Quinn: Islam is a "Neanderthal religion" that "enslave[s] black people"
July 02, 2009 3:26 pm ET
From the July 2 edition of Clear Channel's The War Room with Quinn and Rose:


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"The burka isn't a heck of a lot different from a nun's outfit..."
Interesting point. If you look at the nun's outfits (before nuns started wearing regular street clothes, back in the seventies) they were not that different from what medieval woman wore, way back when.
The nobility, and those who could afford the fabric, copied the Muslim dress. My only quess is; it was considered exotic, and quite fashionable.
Agreed: the burka is different. However, women do not wear the burka in most Islamic countries. In only the most repressive, and fundamentalist do the women were burkas.
Muslim women, according to the dress code (and I am no scholar of Islam) must be covered from head to foot, literally. Heads, arms, and legs down passed the ankles are covered in order not to tempt men. Again, think of a nun's habit.
The burka goes beyond that - whereas you said a shroud - I think of their individuality being supressed. All women are identical.
The question of whether or not "it is forced" doesn't really get us anywhere. The question of who imposes the force and with what legitimacy seems a bit more relevant here.
But Quinn's indictment of Islam is a global one: he claims that it is the religion that enslaves people, not the states that enforce their own interpretations of Islamic laws. Even in Saudi Arabia, it's not that there's no difference between the state and the global religion of Islam; it's that the Saudi state legitimates its violence by citing its official interpretation of Islam. That's a distinction with quite difference that -- as you point out -- is hardly academic.
if you want to see it as some big coincidence that so many muslim societies repress their citizens, then that's up to you. i even pointed out iran as one of the more moderate countries [in comparison]. but when it came down to the election, was it the independent courts of iran that said the elections results would stand? no, it was the grand ayatollah. i've been more than willing to criticize the religious fundamentalists here. but here, they don't run my life. in many muslim countries they do, how strictly is one question, but the fact is that it's still tied to the religion. to say that one country forces the burqa and others some less restrictive but still cumbersome dress, does not mean that there's not a problem. when i start seeing the religious leaders in islamic countries coming out in large numbers and saying women are equal and we respect your right to follow another religion, then i might believe differently. but that's not the case, because those leaders are few and far between.
As for me, I don't not agree with everything that USAarmOf1 seems to imply, in the above post but; that is pretty much the definition of freedom. Free to believe the religion you want and free to practice those beliefs. I may not agree with the way women are treated in certain Islamic states but; it is their country not mine.
Think Pakistan, they took the time to develop their constitution and make it work with the Quran and Islam. For the Taliban that wasn't enough, since it did not meet with their version of Islam or their interpretation of the Quran. Now the whole nation is having to deal with the results of the decisions that were made. It is messy, it is ugly, and people are suffering and being killed as a result. It doesn't make it right, it doesn't make it wrong, it just is.
So you do not care about human rights?
Many on the left do not have the courage to speak out against the abuses that take place in the name of Islam. And whan someone does, they are labeled a bigot. What hypocrits.
I can see why you thought it necessary to chastise us liberals about Darfur. After all, you have such overpowering support and respect from the reich in regards to that embattled region...
First, what is the definition of "feminism?" One source I found said "Feminism is a belief in the right of women to have political, social, and economic equality with men." Another source said, feminism is "aimed at equal rights and legal protection for women." Another says feminists "advocate equality for women and campaign for women's rights and interests." How can you, with a clear conscious, support a religion, culture, or organization that clearly debases its females and places men in superior power positions? And it's not just the burka; it's also the female circumcision, the Honor killings, and the “shut-up-and-do-as-you’re told” mentality operating through a heavy-handed patriarchal rule. No true, clear-thinking feminist would use the cop-out of "I am not a Muslim" so I'll stick my freaking head up my posterior cavity and repeat "I see no evil..." Come on – get real!
