Simon_Jester wrote:Okay, but if he's going to make Malaysia-specific arguments or Singapore-specific arguments, he should say that they're specific to Malaysia or Singapore. And say that they're informed by Malaysian conditions. Because Malaysian conditions are very different from the ones that exist in the US or Europe. Rather than prattling about conditions in a country he doesn't know and how "we" for some nebulous we need to "take a stand" against a problem he doesn't comprehend.
Given that this is a UK article in a UK newspaper written by a UK activist talking about the problems in the UK, why should anyone assume we are talking about America as the main reference point?
Radical Islam is far less of a problem in the US compared to Europe, with far less Americans joining ISIS than Europeans. It is true that Americans have far less to fear from domestic Islamist terrorist than Europe. But at the same time, American politics do have a heavy influence on shaping the discourse on Islamophobia in Europe.
ray245 wrote:How many individual Muslims are we talking about here?
Hint, if 10000 Muslims "radicalize" out of a population of, say, ten million... that can add up to a lot of terrorist attacks. But it's still one in a thousand of the total population. If the other 99.9% of Muslims are NOT radicalized into becoming terrorists, that indicates that whatever strategies are being used to prevent radicalization are working. They're not working as well as we might wish them to, but they're working.
You can't just say "some Muslims in Country X become terrorists, so Country X's strategy for preventing radicalization is a failure," any more than you can say "sometimes places in Country X get struck by lightning, so Country X's strategy of using lightning rods is a failure." And you certainly can't say "the lightning rods are a failure, so we should all dress up in big suits of metal armor and stand out in the rain on top of tall mountains, yelling insults at the thunder-gods."
Stop using words like 'some' and 'too many' and start using numbers, and it may throw your arguments into much better perspective.
You want numbers? Sure. Let's take the numbers of westerners joining ISIS.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2016/03 ... -for-isil/
USA: 150 official counts. Total population of USA is 321 million, which means roughly 0.00000004% of them are radical enough to join ISIS.
UK 760. Total population 65 million, which means the number of British who joined ISIS per head is 25 times higher than the American terrorists per head.
France: 1700. Total population 66.8 million. This means the number of French joining ISIS per head is 55 times higher than Americans.
Does geography play a huge role? Sure. But that doesn't explain why there are less Italian joining ISIS per head than the UK or France.
So some countries are having a harder time preventing radicalisation than others. Is Islamic radicalisation a big problem in the US compared to Europe? I don't think so. But there are a wide variety of reasons that explain why radical Islam is far less of a problem in the US than in Europe.
Saying the subject is complex does not grant you automatic free cover to prescribe your own non-solution 'solution' of "getting tough" as though that would somehow cut through all these complexities you so vaguely ramble about. "Getting tough" on a complicated problem rarely makes the problem better.
Is imposing more restrictions on radical Islam preachers "getting tough"? You do realise that there are many radical preachers in Europe that are effectively funded by foreign countries like Saudi Arabia and the other rich gulf states?
How are you going to tackle problems like this?
While the Muslim Council of Britain perfected the art of issuing press statements, it did nothing to push back on such poisonous teachings. For 10 years, my organisation Inspire, in an attempt to build resilience to extremism in Muslim families, taught theological counter-narratives to extremist ideology. The response I heard from hundreds of Muslim mothers was the same. No one has taught us this before and no one has taught our children it either. What was apparent is that the weak “community” defence system would not be able to hold back the tidal wave of extremist propaganda.
Is supporting organisation that tries to teach a theological counter-narrative "getting tough"?
Humans are such funny creatures. We are selfish about selflessness, yet we can love something so much that we can hate something.