Detention Threat for Malaysian blogger 95
Malaysian Patriot writes "The Malaysian blogosphere is currently in uproar as one of their most famous bloggers, a political observer named Jeff Ooi, has been threatened with action under the country's draconian ISA (Internal Security Act) law which allows a person to be detained without trial if he is thought to threaten "national security". The whole problem started with a comment made by a reader of the blog. The comment is alleged to have been insulting of Islam. A national newspaper (whose editor has frequently been a target of Ooi's blog) took up the story and accused the blogger of insulting Islam, while Ooi in his defence states he warned (and later deleted) the offending commenter when he was alerted to it. Malaysian bloggers meanwhile are outraged that a blogger should be held responsible for comments made by readers. In the case of Ooi's blog, which attracts thousands of hits per day, it is logistically impossible for Ooi to read and moderate every comment made. The whole saga can be followed in Jeff Ooi's Screenshots blog."
Actually (Score:2, Insightful)
The First Ammendmend (in the US at least)
Hell, we don't even let people burn our flag!
Yes, we do. Flag-burning is protected speech, and the ammendment proposed to change that fact was shot down.
When will you Atheists realise that your beliefs are just as much a religion as anthing you find in the Bible or the Quran?
Heh.. Free
Re:Actually (Score:1)
Are there any forms of 'unprotected speech'? Can you see where this is going?
Re:Actually (Score:1)
Unfortunatly, most people's speech is unprotected. Personally, I always where a condom when talking... knowing that I'm protected just makes the entire event relaxing and fun, just like it should be.
Re:It makes sense. (Score:5, Insightful)
Because we should be free to insult anything and anyone. I for one don't find that fact that hundreds of millions of people adhere to a religion that is philosophically stuck in the eighth century (minus all the scientific and cultural progress they were making back then), all that compelling a reason for its merit.
We would not put up with anyone insulting Christianity
What planet are you from?
When will you Atheists realise that your beliefs are just as much a religion as anthing you find in the Bible or the Quran?
On this we agree.
I suppose I'll get shot down in flames for pointing this out, but the levels of Islamophobia and general religious intolerance at slashdot are staggering.
Perhaps, but I do not need to be afraid that I or my children will be nuked, poisoned or infected by militant Buddhists, or Presbyterofascists, or Mormon suicide bombers, because they don't exist. There are no rabbis, or bishops issuing death warrants.
While there certainly have been Christian, et al, terrorists, they pale in significance by orders of magnitude to those of Islam. No bigotry in this statement, just facts.
Re:It makes sense. (Score:2)
Re:It makes sense. (Score:2)
Sure there are nutcases who bomb abortion clinics or shoot doctors... there is no lack of denouncement of these deluded and evil acts in any church I've been in.
No one is perfect, but there is a huge cultural difference here. Some of us are moving into the third millennium, making progress despite being imperfect, while others are mired in the first.
The hugest irony is that a tho
Re:It makes sense. (Score:1)
Re:It makes sense. (Score:1)
here in the real world, it's hard to separate the two.
This is the Islamic equivalent of the Puritans (Score:3, Interesting)
by Tarek Heggy
Here's the complete series:
The man who founded Wahhabism was not a theologian but a proselyter who was determined to convert the faithful to his harsh brand o
Re:It makes sense. (Score:2)
Re:It makes sense. (Score:1)
I am so tired of religious people saying that atheism is just another religion. Atheism is simply the absence of belief, not a belief that there is no God. To claim that atheism is a religion is like saying that silence is just another sound or that darkness is some kind of light.
I think some people simply can't grasp that someone might simply not believe in any kind of God and the
Re:It makes sense. (Score:2)
What you're describing is generally known as "agnosticism".
Atheism by sheer virtue of its etymology means a belief that God does not exist.
I think some people simply can't grasp that someone might simply not believe in any kind of God and they try to paint this stance as being just as irrational as any other religion.
I think that some people cannot grasp the idea that a belief in God and practice of religion can be as rational as any empiricist.
I just wish
Re:It makes sense. (Score:1)
Re:It makes sense. (Score:2)
Re:It makes sense. (Score:3, Insightful)
And generally incorrectly known as agnosticism. Agnosticism is the philosophy that the existence of gods is unknowable.
One can be an agnostic atheist, a gnostic theist, an agnostic theist or a gnostic atheist.
Atheism and agnosticsm are orthogonal.