You also say "we have to understand other cultures and tolerate their practices." Really? If a culture allows the practice of human sacrifice, do we REALLY have to try to understand that? If a culture allows the enslavement of others, would you argue “Now, now – we must be politically correct and accept them into the fold?” If a culture allows the practice of mutilating a young girl's genitals via circumcision or the despicable practice of honor killing of young girls, are we truly supposed to understand and ignore?
Lastly, if we really DO have to understand the cultures and practices of everyone in this country, then please understand that in MY culture, some of the practices we uphold include embracing capitalism, patriotism, equality of gender and race (which means NO discrimination OR elevation), and a love of country and citizenship. It also includes upholding the Republic for which our American Flag stands, supporting the idea of country first, and the firm belief that the American Dream is still found through personal responsibility and hard work, and NOT through government control, government takeovers, or government bailouts.
I don't personally believe in religion, or god, or gods for that matter, but I do respect the people that do, as many of them are my friends, and family.
Nothing twisted about this talk monkey. Seems clear, he enjoys the objectification of women, and what is this “our culture” he speaks of and why his fascination with “snap-on tools?”
So... people came to this country to escape persecution. People still come here for "opportunity". We have our lovely FIRST AMENDMENT protecting a person's right to wear a yarmulke, nun's habit, Om, crucifix, burqa, whatever. Usually not all at the same time... but Americans have the freedom to do so.
This sort of crazy discrimination should apply to everyone, you can't be picking and choosing how people are allowed to express themselves when we made it #1 in our Constitution... FOR THIS VERY REASON.
There are a lot that certain people do as part of their religion, and abandoning something that acts as such a huge part of their lives can be a traumatic thing to let go. You're threatened and afraid of the woman in the burqa, Jim? How do you think she feels about you, glaring at her and calling for her to throw away part of her culture, no matter how warped you think it is?
http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/med/lewis1.html
And where is slavery accepted today, what permits it?
He just wants to go back to the time,when European white men who owned property ruled the country with impunity.
Seriously: what kind of company executive actually employs a man who says this kind of crap and sleeps at night?
He sleeps well knowing that the owners of the stock of the company (little old ladies, retired workers' IRAs, rich white, black, red, and yellow guys, unionized teachers pensions) can sleep better as well.
It's only a dollar, PC. It's not moral antacid, and it's certainly not a certificate of having done good for your fellow man.
Your arguement falls because Quinn is no racist and his show making money has nothing to do with your white supremacist comparison. No one supports that kind of racial division and hatred unless you are a socialist and like defining people by race first. I believe judging by race is.....being a racist, isn't it?
For instance, imagine a nominee for the Supreme Court having served on the council of a group defined as 'The Race'. Now how does one square that with a supposed progressive mind?
It does take some amount of imagination to come up with that example. "The race" is not the only translation, so it is not "defined" that way.
I never said anything about Quinn being racist. If I had wanted to call him a white supremacist, I would have. (If you've got something to say about Sotomayor, by the way, there's no need to be shy. We can discuss affiliations with groups like La Raza and the NAACP and why one can fight descrimination on the basis of race and nationality without being racist or nationalist.) Since you missed the point of my hypothetical example, I'll spell it out for you: despicable behavior cannot be morally justified by profit alone.
But since you bring it up...
PC: "I believe judging by race is...being a racist, isn't it?"
If that's true, then you really should reexamine your defense of Quinn. Here's what he actually said.
Now what was that you were saying about what it means when you judge a person by race alone? I personally have no idea whether or not Quinn is racist. I've never met him and I have no idea what's in his mind. For him this may all just be one big profitable performance. (Which, after all, excuses everything according to your previous comment.) But what Quinn said is remarkably disrespectful of those two individuals, African Americans, people of color around the world, and Muslims all in one swipe. He sees two people who "he thinks might be black", then assumes that they're Americans (?) who converted because they hate American culture (??), and then proceeds to speculate and judge their motivations (!!) and to attack their choice of religion based on race alone. His appeal boils down to, "How stupid and self undermining are American black people for converting to a religion that enslaves blacks!"
