-
32 votes
-
Noam Chomsky: The false promise of ChatGPT
30 votes -
Why crypto could be green power's unlikely new best friend
13 votes -
Water isn't normal
24 votes -
Why the world cannot afford the rich
43 votes -
For Southern Illinois and the climate, Shawnee National Park is the ‘next logical step’
9 votes -
(Former Morgan Stanley chair) Stephen Roach: It pains me to say Hong Kong is over
17 votes -
Ezra Klein Show: "What relationships would you want if you believed they were possible?"
21 votes -
New Grammy category for African music: nominations ignore almost all of Africa
13 votes -
Opinion: Tesla investors should think twice about Elon Musk’s plan to reincorporate in Texas
14 votes -
Why Germany is rich but Germans are poor and angry
35 votes -
Norway's Arctic deep sea mining plan will inevitably sink – industrialising the ocean floor in the middle of a climate crisis is not only reckless, it's cruel
9 votes -
Norway's decision to permit exploratory deep-sea extraction of valuable minerals breaks a promise to the other nations on the Ocean Panel and to scientists
14 votes -
Commentary - on archaeology and small mundane discoveries
4 votes -
You don’t need more resilience. You need friends. And money.
44 votes -
Why do hardly any straight men write about sex and dating?
64 votes -
Blasphemy laws have returned to Denmark – even fanatical Quran-burners must remain free
28 votes -
Paris is saying 'non' to a US-style hellscape of supersized cars – and so should the rest of Europe
82 votes -
The old new way to provide cheap housing
18 votes -
UAE corruption beyond description means COP28 is likely over before it starts — Bill McKibben
23 votes -
What am I thankful for this year? Amazing scientific discoveries.
19 votes -
Tesla may have picked an unwinnable fight with Sweden's powerful unions
23 votes -
Opinion: US infrastructure law offers too little progress on climate and equity
9 votes -
Iceland volcano won't spew more carbon than humanity – social media is once again filling up with such claims, as it always does when volcanoes make news
15 votes -
Net neutrality in the US is about more than just blocking and throttling, don't be fooled by attempts to limit the discussion to these concepts
27 votes -
Why the US never saves money on health care
25 votes -
The unexpected climate policy that could tackle both US national debt and China: Carbon pricing has the potential to become a bipartisan policy
26 votes -
Everything I know about the tech industry I learned from baseball
5 votes -
On the inadequacy and obsolescence of US laws protecting student privacy - threatening intellectual freedom to explore ideas
6 votes -
The US library system, once the best in the world, faces death by a thousand cuts
39 votes -
Real men share the housework: what Britain can learn from the domestic bliss of Scandinavia
31 votes -
What’s in your go bag for the apocalypse?
27 votes -
Dear drivers, steady as you go at 20mph. And welcome to the future.
35 votes -
Respect laws of nature by moving to a circular economy
9 votes -
Opinion by Brian Merchant: I’ve always loved tech. Now, I’m a Luddite. You should be one, too.
69 votes -
We need cheap protein — but it doesn’t have to be meat
16 votes -
And then Elon Musk said there’ll be no more war – not via his satellite. Aren’t we lucky to have the world in his hands?
69 votes -
Local governments aren't businesses – so why are they force-fed business software?
31 votes -
Trigger warning: Faced with professional discipline and a requirement to take training to keep his psychology license in Canada - Jordan Peterson shares his beliefs re trans people
21 votes -
Opinion: The Kids Online Safety Act would harm US LGBTQ+ youth, restrict access to information and community
38 votes -
Ozempic cuts alcohol cravings. Liquor companies aren’t ready.
30 votes -
Cats with bird flu? The threat grows.
16 votes -
Three big, bold ideas to douse the flames of a world on fire
10 votes -
The unwanted Spanish soccer kiss is textbook male chauvinism. Don’t excuse it.
34 votes -
What happened to Washington, DC food trucks?
15 votes -
The GDP gap between Europe and the United States is now 80%
37 votes -
Norway has a chance to transform climate finance – the country's windfall from the energy crisis should be used to underwrite investments in developing countries
17 votes -
In Alabama, white tide rushes on
10 votes -
Apostate Muslims - this is why we protest the Quran
Here's the article in Danish First of all, I hope it's ok to post links to sites that aren't in English because this is a really good opinion piece. For context, there has been a lot of news about...
First of all, I hope it's ok to post links to sites that aren't in English because this is a really good opinion piece.
For context, there has been a lot of news about activists burning the Quran in Sweden and Denmark - Turkey has withheld Sweden's Nato bid because of it, and Russia has been accused of influencing events in order to attempt to destabilize western countries. So it's a whole thing.
