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Suicide Bombers, Propriety  and Sanctity (Read 26840 times)
DocM
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Re: Suicide Bombers, Propriety  and Sanctity
Reply #30 - Jan 13th, 2006 at 10:48am
 
The only solution is for all to agree that killing nonmilitary civilians is wrong; that killing for killing's sake is wrong.  Radical islam may never do this.  Radical islam may never recognize the equality of women.  As such, it is a barbaric, medievel religion not worthy of continuing.  If both sides can't agree that killing innocent civilians is wrong, then the side that can should prevail.

The live and let live philosophy is advanced in a spiritual sense.  But think about it.  It was not that way with Nazi Germany.  The Nazis were thoroughly destroyed and not allowed back again.  They were thought of by all free nations (except themselves) as an evil on the face of the earth.  Whether or not they were a cosmic evil (and I believe they were), they had to be completely eradicated.  It was not "let us live side by side with them and their hate in peace."

Unless moderate peace-loving Muslims speak up, I fear that first radical Islam, and then the whole religion itself may need to go the route of Nazi Germany, Mussolini, and other evil regimes (the Apartheid party in South Africa).  And yes, I know there are 1 billion Muslims in the world, and most are peaceful.  But you have a religion whose members do not readily repudiate the acts of its radical group hate and murder fringe group. 

Christianity went through a reformation.  Medievel customs have been replaced with debate, wisdom and evolution in the Jewish and Christian faiths.  It is time for the other people who claim to come from the same tribe of Abraham to step up to the plate!

Matthew
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Lucy
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Re: Suicide Bombers, Propriety  and Sanctity
Reply #31 - Jan 13th, 2006 at 1:37pm
 
But Matthew

(and I remember you mentioned your heritage)

How would you solve the Palestinian issue? If those people had never been displaced, would this mess have evolved? And it wasn't the Israelis alone who displaced them because it took alot of English-speaking help. The US brought some of this on itself. We were wrong to take people's homes away from them. There are no simple answers because we got here by a complex path.

BTW I have alot of colleagues who are ethnic Moslems and, well, the women certainly don't wear the veil! Islam is as diverse as any of the other religions. This is too complex to solve here.
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DocM
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Re: Suicide Bombers, Propriety  and Sanctity
Reply #32 - Jan 13th, 2006 at 2:02pm
 
I can't solve the issue, its true.  I have some ideas.  I think a Palestinian state is vital, and it should come to pass.  I think that part of that happening would be for them to denounce suicide bombers in their schools.  They should stop teaching the children to count to ten by saying "one dead israeli, two dead israelis" (which has been caught on a famous documentary in the palestinian schools.

Although there is no ultimate right or wrong when you argue over land, there is the general golden rule, and rule not to kill except when fighting directly in mortal combat.  Most civilized people take this as a given.  Some people of the radical factions do not.

You can not live with a neighbor who refuses to renounce wanton killing of innocents.  Once the palestinians renounce this, they will have a state, and freedom, perhaps not exactly where they want.

The USA and europeans have certainly committed heinous acts, but in general they have supported openly freedom (from Apartheid), freedom for independent nations.  There is no government that is blameless.

M
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Lucy
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Re: Suicide Bombers, Propriety  and Sanctity
Reply #33 - Jan 13th, 2006 at 3:45pm
 
I was reminded of the complexity of this situation a short while back. I was visiting a discussion group (no particular topic) and one of the regular members is a former ambassador from Iran...era of the Shah. He mentioned that the real religion of Iran is Zoroastrianism (or whatever you call it). Followers of Zoroaster. I thought that was interesting. There is a large Iranian immigrant community in CA. He indicated that the Zoroastrianism is the preferred faith of many of this community, the real traditional religion of Iran. I didn't know that.
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Re: Suicide Bombers, Propriety  and Sanctity
Reply #34 - Jan 13th, 2006 at 4:34pm
 
the Palestinain/Nazi issue:

It is a well documented and historical fact that in 1948 the palestinian people were told not to leave Israel by the New settlers as they would still have their homes/farms intact.  The reason why they left is because the surrounding arab nations (egypt, saudi, jordan) said that they would "drown the heathen jews into the meditteranean sea".   Nobody has the right to just arrive at a country but I think they do when 6 million of their people were massacred while the world watched and did nothing, so that in my opinion gives them a right to have a homeland when all that they owned was stolen from them.
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Lucy
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Re: Suicide Bombers, Propriety  and Sanctity
Reply #35 - Jan 14th, 2006 at 7:00am
 
Dave

I thought about your question and I think my answer is that I'm not impressed by either A or B.

I think we're not getting the answer (to war etc) right because we are somehow missing the right question.

I think the right question will involve asking why we are here (as animals) and what are we to learn from that. What is this conciousness and what is it for?

