Yick...the "Caricature Riots" in Damascus and Beirut; Inside the Mind of a Killer
Still feelling craptastic, although I dragged my butt into work today because...yeah. I'm stupid. That and I'm just well enough to be going out of my skull from boredom.
I may post another part tonight for Facing the Heart in Darkness. Or I may just crawl directly into bed. Depends on how sucky I feel.
I do apologize for the delay, but this stomach bug sucks.
Anyway, I've been seeing some discussion about the Danish Charicature Riots, especially among the Europeans on my FList. As I've been in and out of it pretty much for the past five days, I haven't really gotten involved in the discussion nor have I been able to really think clearly about it.
I did, however, find a very good write up about what happened this past weekend.
Juan Cole, a professor of history at the University of Michigan who specializes in Middle Eastern Studies has the best, most balanced, and most level-headed take on the caricatures that riled the Muslim world that is very much worth reading.
Sample quote:
I really recommend that you read the whole thing...
ETA: A Sign of the Times...
via Atrios
Freaky-ness.
Once upon a time, you'd have to search someone's bedroom and find the diary when you had people like Jacob D. Robida, the New Bedford 18-year-old who attacked patrons in a New Bedford gay bar with a hatchet and a gun and then subsequently died in a shootout with police in Arkansas.
Now, you can always read Robida's My Space page to get a look inside the mind of a killer.
Anyone else just a little creeped out by this? Or is it just me?
I may post another part tonight for Facing the Heart in Darkness. Or I may just crawl directly into bed. Depends on how sucky I feel.
I do apologize for the delay, but this stomach bug sucks.
Anyway, I've been seeing some discussion about the Danish Charicature Riots, especially among the Europeans on my FList. As I've been in and out of it pretty much for the past five days, I haven't really gotten involved in the discussion nor have I been able to really think clearly about it.
I did, however, find a very good write up about what happened this past weekend.
Juan Cole, a professor of history at the University of Michigan who specializes in Middle Eastern Studies has the best, most balanced, and most level-headed take on the caricatures that riled the Muslim world that is very much worth reading.
Sample quote:
I want to underline that few places in the Muslim world have seen violence over the caricatures, so far mainly Damascus and Beirut (which are unexpected in this regard.) Protests in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iraq, Iran, Egypt, and elsewhere have been nonviolent. This is not to play down the seriousness of what happened in Damascus and Beirut over the weekend — acts which can only inspire horror and condemnation — only to set it in context. There are 1.5 billion Muslims. A lot of Muslim countries saw no protests at all. In some places, as in Pakistan, they were anemic. The caricature protests are resonating with local politics and anti-imperialism in ways distinctive to each Muslim country. The protests therefore are probably not mostly purely about religion.
I really recommend that you read the whole thing...
ETA: A Sign of the Times...
via Atrios
Freaky-ness.
Once upon a time, you'd have to search someone's bedroom and find the diary when you had people like Jacob D. Robida, the New Bedford 18-year-old who attacked patrons in a New Bedford gay bar with a hatchet and a gun and then subsequently died in a shootout with police in Arkansas.
Now, you can always read Robida's My Space page to get a look inside the mind of a killer.
Anyone else just a little creeped out by this? Or is it just me?
no subject
I've been trying to catch up on facts since they started burning the embassies - the actual printings of the cartoons were in September, so the situation has some build-up.
As far as I understand, a lot of the kerfluffle started with the murder of that Dutch filmmaker. Then a Danish professor was doing a lecture, and was quoting the Qur'an - and wound up getting death threats for this. After that, the community were fairly afraid of what would happen, and so when the children's book author needed illustrations for his book about Muhammed, he had serious trouble finding illustrators who dared do it - and they wound up doing it anonymously. This was the situation Jyllandsposten wanted to prove a point about, by inviting caricaturists to draw these cartoons. Of course, since I don't read arabic, this is a mixture of Danish, Norwegian, British, American newspapers.
Though, Arabic journalists stationed in Norway has stated that they've not reported several errors to their paper regarding who said what, with the result that the head of the press organization in Norway - who was advocating the free press, but not necessarily the drawings, has been portrayed as Editor of Jyllandsposten, and similar errors. The journalists just said that it was something that would sort it self out. (Paraphrasing.)
Then you also come to the part where Denmark's Queen Margrethe is being portrayed as a racist in some of the demonstrations. The reason for that: The Queen's biography was published last year. Parts of it was translated to English. The translator mucked up - and now the Islamic world thinks she's against islam. What she was commenting on was how one should provide alternatives to the very fundamentalistic parts of islam - that might be less violent, instead she was quoted as saying that one should provide opposition to islam. Because of an error in translation. But then again, this whole thing is rather stupid.
I don't think the violence is universal. The media will play things like this up - and relish it for as long as they can. Unfortunately, there are idiots on both sides.