antishock8 wrote:Turkey.
Constantinople.
??? Armenian Genocide I"m assuming? I hope you've read the part of the story where the Armenians killed a few hundred thousand Muslims during the same general period.
antishock8 wrote:Turkey.
Constantinople.
Daniel Peterson wrote:Since, as I quoted earlier in the thread, there are plain statements from the Prophet Muhammad (hadith, as they're called) that call for the education of women -- and I could have multiplied them several times -- it seems to me that it would be very difficult to claim that, as a whole, Muslim women who have gained educations have done so as a departure from Islamic teachings.
Dr. Shades wrote:In that case, where did the Taliban (and, I imagine, other such extremist groups) get its justification for denying women an education?
I would have to read much more extensively than I have in the writings of the Taliban to know precisely where they got their notions about the education of women. But they're clearly out of the Islamic mainstream. So much so, in fact, that even the Islamic Republic of Iran denounced their treatment of women some years back, pronouncing the Taliban tyranny in Aghanistan "the shame of Islam."
marg wrote:No DCP I was talking about current Mormon practice, today..in polygamous communities. They are following true Mormonism as J. Smith set up and B.Young continued.
marg wrote:And they are the followers of true Mormonism the one J. Smith envisioned.
marg wrote:For the majority of women in polygamy and I'm not going back to 19 century, no need to, I'm talking currently they are treated as chattel, to serve the men, receive little education and skills to enable leaving the system and are indoctrinated into this lifestyle often from a young age, many traded between polygamous communites to be wives at young ages often 14, 15, & 16.
marg wrote:Looking into Martha Hughes Cannon, briefly I learned she certainly was not the average woman, nor the typical female raised in a polygamous family. One reason is she didn't come from a polygamous family. So she was educated and not indoctrinated to be subservient to men and a baby maker.
and thatmarg wrote:rather deceitful on your part, you know better.
For DCP to bring her up as an example of women in polygamy is despicable.
Daniel Peterson wrote: LOL. It appears that failure to agree with certain people on this board is, in itself, definitive proof of fatal moral defect.
harmony wrote:Then you come back with THIS gem:Daniel Peterson wrote:Please try to remember that the government in Kabul, which you yourself say wants to educate women, is just as Muslim as rural Afghanistan is.
Muslim... no differentiation between Taliban Muslim and regular Joe kind of Muslim. YOU said "the government in Kabul, which you yourself say wants to educate women, is just as Muslim as rural Afghanistan is." . . .
I'm quoting you, Daniel:Daniel Peterson wrote:Please try to remember that the government in Kabul, which you yourself say wants to educate women, is just as Muslim as rural Afghanistan is.
You make no differentiation between Muslim and Taliban brand Muslim, so neither did I. You, after all, are the expert on Islam on this board, right? So when I quote you, follow your lead, I can be sure I'm giving accurate information, right?
marg wrote:when you bring a woman up as an example to illustrate 'nothing wrong with polygamy'.
marg wrote:Daniel Peterson wrote: LOL. It appears that failure to agree with certain people on this board is, in itself, definitive proof of fatal moral defect.
No you are the only one exhibiting moral defect on this board,
marg wrote:when you bring a woman up as an example to illustrate 'nothing wrong with polygamy'.
Daniel Peterson wrote:...
Methodists and Quakers are equally Christian, as are the Greek Orthodox and the Roman Catholics.
...
Daniel Peterson wrote:marg wrote:No you are the only one exhibiting moral defect on this board,
Natch!
QED.
LOL.
DCP wrote:I said absolutely nothing about there being "nothing wrong with polygamy" -- neither for it nor against it.
I simply brought Martha Hughes Cannon up as an obvious illustration of several things that would have been utterly impossible under the Taliban. I also brought up early women's suffrage in Utah Territory, fully five decades before women won the right to vote nationally. (I notice that you've had nothing to say on that point.)
I have a few questions for you Harmony. If you think Islam is a significant reason for illiteracy of women, and you mentioned that women from Turkey who are educated isn't surprising to you, I'll add that Turkey is a democracy and has separation of state and religion...what do you see as the causal difference between Mormonism and Islam in women's literacy? What do you see as significant factors which differentiate Islam from Mormonism and how women are viewed?
Where I'm coming from is that my impression is that Islam and Mormonism are very similar and were it not for separation of state and religion, and if we lived in countries headed by Mormon men, that women would be illiterate, living in polygynous marriages. At least under Islam men are supposed to only take up to 4 wives, that's better than Mormon leaders promoted and still practice under the truer version of J. Smith's religion.
Thus, any suggestion that nineteenth-century Utah resembled Taliban-style Islam -- and that was, of course, the context of the conversation -- is simply ignorant and risible.
Incidentally, you haven't acknowledged your misrepresentation of that older conversation in the CK -- the one in which you falsely portray me as having no sympathy for the suffering of Muslim women by means of falsely portraying me as approving of the Afghan burka.
Has Harmony somehow passed the baton to you? Are you taking over the role of delivering wrathful moral condemnations on the basis of transparent misreadings and complete irrelevancies?