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Author Topic: The friendly and polite Europe related terrible jokes thread  (Read 1109212 times)

ChairmanPoo

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Re: The friendly and polite Europe related terrible jokes thread
« Reply #10920 on: October 29, 2020, 02:44:32 pm »

I've come to the conclusion that it's neither immigration nor religion. Its socioeconomical. If you look to a pattern in common between islamic stabber-terrorists and mosque-shooters: we're looking at disenfranchised male millennials more often than not of lower economic strata and more often than not with lower education levels.   
I think a number of people with these characteristics just break under the pressure of a system that is offering them scant opportunities. Depending on their particular background some will become religious integrists. Others far right activists. Others will mannifest it in other ways, some unpleasant, some not.
But the gist of the thing is that, to me, it's pretty clear that we're talking about a socioeconomical problem, rather than a religious or cultural one
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Loud Whispers

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Re: The friendly and polite Europe related terrible jokes thread
« Reply #10921 on: October 29, 2020, 03:27:58 pm »

I've come to the conclusion that it's neither immigration nor religion. Its socioeconomical. If you look to a pattern in common between islamic stabber-terrorists and mosque-shooters: we're looking at disenfranchised male millennials more often than not of lower economic strata and more often than not with lower education levels.
Radicalised Muslims in UK more likely to be born in Britain, rich and depressed

New research from Queen Mary University of London has found youth, wealth, and being in full-time education to be risk factors associated with violent radicalisation. Contrary to popular views – religious practice, health and social inequalities, discrimination, and political engagement showed no links.

The study found that recent immigrants in poor and violent neighbourhoods tend to be most averse to radicalisation, whereas those committed to radicalisation were from wealthy families, well-educated and well-integrated 3rd gen or more.

Quote
sympathy levels increased among those under 20, those in full time education rather than employment, those born in the UK, and high earners (£75,000 per year or more).
Interestingly, migrants and those speaking a language other than English at home, and those who reported having poor physical health, were all less likely to show sympathies for terrorist acts. In addition, those who reported suffering from anxiety and depression were no more likely to display sympathies, provoking some new research questions about the relationship between radicalisation and mental health.
Mahathir Mohamad is right, in that the West has become so divorced from the concept of belief that it no longer has the capacity for understanding those who do. The notion that a young person would succeed materially in the West yet see very little value in the material success must seem strange to those for whom all violence is a result of socioeconomic relations, and the concept of a person with their own ambitions and convictions sufficient to murder or launch a suicide attack is incomprehensible. This is why even a total hermetic blockade, or some bureaucratic filtration of actively radicalised persons, would fail to address why the West cannot provide a platform of belief appealing to those who should be her success stories: Well integrated, well-off and well-educated - yet determined to harm their neighbour for having different beliefs, or a lack thereof.

Yes, yes, you're a very hard man making hard decisions about bombing refugees that the soft-bellied liberals don't understand. However, the problem is actually religion, so bombing refugees will not stop anything. This can be demonstrated by how many people have been bombed already, and yet attacks continue.
If we stopped bombing other countries, there would be much less refugees from aforementioned bombs. Not saying you're arguing that, as I'm sure you already agree, just pointing out that Th4DwArfY1 is referencing how no matter how many times people bent on killing innocents for being different walk into Europe, no matter how many people believe closing the open door policy isn't a controversial opinion, our glorious overlords will nevertheless refuse to accept any link between heterogeneous religious communities and religious violence, unless the topic of news is Ireland and other post-colonial borders.

It's not so much the policy proving itself as reality proving policy. There are only two border policies: Records or No Records. There used to be a third policy called Being An Island but that's gone the way of the dodo in the modern world, unless you're literally in the abyss of the open Pacific. Countries that go in for all this emotive bullshit about Keeping Them Out or even Saving The Refugees are dancing around the reality that they don't actually have control over borders.
Countries can just ignore the Schengen Area agreement like the Visegrad bois and resume policing of their borders. The EU would throw a hissyfit as usual but who cares

