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posted by LaminatorX on Sunday October 05 2014, @01:31AM   Printer-friendly
from the "I'm-not-racist-but..." dept.

White Americans may view diversity and multiculturalism more negatively as the U.S. moves toward becoming a minority-majority nation, UCLA psychologists report.

As part of their study, the researchers divided 98 white Americans from all regions of the country — half male, half female, with an average age of 37 — randomly into two groups. One group was told that whites will no longer be the majority in the U.S. by 2050; in fact, this is likely to be true as soon as 2043, according to some projections. The second group was told that whites would retain their majority status in the U.S. through at least 2050. All participants were then asked a series of questions about their views on diversity.

“Whites feel lukewarm about diversity when they are told that they are about to lose their majority status in the United States for the first time,” said Yuen Huo, UCLA professor of psychology and the study’s senior author.
http://newsroom.ucla.edu/releases/soon-to-become-a-minority-in-the-u-s-whites-express-declining-support-for-diversity-ucla-psychology-study-finds

[PAPER]: No Longer “All-American”? Whites’ Defensive Reactions to Their Numerical Decline:
http://spp.sagepub.com/content/early/2014/08/13/1948550614546355

 
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  • (Score: 2) by keplr on Sunday October 05 2014, @05:28AM

    by keplr (2104) on Sunday October 05 2014, @05:28AM (#101919) Journal

    I'm afraid I can't form an argument against nasal grunts so I'll tell a parable instead. An obese man came to his physician, short of breath and clutching at the pain behind his sternum. The man in white began to speak but was interrupted, "It's good to know that you, doctor, someone who has never had a heart attack, is qualified to tell a patient about this condition." The doctor didn't have an argument against that either. Some ideas are so stupid that merely repeating them back suffices.

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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday October 05 2014, @07:51AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday October 05 2014, @07:51AM (#101936)

    So you are an expert on islam. You've got a PhD in middle eastern religion.
    That's kind of funny you should hold such opinions then because literally no one else with such a degree agrees with you.
    Not a single fucking one of them.

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday October 05 2014, @11:43AM

      by Anonymous Coward on Sunday October 05 2014, @11:43AM (#101980)

      Different AC.

      People who devote the time and effort required to become an expert on something generally don't think that something is bullshit, bad for society, etc. -- even if it is. So if you base your opinion on Islam from people who have devoted their lives to it ... you might come away with a slanted view.

      • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday October 05 2014, @07:56PM

        by Anonymous Coward on Sunday October 05 2014, @07:56PM (#102145)

        And all those scholars of nazi germany are pining for der fuher to return.

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday October 05 2014, @07:58AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday October 05 2014, @07:58AM (#101941)

    Different AC here. Your comparison of a heart attack to being a Muslim is very telling, but it is a false equivalency.

    "Reality is that which when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away."

    and

    The Quran is more coherent (toward violence).

    Please provide quotes from the Quran supporting this just as you quoted from the bible. That should be argument enough.

    • (Score: 2) by keplr on Sunday October 05 2014, @08:20AM

      by keplr (2104) on Sunday October 05 2014, @08:20AM (#101950) Journal

      I can do better than giving a few examples. There's an absolutely fantastic resource that catalogs all of these things in the Bible and the Quran. Here's the relevant link to violence and cruelty section.

      The Skeptic's Annotated Quran - Cruelty in the Quran [skepticsannotatedbible.com]

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      • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday October 05 2014, @08:31AM

        by Anonymous Coward on Sunday October 05 2014, @08:31AM (#101952)

        Hey, you surprised me!
        I haven't seen that one before.
        A cruel god is the same thing as promoting violence.
        eyeroll

        • (Score: 2) by keplr on Sunday October 05 2014, @08:43AM

          by keplr (2104) on Sunday October 05 2014, @08:43AM (#101955) Journal

          Cruelty and violence are practically synonyms, yes. There's plenty of both in this context. I'm not sure what you're even trying to defend at this point. Your incredulity is approaching self-parody, so this will have to be my last comment in this thread because you're not actually contributing anything of substance.

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          • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday October 05 2014, @08:57AM

            by Anonymous Coward on Sunday October 05 2014, @08:57AM (#101958)

            > Cruelty and violence are practically synonyms, yes.