Last night caught a rerun of a PBS show..Deep Jungle. I always assume since you are in social sciences that yu know about stuff like what I am going to bring up. The episode had information from primate researcher David Watts. It went into the stuff about the chimps who apparently band together to kill and tokenly eat colobus monkies even when they don't need the food. It was hard to not think of it as ritual male bonding. Well that's what it was. Then the chimps banded together and killed another chimp. It almost seemed premeditated.

Here's a little info on that show:
http://www.pbs.org/wnet/nature/deepjungle/episode3_watts.html

I don't know Dr. Watts but I somehow doubt he falls back on models of reincarnation to explain any primate karma that's developing here. But if the chimps can do this, then is there something in what makes the chimps do this that is also operant in us humans?

If we are here to experience conciousness then that must also mean its down side too.

Or maybe the problem is we just aren't so highly evolved after all....
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DocM
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Re: Suicide Bombers, Propriety  and Sanctity
Reply #36 - Jan 14th, 2006 at 7:54am
 
Lucy,

I think you hit on something.  I've often thought that some of the new age dogma such as "we didn't purge fear in a past life, so we are back to the drawing board and here to purge it again in a second chance," is a bit of bunk.  Our lives are too complex to boil them down to one lesson, or one reason for existing. 

These primal urges to kill are present in much of the animal kingdom.  Usually for food, territory, or sex.  Sometimes in a mean way.  But the idea of bambi and cute animals playing in the forest is so unreal, any true lover of nature knows this to be untrue.  Can a monkey experience grace, or PUL?  If so, are they too supposed to follow the golden rule?  Monkey hell, if not?  I can't even begin to imagine. 

Many ancient texts like the bible keep talking of God separating man from beasts.  We are supposed to know the difference of right and wrong actions.  And deep inside, I'd like to think we do.  Since thought creates our surroundings, a killer, or one who does a heinous act, will by necessity be unhappy in other ways, and unbalanced.


Matthew
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dave_a_mbs
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Re: Suicide Bombers, Propriety  and Sanctity
Reply #37 - Jan 14th, 2006 at 8:03pm
 
Lucy and Doc-
OK, I'm in basic agreeement, and of course there's very little to be said about useless killing.  Except for the chase and killing of Colubus by chimps I had the impression that only Man was the only critter that kills for sport. Are we setting a bad example to our longer tailed friends? The idea about simian macho bonding makes some kind of sense. It also fits territorial and caste concepts. And, very unfortunately, it fits right in with observed behaviors in oppressive regions where rape is used as a social weapon to dispossess people of their social status, and where the husband blames the wife for getting raped.

It seems that the nature of males is rejecting, isolating and destructive. The  moose in rut, elephant in must, and similar animals are examples. This clearly points to mating behaviors and competitions. However, in matriarchies we are not free from violence either. Although the competition that comes to my mind at the moment is more the Soap Opera type, my wife has many stories about tough girls in school, fighting and so on.

These ideas are reflected in many urban areas in territorial gangs. Presumably, as we get socialized we are able to accept the idea of a larger and more valuable social purpose for which we create a social contract of unity. Buddhist and Hindu philosophies, arising generally in lush areas in which wild food was not uncommon, seem to have incorporated some of this unity into their general outlook as a beneficial quality of social living. The world offers us the opportunity to be social, and from this we have the gains and joys of social living. How fortunate that we can do this.

The Arab social historian Ibn Khaldoun, in his Muqqadimah, pointed out that the world is a fierce and hostile place, that the survival chances for a single person are quite minimal, so we're forced to live together in social groups in order that we do not perish. This is an enforced socialization, and not at all a matter of being fortunate. Instead, it is a matter of dire compatition. Evidently the mullahs, who are the present mouthpieces for Islam, find that life is like a caravan moving across an endless desert, in which all interference is a lethal threat, and not an offer of companionship.  Couple this to macho territoriality and it is an incendiary situation.

I find it sad that the sons of Abraham can't play in the same sandbox without fighting.  We could go back to Jacob and Esau, but in the modern world, I think Adam Smith is more pertinent.  Were I able to input my opinions into the situation, I'd be inclined to suggest that the Middle East nations, most of which are Islamic, should form a commonwealth, rather like the OPEC common governance of resources, and through the economic power of their commonwealth they would begin to settle issues in the region.  But there seems to be disagreement even at that level, as between Syria and Lebanon etc. Still, when considered in the light of the entire world, Ibn Khaldoun's counsel to form a social group in order to survive still seems pertinent.

dave
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B-dawg
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Reply #38 - Jan 15th, 2006 at 6:28am
 
Lucy,

I think you hit on something.  I've often thought that some of the new age dogma such as "we didn't purge fear in a past life, so we are back to the drawing board and here to purge it again in a second chance," is a bit of bunk.  Our lives are too complex to boil them down to one lesson, or one reason for existing. 

