Formless wrote: ↑2020-08-31 04:23pmJub, what you aren't getting is that there is a fine line between integration and cultural erasure.
Given that Sweden isn't forcing anybody to immigrate and isn't conducting any form of genocide in Muslim nations I fail to see how Muslim culture is being harmed by asking people to integrate with current Swedish cultural norms.
in what way does this muslim community burden the Swedish government or people?
Aside from forming lobbiest groups which push for special treatment:
"The Muslim Council of Sweden (SMR), an umbrella organization for Swedish Muslim organizations, has been involved in several controversies. In 2006 Mahmoud Aldebe, one of the Board members of SMR, sent letters to each of the major political parties in Sweden demanding special legislation for Muslims in Sweden, including the right to specific Islamic holidays, special public financing for the building of Mosques, that all divorces between Muslim couples be approved by an Imam, and that Imams should be allowed to teach Islam to Muslim children in public schools. The request was condemned by all political parties and the government and the Swedish Liberal Party requested that an investigation be started by the Office of the Exchequer into the use of public funding of SMR. The Chairman of the Board of SMR subsequently stated that it supported the demands made by Aldebe but that it did not think that the letter had been a good idea to communicate them in a list of demands.
Although the Board of SMR did not condemn Aldebe the letter has caused conflict within the organization. SMR has also been accused of being closely allied to the Swedish Social Democratic Party, which has been criticised both inside and outside the party."
How about harboring terrorists:
"The Brandbergen Mosque has been described by the FBI terrorism consultant Evan Kohlmann as a propaganda central for the Armed Islamic Group (GIA). According to Kohlmann, people connected to the mosque also participated in the financing of GIA's bombing campaign in France in 1995.
In 2004 an Arabic-language manual, which carried the logo and address of the Brandbergen Mosque, was spread on the internet. The manual described the construction of simple chemical weapons, including how to build a chemical munition from an ordinary artillery round. On December 7, 2006, the Swedish citizen Mohamed Moumou, who is described by the United States Department of the Treasury as an "uncontested leader of an extremist group centered around the Brandbergen Mosque in Stockholm", was put on the United Nations Security Council Committee 1267 list of foreign terrorists."
Discriminating against women in private while pretending to be for equality in public:
"n 2012, the SVT program Uppdrag granskning visited 10 mosques once with a hidden camera and once with a visible camera. When the representatives were aware of being filmed, they stated that they supported values such as gender equality; however, when two undercover journalists posed as Muslim women with difficulties in their marriage, the answers from the majority of the visited imams were different. The imams told the women that they were expected to sleep with their husbands even if they did not want to and that they were to accept being beaten, and strongly discouraged them from going to the police. Since about half of the visited mosques receive state or local funding, they are expected to promote basic values of Swedish society, such as equal rights between genders and to counteract discrimination and violence."
Inviting public speakers to make speeches against homosexuality:
"In March 2014 Malmö Municipality withdrew financial support to a local association because they invited a Syrian lecturer who says that homosexuality should be punished by death to a charity event. The organisers said that the lecturer would not attend and hold no speeches, but after a video recording showed him holding a lecture, the sum of money was recalled.
In January 2015, Sigtuna council stopped radical Islamic preacher Haitham al-Haddad from holding a lecture at their premises. He had been invited by Märsta Unga Muslimer (tr: Muslim Youth of Märsta) but when the council was informed of the preacher's homophobic and antisemitic views, the council cancelled the rental contract.
According to criticism by British think-tank Quilliam in May 2015, Sweden is more likely than other countries to allow preachers with radical views to enter the country and spread their views.
In May 2015, radical preacher Said Rageahs was invited to the mosque in Gävle where he promoted the views that whomever insults Mohammed should be killed along with apostates and advocated segregation between Muslims and non-Muslims. The local imams at Gävle mosque ran the webpage muslim.se which espoused similar views (with the death penalty for homosexuality added) and according to islamologist Jan Hjärpe at Lund University their views are typical of the Wahhabi."
Now I know the counter argument to this will be that this is only a small fraction of the Muslim community and that this is the price a free nation must pay for upholding its ideals, but let's be honest. Sweden wouldn't have to deal with this shit if they didn't take in Muslim immigrants and this is a burden upon them. That's not to say that it isn't a burden worth baring for both moral and economic reasons, but it is a burden.