            Cruelty by God is not even close to advocating that his adherents practice violence.

            > Your incredulity is approaching self-parody,

            And your credulity in the kind of spittle-spraying lunacy of sites like thereligionofpeace.com while implying that you have a doctorate level understanding of the religion is a parody.

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday October 05 2014, @08:25AM

      by Anonymous Coward on Sunday October 05 2014, @08:25AM (#101951)

      That's a rabbit hole that is pointless to go down. I've done it too many times.
      The guy will quote the "sword verse" and a couple of others.
      You can point out the context was limited to a specific conflict, he'll deny that it is limited.
      You can point out all the other verses that do not have a limited context and preach peace, he'll cite some obscure verse that says you can ignore all of the parts about peace.
      You can point out that no serious scholar of islam agrees with his interpretation of that obscure verse, he'll insist that he's still right.
      You'll come away convinced that all the stuff about islam being a religion of violence really is just crazytown paranoia, he'll think you are a libtard.

      • (Score: 2) by keplr on Sunday October 05 2014, @08:40AM

        by keplr (2104) on Sunday October 05 2014, @08:40AM (#101954) Journal

        Well, as a "libtard" (Social Democrat, usually vote Green Party USA), I probably wouldn't automatically reach for that sort of attack--or an attack at all for that matter. I'll just point out that these are some very poorly formed ideas you've mentioned that don't map onto reality with much accuracy.

        It's worth pointing out that most of the calls for violence in the Quran are both open-ended and aggressive [thereligionofpeace.com]. That means to say that they are not limited in time or to a specific historical grievance. Calls to violence are usually directed to go on for as long as non-Muslims and criminals exist, and are not meant to be strictly defensive in nature. Apostates (Muslims who become atheists or convert to a different religion) are also explicitly targeted for violence. Please, just read the Quran yourself.

        no serious scholar of islam

        Most serious scholars of Islam are Muslims themselves, so not the best source of unbiased analysis. I'd never look to a devout Christian for an accurate account of the Bible, especially not when these materials are so readily available for any literate person to make their own judgements.

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        • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday October 05 2014, @08:51AM

          by Anonymous Coward on Sunday October 05 2014, @08:51AM (#101956)

          Dude, you are citing the thereligionofpeace.com -- its game over right there.
          If looking at the front page of that website doesn't convince you that they are a bunch of bigots with zero academic qualifications, then hope is lost for you.

          > Most serious scholars of Islam are Muslims themselves

          While the idea that the people who practice a religion can't have an informed opinion of their own religion is circular reasoning on the level of drowning a witch to prove she isn't a witch, all of the non-muslims with PhD's in middle eastern religion also disagree with you.

          • (Score: 2) by keplr on Sunday October 05 2014, @09:09AM

            by keplr (2104) on Sunday October 05 2014, @09:09AM (#101962) Journal

            It's mostly just a collection of links to other sites. But stay off the front page as the commentary is rather tactless and unfiltered by any restraint of decency. I'm very critical of Islam, as I am with all religions, but I do not hate anyone. I also am very explicit that one should not fall into the trap of conflating Islam (the religion) with any ethnic group. Anyway, It's a decent compilation of actual quotes from the Quran on the page to which I linked. So there's not a criticism of any substance there.

            It's really illustrative of how tuned up political correctness is about this subject. You simply can't speak ill of Islam on the left. It's frustrating, as a liberal, when the only people willing to speak candidly with me about this topic also have some rather frightening political baggage that I of which I want no part. Then I turn around and say there's a disturbing amount of depravity and violence in the Christian Bible too, and I'm left standing alone. Well I'm not going to pull punches from either side just to gain friends.

            the people who practice a religion can't have an informed opinion of their own religion is circular reasoning

            What do you call someone so open-minded and critical of their own religion that they are willing to leave it? Can you find me one? I'm sorry, but you're appealing to authority and it just doesn't work for me. It's white noise. If you're a true believe, you are too biased to participate in this specific conversation. There are other topics they'd be value contributors to, but a critical analysis of religion's struggle with secularism isn't one.

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            • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday October 05 2014, @09:18AM

              by Anonymous Coward on Sunday October 05 2014, @09:18AM (#101964)

              > It's a decent compilation of actual quotes from the Quran on the page to which I linked. So there's not a criticism of any substance there.

