I'm coming up to 50 books now, you'd think uziq would be pleased.
Fuck Israel
The proverb 'A little knowledge is a dangerous thing' expresses the idea that a small amount of knowledge can mislead people into thinking that they are more expert than they really are, which can lead to mistakes being made.
in your LIFE?Dilbert_X wrote:
I'm coming up to 50 books now, you'd think uziq would be pleased.
Everyone thought he was a stupid prat and needed to shut up.uziq wrote:
remember in the late 90s when everyone was shocked and appalled that salman rushdie’s novels were being burned in islamic countries? how everyone tutted at the barbarism and expressed disbelief that a culture could get so upset over some books?
Last edited by uziq (2022-01-28 03:32:03)
https://www.nj.gov/education/amistad/about/Under legislation sponsored by Assemblymen William D. Payne and Craig A. Stanley, schools in the Garden State are moving to recognize the integral part African-Americans have played at every turn in this nation’s history. The Amistad Bill (A1301), which became law in 2002, calls on New Jersey schools to incorporate African-American history into their social studies curriculum. This legislation also created the Amistad Commission, a 23-member body charged with ensuring that African-American history, contributions and experiences are adequately taught in the state’s classrooms.
ok so you clearly haven’t read it.Dilbert_X wrote:
I'm sure he could have found a way to write the same book without insulting Islam.
That's a bit much. The Iranian leadership displayed barbarism by calling for his deaths but it is not like he wrote some stuff that was just misunderstood.According to McRoy (2007), other controversial elements included the use of the name Mahound, said to be a derogatory term for Muhammad used by the English during the Crusades; the use of the term Jahilia, denoting the 'time of ignorance' before Islam, for the holy city of Mecca; the use of the name of the Angel Gibreel (Gabriel) for a film star, of the name of Saladin, the great Muslim hero of the Crusades, for a devil, and the name of Ayesha the wife of Muhammad for a fanatical Indian girl who leads her village on a fatal pilgrimage. Moreover, the brothel of the city of Jahilia was staffed by prostitutes with the same names as Muhammad's wives,[19] who are viewed by Muslims as 'the Mothers of all Believers'.[20]
uziq wrote:
there’s nothing baldly insulting or offensive in the book. nothing that would cause a secular reader’s eyes to widen anyway.
interpreted by conservative muslims, you could stretch and say that discussing the life of the Prophet in quite mundane and naked terms is ‘blasphemy’. i believe an old testament name is called ‘a bastard’ or something in a bit of dialogue - swearing in dialogue in fiction generally isn’t seen as an incitement to riot in sane societies.
Yes, I can't see any muslim finding that at all offensive, why would they unless they're silly people?Macbeth wrote:
Moreover, the brothel of the city of Jahilia was staffed by prostitutes with the same names as Muhammad's wives, who are viewed by Muslims as 'the Mothers of all Believers'.
No uuziq wrote:
once again you’re pontificating on things you know nothing about.
Last edited by uziq (2022-02-14 05:58:06)
Said not STEM graduate ever.uziq wrote:
'why do i need to take a dumb ethics module?' - STEM graduate.
There's something suspicious about the PLA conducting gain of function and genetic-specific virus research.there's nothing prima facie suspicious about gain-of-function research. there are lots of regulatory grey areas, depending on extra-locality and national-level laws and legislation.
Last edited by uziq (2022-02-14 14:43:52)