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UK citizens going to syria to fight for IS 
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okenobi wrote:
As for people leaving to fight for ISIS. Should we not be worrying about the causes of the conflict instead of being annoyed that people have enough balls to fight for something they believe in (unlike the majority of UK citizens who believe strongly in nothing)?

Thing is you see, the majority of people in the UK (of whatever or no religion) the things they would fight for - the safety of their loved ones, the right to live in peace etc - they already have, so they don't need to fight for them. I'm sure most people around the world would be willing to cope with the shame of not having to fight for those things.

And, to be frank, it appears to be that what ISIS 'believe in' is oppression, brutality, hatred, segregation, murder, torture, drug running, forced marriage and rape. We should be worried that people are leaving to fight for ISIS, yes. Because frankly nobody who reaches adulthood in the UK should be that sodding naive and stupid.

The idea that fighting for any set of beliefs, no matter how lunatic and reprehensible, is somehow a laudable act is one of the most bizarre things I've encountered in quite some time.


Thu Jul 02, 2015 11:25 pm
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I wonder if it's anything to do with trying not to 'arm' the ISIS fighters, after all, the more people who go to join their cause, arming themselves and fighting their 'opressors'; the more of 'them' there are killing 'us'.

I tried really hard to write that sentence without using the 'them and us' statements, but it proved impossible.

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Fri Jul 03, 2015 7:48 am
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Well call me bizarre.

I obviously don't watch/read nearly enough news coverage compared to the rest of you (i.e. ZERO)

I just think there are bigger issues. Maybe we could be tackling the reason(s) ISIS exists? Or maybe poverty, hunger, whatever, but what do I know...


Sun Jul 05, 2015 9:04 pm
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okenobi wrote:
we could be tackling the reason(s) ISIS exists?


And why does ISIS exist?


Sun Jul 05, 2015 10:49 pm
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I don't [LIFTED] know!

You lot are the ones who are informed on such things.

I'm talking about the bigger issues. Religion, social injustice, unrest etc.

Everybody else in the world is not simply a [LIFTED]. They have motivations which are just as as valid to them as yours are to you. Work on the issues that create these motivations and ISIS no longer feel the need to do what they do, no? It might be a long process, but it needs doing and getting annoyed about it isn't productive.


Mon Jul 06, 2015 1:55 pm
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The Muslims could start by championing basic human rights such as equality and freedom to choose any religion or no religion. The onus is on them in their communities. Rather than viewing normal Islam as being perfect and unquestionable, but ISIS Islam to not be real Islam and 100% bad.

In order to deal with a problem you must first have the courage to actually identify and acknowledge the problem. A secular education is like an immunity, or at least a stronger immune system against irrationality. And to feel part of the culture you're surrounded by; learning to adopt and champion western morality would be an excellent start.

So start by making faith schools illegal, there's my suggestion, open to debate. No one is getting annoyed here by the way.


Mon Jul 06, 2015 5:40 pm
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I personally see it slightly differently - there's an ISIS because a bunch of former Iraqi soldiers saw a power vacuum and sought to exploit it under a banner.
The religion bit is, to my mind, the means to gaining traction in people's minds to 'legitimise' what they're doing in the faithful's eyes.
A lot of support seems to be coming from our chums the Saudis too.
Regardless, a lot of it seems to be attractive to a disaffected youth - give them a cause and stand back, whether it's Islam, UKIP or the NF. And, I suppose, that's how a lot of these things grow.

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Mon Jul 06, 2015 5:46 pm
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It would be easier to discuss if there wasn't a concerted effort among liberal westerners to avoid even mentioning Islam in the same breath as IS.

I mean it's 50% of the words, and there's only two words.

Nothing to do with it though apparently.

Just as the IRA had nothing to do with Ireland, presumably.

http://blogs.spectator.co.uk/coffeehous ... t-realise/


Mon Jul 06, 2015 6:31 pm
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I wasn't referring to people in here. People in the UK in general are annoyed - is what I meant.

ProfessorF wrote:
Regardless, a lot of it seems to be attractive to a disaffected youth - give them a cause and stand back, whether it's Islam, UKIP or the NF. And, I suppose, that's how a lot of these things grow.


This is a prime example of something we can actually do something about.

Faith schools I know little about. I was raised Christian by my parents and went to a CofE primary school. But in Cornwall, so did everybody else. We had 2 black people, no gays and no Poles. The first time I went to London blew my mind. I don't think faith schools are the issue, but I'm all for any kind of change/action that might seek to tangibly change the wider political and religious situation that pervades our world these days.


Mon Jul 06, 2015 10:04 pm
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