              Yeah, like the sword verse. Been down that rabbit hole before. You with your doctorate level understanding of islam should know the context of those quotes and the interpretations put on them by non-crazy people. But you don't, you take TROP's bullshit at face value because you have precisely zero cultural literacy in islam.
              > What do you call someone so open-minded and critical of their own religion that they are willing to leave it?

              Yeah, the only good muslim is a former muslim. Heard that line of bullshit all the time on sites like TROP.

              > I'm sorry, but you're appealing to authority and it just doesn't work for me.

              So if the people who are experts on the topic are out, what does that leave?

              > Then I turn around and say there's a disturbing amount of depravity and violence in the Christian Bible too, and I'm left standing alone.

              So what? No one is attacking Christians here, that's just cover for you to attack muslims. Don't give me that "I hate all religions equally" bullshit.

              • (Score: 2) by keplr on Sunday October 05 2014, @09:21AM

                by keplr (2104) on Sunday October 05 2014, @09:21AM (#101966) Journal

                I guess we have to stop talking then, if you simply refuse to believe me when I plainly state what I actually believe and just assume I'm acting in bad faith. That's usually how this sort of thing ends and it is very disappointing to me.

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                • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday October 05 2014, @09:37AM

                  by Anonymous Coward on Sunday October 05 2014, @09:37AM (#101967)

                  > I guess we have to stop talking then, if you simply refuse to believe me when I plainly state what I actually believe and just assume I'm acting in bad faith.

                  Words and actions man.

                  You take TROP at face value, what am I supposed to think?
                  You deny that anyone with a PhD in islamic studies whether they are muslim or not, could know better than you, what am I supposed to think?

                  How about this. You do what I've done. Run through each one of those citations from TROP. Google the verse number and the word "quran" and read the interpretations from people who aren't bigots. Yes, I have done that. Once upon a time, about a decade ago, I thought maybe there was something to all this hate for muslims. You know, where there is smoke there is fire. But in every single case, every ... single ... case, the interpretation from those assholes was that of extremists, not the mainstream.

                  The quran is like any other popular religion - when you read the quran, it reads you. If you want to find advocacy for hate and violence in it, that is what you will find. Not because it is there, but because it is in you and that's what you chose to see, it is the lens you wear.

                  • (Score: 2) by keplr on Sunday October 05 2014, @10:30AM

                    by keplr (2104) on Sunday October 05 2014, @10:30AM (#101975) Journal

                    Paraphrasing Daniel Dennett, religious scholarship is like stamp collecting: very few people do it, and they have little influence. A sophisticated and liberal scholar might have a nuanced and tempered understanding of their religion compatible with contemporary secular society, but he doesn't have any authority or influence on the vast majority of believers who are more than willing to take on board the unsophisticated version of the faith. Those are the people I'm concerned with. What the PhDs say is essentially irrelevant, because it just hasn't gained much currency. If all Muslims were like that, accepted those interpretations, then we could call it a day.

                    I don't know what your background is, but you sound like you've done at least as much reading as I have so share with me what you've found. Let's start with a simple topic. Apostasy. Educate me on what Islam's position is on that. Give me the most charitable interpretation. From what I've read, the Quran specifies that it is a serious crime (16:106) that must be punished, it doesn't specify how or to what extent. The Hadith reaffirms that it is a crime, and adds that the proper punishment is death (Sahih al Bukhari 4:52:260). There are over 20 Muslim countries that actively punish apostates in some way, including with death. You just don't see this sort of thing with other religions today. So what am I missing about apostasy?

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                    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday October 05 2014, @05:11PM

                      by Anonymous Coward on Sunday October 05 2014, @05:11PM (#102082)

                      or influence on the vast majority of believers who are more than willing to take on board the unsophisticated version of the faith. Those are the people I'm concerned with. What the PhDs say is essentially irrelevant, because it just hasn't gained much currency.

                      I will hold you to that. What the vast unwashed masses of muslims actually do is what matters. Not what a small minority of extremists do. Not what their books say. Not what their scholars say. Not what other scholars say about their books.

