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Amir Taheri: "Islam Is Incompatible With Democracy"
Benador Associates ^ | May 19, 2004 | Amir Taheri

Posted on 05/19/2004 9:36:50 PM PDT by F14 Pilot

Amir Taheri's remarks during the debate on " Islam Is Incompatible With Democracy"

Ladies and Gentlemen,

I am glad that this debate takes place in English.

Because, were it to be conducted in any of the languages of our part of the world, we would not have possessed the vocabulary needed.

To understand a civilisation it is important to understand its vocabulary.

If it was not on their tongues it is likely that it was not on their minds either.

There was no word in any of the Muslim languages for democracy until the 1890s. Even then the Greek word democracy entered Muslim languages with little change: democrasi in Persian, dimokraytiyah in Arabic, demokratio in Turkish.

Democracy as the proverbial schoolboy would know is based on one fundamental principle: equality.

The Greek word for equal isos is used in more than 200 compound nouns; including isoteos (equality) and Isologia (equal or free speech) and isonomia (equal treatment).

But again we find no equivalent in any of the Muslim languages. The words we have such as barabari in Persian and sawiyah in Arabic mean juxtaposition or levelling.

Nor do we have a word for politics.

The word siassah, now used as a synonym for politics, initially meant whipping stray camels into line.( Sa'es al-kheil is a person who brings back lost camels to the caravan. )The closest translation may be: regimentation.

Nor is there mention of such words as government and the state in the Koran.

It is no accident that early Muslims translated numerous ancient Greek texts but never those related to political matters. The great Avicenna himself translated Aristotle's Poetics. But there was no translation of Aristotle's Politics in Persian until 1963.

Lest us return to the issue of equality.

The idea is unacceptable to Islam.

For the non-believer cannot be the equal of the believer.

Even among the believers only those who subscribe to the three so-called Abrahamic religions: Judaism, Christianity and Islam ( Ahl el-Kitab) are regarded as fully human.

Here is the hierarchy of human worth in Islam:

At the summit are free male Muslims

Next come Muslim male slaves

Then come free Muslim women

Next come Muslim slave women.

Then come free Jewish and /or Christian men

Then come slave Jewish and/or Christian men

Then come slave Jewish and/or Christian women.

Each category has rights that must be respected.

The People of the Book have always been protected and relatively well-treated by Muslim rulers, but often in the context of a form of apartheid known as dhimmitude.

The status of the rest of humanity, those whose faiths are not recognised by Islam or who have no faith at all, has never been spelled out although wherever Muslim rulers faced such communities they often treated them with a certain measure of tolerance and respect ( As in the case of Hindus under the Muslim dynasties of India.)

Non-Muslims can, and have often been, treated with decency, but never as equals.

(There is a hierarchy even for animals and plants. Seven animals and seven plants will assuredly go to heaven while seven others of each will end up in Hell.)

Democracy means the rule of the demos, the common people, or what is now known as popular or national sovereignty.

In Islam, however, power belongs only to God: al-hukm l'illah. The man who exercises that power on earth is known as Khalifat al-Allah, the regent of God.

But even then the Khalifah or Caliph cannot act as legislator. The law has already been spelled out and fixed for ever by God.

The only task that remains is its discovery, interpretation and application.

That, of course, allows for a substantial space in which different styles of rule could develop.

But the bottom line is that no Islamic government can be democratic in the sense of allowing the common people equal shares in legislation.

Islam divides human activities into five categories from the permitted to the sinful, leaving little room for human interpretation, let alone ethical innovations.

What we must understand is that Islam has its own vision of the world and man's place in it.

To say that Islam is incompatible with democracy should not be seen as a disparagement of Islam.

On the contrary, many Muslims would see it as a compliment because they sincerely believe that their idea of rule by God is superior to that of rule by men which is democracy.

In Muslim literature and philosophy being forsaken by God is the worst that can happen to man.

The great Persian poet Rumi pleads thus:

Oh, God, do not leave our affairs to us

For, if You do, woe be to us.

Rumi mocks those who claim that men can rule themselves.

He says:

You are not reign even over your beard,

That grows without your permission.

How can you pretend, therefore,

To rule about right and wrong?