Nobody in the "West" has the chutzpah to reach this level of violence on their domestic borders. So it's just not going to happen, simple as that. Any policy that would be accepted would be subverted in short order. Which means there's no point in even wasting words on it since it poisons politicians to admit they don't have this kind of control, and the discussion should be all about policies which incentivize compliance with record-keeping entry.
That's rather absurd, you can accomplish with naval patrols, a fence, land patrols and border checkpoints a satisfactory border control without blowing the legs off every pedestrian with a warzone minefield. People will still find ways through; yet the simple act of raising the difficulty of entry from "you can walk in" to "papers please" means the vast majority will have the joys of introducing themselves to bureaucracy or bust. Many of the EU countries have already shown they are capable of enforcing border control to the majority of transit goers due to the COVID-19 restrictions should they so choose to. Meanwhile countries that do enforce borders show that whether landlocked or seaborne, such as the UK or Hungary, an enforced border means you have a few hundred to a few thousand enter your country illegally instead of the millions countries like Germany and Sweden faced. Furthermore, as the UK shows, on a year to year basis most of the 2,000 annual channel crossers get caught, processed and granted asylum status, having determined their authenticity or not.
I believe border control, for the reasons I've stated above, will not address the fundamental issue of why Christmas markets keep turning into slaughterhouses. Yet viewed independently of terrorism or cultural cohabitation, a policed borders confers many advantages over an open border.

Least secure border in the world is US-Mexico. Maybe there's competition for least secure, but more people cross that one than the rest. It's a farce. You think you'll manage a border harsher than Trump in a democratic system?
Harshness is not a necessary requirement to policing, European police do not tend to carry guns.

And while the right continues to push on trying to get people to acknowledge "the dirty fact" that they think they're correct on but doesn't even recognize the reality of border policies, the situation just continues as it has. It's not even about achieving an actual material goal, it's just about getting people to say immigrants are bad. Getting caught up in "immigrants good/immigrants bad" discussions paralyzed the US for around 50 years now, ultimately ending with deciding immigrants were good. Real immigration management is pretty much exactly where it started but we have computer databases and secret police now. I don't recommend going down that kind of path.
That's good, because I am not seeking to create a dichotomy between native born and immigrant, especially since I have repeatedly posted evidence that it is the well-integrated scions of Muslim migrants who pose more trouble than Muslim migrants.

Of course, one global ecosocialist revolution coming right up.
I'll settle for everyone gaining a collective level of reason. No one gets murdered for their beliefs, we purge our elite strata of pedophiles, slavers and traffickers, we stop pointless wars around the world, we stop revolving all of our society around the acquisition of meaningless status and wealth. The world would improve drastically for people, plants and animals

Quote
A border =/= A blockade
Might as well be for this purpose. One thing Kissinger was right about is that you can't get something for nothing in geopolitics. On top of humans flowing like intelligent water and thus subverting the barriers put in front of us, a nation is not going to accept otherwise normal relations with a "and your people aren't allowed to ever visit us, filth" tacked on the end. Those days are over. One of the two will give - you will lose your access to the precious resource deposit mined by orphans for pennies on the yuan or you'll change your visa policy. Then someone comes over on that visa and decides they're the sword of God, we have this argument about practical policymaking, and the cycle starts anew. Then the ecocide kills everyone.
It is not helpful to imagine only extremes are possible, when working alternatives already exist. I don't want my country to export financial services in exchange for importing militants. I feel there is an equitable trade that can occur; the UK ceases support for terrorist funding states like Saudi Arabia, and in return the UK military-industrial complex loses some money. Win win

France doesn't fuck around when it comes to religion. Once you've gone and oppressed your own majority religion a couple times it's really burned into the collective unconsciousness. As long as Le Pen stays out I expect the whole thing to end in something like banning religious schools, that's been proposed before by some French politicians I think.
It is easier for a liberal nation to oppress its own religion than to oppress another's religion, a consequence of post-colonial remorse, trauma and revanchism.

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Corbyn's not necessarily dead in the water, as he's still fighting the decision to suspend him. Not saying a sequel's likely but he may survive the ides of covid
Liberalism is, of course, inherently doomed to collapse. But I suspect that it shall only end with Corbyn alone amongst the ash of what once was Britain.
Upon a field of ashen Greggs and hollow Spoons, the ruined wreckage of the British Isles that devilish druids from Norf FC successfully plane-shifted into the Sun lies silent but for the trembling steps of the wandering Jezza. Betrayed by his own clan, his back adorned with a thousand swords, he wanders - his rose red blood dripping with each step. He has wandered the land for so long, a small hammer held gently in a weak and frail arm, so emaciated by the entropy of time that his veins have turned black and his skin turned a vitruvian white.
Beneath the shadow of a tall tower, a testament to the hubris of the Stock Mages and Exchange Warlocks, the bones and skulls of the indentured souls labour eternally for a competitive London living wage. Part of the tower, part of the company.
Jezza raises his hammer meekly, igniting what remains of his humanity. The skies darken and the screams of the damned turn silent as the Dark Lord steps down from his throne of lies.
"FOOOL. YOU SHOULD HAVE ACCEPTED YOUR DEATH, OUR LORD IS MONEY MADE MANIFEST, NO ONE CAN DEFEAT HIM," bellowed Nick Clegg the Betrayer, ensorceled with Z'Uck Er'Berg's energy. The Dark Lord silenced the Betrayer with a flick of his commanding hand.
"I will deal with this pitiful relic," said Tony Blair, raising his maul.