These primal urges to kill are present in much of the animal kingdom.  Usually for food, territory, or sex.  Sometimes in a mean way.  But the idea of bambi and cute animals playing in the forest is so unreal, any true lover of nature knows this to be untrue.  Can a monkey experience grace, or PUL?  If so, are they too supposed to follow the golden rule?  Monkey hell, if not?  I can't even begin to imagine. 

Many ancient texts like the bible keep talking of God separating man from beasts.  We are supposed to know the difference of right and wrong actions.  And deep inside, I'd like to think we do.  Since thought creates our surroundings, a killer, or one who does a heinous act, will by necessity be unhappy in other ways, and unbalanced.
*****************
Monkey Hell. An interesting idea, Doc.
Could it be...
A CDC (Center for Disease Control) primate infectious disease studies laboratory?

B-man
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Re: Suicide Bombers, Propriety  and Sanctity
Reply #39 - Jan 15th, 2006 at 6:38am
 
Lucy and Doc-
OK, I'm in basic agreeement, and of course there's very little to be said about useless killing.  Except for the chase and killing of Colubus by chimps I had the impression that only Man was the only critter that kills for sport.
*****************
How then do you explain the behavior of my overfed, obese (21 lbs.) spoiled house cat?
He regularly drags birds, squirrels, ect. back to the house (always so badly hurt, I  usually have to put them out of their misery) and thinks himself quite the beau for doing it, to see the look on his face and the... well, STRUT he affects afterward. (He's also a bully who attacks any cat smaller than himself...)
Obviously he's hunting for the FUN of it (i.e., sport.) so I think we can't call mankind unique on this one... or chimps, for that matter. Then there's sheep-killing dogs and so on.
BTW, I doubt there is a "cat hell" (for what that's worth.)

B-man
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Lucy
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Re: Suicide Bombers, Propriety  and Sanctity
Reply #40 - Jan 15th, 2006 at 9:40am
 
Chumley

The point about the chimps was that they did the chase and killings of both monkies and other chimps as a (social) group. Your cat undoubtedly acted alone.

I also think that if left alone, the cat might return to the dead prey and snack a bit. I think that's the way it works in the wild.

I once lived out in the country with a human and several dogs and a group of chickens.  The dogs went renegade one day and got in the hen house and put all those birds out of their misery. I do not for a seconfd believe this was premeditated, dogs being rather spontaneous and opportunistc creatures, whereas the chimps almost appeared to plan their attacks. Dogs also have a chase instinct, which is why you don't leave small children alone in the reach of some dogs.

We couldn't find all the chicken bodies, at first. But one of the dogs would afterwards show up from time to time with a carcass to knash on. Don't know where they were "stored". Just because things don't get eaten right away doesn't mean they don't get eaten. But then, these were well-fed dogs; why did they go on their hunting frenzy? "Instinct"? And do we have the same genes as that in our brains? And if so, assuming that the instinct can go awry and be turned towards others of our own kind, how do we learn to deal with it so as to live peacefully in society?

BTW, Dave, tell your wife I'd take it a step further. If men are like apes, then women are like piranha. I'm just not sure what biological function that reflects. Having truly believed since I was about 8 yrs that women could make a difference, I have had some bitter lessons. It's not that simple; replacing the men with the women won't work. I personally believe that if there was an Atlantis, it was the women who destroyed it. I think the solution might lie in developing some kind of balance between men and women....maybe something we don't see in the "lower" animals. Maybe that is a challenge we accepted when we came here: how do we take this biology that we can see more clearly in chimps etc. and surpass it to establish something more balanced. Or maybe just remembering that before we were humans, we were something else.
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Re: Suicide Bombers, Propriety  and Sanctity
Reply #41 - Jan 15th, 2006 at 10:19am
 
Greetings Lucy,
Re: your idea of a balance of genderness as a means of humanity avoiding trouble--
Androgyny is over-rated, I'd have to say from experience, at least for anyone who's androgenous who lives in an area where the hunt and conquest for sexual partners is a main cause for living.  Here in the US, I'd say that includes the South, the West, the college/yuppie areas of the east and the farming/ranching areas of the midwest. Too much energy is taken up trying to define what you are in these situations.
This site has alot of great discussions with obvious male and female polarities. They usually end up understanding the topic and each other better, as we all do. I really appreciate that.
Keeping sons and daughters of the desert chaste and separate until their 20's sounds criminal to me. All that pent-up energy then becomes perverted by the State. Maybe we need a Garden of Eden where bodies can be adored instead of bomb-packed vests that destroy what's so worthy of adoration.
Racey huh?  I've never talked like this before.
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Re: Suicide Bombers, Propriety  and Sanctity
Reply #42 - Jan 15th, 2006 at 1:06pm
 
Great post Bets.