The expression "abandoned by God" sends shivers down Muslim spines. For it spells the doom not only of individuals but of entire civilisations.

The Koran tells the stories of tribes, nations and civilisations that perished when God left them to their devices.

The great Persian poet Attar says :

I have learned of Divine Rule in Yathirb ( i.e. Medinah, the city of the Prophet)

What need do I have of the wisdom of the Greeks?

Hafez, another great Persian poet, blamed man's "hobut" or fall on the use of his own judgment against that of God:

I was an angel and my abode was the eternal paradise

Adam ( i.e.) man brought me to this place of desolation

Islamic tradition holds that God has always intervened in the affairs of men, notably by dispatching 124000 prophets or emissaries to inform the mortals of His wishes and warnings.

Many Islamist thinkers regard democracy with horror.

The late Ayatollah Khomeini called democracy " a form of prostitution" because he who gets the most votes wins the power that belongs only to God.

Sayyed Qutub, the Egyptian who has emerged as the ideological mentor of Safalists, spent a year in the United States in the 1950s.

He found "a nation that has forgotten God and been forsaken by Him; an arrogant nation that wants to rule itself."

Last year Yussuf al-Ayyeri, one of the leading theoreticians of today's Islamist movement, published a book ( available on the Internet) in which he warned that the real danger to Islam did not come from American tanks and helicopter gunships in Iraq but from the idea of democracy and rule by the people.

Maudoodi, another of the Islamist theoreticians now fashionable, dreamed of a political system in which human beings would act as automatons in accordance with rules set by God.

He said that God has arranged man's biological functions in such a way that their operation is beyond human control. For our non-biological functions, notably our politics, God has set rules that we have to discover and apply once and for all so that our societies can be on auto-pilot so to speak.

The late Saudi theologian, Sheikh Muhammad bin Ibrahim al-Jubair, a man I respected though seldom agreed with, sincerely believed that the root cause of all of our contemporary ills was the spread of democracy.

" Only one ambition is worthy of Islam," he liked to say, " the ambition to save the world from the curse of democracy: to teach men that they cannot rule themselves on the basis of manmade laws. Mankind has strayed from the path of God, we must return to that path or face certain annihilation."

Thus those who claim that Islam is compatible with democracy should know that they are not flattering Muslims.

In fact, most Muslims would feel insulted by such assertions.

How could a manmade form of government, invented by the heathen Greeks, be compared with Islam which is God's final word to man, the only true faith, they would ask.

In the past 14 centuries Muslims have, on occasions, succeeded in creating successful societies without democracy.

And there is no guarantee that democracy never produces disastrous results. (After all Hitler was democratically elected.)

The fact that almost all Muslim states today can be rated as failures or, at least, underachievers, is not because they are Islamic but because they are ruled by corrupt and despotic elites that, even when they proclaim an Islamist ideology, are, in fact, secular dictators.

Let us recall the founding myth of democracy as related by Protagoras in Plato.

Protagoras's claim that the rule of the people, democracy, is the best, is ridiculed by Socrates who points out that men always call on experts to deal with specific tasks but when it comes to the more important matters concerning the city, i.e. the community, they allow every Tom , Dick and Harry an equal say.

Protagoras says that when man was created he lived a solitary existence and was unable to protect himself and his kin against more powerful beasts.

Consequently men came together to secure their lives by founding cities. But the cities were torn by strife because inhabitants did wrong to one another.

Zeus, watching the proceedings, realised that the reason that things were going badly was that men did not have the art of managing the city ( politike techne).

Without that art man was heading for destruction.

So, Zeus called in his messenger, Hermes and asked him to deliver two gifts to mankind: aidos and dike.

Aidos is a sense of shame and a concern for the good opinion of others.

Dike here means respect for the right of others and implies a sense of justice that seeks civil peace through adjudication.

Before setting off Hermes asks a decisive question: Should I deliver this new art to a select few, as was the case in all other arts, or to all?

Zeus replies with no hesitation : To all. Let all have their share.

Protagoras concludes his reply to Socrates' criticism of democracy thus:" Hence it comes about, Socrates, that people in the cities, and especially in Athens, listen only to experts in matters of expertise but when they meet for consultation on the political art, i.e. of the general question of government, everybody participates."