hector13

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Re: The friendly and polite Europe related terrible jokes thread
« Reply #10922 on: October 29, 2020, 03:50:06 pm »

It most certainly is a migration problem. Whether the consequences become evident one or two generations down the line they still stem from migration. Willingly refusing to see issues in a long-term perspective just make you, well, short sighted.

My optometrist has been wrong all these years!

Radical Islam isn’t an immigration issue ‘cause you can’t stop an idea at the border, nor can you pull it out of someone’s head space. Further, not all Muslims are susceptible to violent radicalization, just as all violent radicals aren’t Muslim (for some reason auto-correct wants that to be in all caps).
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scriver

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Re: The friendly and polite Europe related terrible jokes thread
« Reply #10923 on: October 29, 2020, 04:28:48 pm »

I've come to the conclusion that it's neither immigration nor religion. Its socioeconomical. If you look to a pattern in common between islamic stabber-terrorists and mosque-shooters: we're looking at disenfranchised male millennials more often than not of lower economic strata and more often than not with lower education levels.   
I think a number of people with these characteristics just break under the pressure of a system that is offering them scant opportunities. Depending on their particular background some will become religious integrists. Others far right activists. Others will mannifest it in other ways, some unpleasant, some not.
But the gist of the thing is that, to me, it's pretty clear that we're talking about a socioeconomical problem, rather than a religious or cultural one

The question one might ask oneself then is: Why do Sweden have the highest number of ISIS joinees per capita of Europe?


It most certainly is a migration problem. Whether the consequences become evident one or two generations down the line they still stem from migration. Willingly refusing to see issues in a long-term perspective just make you, well, short sighted.

My optometrist has been wrong all these years!

Radical Islam isn’t an immigration issue ‘cause you can’t stop an idea at the border, nor can you pull it out of someone’s head space.

Muslims tend to have migrated to Europe within 1-3 generations, hector.


Quote
Further, not all Muslims are susceptible to violent radicalization, just as all violent radicals aren’t Muslim (for some reason auto-correct wants that to be in all caps).

I also heard that the sky is blue and bears defecate in woods.
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Loud Whispers

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Re: The friendly and polite Europe related terrible jokes thread
« Reply #10924 on: October 29, 2020, 04:32:01 pm »

The question one might ask oneself then is: Why do Sweden have the highest number of ISIS joinees per capita of Europe?
Too much eurovision has that effect on the soul

Muslims tend to have migrated to Europe within 1-3 generations, hector.
That and letting in active militants & recruiters is a silly idea

hector13

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Re: The friendly and polite Europe related terrible jokes thread
« Reply #10925 on: October 29, 2020, 05:20:39 pm »

Nobody likes a smartass, scriver.

If you already have 3 generations worth of immigration, how does stronger border control now prevent the spectre of radicalization from rearing it’s ugly head?

If you’d like me to expand on what I said, I think it’s not an immigration issue because not all immigrants are Muslim, which means you have to ask immigrants their religion, which is a protected status in Europe, so you probably wouldn’t get away with directly asking about it anyway.

Pointless rambing: At what point do you determine someone is a religious zealot enough to deny them entry to your country? Sure if you know someone is engaging in militancy and they show up at your border, send them away or better yet arrest them, but what about the average Muslim showing up to come in? You going to say that you’re so worried in 20 years or 40 years time when their kids or grandkids grow up they might be more likely to become a radical that they can’t come in? /Pointless rambling

Or do you just want to make more snarky comments and not engage me in discussion and I’d be better served coming up with my own snarky comments like “well you’ve got three generations of Muslims so when do you plan on developing your 4th dimensional border control m8?” :p
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martinuzz

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Re: The friendly and polite Europe related terrible jokes thread
« Reply #10926 on: October 29, 2020, 05:43:42 pm »

The question one might ask oneself then is: Why do Sweden have the highest number of ISIS joinees per capita of Europe?
Surströmming
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scriver

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Re: The friendly and polite Europe related terrible jokes thread
« Reply #10927 on: October 29, 2020, 06:53:33 pm »

Nobody likes being condescendingly lectured with self-obviousities either, hector.