I translated the article through DeepL and did some small edits and added occasional context in [brackets]:
Apostate Muslims - this is why we protest the Quran
It is an insult to apostate Muslims if the government gives in and criminalises the burning or desecrating of the Quran - we have fought to free ourselves from the Quran, now you want to protect the perpetrator.
I'm an apostate - ex-Muslim. It's hard to get there. Doing away with Islam can have completely incalculable consequences. And if the government gives in to the Islamic countries that want to restrict freedom of speech in Denmark with threats of violence and economic pressure, it will be much harder to break free from Islam and live a free life in the future.
Because it's not just about Quran burnings or Rasmus Paludan [very controversial far-right activist who has done Quran burnings in Denmark and Sweden many times]. It's about criticising Islam, which will not be tolerated. To signal this to the Islamic countries - that they should focus on legislation in their own countries - The Association of Apostates is therefore protesting on 22 August in front of the Turkish embassy in Copenhagen.
But it is just as much a signal to the Danish government.
The Association of Apostates is Denmark's first organisation for ex-Muslims, and we know how difficult it is to come to terms with Islam - because we have done it ourselves. But if criticism or mockery of Islam is criminalised as it is in Islamic countries, the apostasy process becomes even more difficult, because you also have the law against you.
A conformist who defends their abuser
Many Muslim apostates lead double lives: Outwardly, they live by Islamic rules. Some go to the mosque, pray and fast because it is expected and because they have to keep up appearances even though they have lost their faith. This is due to a fear of the incalculable consequences that an apostasy from Islam can have for the individual person.
It is not Allah's punishment that is feared, but rather the traumatic consequences of societal pressure or ostracisation. As a result, many often end up complying with Islamic traditions and expectations from family and friends.
This can range from marriage, which must be to a Muslim, to the circumcision of male children. To survive in this situation, many choose self-deception, trying to fit in with the group by denying reality and defending Islam, despite feeling no connection to the religion.
People who have been victims of domestic violence often describe that after the breakup, they find it difficult to let go of their partner. Apostate Muslims also experience this dependency. You end up as a conformist who defends your abuser. You keep the label of 'Muslim' because it is far more unsafe and full of conflict to call yourself an apostate.
The law is a slippery slope
In many of the Muslim countries that will now dictate legislation in Denmark, there is death penalty and imprisonment for apostasy and blasphemy. Gay rights are violated and women are treated as second-class citizens. As ex-Muslims, we see how Islamic dogmas and traditions are gaining more and more influence in Denmark.
Hijab, which represents discrimination and inequality between men and women, is promoted as the norm. But the reality is that for ex-Muslim women in Denmark, removing the hijab often has serious consequences.
The month of Ramadan is promoted in the same way as Christmas, even though for many ex-Muslims, Ramadan is a month where social control is heightened because Ramadan is about getting closer to Allah - a god you don't believe in.
If the government yields in regards to blasphemy or desecration of the Quran, it's just another step down that slippery slope. A slippery slope where ex-Muslims live under social control or in exclusion.
But fortunately, we live in a free country like Denmark, where there is room for critical thinking and where you have the right to believe what you do and do not believe. Where you have the right to draw what you want [reference to drawings of the Prophet that caused an international incident in the 2000s] and, in protest, burn, shred or make paper aeroplanes out of a book whose content you find repulsive or disagree with. Like when Poul Nyrup demonstratively tore the pages out of Fogh's book back in 2001. [Nyrup is a Social Democrat and debated Fogh of Venstre, a right-wing party, on TV during the election campaign]
Protect the victim, not the Quran
At The Association of Apostates, some of our members say that one of the things that bothers them about Islam is that Islam calls itself the religion of peace, but at the same time believes that you should receive 100 lashes if you have sex before marriage. Here, the members refer to the Quran's Sura 24:2 which reads: "As for female and male fornicators, give each of them one hundred lashes, and do not let pity for them make you lenient in enforcing the law of Allah, if you truly believe in Allah and the Last Day. And let a number of believers witness their punishment."
Should a woman who is critical of this content of the Quran also be punished by the government if she tore out the pages of the Quran in protest? Or burned it? If the woman had been subjected to the act prescribed by the Quran, should she just keep quiet and respect the holy scriptures?
I certainly don't think so. But that's what's being suggested in the government's proposal. [They want to ban burnings of the Quran in places like in front of embassies]
60 votes -
A single reform that could save 100,000 lives across the USA immediately
24 votes