I think that some people cannot grasp the idea that a belief in God and practice of religion can be as rational as any empiricist.
As an agnostic atheist, I hold that belief in God and practice of re
Re:It makes sense. (Score:1)
A fellow atheist
well, think of it this way (Score:1)
Islam is a much younger religion than most, Christianity, Judaism, etc. Islam's current state and that of most other religions cannot be compared accurately; the others have had time to streamline themselves in a way that Islam has not yet. i.e. it's heading into an age of reform that happened several hundred years ago in Christianity an
Re:well, think of it this way (Score:3)
When the state-of-the-art is a sword or a crossbow, it's one issue, but with weapons of mass destruction, it's a much scarier prospect.
Re:It makes sense. (Score:5, Insightful)
Refusing to believe in something until evidence is submitted is a matter of reason, not religion or faith.
I don't believe in God.
I don't believe in unicorns.
I don't believe in Santa Claus.
I don't believe in leprechauns.
I don't believe in Brahma.
I don't believe in alien abductions.
Chances are that you and I agree on all of those but the first. You probably also agree that the fact that you don't believe in unicorns is not a religious belief. Doesn't take a religious, faith-based belief to not believe in a stupid fairy tale, does it?
Now, please explain to me how the fact that I don't believe in unicorns is not a religious belief, but the fact that I don't believe in God is. Go ahead, I'm waiting.
Re:No. (Score:2)
Everything is "unprovable" in the strictest sense of the word. For all you know, you're currently locked in a padded cell in an insane asylum, having a vivid delusio
Re:No. (Score:1, Funny)
This of course does not preclude the existance of God, there's something to be said for the Bible as a metaphore. While Maxwell's equations are, no doubt, more useful and precise than "Let there be light" they do lack a
Re:No. (Score:2, Informative)
The Big Bang is a scientific model of the start of the universe. I could point out that it's a scientific theory that was created to explain observable facts, whereas God creating the universe doesn't explain anything. And if you start asking what created Big Bang, I'm afraid you're a bit behind the times there. The current conception just has space, and the space 'tilts' sideways and turns into time. (I don't pretend to understand how things can 'tilt' in no time, but the math works.)
Howev
Re:No. (Score:2)
Well, it's obvious that the most fundamental questions about the universe remain unanswered to some people's satisfaction, mine included. The big bang may describe the first split second, but doe
Re:No. (Score:2)
Yes, it is crazy.
Re:No. (Score:2)
No modern religion claims that god makes it rain. That religion was once used to explain things that could otherwise have been explained better only says something about how unwilling primitive people were to explore reasoning.
But, if you insist on using that line of reasoning, isn't it only fair to subject science to the same thing? I mean, if Zeus is going to be responsible for lightn
Re:No. (Score:2)
When did I say that I support the big bang theory? In any case, the big bang theory is not a religion for many reasons, but most notably because it is falsifiable. It makes certain predictions, and you can test those predictions to see whether or not they hold true. You can prove it wrong, and come up with a theory that better explains the observed facts.
None of those traits hold f
Re:No. (Score:2)
Nice of you to pick the craziest,
Re:No. (Score:2)
Not at all. A strawman argument is misrepresenting your opponent's argument in a weaker form, attacking the weakened form, and then claiming that you have defeated the argument.
I admit that few people nowadays really believe in the miracle of transubstantiation, but the other two (the Great Flood and that homosexuality is a sin) are very much active beliefs held by millions of Christi
Re:No. (Score:1)
Re:Faith vs Reason (Score:4, Insightful)
The word "faith" has a number of different definitions; you are confusing the argument by using a different one than I am. You have evidence of your wife's faithfulness -- she has always been faithful to you in your presence, has professed her love to you on many occasions, and has done many other things to give you reason to believe in her faithfulness. There is no such evidence of the existence of God, so any belief in him must be a different sort of faith than what you describe.
I hope you can see that faith can be reasonable.
If it's reasonable (based on rational fact and evidence), it's not "faith" as generally defined in religious discussions.
Secondly, you wanted some evidence to be submitted about God. There are two kinds of evidence recognised by Christians: what can be seen in nature; and what has been specifically revealed by God in history.
I submit that there is nothing in nature which indicates the existence of God, nor has God at any point revealed his existence. I challenge you to submit evidence to the contrary.
Have you ever asked the questions that Science can't answer?