Nobody likes a smartass, scriver.

If you already have 3 generations worth of immigration, how does stronger border control now prevent the spectre of radicalization from rearing it’s ugly head?

Refusing to not make more mistakes because mistakes have already been made and there's already radical rightwing terrorists here now so there's no point in not making the problem with rightwing terrorists grow larger over time is a very strange way of thinking and I don't think it would be responsible for any government to act according to it.

If we for the sake of the argument accept migration as the root cause then the reasonable course of action is to diminish that inflow so that countries can deradicalise the radicals who have already established themselves in the country without additional radicals constantly flowing in and making the groups even larger.


Spoiler (click to show/hide)

It's a migration issue because it roots itself from migration. Pretending it isn't is just posturing; likely for the ideological sake of refusing to acknowledge that migration has bad sides and not just good.

As for the latter part, I don't see any problems at all with a lowered migration rate resulting in average Muslims not getting in if does mean a lowered rate of rightwing terrorists in the future. We as people in a community must consider the effects of our actions upon our communities even in the long term. It's not really that unlike our environmental situation right now, except your the boomer who is refusing to change because the consequences of not changing will lay upon future shoulders rather than their own.


The question one might ask oneself then is: Why do Sweden have the highest number of ISIS joinees per capita of Europe?
Surströmming


Very probable, must be taken into account
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McTraveller

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Re: The friendly and polite Europe related terrible jokes thread
« Reply #10928 on: October 29, 2020, 07:16:58 pm »

Here's what I can't quite figure out: at what size of a community does requiring "borders" even come into being in the first place?

Consider that people can move into or out of my neighborhood without any kind of special checks; the only requirement is really if you can get the mortgage cleared.

Consider in the US that you can move from state to state basically with no bureaucracy either; I mean yeah you may need to change your drivers license, but the rest is just change of address forms which is no different than you'd do for moving across town.

So what is it specifically that suddenly makes moving from nation to nation such a big deal?  You can't even say it's taxes, because moving from state to state already changes tax jurisdiction. So it's not taxes per se that causes it.

So just what is it about a "national" border that makes moving around so different than just moving across a town?  Is this even a reasonable distinction in the first place?  Put another way - why don't we have such restrictions on moving from town to town (except in the case where "the next town over" might be across that political border)?
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feelotraveller

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Re: The friendly and polite Europe related terrible jokes thread
« Reply #10929 on: October 29, 2020, 11:50:47 pm »

Lots of putting the cart before the horse here.  (Along with some more astute comments.)

Quote
The fact is that the role of religion in radicalisation (and deradicalisation) is grossly overestimated. There is actually no empirical evidence to support the claim that religion (any religion) and ideology are the primary motivators of violent extremism.  [...]

Factors such as anger at injustice, moral superiority, a sense of identity and purpose, the promise of adventure, and becoming a hero have all been implicated in case studies of radicalisation. Religion and ideology serve as vehicles for an “us versus them” mentality and as the justification for violence against those who represent “the enemy”, but they are not the drivers of radicalisation.
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/jan/14/the-role-of-islam-in-radicalisation-is-grossly-overestimated

The rise of radicalisation over the last couple of decades has largely been driven by the response to 9/11 and the global currents triggered by the Iraq invasion.*  Trump has not helped.  (probably more appropriate to ameripol discussion but see https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2020/10/01/political-violence-424157)

Fundamentally it is a social problem not a religious problem (thanks LW).  Islam has been latched onto by many who are disgruntled by the world we find ourselves living in.  In other circumstances they be Proud Bois.

Border controls are a furphy here, regardless of their other (ir)relevancies. 


* There's a longer history where invasions would be more appropriate but didn't want to detour here too much.
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hector13

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Re: The friendly and polite Europe related terrible jokes thread
« Reply #10930 on: October 30, 2020, 12:22:43 am »

Nobody likes being condescendingly lectured with self-obviousities either, hector.

Nobody likes a smartass, scriver.