                      With respect to apostasy then, all the verses in the quran that say there is no compulsion in religion don't really count. [themodernreligion.com] Nor does it count when the quranic scholars says that it isn't apostasy that uniquely requires punishment in this life, [blogspot.co.uk] but apostasy combined with their version of treason against the state. [fiqhcouncil.org]

                      What matters to you is how it is actually practised. So to that I say the actual number of people executed for apostasy by any recognized government is vanishingly small and it only happens in the most extremist of theocracies like Iran and Saudi where they execute people for things like drug trafficking at a rate at that are couple of orders of magnitude higher. Sure, a lot of people are casually in favor of the concept, but they don't care so much about it that they are willing to actually make it happen. Same thing with treason laws in the USA, technically a capital offence, but no one has been executed for it in generations.

                      That's not to say all is good and fine with how these conservative societies handle basic human rights that we take for granted, only that the western definition of apostasy isn't their definition of apostasy. There are a lot bigger problems that those countries have with respect to free speech in general, just like basically every 3rd world country and some 1st world countries. [volokh.com]

            • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday October 05 2014, @10:34AM

              by Anonymous Coward on Sunday October 05 2014, @10:34AM (#101976)

              It's really illustrative of how tuned up political correctness is about this subject. You simply can't speak ill of Islam on the left. It's frustrating, as a liberal, when the only people willing to speak candidly with me about this topic also have some rather frightening political baggage that I of which I want no part. Then I turn around and say there's a disturbing amount of depravity and violence in the Christian Bible too, and I'm left standing alone.

              This thread is not about whether all Abrahamic faiths are intrinsically violent, nor about whether all religions are toxic to secular society. This thread is about the claim that there is only one religion, Islam, that specifically and unequivocally demands that non-believers be converted or killed. That claim is not true.

              There surely are Islamic cults that latch on to particular verses of the Quran and follow them manically, but that same phenomenon gives the Christians Jonestown and the 1996 Olympics bomber. Christians, as a group, seem to have worked themselves around to disclaiming their more radical and extremist factions over the past 50 or so years, but it's been much easier for them to see and communicate the abuses in the name of their faith than relatively isolated Muslims. Maybe that's something the Christians should thank Martin Luther for: the notion that there can be many disparate forms of Christianity, so each sect can distance itself from offensive practices of Christianity, where we still seem to think all Muslims are either Sunni or Shia and "all the same."

              • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday October 05 2014, @05:49PM

                by Anonymous Coward on Sunday October 05 2014, @05:49PM (#102105)

                I wouldn't put it on Martin Luther - Islam has more religious diversity than christianity, its just the western eye that barely even notices shia and sunni much less alawites, qutbists, whabbis, sufis, and thousands of others that I can't think of off the top of my head. I'd give much more credit to the magna carta for its part in reducing dictatorship. Religion is a favorite tool of despots, the saudi royal family just love to promote the salafis because it simultaneously gives them cover to be casually brutal to their own subjects and to distract from their own failings -- that political rabble rouser is blaspheming, kill them! (and ignore what they had to say about government).

    • (Score: 2) by aristarchus on Sunday October 05 2014, @09:14AM

      by aristarchus (2645) on Sunday October 05 2014, @09:14AM (#101963) Journal

      Different AC here. Your comparison of a heart attack to being a Muslim is very telling, but it is a false equivalency.

           

      "Reality is that which when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away."

              and

              The Quran is more coherent (toward violence).

      Please provide quotes from the Quran supporting this just as you quoted from the bible. That should be argument enough.

      A different different AC here, just saying that while the Pope is supposedly infallible, only the Ummah in Islam is authoritative, and this can take some time to settle, especially when certain monarchies are funding Wahabis to corrupt the very nature of the one true religion, the Church of the Flying Spagetti Monster, but mostly I just want to say, one AC to another who is not the same AC, but quite possibly gweg, that AC debates over the fundamentals of religion are about as good as virgins discussing investment options.

  • (Score: 2) by Arik on Sunday October 05 2014, @03:20PM

    by Arik (4543) on Sunday October 05 2014, @03:20PM (#102050) Journal
    Except he is right. The Quran, like the Bible, has quotes for both sides to justify their positions in their own minds using it. Mainstream islamic scholars have been quite clear [lettertobaghdadi.com] on their position.
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