This isn't to mention the refugee crisis which really lit the fuse of this as an issue. It's unquestionable that a lot of anger about the crisis in general is being passed on to the Muslim community as a whole. This isn't fair, but its also true that refugees will have more issues fitting into their new society than screened and approved immigrants and that their lack of integration may be a source of some of the current issues. I don't live in Sweden, I don't know the exact situation which is why I raised the issue as a broader question in the first place.
Do you or do you not consider diversity to be a Democratic value?
I don't consider democracy itself to be of much value. I've advocated my views on the current system of democracy employed by the west and my issues with it several times on this board.
Do you or do you not consider Islam inherently threatening to Sweden?
Not threatening, so much as a constant annoyance. Like a neighbor that plays their music too loudly or a crying child on an airplane. It's not a threat and its not even an issue all of the time, but it's
Do you really think that Islam is antithetical to Swedish law?
If strictly followed most religions are antithetical to modern values. I have no issue with those who follow religion as a matter of personal fulfilment, I do have an issue with the power organized religion wields and with the extremes that fundamentalists will go to to ensure that their personal fiction is made manifest.
Do you really think that these people refuse to learn Swedish?
I know for a fact that many immigrants will bring over family members, parents etc. who are unlikely to ever become fluent in Swedish and who may never even make an attempt to learn it. I face this a fair bit at my current job where people have either no English at all or such poor English that I am unable to help them due to a lack of ability to communicate. Though to be fair I'd be equally stumped if they only knew French and that's an official language of Canada even if it's rarely used in British Columbia.
Do you not understand that it was the Right Wing protestors who were arrested BY the Swedish government, and why?
Have a made a single comment about the protestors, the riot, or the tensions that lead up to it? If I have please quote me.
Formless wrote: ↑2020-08-31 04:33pmSince you decided to edit your post AFTER I made a post responding to it, I will respond to this as if it were its own post.
I made the edit before seeing your reply, this is a fast moving thread, it's going to happen.
Look, if the views of the community they were moving into were sacred, then blacks and other minorities should never move into areas of the United States that are dominated by the KKK or other White Nationalist groups.
This is bunk, for a lot of reasons. One, blacks didn't choose to come to North America and in many cases aren't immigrants (at least not any more than a white American isn't an immigrant). Two, moving within one's own nation is very different than moving between nations.
but the community they are moving into that should learn to calm the fuck down, back the fuck off, and grow the fuck up, because this is the 21'st fucking century.
The community should calm down, back off, and not attempt to discourage the bullshit (see above) that comes attached to the culture in Muslim nations that is being imported to Swedish shores. Is this your assertion?
MAJOR EDIT: Or, how about I simply turn the tables and ask you this: should we respect this attitude of yours when it is Saudi Arabia telling immigrant women that they cannot drive and they have to wear hair covering? Or other Middle Eastern communities that have not codified it into law, but still expect it and intimidate any woman who refuses to do so because they aren't muslim? If not, why is it different when Western countries act this way?
We shouldn't respect it but equally don't move there if you don't want to be subject to their laws and cultural norms. It's a wide world out there, don't move to a shitty bit and complain that it's shitty.
ray245 wrote: ↑2020-08-31 04:30pmNo one is saying the country should change itself? But what is important is to acknowledge the idea that if a Country wants to welcome immigrants, then it needs to acknowledge the idea that integration is not a one way street. There is a need to ensure someone of immigrant background, or descended from a recent migrant background do not face all sorts of socio-cultural barriers that will limit their life opportunities.
I agree, my standards basically boil down to:
1) Speak the language
2) Respect local customs
3) Don't create an unnecessary burdens for your new home
Beyond that, go nuts. Build that church/temple/mosque, form a community, speak your language, throw a festival, just respect that this is your adopted home and that you made a choice to come here.
I'm speaking as a migrant to the West, and I can personally say integration with local community is not as easy as people are making it out to be, and I come from a relatively privileged position of being well-exposed to Western culture. I am not sure if all the people who talks about integration has ever lived abroad as a migrant and understood just how challenging it can be for many people.
You, or your parents if you came over as a child, should have known this going in. Moving from one nation, especially a non-Western nation to the west will be a challenge. You will face racism, potential language barriers, and culture shock and it will be on you to overcome those things because it was your choice to move. It's on people immigrating to understand the challenges that it will bring and weigh that against the benefits.