.  I think you are just becoming more conservative.

Reply #21 Top
I don't know if this was aimed at me - I assume it was in some ways, as by JU standards I'm fairly liberal and I have defended some Muslims - but I think there are some Muslims worth defending.


It wasn't directed at you, cacto...it was directed at the trend of the American left to defend Islam as it is being practiced by Islamic nations, specifically by calling our soldiers "terrorists" and Bush the biggest terrorist of them all, and by calling the guerilla warriors in Iraq "freedom fighters" when, ironically, the "freedom" this faction desires is, in fact, harsh tyranny.

And yes, many MUSLIMS are worth defending, but the religion itself needs to be called to task because of the fact it is being overtaken by radical elements. And the nations that are run by Islamic governments (ironically, a combination of church and state, another liberal soapbox) are especially culpable in these violations of almost every liberal tenet.
Reply #22 Top
Like Larry, I think we're assigning a lot of different meanings to one word. "Islam" is an extremely overloaded word, just like "Theory", "Liberal" and "Conservative"

There's Islam the faith, which in and of itself isn't a bad thing. It's really no more a violent religion at it's core than Judaism or Christianity. There is a lot of variance in how it is practiced, and that's where the violence comes from.

There's Islam the government, which is a very very bad thing. Any theocracy is bad because it forms around one particular view of a religion and grows increasingly intollerant of dissent and criticism. As soon as attacking the government becomes an attack on God, horrible things start to happen.

There's Islam the fundamentalist/extremist movement. This is a combination of that varried practice of faith and theocracies that have spanned centuries. This gets baked into the culture almost after all those centuries. This is also always a bad thing because extremists tend to act the most violently to anything they percieve as heretical (is that a word?). You have one whacked out view of Islam, reinforced by the government ruling you, and for many it's all they ever know. It's very much like the Amish (minus the violence)... a very odd and unique take of faith and culture. It becomes baked into whoever is raised in it.

Two of the three forms of Islam are very bad. They promote violence, intolerance, the degredation of women, of homosexuals, of free thought and speech. The faith doesn't call for that crap any more than other faiths do. This is what I defend. I defend the actual faith of Islam. Most people usually mean the government or the extremist form of Islam. Why? Because it's what they see on the news, so to most it becomes synonymous. It's the same problem you see with the term "Theory" when it comes to Evolution/ID arguments. Both sides use the same word but have fundamentally different definitions.

There are fundamental problems with Islamic culture. It has become deletrious in it's fanatacism and can not survive in a global setting. Radical governments with extremely intollerant cultures survived just fine when it took weeks and weeks to move between nations, before communication was instantaneous, before one resource could tilt the entire globe on its ear. It has become a culture that needs either an overhaul, or it needs to be removed.

But remember, what the culture is, what the extremists do, and what the theocracies do is different from the religion itself. It is the individuals, the terrorists, the organizations and states that promote the violence that the issue is with. The average Muslim is not the enemy. Islam itself is not the enemy. It's the people and groups that are attacking us, that are blowing cars up, that are flying planes into buildings that are the problem. When you start going on about how Islam is violent, that Islam = Terrorists you are attacking people who have nothing to do with all of this. These are the ones I defend when I step up and defend Islam. When you say to them that Islam is evil, to them you're saying they are evil. Such an attack actually HELPS the terrorists as it pushes people towards their cause. I mean, if we're going to call them all terrorists and evil, they might as well be right? It errodes any support we may be building in the area.
Reply #23 Top
zoomba,

You are correct on that point. I was general in my terminology. But my question still remains valid: why do liberals defend Islam (all three forms) for the very same ideology that they feel merits their attack on Christianity, and why do they defend two forms of Islam that are fundamentally opposed to everything liberals support?