Of course. No one is claiming that science has all the answers.
Empiricism can observe the material world, and it can even propose laws which seem to describe the way the universe works. But it cannot say where these laws come from, or why they are so.
True. However, God doesn't make the situation any better.
Science: Question: Why does [system A] behave in [behavior B] fashion? Answer: We don't know.
Religion: Question: Why does [system A] behave in [behavior B] fashion? Answer: God wants it to work that way. Question: Why? Answer: We don't know.
All you've done is introduced one more unknowable thing and abstracted the answer one more step away.
Isn't it beautiful and elegant that such simple laws can describe such complexity? Isn't it still so unlikely, even given such laws, that they would produce you?
First, nobody has any idea how likely or unlikely it is -- we don't understand the processes that gave rise to life (and when we do, it will have been science, not religion, that answered the question). Second, even if it's fantastically unlikely, what does that have to do with anything? In a universe with fifty billion stars in each of a hundred trillion galaxies, the fact that something is "unlikely" still leaves room for it to happen trillions of times. And all we need is for it to have happened once -- and it obviously did, since here we are.
Have you ever investigated the historical man Jesus Christ, and assessed his claims and the claims of his followers? Reading the new testament of the bible is a good start: it's not very long, and you can't claim lack of evidence without having read it. It's also worth looking at historical analyses of it.
The historical man Jesus Christ is known from exactly four documents: the four Gospels. There are, to the best of my knowledge, no other known documents claiming first-hand knowledge of the man.
Tell me something: if I and three of my friends wrote stories claiming that we had seen a man perform great miracles, claim to be the son of Allah, and endorse Islam as the one true path, would you instantly trust me, discard all other religions, and follow Islam?
That is exactly what you done. Replace "Allah" with "God" and "Islam" with "Christianity" and you ha
Re:Faith vs Reason (Score:2)
However, regarding:
"There is no such evidence of the existence of God, so any belief in him must be a different sort of
Re:It makes sense. (Score:2)
It tells the hypothetical story of a puddle of water that franctically clings on to the idea of how well the world around it (namely the hole in the ground that it inhabited by it) is made by God to fit it exactly, even as the sun slowly evaporates and shrinks it.
Oh heck...who am I kidding...believers discount rationality
Re:It makes sense. (Score:4, Funny)
I smell a definition flamewar. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:It makes sense. (Score:1)
Uh, no. By definition, Aethism is the absence of belief, so, the non-existence of something is NOT something (see your Greeks for an explanation of that one). You don't have to actively not-believe in something, and even if you do, it doesn't constitute a religious belief.
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:is it just me... (Score:2)
You just went right past "cruel" and slammed straight into "psychotically evil".
Them too? (Score:4, Insightful)
They have the Patroit Act too?
Re:Them too? (Score:2)
a) snoop into your private life without court order or permission,
b) detain non-citizens without trial [with exceptions of 'enemy combatants'].
c) Expires End 2005.
The ISA has not expiry date and allows the police to detain anyone for arbitrary periods without trial on any suspicion on having acted or likely to act on any matter of national security. The difference is on implementation: the ISA is frequently used against opposition parties, religious
Re:Them too? (Score:1)
Yep. (Score:2)
The fierce Malaysian freedom fighters did not deem necessary to get rid of it once independence was attained.
Re:Them too? (Score:1)
As such, there is some discontent between some races, but we just dont show it. There have been cases of racial riots, so to prevent this, we have the ISA.
Under the ISA, if the police feel that you pose a threat to national secur
Re:Them too? (Score:1)
Re:Them too? (Score:1)
ISA (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:ISA (Score:1)
The authorities in Malaysia and Singapore tend to clamp down first and ask questions later. The alternative is bloody riot and strife, as happend on numerous occasions in the fifties and sixties, when those quaint post-colonial notions of freedom of expression were popular.
Narcissistic dweebs (Score:2)
Ho
Re:Well.... (Score:1)
I believe CmdrTaco subscribes to the same theological view: "Yes, God, people may have blasphemed against You on my website but anything posted in the IT or Games section shouldn't count."
Re:Well.... (Score:4, Insightful)
It is their own weak belief, that some 'humans' think needs defending through coersion.
Well... (Score:2)
This is appalling (Score:1)
Wait till they come for Taco (Score:1)
Online Petition (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Online Petition (Score:1)
Quit. Period. (Score:1)