Traditional Islamic political thought is closer to Socrates than to Protagoras.

The common folk, al-awwam, are regarded as "animals "( al-awwam kal anaam!)

The interpretation of the Divine Law is reserved only for the experts.

In Iran there is even a body called The Assembly of Experts.

Political power, like many other domains, including philosophy, is reserved for the " khawas" who, in some Sufi traditions, are even exempt from the ritual rules of the faith.

The " common folk", however, must do as they are told either by the text and tradition or by fatwas issued by the experts. Khomeini coined the word "mustazafeen" (the feeble ones) to describe the common folk.

In the Greek tradition once Zeus has taught men the art of politics he does not try to rule them.

To be sure he and other Gods do intervene in earthly matters but always episodically and mostly in pursuit of their illicit pleasures.

Polytheism is by its pluralistic nature is tolerant, open to new gods, and new views of old gods. Its mythology personifies natural forces that could be adapted, by allegory, to metaphysical concepts.

One could in the same city and at the same time mock Zeus as a promiscuous old rake, henpecked and cuckolded by Juno, or worship him as justice defied.

This is not possible in monotheism especially Islam, the only truly monotheistic of the three Abrahamic faiths.

In monotheism for the One to be stable in its One-ness it is imperative that the many be stabilised in their many-ness.

The God of monotheism does not discuss or negotiate matters with mortals.

He dictates, be it the 10 Commandments or the Koran which was already composed and completed before Allah sent his Hermes, Archangel Gabriel, to dictate it to Muhammad:

Read, the Koran starts with the command; In the name of Thy God The Most High!

Islam's incompatibility with democracy is not unique. It is shared by other religions. For faith is about certainty while democracy is about doubt. There is no changing of one's mind in faith, while democracy is about changing minds and sides.

If we were to use a more technical terminology faith creates a nexus and democracy a series.

Democracy is like people waiting for a bus.

They are of different backgrounds and have different interests. We don't care what their religion is or how they vote. All they have in common is their desire to get on that bus. And they get off at whatever stop they wish.

Faith, however is internalised. Turned into a nexus it controls man's every thought and move even in his deepest privacy.

Democracy, of course, is compatible with Islam because democracy is serial and polytheistic. People are free to believe whatever they like to believe and perform whatever religious rituals they wish, provided they do not infringe on other's freedoms in the public domain.

The other way round, however, it does not work.

Islam cannot allow people to do as they please , even in the privacy of their bedrooms, because God is always present, everywhere, all-hearing and all-seeing.

There is consultation in Islam: Wa shawerhum fil amr. ( And consult them in matters)

But the consultation thus recommended is about specifics only, never about the overall design of society.

In democracy there is a constitution that can be changed or at least amended.

The Koran, however, is the immutable word of God, beyond change or amendment.

This debate is not easy.

For Islam has become an issue of political controversy in the West.

On the one hand we have Islamophobia, a particular affliction of those who blame Islam for all the ills of our world.

The more thin skinned Muslims have ended up on regarding every criticism of Islam as Islamophobia.

On the other hand we have Islamoflattery that claims that everything good under the sun came from Islam. ( According to a recent PBS serial on Islam, even cinema was invented by a lens-maker in Baghdad, named Abu-Hufus!)

This is often practised by a new generation of the Turques de profession, Westerners who are prepared to apply the rules of critical analysis to everything under the sun except Islam.

They think they are doing Islam a favour.

The opposite is true.

Depriving Islam of critical scrutiny is bad for Islam and Muslims, and ultimately dangerous for the whole world.

The debate is about how to organise the global public space that is shared by the whole humanity. That space must be religion-neutral and free of ideology, which means organised on the basis of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

There are 57 nations in the Organisation of the Islamic Conference (OIC).

Not one is yet a democracy .

The more Islamic the regime in place the less democratic it is.

Democracy is the rule of mortal common men.

Islam is the rule of immortal God.

Politics is the art of the possible and democracy a method of dealing with the problems of real life.

Islam, on the other hand, is about the unattainable ideal.

We should not allow the everything-is-equal-to-everything-else fashion of postmodernist multiculturalism and political correctness to prevent us from acknowledging differences and, yes, incompatibilities, in the name of a soggy consensus.

