I don't know what you're on about but I was referring to the rule of law regarding public safety and basic human rights. Like I said, all governments, Western and Muslim, should prosecute anyone who incites violence. Not sure why you find that so hard to understand.
I understand 'the rule of law' well enough. My point was in response to this silly statement...
I only wish Muslim governments were more diligent in maintaining rule of law.
When it comes to protest about America and Israel. What laws are there regarding mass demonstrations where muslims chant 'Death to America'? If there are no laws against chanting 'Death to America' the next question is should there be? We can see what happened in Iran as indicative that if there is a mass demonstration by the people who demand some form of 'Death' to the current regime they are living under, no doubt the muslim government at that time will waste no time in executing the law that ban any call for revolution. In that, muslim governments are quite diligent.
And the Western equivalent of people marching "Death To America" are well-dressed, terrorism and security "experts" advocating invasion of Iraq, Iran, or whatever. Just because these people are more polished and well versed in public relations and double-speak doesn't mean they are any less fanatical.
Are you saying that neither Iraq nor Iran have no such people roaming the corridors of their governments?
Or how about some of them in clerical garbs who, in their exhortations to muslims to smite us infidels, peppered their orations with verses from holy scriptures? You think imams do not have PR people working for them?
My argument remains intact. I never said the media should not report crimes by Muslims. I said that they should devote equal space to positive stories about Muslims to present a more balanced picture.
No...Your arguments felled apart a while ago. The Western media is under no obligations to report anything under anyone's or any group's dictates. Freedom of the press means the freedom to excel as well as to fail. People expect their lives to be unexciting unless it is they who induced their own excitement, such as in vacations or even from a night of binge drinking. We do not expect to see and hear threats from a group whose threats call for our annihilation. People expect muslims to live peaceful lives among non-muslims' peaceful lives. Normalcy do not generate excitement and interests. Do you think this is normal for church going children?
There is no incitement to violence there, just sheer hatred for homosexuals. But that is news. And so
SHOULD this be newsworthy...
'EXTERMINATE THOSE WHO SLANDER ISLAM' is eyecatching, natch? Falling back to legalism? It is irrelevant if making such exhortations to violence is 'against the law' or not. What is relevant is the threat that is clear and unequivocal from those who made that threat. The laws has nothing to do with perceptions. If there is no law then there is no 'law-breaking' but the threat to do harm is still there. The Western media is obliged to report any event, especially when the event carry such a clear and unequivocal message, that constitute a threat to peaceful lives.
So you prove my point that Arab, and Muslim, newspapers published the cartoons. I notice there are a number of those newspapers whose editors were not fired. By contrast, there were almost no Western newspapers that published the Holocaust cartoons.
No...What I proved was that the Western media are far more aware of their freedoms and obligations than the cowed muslim media, whose cowardliness contributed to those not very positive perceptions of muslims. Like I said earlier, it is a delicious irony that only in the West do muslims are able to express their opinions, their satisfactions and discontents, and their threats to violence to the very society that guaranteed their basic human rights. Is 'the media' forbidden to point out this contradiction?
Speaking of freedom of speech, here's the latest...
Dutch to prosecute Arabs over Holocaust cartoon - Yahoo! News
"
Prosecutors plan to press charges for "insulting a group and distributing an insulting image."
No double standards. None whatsoever...
By all means complain to the Dutch. But remember that your charge is about the Western media at large. For US, we have Holocaust denial organizations that publishes their tripe under the First Amendment right. This goes back to the many 'brands' under the 'Western media' umbrella.
I use Fox News because it demonstrates the mindset you display continually with your monolithic view of the Islamic world. You tend to equate Arab with Muslim. I would invite you to become more familiar with media from Turkey, Pakistan, Malaysia, Indonesia, to name a few countries. Just within Pakistan, you can read DAWN.com among others. People like Nadeem Paracha, Cyril Almeida, Pervez Hoodbhoy and others would make Noam Chomsky look like a Pentagon spokesman.
Once again, your misconceptions about media in Muslim countries is clouding your judgement. I encourage you to familiarize yourself with non-Arab media in the Muslim world.
