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by hackuser
3651 days ago
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> Suppose a hundred million members around the world are in favour of death for leaving the group I'm not sure hypotheticals help here; it's hard to address issues that lack the dimensions of reality. > Is that enough for western countries to say hey, that's not acceptable? To note that there may be a serious incompatibilities in beliefs? In another post you said you didn't mean to troll, but I'll say that this question seems like one. Again, I'm not sure what this question would mean in reality. Each individual has their own beliefs; democracies outlaw certain behavior; I don't see what their religion has to do with it. A person either follows the law or not, regardless of their religion. We can't imprison or punish people based on some prediction of future behavior, and that prediction based purely on religion would be absurd. Maybe we should imprison all poor people, who commit crimes at a higher rate, or all men under the age of 30 - imagine how much lower the crime rate would be then! Also, all politicians. |
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Here's Pew Research on the topic[1] I'm going off. According to this, 74% of Egyptian Muslims favour sharia. Of those, 81% support stoning for adultery, and 86% for death for apostasy. Egypt has 80M Muslims, so that's around 50M people in one country alone, that believe in death for leaving the religion.
I'm not saying anyone should be punished. Just that some groups, overall, seem to have many members with views opposite what the country wants. Is this not a fair subject to discuss when talking about integrating hundreds of thousands, or millions of people, into another country?
I am uncomfortable with a blanket ban on a particular religion, because it's not accurate enough. But to pretend there's absolutely no signal at all doesn't seem good either. I'm don't agree we should just assume everyone will put such extreme personal views aside.
Thank you for excusing my poor phrasing.
1: http://www.pewforum.org/2013/04/30/the-worlds-muslims-religi...