If we are all the same how can we have a dialogue of civilisations, unless we elevate cultural schizophrenia into an existential imperative.

Muslims should not be duped into believing that they can have their cake and eat it. Muslims can build democratic society provided they treat Islam as a matter of personal, private belief and not as a political ideology that seeks to monopolise the pubic space and regulate every aspect of individual and community life.

Ladies and gentlemen: Islam is incompatible with democracy.

I commend the motion.

Thank you

* The motion was carried by 403 votes for, 267 against and 28 undecided.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Extended News; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: 1stamendment; amirtaheri; civilization; culture; democracy; freespeech; iran; iraq; islam; mideast; mullahs; muslim; muslims; saudi; west
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To: rogueleader
He makes a few errors like saying Christianity is not monotheistic, but those errors are small in number.

That is not an error.
That is a fundamental tenet of Islam straight from the Qur'an.

[9.29] Fight those who do not believe in Allah, nor in the latter day, nor do they prohibit what Allah and His Apostle have prohibited, nor follow the religion of truth, out of those who have been given the Book, until they pay the tax in acknowledgment of superiority and they are in a state of subjection.
[9.30] And the Jews say: Uzair is the son of Allah; and the Christians say: The Messiah is the son of Allah; these are the words of their mouths; they imitate the saying of those who disbelieved before; may Allah destroy them; how they are turned away!
[9.31] They have taken their doctors of law and their monks for lords besides Allah, and (also) the Messiah son of Marium and they were enjoined that they should serve one God only, there is no god but He; far from His glory be what they set up (with Him).
[9.32] They desire to put out the light of Allah with their mouths, and Allah will not consent save to perfect His light, though the unbelievers are averse.
[9.33] He it is Who sent His Apostle with guidance and the religion of truth, that He might cause it to prevail over all religions, though the polytheists may be averse.
81 posted on 05/20/2004 3:21:45 PM PDT by UnbelievingScumOnTheOtherSide (Give Them Liberty Or Give Them Death! - Islam Delenda Est! - Rumble thee forth...)
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To: Humidston
They need to be converted to Christianity ASAP. (Judaism would be fine as well.)

Heck, replacing islam with almost any other ideology / belief system would be an improvement.

Animism, Budism, secular humanism, materialism, even European-style socialism are all vast improvements over the mental illness now inflicting muslims.

82 posted on 05/20/2004 3:22:59 PM PDT by Freebird Forever
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To: UnbelievingScumOnTheOtherSide

Yes, but I mean that it is an absolute error.

Within Islam it would not be an error, but then Islam is fundamentally error-ridden.

The Christian perspective (and the fundamentally correct one) states that it is an error to deny the Trinity.

(This is my last post on this topic.)


83 posted on 05/20/2004 3:30:01 PM PDT by rogueleader
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To: F14 Pilot
Lest us return to the issue of equality.
The idea is unacceptable to Islam.
For the non-believer cannot be the equal of the believer.


That's not our problem.
History[Dustbin] = Islam
84 posted on 05/20/2004 3:35:42 PM PDT by UnbelievingScumOnTheOtherSide (Give Them Liberty Or Give Them Death! - Islam Delenda Est! - Rumble thee forth...)
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To: F14 Pilot

Bump.


85 posted on 05/20/2004 4:06:13 PM PDT by k2blader (Anything that claims to come from God but can't be confirmed in Scripture, hasn't.)
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To: F14 Pilot

Excellant post and cultural perspective on why the middle east and islam represents the antichrist.


86 posted on 05/20/2004 4:11:17 PM PDT by Mat_Helm
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To: SpinyNorman
"I don't think the arm would be bared on the Statue of Liberty either."

She would definitely get a radical Islamofacist makeover!
87 posted on 05/20/2004 5:25:24 PM PDT by Smartass ( BUSH & CHENEY IN 2004 - Si vis pacem, para bellum)
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To: F14 Pilot
He makes a lot of very good points in this. Western, Christian history agrees with most of this. God's law, which can be recognized as the natural law, is truly sovereign and Men's laws are good and just only to the extent they are in accord with God's law.

