When I see a group such as Pegida that only start to give a shit the moment they can blame an Arab for it,
You think Pegida is an anti-religious group?
Their leading figure posed as Hitler and publicly posted racist and generally xenophobic sentiments. Everyone who takes part in that movement and thinks they aren't supporting xenophobia is seriously deluded.
They're using the same tactics as the well-known far-right fascist idiots we had in Germany since ever, those insufferable people who use the phrase "I'm not a racist, but…"
They may actually genuinely care about what happened in Cologne, but they certainly use it for their own very definitely
xenophobic agenda, and that is something that very well can be criticized.
Pegida isn't anti-Islam (and certainly not anti-religious in general), it's anti-immigration.
I'mma ask right now that people don't use Islamist.
Adding -ist unnecessarily to things to make them into positions, particularly positions that are implied by that suffix to be evil (AND WHEN THERE'S A PERFECTLY GOOD EXISTING WORD TO USE) is not appropriate debate tactics.
I use the word "Islamist" to denote fundamentalist/extremist Muslims. I use "Muslim" to denote Islamic people in general. I specifically do not want to use the word "Muslim" in a context where fundamentalism/extremism is implied, because that implication isn't true for Muslims in general, which is another reason why I suspect everyone who thinks we should fight Islam as a whole of xenophobia. History shows us that Islam is
not inherently more or less violent than other religions.
I thought this use of the words "Muslim" and "Islamist" was ubiquitous.
I suppose I should ask this of everyone here; what would you have to see to change your mind? Everyone here, mind you. If the answer is "nothing could possibly do that" or "well I already know the facts so that question's pointless", I recommend you take a second look at your position.
I don't really know what I'd need to experience to change my mind about this topic. I know that talking about what's in the Qur'an won't convince me that Islam is the deciding factor in the problems we have with immigrants. I also won't be convinced by pointing out that their values are different from our own – I know that already.
Probably you'd need to show me something that is ubiquitous in their culture that, in it's core, violates something I thought was a value all humans had in common.
Furthermore, beliefs can change, but you typically don't control what you believe. What you profess to believe, how you act, yeah, you choose all those. "Man can indeed do what he wants, but he cannot will what he wants." Religion has to be changed, which usually takes both external and internal influence, from what (little) I know.
I though the general principle that is exemplified in conservation of matter/energy somehow entered the intuition of most people. But no, humans are somehow exempt from the way the interact with the universe, because Free Will or something.
... yeah, if you had paid the least bit of attention to what pediga actually does, you'd know most of their stuff isn't particularly about reacting against religious violence, though that's at times part of it/used as an excuse. They're anti-islam, not anti-religion, with a very heavy (and getting heavier as time passes) dose of racism, xenophobia, and anti-immigration sentiment. Calling them an anti-religious protest group is whitewashing the hell out of what they're about.
Don't even have to be in/near germany to pick up that much, they're pretty blatant about it.
There is nothing racist or illiberal in noticing that some cultures or religions are worse thean others. Considering the contemporary events and world politics it is not unethical or right-wing to protest against the source of the most extreme right-wing views on earth today. Also, don't fool yourself that there are not a ton of people - centrists and liberals included - using the only outlet available to them to protest against what they see as religious violence.
Yes, there are some and it's quite disconcerting, because they are inadvertently supporting actual neo-nazis. Pegida's driving motivations isn't so much concern as it is hate. If they were actually concerned, they'd maybe be damn scared about the rise of racism in Germany, but they aren't. They publicly display behavior know from WWII, such as burning books.
So they attract three kinds of people:
1. Nazis
2. People who don't care about whether Nazis get more power
3. People who don't understand history or social dynamics
I want to support none of them and there is plenty to criticize about each.
Wait, are you calling xenophobia 'disapproving of regressive elements in a culture'?
Well... It's certainly closer to that than it is to "racism". I guess it's inaccurate though since I'm not disapproving of all foreigners, or even most, just very worried about certain ones. A xenophobe would fear or disapprove of foreigners in general, and/or because they're foreign. Not just certain foreigners who think women are property.
I don't think that misuse is really on the same level as playing the race card in a discussion about culture, though. Or trying to defend said misuse.
I'm not defending that misuse, I am attacking the notion of intentionally interpreting what someone else said based on that misuse.