TAK wrote:Hush.. our own personal Neville Chamberlain has spoken..
That's right. A soft-on-Islam Neville Chamberlain who supported the invasion of Iraq, the surge in Iraq, and the invasion of Afghanistan, and who defended Israel in a public debate with Professor Amr al-Azm, a Syrian, at BYU a couple of weeks ago. Uh huh.
Hush! (TAK thinks he knows what he's talking about. Again!)
As for Harmony: Afghanistan under the Taliban definitely forbade the education of post-pubescent girls. Post-Taliban Afghanistan absolutely does not. Not officially. Is the culture of Afghanistan resistant to the education of females? Yes. But is that Afghan culture, or Islam? Since neither Egypt nor Iraq nor Iran nor the Afghan government opposes the education of women, it seems unlikely that Islam, as such, is the relevant factor in this case. And, in fact, it's not. Is illiteracy high among women in Afghanistan? Yes. But it's also far too high among men. Is that because of Islam? Not likely. Is it because Afghanistan is a poor, isolated, backwater country? That seems plausible. Women don't do all that well in poor rural India, Zimbabwe, and China, either.