Our own nation's founders rejected democracy in hopes of forming a republic because they recognized the dangers of democracy. In the past century the constitutional protections have been progressively abrogated and we have drifted closer to democracy and with it growing abuses and inconsistencies in the law.

Where he is mistaken is in thinking that Islam is a close reflection of God's law. Contrary to Islam, all humans are equal in dignity, man or woman, slave or free and we are all sinners.

Islam is restricted in its government just like it is limited in its language. Its regulations are rather particular to desert dwelling nomads, not suited to properly governing beyond that sphere. This key flaw stems from the fact it is the creation of a man of a particular place and time(Mohamed) and not the eternal and universal God.
88 posted on 05/20/2004 5:25:39 PM PDT by Flying Circus
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To: F14 Pilot; SAMWolf; MeekOneGOP; Smartass; Happy2BMe; Grampa Dave; BOBTHENAILER; onyx; potlatch; ...
A series of interesting points.

I think his citing Islam as the one true monotheistic religion is in reference to the Christian trinity of Father, Son and Holy Ghost.

Too little emphasis on historic reality: Islamic governments are without exception misogynist dictatorships.

The main problem of Islam vis a vis democracy is that pesky little death-to-the-infidel thing.

That and it's always run by blockhead micromanaging fascist perverts.

Not that there's anything wrong with that.

An interesting passage:

The " common folk", however, must do as they are told either by the text and tradition or by fatwas issued by the experts. Khomeini coined the word "mustazafeen" (the feeble ones) to describe the common folk.

Khomeini shares the contempt for the untermenschen with patrician prick Jihad Fedayeen al-Keri who voted for fatwas before he voted against them.

America's founders held truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights; that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.

In view of this I see no free future for mankind in any "religion-neutral" direction.

Secular humanism has no ethical problem with the extermination of Jews by Hitler, Christians by Sudanese Muslims, Tibetan Buddhists and home-worshipping Christians by Communist Chinese.

Freedom is God's gift which must be safeguarded by men.

Democracy is in general the rule by the people; representative government is the American way.

Anything which dilutes the diktats of the nomenklatura is despised by the Kerrys and Khomeinis.

The safety valve must be available to the Iranian people: The tree of liberty must be watered with the blood of tyrants.

And never forget: Mr. UN is not your friend.


89 posted on 05/20/2004 5:39:24 PM PDT by PhilDragoo (Hitlery: das Butch von Buchenvald)
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To: F14 Pilot
My major concern regarding the Iraq war was the exit strategy depended upon establishing a democracy...but I was already aware that Islam is not compatible with democracy.
90 posted on 05/20/2004 5:42:19 PM PDT by highlander_UW (A liberal is a man too broadminded to take his own side in a quarrel. - Robert Frost)
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To: PhilDragoo
Freedom is God's gift which must be safeguarded by men.

Something the American Liberals and Socialists will never understand. They look on Freedom as something they allow us to have and they are the safeguards of the power.

91 posted on 05/20/2004 5:49:48 PM PDT by SAMWolf (I'm as confused as a baby in a topless bar.)
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To: F14 Pilot

Thanks for the ping. Interesting article.


92 posted on 05/20/2004 6:03:59 PM PDT by Eurotwit
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To: PhilDragoo

Good post, Phil.


93 posted on 05/20/2004 7:55:52 PM PDT by potlatch ( Medals do not make a man. Morals do.)
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To: John Valentine
Taheri made the point often by Muslims that their religion is "truly" monotheistic.

IIRC, Wahhabists think that the other Muslims are actually polytheists...hence some of
the reason that they'll kill other Muslims.

This is my recollections from hearing Dore Gold discussing his book
on Wahhabism "Hatred's Kingdom" on The Dennis Prager Show.
94 posted on 05/20/2004 8:02:58 PM PDT by VOA
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To: John Valentine
Technically, he has a point. From the Muslim point of view, shared, I might add by some western, i.e. Christian thinkers, the the Christian concept of the trinity makes Christian monotheism less "pure" than the radical monotheism of Islam.