No...You used Fox News simply because it is a convenient rhetorical tool. As for my 'monolithic' view of the Islamic world...Show me a single country in the ME, awash with oil wealth, that is a functional democracy that guarantee you the right to call its leader vile names. Ever seen that dance bit by the American actor James Carey on the television show
In Living Color where he parodied President Bill Clinton on his sexual escapades? What Carey did was crude and would be personally insulting to anyone. But also in the same world are serious discussions about the moral responsibilities of a leader and why it is important that Clinton should (or not) be impeached. The range of disagreements to a President of the US is clear, from respectful discussions to sexually offensive parodies. If you cannot show me a pattern of independence of the public from its government, and 'the media' is part of that public, then try to understand that the lack of whatever we take for granted contributed to this 'monolithic' view of the Islamic world. No need to go into details about women's issues or scientific progress or several others.
Utter BS. The US have no such laws regarding the Muhammad cartoons nor disputing the Holocaust nor headscarves.
Is that it?
THAT is a sign that the US has a national law regarding muslim head covering? Looky here, Perfessor...That is by the local authority.
Head Games | News and Opinion | Philadelphia Weekly
The state court has held that the policy--known as Directive No. 78--"reflects the fact that the police force is a para-military organization in which personal preferences must be subordinated to the overall policing mission ... "
The crucial difference that make the US case different than France's law and merit serious discussions is this...
Perhaps the most notable difference in this case is that Webb is--as city attorney Ewing stated--an "armed agent" of the city.
A police officer is not merely a representative, or a bureaucrat, from the government but an
ARMED AGENT of a government. Governments are naturally coercive and when a representative of the government carries a weapon, has the power of arrest and display a religious preference, it can be perceived that the government has a clear and unequivocal biased towards a particular religion at its most extreme -- armed coercion. The French law apply to the general public. We can now see how pervasive this victimhood mentality is in the
ummah when you did not bother to even try to see if this local authority's policy has any merit and comparative value to France's law.
There is no contradiction. Bias relates to particular issues or ideologies. The American media has diversity of opinion when it comes to domestic policy. There are liberal and right wing camps, each accusing the other of bias. But when it comes to Middle Eastern politics or Muslim issues, then the American media becomes much more monolithic. Almost any media debate on Middle Eastern issues lacks a first-hand Palestinian perspective. Debates regarding Afghanistan and Pakistan policy rarely have people from the region presentign their point of view. There are a handful of programs like Lehrer Report and Charlie Rose on PBS which are better, but most of the media has two American "experts" debating each other.
Sure it is...Not...
Boycott Israel -- latimes.com
Another 15secs wasted. You can dismiss this if you want but it is already clear that even though the contents of any of 'the media' article may not be to your liking, the US and the Western media at large is far more diverse in reportage in one year than any of your muslim media in ten, including ME issues and the LA Times is a nationally known newspaper, in print and electronics. Also, there is no shortage of dissenters who are more than willing to criticize Israel and the US on behalf of the Palestinians, even when one of them is a Jew like the article above. It is further difficult to swallow your claim in this Internet age when there are plenty of support for the Palestinians at
counterpunch or
democraticunderground. Lay off it already.
As stated earlier, you are under the same misconception that plagues many Westerners:
you equate Arab with Muslim. FYI,
about 20% of Muslims live in Arab countries, 30% in the Indian Subcontinent, and 15.6% in Indonesia alone, the largest Muslim country in absolute numbers (Source:
Islam - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia )
The Saudis fund the education of Wahabism in Asia to the point that on many of the Asian forums I frequent, the 'Arabization of Asia' is a serious discussion among Asians and Asian-Americans.
Reuters AlertNet - SE Asian Muslims want state support for madrasas
"We're alienating our children from our history, culture and sense of nationalism because we're not producing enough books and materials for our madrasas," Salipada Tamano, a professor of Islamic Studies in the Philippines, told Reuters.
"It doesn't surprise me if our children were more oriented to Islamic teaching from the Middle East because we've been getting most of our reading materials and our Arabic teachers from Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan and Libya."
It is only natural that the dominant will attempt to replace the subordinate's culture and even language if possible. The Arabs are not ignorant of what they are doing to Asians. They do not care and they found many willing agents among the Asian muslims.