This is one of the multitude of reasons I defected from the left. As a longtime Amnesty International supporter, I was well aware of the massive human rights violations in Islamic led countries, and as a friend of an organization that worked closely among the Kurdish population, I was well aware of the atrocities committed against these individuals. Yet everyone of my "liberal" friends was quick to come to bat for these groups, including, ironically enough, individuals who were dangerously close to being hardcore female supremacists. How can you attack a culture for not allowing you to show your breasts in public while defending a culture that shrouds almost every square inch of a woman's body behind a burqa in public?
Reply #24 Top
In defense of Islam, you are comparing apples and oranges, a religion to a "nation". Although western civilizations tend to broaden the term, that doesn't make it so. Also, why are you asking in a forum that is predominately republican a topic for democrats to comment on?

... But to humor your points:

"The environment: Liberals are quick to condemn our dependence on fossil fuels in the west. They are quick to decry our environmental atrocities, while failing to hold Islamic countries accountable for the same."


When you claim to be Numero Uno, you don't have much latitude in screwing up.

Secondly, the numbers are: 1/4 of the world's pollution, 1/3 of 1/6 of the world's population the US accounts for. The numbers aren't in your favor.

But of course this means nothing as it is comparison of the US to any and all countries.


"Equal rights: Women are second class citizens in Islamic countries, and homosexuality is justification for murder in many villages, without consequence from the national government."


All US citizens are second class citizens.

Some ethnic groups as well as women are still fighting for true "equality".


"Free Speech: Do I even have to go here?"


Speech is curtailed in the US as well. The question is: how long is the leash?


"Freedom of Religion: There is but one God, Allah, and Mohammed is his messenger."


Since Islam is a religion, that is correct. The same is said for Judaism and Christianity.


"Democracy: virtually nonexistent"


... and the point here is??? Democracy is not a good thing or the best thing.


"Civil Liberties: The Hussein regime in Iraq was a horribly ruthless and oppressive regime. Islamic countries are constantly at the top of Amnesty International's watch lists."


1. It was a civil war.

2. It was supported by the US. Just ask Donald Rumsfeld.


"Fair labor standards: Again, Islamic countries come in on the low end."


Again, when you brag and boast Numero Uno, be wary of the skeletons you carry.

'til dawn...
Reply #25 Top
Communist Governments do not make the tall moral claims that the elected regimes make.
---Bahu

Thanks very much for so clearly affirming my point.


Cacto:

Your point about Far Eastern vs. Mideastern Islamics brings an odd thought:
How long has Islam been in the East? I once read a book about the Arab invasions of Europe in the 5th century or so.
The book pointed out that the Muslim invaders were pretty easy on the conquered peoples, overall. Taxes were often lower than those Rome had imposed, and they even allowed the people to worship as they saw fit, as long as they swore allegiance to the Arab rulers. They weren't hateful maniacs, in other words. Not yet, at least.
This makes me wonder if the Middle Eastern Muslims, having been around longer, have simply evolved into a "purer breed" of Muslim than their more recent(?) Eastern converts?
This might explain the more liberal outlook of the Easterners, so similar to the outlook of the " brand-spanking new" Muslims inhabiting the Arab Pennisula (and thrusting into Northern Africa and Southern Europe) 1500 years ago.
Of course, that being said, it doesn't bode all that well for the future of the Muslims of the East.

You will agree that Bush and the Bushmen have not been in any sense of the word any great defendres of Civil Liberties. The Patriots Act and the on going spuying on the citizens precludes any thought that Bush is a defender od democracy.


Names, Bahu...names. Give me names and addresses of people...loyal, red-blooded, all-American Americans, whose lives have been disrupted in any way by the Patriot Act. Bush doesn't want to spy on "YOU", the "average American"; he wants the government to be able to listen in on suspected terrorists or their allies.
A few criminals have been caught under the use of the Patriot Act, too, yes, but I wouldn't call them Red-Blooded Americans, would you?
That's a far cry from George Orwell, no matter loudly or frequently you scream out the Lie.

Waging War on Iraq in an wholly illegal manner and now with Iran. Islam has become the rallying point of all those who oppose this unipolar world dominated by the USA
---Bahu

Another point proven most clearly. Thanks, Bahu. Keep talking; we'll never have to say anything again.