Islam is more properly called Mohammedanism. All the crap in the Koran/Hadiths is derived from Mohammed speaks. Islam is hardly an idolatry free religion focused only on a transcendent god . The real focus is Mohamed, whose life they are commanded to emulate. Their idol is the Kabba rock they dance around in Mecca. Their idol (with huge feet of clay) is Muhammad

95 posted on 05/20/2004 8:04:31 PM PDT by dennisw (Koran teaches: "Cut off their heads, and cut off the tips of their fingers." (Sura 8:12))
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To: F14 Pilot

ROP bump


96 posted on 05/20/2004 8:06:43 PM PDT by Former Proud Canadian
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To: F14 Pilot
Interesting, and common sense for the most part.

In my opinion, Mohamed corrupted Islam into it's current state.

Prior Islamic communities were thriving and productive.

But, unfortunately, no Muslim can go against Mohamed. He fixed that little problem.

The question is can they overcome it?

The answer is going to be long in coming.

97 posted on 05/20/2004 8:14:04 PM PDT by Cold Heat (Lex et Liberatas......Semper Vigilo, Paratus, et Fidelis!)
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To: highlander_UW
was the exit strategy depended upon establishing a democracy.

I never saw that in print.

The exit strategy is to get them on their feet, then help them as needed. We, as a occupation force, will be out of there as soon as there is a command and control by the Iraqi government.

That should happen by sometime in 06. Portions of our forces should be out before then, if the creek don't rise.

The Democracy, if it ever occurs will not look like ours. It will take a generation or so to shake out and then it may fall on it's ass a few times.

I don't think it will be Americans picking them up if it does. I don't know if you noticed, but the U.N. is being remade as well.

Interesting times for sure.

98 posted on 05/20/2004 8:24:48 PM PDT by Cold Heat (Lex et Liberatas......Semper Vigilo, Paratus, et Fidelis!)
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To: Diddle E. Squat
Thank you. : ) I would have missed this one.

It's nice to see this coming from a Muslim. I only wish more of the moderate ones would speak out as he has.

You know... Between you & me ; ) I've known a few who were generally good people. Tho, when it came to certain issues, I could never relate to their "logic" about justice... and I had a hard time believing that they truly bought into even the watered-down version of Islam they followed.

I look at them as sort of like unitarian or other really liberal Christians, or Jews... only a weak reflection of the creed. What's different is that the liberal Christians & Jews don't hesitate to speak out against fundamental Christianity, while I see very little of that from their Muslim counterparts.

I honestly think many are just afraid to. Or maybe (cynical mode), they are more sympathetic to the extremists, and are just waiting til they have critical mass before they admit it.

I'm thinking about the ones who got the Muslim Call to Prayer in that Michigan town... Judging by that. the Islamic religion truly does conflict with the American way. Not that Christians don't make the same mistake... While I'd rather see Judeo-Christian ideas supported by gov't, like prayer in school, etc, I fear it'll bite us in the butt when we have to give equal treatment to *all* religions.
99 posted on 05/21/2004 12:39:27 AM PDT by Trinity_Tx (Most of our so-called reasoning consists in finding arguments for going on believin as we already do)
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To: wirestripper
I never saw that in print. (Exit Strategy - Democracy)

It may have not been stated clearly, but it was obvious they weren't interested in setting up a theocracy or another dictatorship.

The Democracy, if it ever occurs will not look like ours. It will take a generation or so to shake out and then it may fall on it's ass a few times.

I'm sure this is correct. The only democracies within Islam are Turkey (which has been kept that way because the military is secular enough, and threatens to overthrow any theocracies), Indonesia (which is rife with corruption to the point is it a sham democracy), Pakistan (democracy in name only).

The problem is, if you have a democracy, then the Imams can browbeat the rank and file into electing mullahs to rule, and they don't give up power easily and you lose the democracy....It's an Islam thing.

I don't think it will be Americans picking them up if it does. I don't know if you noticed, but the U.N. is being remade as well.

Big shaking going in in the EU as well. Don't rule them out...they're interested in becoming one of the big boys on the block if not THE big boy.

Interesting times for sure.

I agree, and it reminds me of that ancient Chinese curse...may you live in interesting times.

100 posted on 05/21/2004 4:25:30 AM PDT by highlander_UW (A liberal is a man too broadminded to take his own side in a quarrel. - Robert Frost)
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