If you already have 3 generations worth of immigration, how does stronger border control now prevent the spectre of radicalization from rearing it’s ugly head?

Refusing to not make more mistakes because mistakes have already been made and there's already radical rightwing terrorists here now so there's no point in not making the problem with rightwing terrorists grow larger over time is a very strange way of thinking and I don't think it would be responsible for any government to act according to it.

If we for the sake of the argument accept migration as the root cause then the reasonable course of action is to diminish that inflow so that countries can deradicalise the radicals who have already established themselves in the country without additional radicals constantly flowing in and making the groups even larger.

Why not both at the same time? While you’re deradicalising you learn the process of radicalization and find common themes in populations prone to extremism that can be targeted to reduce the incidence, similar to the research LW posted.

Migration during this means you know who is susceptible to it, what signs to look out for, and can guide the migrants toward resources that will prevent it from happening.

Teaching critical thinking in schools (while being a good idea in general for everyone) will also provide folk with the tools necessary to question potentially radicalizing material, reducing incidence further. Heck, just classes on the signs of radicalisation would be useful, and isn’t limited to the Islamic world either.

Spoiler (click to show/hide)

It's a migration issue because it roots itself from migration. Pretending it isn't is just posturing; likely for the ideological sake of refusing to acknowledge that migration has bad sides and not just good.

I suspect you and I are thinking of different things when we say migration, because when I say migration I mean people moving from one sovereign territory to another, whereas you seem to be focused on the Muslim world, which is why I said the allegedly self-obvious things you got snarky over.

Could you explain what you mean by it being an issue rooted in migration?

As for the latter part, I don't see any problems at all with a lowered migration rate resulting in average Muslims not getting in if does mean a lowered rate of rightwing terrorists in the future. We as people in a community must consider the effects of our actions upon our communities even in the long term. It's not really that unlike our environmental situation right now, except your the boomer who is refusing to change because the consequences of not changing will lay upon future shoulders rather than their own.

Your way is shifting the problem onto someone else, too. This is how you end up with immigrants being treated like cargo on a ship in the Med for weeks on end.
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scriver

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Re: The friendly and polite Europe related terrible jokes thread
« Reply #10931 on: October 30, 2020, 02:05:13 am »

Nobody likes being condescendingly lectured with self-obviousities either, hector.

Nobody likes a smartass, scriver.

If you already have 3 generations worth of immigration, how does stronger border control now prevent the spectre of radicalization from rearing it’s ugly head?

Refusing to not make more mistakes because mistakes have already been made and there's already radical rightwing terrorists here now so there's no point in not making the problem with rightwing terrorists grow larger over time is a very strange way of thinking and I don't think it would be responsible for any government to act according to it.

If we for the sake of the argument accept migration as the root cause then the reasonable course of action is to diminish that inflow so that countries can deradicalise the radicals who have already established themselves in the country without additional radicals constantly flowing in and making the groups even larger.

Why not both at the same time? While you’re deradicalising you learn the process of radicalization and find common themes in populations prone to extremism that can be targeted to reduce the incidence, similar to the research LW posted.

I literally said why in the post you quoted.


Quote
Migration during this means you know who is susceptible to it, what signs to look out for, and can guide the migrants toward resources that will prevent it from happening.

Teaching critical thinking in schools (while being a good idea in general for everyone) will also provide folk with the tools necessary to question potentially radicalizing material, reducing incidence further. Heck, just classes on the signs of radicalisation would be useful, and isn’t limited to the Islamic world either.

Spoiler (click to show/hide)

It's a migration issue because it roots itself from migration. Pretending it isn't is just posturing; likely for the ideological sake of refusing to acknowledge that migration has bad sides and not just good.

I suspect you and I are thinking of different things when we say migration, because when I say migration I mean people moving from one sovereign territory to another, whereas you seem to be focused on the Muslim world, which is why I said the allegedly self-obvious things you got snarky over.

No, we don't, your "sneaking suspicion" is just your own sense of self-superiority.

The reason only Muslim migrants are relevant to the discussion of islamist terrorism is because radical islamists are generally Muslims.

Quote
As for the latter part, I don't see any problems at all with a lowered migration rate resulting in average Muslims not getting in if does mean a lowered rate of rightwing terrorists in the future. We as people in a community must consider the effects of our actions upon our communities even in the long term. It's not really that unlike our environmental situation right now, except your the boomer who is refusing to change because the consequences of not changing will lay upon future shoulders rather than their own.

