| >It almost feels like you're being misunderstanding and misquoting on purpose. Says the guy who responds to a fraction of the arguments and makes absurd arguments expecting to be taken seriously. >Genuinely voluntary apostasy, punished by death, happens. And it's clearly 'not succumbing to social pressure' to do it in countries that criminalize it and punish it by death.[1] What the hell are you even on about? You make 0 sense. You were talking about apostasy and I merely explained that it's nothing out of the ordinary that people can succumb to social pressure and change their identity, this was very specific in the context of french society. So spare me your islamophobic rants. >And then you replace 'integral part of your identity' by merely 'part of your identity', however that's the important word you're omitting. So? You clearly don't understand the english language very well. Integral merely means "important, essential..." and leaving it out doesn't change the essence of the statement.
Keep hairsplitting tho. >However, particular musical genres were never an integral part of my identity the same way people are gay or not, or have a particular ethnical background. Terrible comparison. A taste in music is not the same thing as a religion which encompasses almost every aspect of your life.
Again, terrible terrible comparison. >Attributing some special powers to a class of mere opinions is wrong, misguided and often used as a tool of oppression. Yea, you just perfectly described France's abuse and misuse of 'satire' and 'free speech' to discriminate against minorities.
France has its own blasphemy laws, although they don't label them as such, they are functionally and consequentially, the exact same. Not to mention what secular France has done in its colonial past, murdering and torturing millions of Algerians and Africans for resisting occupation and opposing secularism. Learn your own history and present before you try to lecture others. |
The fact that apostasy is possible and exists, in France or elsewhere, is precisely the proof that religion is not 'essential' (to use your own prefered word) to a person's identity. I'll let you look up what "essential" means, it's perfect in this context.
That makes religion far more similar to musical taste (ever heard of Rock'n Roll as a way of life?) than to ethnicity.
By the way, accusing people who criticise the barbary of blasphemy & anti-apostasy laws of islamophobia is a cheap move but quite typical.