Quote:
Maybe we need a Garden of Eden where bodies can be adored instead of bomb-packed vests that destroy what's so worthy of adoration.
Racey huh?  I've never talked like this before.


I agree and I also feel you are really opening up to be able to talk like this. Good for you.

Love, Mairlyn Wink
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Re: Suicide Bombers, Propriety  and Sanctity
Reply #43 - Jan 15th, 2006 at 2:55pm
 
Actually, B-Man, animal experts seem to feel that the cat is presenting you with food for the family, since you are in the feline role of "top cat". "Hey, Dad, Looky what I brought you!"

But I see your point. Even if, as Lucy put it, they retun to eat later, it's a love of hunting. In my early teens I used to pop off pheasants for dinner, and I admit to the having many of the same emotions as any other predator. On the other hand, Big Macs and Chicken Nuggets don't exactly grow on trees, so modern tastes are only slightly less savage.

By the way, did anyone ever figure out what part of the chicken was the Noodle? (Nope, I won't even touch the other obvious question.)

Bets- I can't really see a problem with chastity until mid twenties. China and India both exemplify the population glut that can happen when people have a huge family. The idea that "more than two is pollution" has merit, although that would leave four of my kids majorly PO'd at me for saying it.

Lucy- men like apes and women like piranaha? Maybe we can translate Doc's monkey-hell into piranha heaven? Ugh. The chilling part is that I have known people that would more or less fit that idea.

We seem to associate adulthood with sexuality. About 5 or 6 thousand years back, when the reckoning was based on the cycle of the Moon, and thus the women were the tribal rules because they "obviously" represented the forces of the Nature Gods, kids had more or less freedom to reproduce as fast as they were capable. Looking at Methuselah, for example, his first child was at about 109 Lunar Years (or "moonths"). Dividing by 13 we get about age 14 Solar Years.

That's OK for breeding, I suppose, but in fact we keep advancing spiritually through the next 13-15 years as well. About 30 years seems to be the age of spiritual maturity IMHO,  and I've noticed that it is also the age of comparative reason, and roughly the peak of intellectual function. The Eastern concept of sat-chit-ananda, menaing to get a grip on love, clear mindedness, and joy from one's lifestyle seems to be a fairly good example of the kind of adulthood that's available at that age. That also correlates with social stability.

My thinking is that we might do a little better culturally if we were to look toward a somewhat higher level of maturity than simply being old enough to diddle the neighbors, blow up the guys across the street, or bulldoze the settlement down the block.

But I see no reason that any culture needs to adopt higher standards merely because they exist and are available. Not even because a higher level of social ethics might be more efficacious in the business of life.

d


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Re: Suicide Bombers, Propriety  and Sanctity
Reply #44 - Jan 16th, 2006 at 9:40am
 
An article in today's online paper has me thinking about what's biological and what's not again. So looking at the chimps, it appears that there is an element of male bonding and perhaps even organized violence that uses the male bonding that is biological, since it comes from creatures that don't communicate with ideas. Seeing the chimps go after the monkeys was weird when in the back of my mind I can see guys together playing football, going to boot camp, etc.

However, with humans, it seems we can use our conceptual talent to harness that biological function for conceptual/cultural goals.

So although I'm not sure all Islam supports violence against women, it is obvious that Fundamentalist Islam does. Here's the story:

http://www.boston.com/news/world/europe/articles/2006/01/16/for_muslim_women_a_d...

We certainly are in the middle of a cultural war. There are many directions one could go with this discussion from here, but we were talking about motivation. Is there a connection between being willing to be a suicide bomber and this ritual abuse of women in the context of Muslim Fundamentalism? Are these things biology in the service of some pretty lousy ideas or is some uniquely human motivation involved here?
_____________

Androgyny is only one form of balance. I don't think balance comes in a neat little package. Partly it means looking for balanced people of either  sex and ignoring which sex they come from. Maybe for some people being in a couple is what brings balance. Maybe for some people being alone is more balanced.

We might need to adopt a higher standard for adulthood as a means to preserving the race. Now, if you have 6 kids, well, you can't go back! I used to argue for 2 kids and my sister, the 3rd, didn't like it either! But to support trends going forward, well, it is difficult to argue for large families. the fisherman in this area are on the bink of crisis because their catch is limited. The fish stocks really have been depleted. When the white men cam ehere in the 1600's or maybe this was written in the 1700's, there were reports of large schools of cod near the shore. And the fish were larger. (Lobsters crawled on the beaches. They were called mud roaches. Only the poor would eat them. What a difference a day makes.) This is not a trivial problem. If we deplete our fish stocks, maybe we will see more starvation, and closer to home. You can either have birth control, or you can have after-birth birth control in all its many forms. What China has done seems horrible, but the pictures from the Sudan of starving children are pretty grim too.
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