[Starglider's answer, while perhaps accurate, was trite and did not really address the question]Crossroads Inc. wrote:You know... I really wish I could get these people together in a room and ask them just what the FUCK. They hope to accomplish...
Are they doing this for "Allah" ?
Do they think history is going to "thank" them for this?
Do think it's existence has some how spread evil and wickedness?
I mean wtf !!!
I'd bet money that, stripped to their essentials, their answers would be "yes, who cares, and yes."
They DO think that Allah's prohibitions on idol-worshipping are profoundly important, and that all worship should be directed toward the one, the unique, the all-powerful, the ineffable and intangible God. Worshipping any other, inferior and lesser thing, any thing of merely mortal nature, is a crime. A sin, because it is a religious crime, but more generally a crime.
They DO think that the very existence of physical sites where the relics of merely-mortal religious figures are kept is at best a temptation to idolatry. That depicting human beings (especially religious figures) is likewise a temptation to idolatry. That bad things happen to people's souls in places where that goes on. That nothing good can come of such places, any more than anything good can come of a crack house.
So if they see enough people visiting a shrine to some merely-mortal figure, they'll blow it up, the same way they would blow up a high-traffic crack house.
So they'll look at you like an ignorant heathen. They would view your questions the same way you would look at someone who asked you "why do the police bother to do anything about that crack house full of criminals and drug pushers? Why not just let it be open?"
[Even if you favor drug legalization, I doubt you think that crack houses as they exist in America are in ANY way a positive influence on the community]
...
Now, do they think history will thank them for this? I don't know. I don't think they care; they are living very much in the now, the only really important history to them is whatever happened in living memory (which is fact) plus whatever happened in the days of the Prophet and his immediate successors (which is sacred legend).
It is, therefore, the Year Zero for them as far as 'modern' Islamic culture is concerned. Everything has to be torn down and rebuilt along lines better aligned with the proper, God-given ways of running a civilization.
And that includes the past.
Okay, now that's nutty and will probably be a limiting factor on their spread.xerex wrote:Actually ISIS are iconoclasts. They intend to wipe out all shrines and monumentsBorgholio wrote:Funny thing is that Jonah's tomb is a holy spot for all Abrahamic religions including Islam. So they're destroying their own cultural monuments because they don't like the people who come to worship at them.
They've even stated that they intend to destroy the Kaaba as it has now become an idol distracting from God.
I'm not surprised by Iran's attitude; they are Persian nationalists as well as being Shia fundamentalists. Moreover, Shia Islam is very heavily tied up with a historical grounding, because it originated with what were essentially loyalists supporting a particular lineage as successors to the first caliphs.Thanas wrote:Saudi Arabia engages in a lot of archeological destruction as well, basically everything that speaks against the official history is destroyed or neglected (like the many very old christian churches that in some cases get bulldozed). Really, nobody really cares about history in that part of the world unless it can be used for politics. The only examples outside of that are Jordan and Israel (Egypt and surprisingly Iran to some degree as well). But that is about it, every other state doesn't really care.
Sunni Islam can function in recognizable form even if you erase all the history between the days of Muhammed and the present, because it's essentially just a body of laws and customs motivated by divine mandate. Shia Islam does not, it's a sect with a strong, historically motivated sense of religious identity that cannot be erased and Year Zeroed away unless you want to remove the Shia sect's reason for existing as a distinct religious minority.
No, that is not the case. They are people who think very differently from you, but they are not brainless animals.Highlord Laan wrote:ISIS is a rampaging horde of what can best be called animals in human form. Conversing with them is pointless, as it'a debatable if they're even capable of the higher brain functions generally associated with being a human being. Would you ask a rabid dog why it bites people? The same situation, and the same response to it, apply here.Crossroads Inc. wrote:You know... I really wish I could get these people together in a room and ask them just what the FUCK. They hope to accomplish...
Are they doing this for "Allah" ?
Do they think history is going to "thank" them for this?
Do think it's existence has some how spread evil and wickedness?
I mean wtf !!!
You're on a science fiction forum, we regularly talk about actual aliens, and the best working definition I've ever heard of for 'alien' is "something that thinks at least as well as you do, but differently." By that standard, ISIS zealots are aliens to you. They do not think the way you do, they do not value what you value. They value something else instead. This does not make them animals; don't mistake different priorities for brainlessness, because not all people with brains decide on the same course of action in the same situation.
At a guess, they think God will buoy them up, as He did in the days of the first four prophets.They have serious delusions of grandeur, with the goal of establishing a pan-Arab Islamic state/Caliphate, and ultimately... "taking over the world", beginning with Rome. Seriously.
I guess London and New York aren't good enough for them.
Look at the rapid spread of Islam in the first 50-100 years after the founding of the religion, and tell me there isn't a precedent for the idea that it could spread massively farther outward in an immense surge. It may be delusional, but it is, again, something that at least makes sense within their frame of reference. Even if it's probably overambitious even within that frame of reference.
The Iraqi military is what we have made of them: a bunch of demoralized men with no esprit d'corps, run by a bunch of lickspittles and toadies who we mainly backed because they lacked the moral courage to stand up to us in any particular.Channel72 wrote:It's really discouraging that the Iraqi military is having so much trouble with these idiots.
Nation building is hard, especially if you're not willing to take "no" for an answer from the nation you intend to build. This is what happens when you get it wrong: you 'build' a nation that cannot stand up under its own power, even when the enemy attacking it is pitifully weak in objective terms.
I bet Saddam Hussein's armies would have had a better chance against ISIS than this, because at least some of them had some semblance of discipline, and a willingness to fight for the regime.
Basra is in southern Iraq, and frankly the strip of Iraq from Baghdad to Mosul would all be one of those "three major fragments" Irbis was talking about. It's not surprising that people in that stretch of the country all feel the same way about an Iraq they think of as "their country."Channel72 wrote:Your lack of faith in Iraqi nationalism is debatable. Yeah, Iraq is ultimately an arbitrary British creation, but it's fostered a sense of solid nationalism in the intervening decades. Just look at how Iraqis reacted to their football team doing well during the summer Olympics. The association with ancient Mesopotamia and cosmopolitan Baghdad also helps create a sense of nationalistic pride. Anecdotally, most Iraqi nationals express affection for their country, before the US fucked it up via sanctions and war. And I'm not only talking about people who lived in Baghdad, but also people from Basra and Mosul.
The catch is that the Basra/Baghdad people's idea of "their country" differs from the ideas of people farther north. And even if that wasn't entirely true in 2004 (back before the worst of the violence associated with the US occupation and 'nation-building'), it's more true today... because said occupation and the associated elections gave rise to a government that was very decidedly not religiously or ethnically neutral, and was biased against the northern Sunni minority.
Whereas Hussein had been neutral or friendly toward this minority, in the usual way of dictators that establish themselves in power by creating a minority group which can't rely on anyone except them for survival.