P.S. "not vygotsky"? Really? I didn't pick them as an homage to Lev Vygotsky, so, yeah, you've accurately deduced that the pseudonym I use on this website is not to be confused with the name I didn't use. You get a gold star, a smile face AND a red apple sticker. Keep up the brilliant work.
Neanderthals died during "the great flood" (along with the dinosaurs). Islam did not come along until thosaunds of years after the flood.
Yeah, Jim; tell us all about how these people were "enslaved":
http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/med/lewis1.html
The article explains how Islam and its spread became the basis for much of the slave trade in the world. During our history of enslavement, slave traders brought captured 'infidels' to our shores. The despicable practice involved both evil whites and muslims in selling people of chattel.
There is no excuse for this having occurred but in its historical record, slavery was more than a white american endeavor. We forget or refuse to learn that truth.
Quinn's comments certainly point to the facts in the article above but also to what the west sees as a forced restriction on female liberty in the religious traditions of Islam. Most nuns have a choice either in entering and leaving a convent. The close they wear are the choice or style of the group but they are free to leave without reprisal. It happened in my family. However, in Islam, there is no choice to freely leave the faith or order. It comes with a death sentence.
If there is demand for a "product" somebody will come along and fill that need just to make a profit. It doesn't make it acceptable that they captured other Africans for White Americans but how immoral and wicked does one have to be to demand such a product?
by USAarmOf1 (3 hours and 53 minutes ago)
1 1 I think you are missing the point the author is trying to make which is freedom. Islam is not a religion of freedom, its a religion which enslaved citizens in God's name according to Holly Quran. I am from Sudan and I am sure you have seen what's happening in that country, special in the Dafur Region, where genocide is taking place as we speak in the name of Islam, but what do you know you have to live under the Shariah Law to fully understand the true concept of the Islamic religion. Under the Shariah Law, women are considered properties if not second hand citizen or worst subhuman. Can you call that freedom?
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Did you actually listen to Quinn's comments either?
How many know that slaughter of people in Darfur is a muslim endeavor?
http://www.sudantribune.com/spip.php?article18616
There's Rwanda...
And Srebrenica...
Australia (aborigini tribes by christian rulers)...
Argentina...
Sabra and Shatila...
Khojaly...
And those were just the christian initiated wars that were declared genocides.
Funny how you ignore the articles that PC mentions, but I wouldn't exect anything else from you.
Conservatives want to be left alone, too, but it's usually so there are more government resources left to investigate what goes on in the bedrooms and doctors offices of liberals and progressives.
HEEEEEEEREEEJHHHHHEEE...
OK seriously, I don't need to listen to this guy to know he's full of it.
Rather than just taking some progressive thought control czar's operative truth at face value, demand a little more of yourself and check into it.
But it is fun to watch, especially the part about the federal indictment coming her way because that Wasilla recreation center was made out of the exact same materials as her home was. Built by the same company, and what a discount she got on that house...
So we don't hate Islam and aren't looking to start anything. They hate us and have made it a religious war for a long time.
I'd also like to see the quote from the commission that you're referring to, where they say that "muslims" declared war on us, as opposed to Bin Laden and Zawahiri.
He also seemed to have a ready audience of followers to jihad and I don't think they were Mennonites from Ohio that jumped on the bandwagon.
Again, our war is not against Islam, but the fundi-wackos that seem to be taking the lead politically and spiritually against the west. There seems to more resistence to that now with our defeating Saddam and winning the war in Iraq that hopefully will lead a mobilization of free democracies in the region
So NOW you think it's important to make the distinction between Islam and violent fundamentalists, but when Quinn pours them all together in a big pot with "American blacks" you've got no criticism.
It seems like you're assigning special powers to these people. They used box cutters to take over a plane and that was the extent of the operation. It wasn't sophisticated at all; they just caught us off guard while we had a dunderhead in the White House.