Your way is shifting the problem onto someone else, too. This is how you end up with immigrants being treated like cargo on a ship in the Med for weeks on end.

Taking responsibility for a problem is not shifting the problem onto others. And no, the current policies is how we ended up with migrants being treated like cargo on the Med.


Lots of putting the cart before the horse here.  (Along with some more astute comments.)

Quote
The fact is that the role of religion in radicalisation (and deradicalisation) is grossly overestimated. There is actually no empirical evidence to support the claim that religion (any religion) and ideology are the primary motivators of violent extremism.  [...]

Factors such as anger at injustice, moral superiority, a sense of identity and purpose, the promise of adventure, and becoming a hero have all been implicated in case studies of radicalisation. Religion and ideology serve as vehicles for an “us versus them” mentality and as the justification for violence against those who represent “the enemy”, but they are not the drivers of radicalisation.
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/jan/14/the-role-of-islam-in-radicalisation-is-grossly-overestimated

The rise of radicalisation over the last couple of decades has largely been driven by the response to 9/11 and the global currents triggered by the Iraq invasion.*  Trump has not helped.  (probably more appropriate to ameripol discussion but see https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2020/10/01/political-violence-424157)

Fundamentally it is a social problem not a religious problem (thanks LW).  Islam has been latched onto by many who are disgruntled by the world we find ourselves living in.  In other circumstances they be Proud Bois.

Border controls are a furphy here, regardless of their other (ir)relevancies. 


* There's a longer history where invasions would be more appropriate but didn't want to detour here too much.

If bolded things are provided by a religion then religion is not just a "vessel" for radicalisation, it is the part of cause of radicalisation itself.

The "current" radicalisation is also not a thing that has it's roots in the last 20 years. It's a movement that's been going on since Salafism broke ground circa 140 years ago and it's been growing since then.
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feelotraveller

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Re: The friendly and polite Europe related terrible jokes thread
« Reply #10932 on: October 30, 2020, 02:21:19 am »

Lots of putting the cart before the horse here.  (Along with some more astute comments.)

Quote
The fact is that the role of religion in radicalisation (and deradicalisation) is grossly overestimated. There is actually no empirical evidence to support the claim that religion (any religion) and ideology are the primary motivators of violent extremism.  [...]

Factors such as anger at injustice, moral superiority, a sense of identity and purpose, the promise of adventure, and becoming a hero have all been implicated in case studies of radicalisation. Religion and ideology serve as vehicles for an “us versus them” mentality and as the justification for violence against those who represent “the enemy”, but they are not the drivers of radicalisation.
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/jan/14/the-role-of-islam-in-radicalisation-is-grossly-overestimated

The rise of radicalisation over the last couple of decades has largely been driven by the response to 9/11 and the global currents triggered by the Iraq invasion.*  Trump has not helped.  (probably more appropriate to ameripol discussion but see https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2020/10/01/political-violence-424157)

Fundamentally it is a social problem not a religious problem (thanks LW).  Islam has been latched onto by many who are disgruntled by the world we find ourselves living in.  In other circumstances they be Proud Bois.

Border controls are a furphy here, regardless of their other (ir)relevancies. 


* There's a longer history where invasions would be more appropriate but didn't want to detour here too much.

If bolded things are provided by a religion then religion is not just a "vessel" for radicalisation, it is the part of cause of radicalisation itself.

The "current" radicalisation is also not a thing that has it's roots in the last 20 years. It's a movement that's been going on since Salafism broke ground circa 140 years ago and it's been growing since then.

Over 1.8 billion Muslims beg to differ.

Edit: followed to source from wikipedia:
Quote
Far from being religious zealots, a large number of those involved in terrorism do not practise their faith regularly. Many lack religious literacy and could actually be regarded as religious novices. Very few have been brought up in strongly religious households, and there is a higher than average proportion of converts. Some are involved in drug-taking, drinking alcohol and visiting prostitutes. MI5 says there is evidence that a well-established religious identity actually protects against violent radicalisation.
https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2008/aug/20/uksecurity.terrorism1
« Last Edit: October 30, 2020, 02:41:50 am by feelotraveller »
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scriver

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Re: The friendly and polite Europe related terrible jokes thread
« Reply #10933 on: October 30, 2020, 03:04:21 am »

That not all religious people become extremists does not mean religion does not play a role for the ones who do.
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hector13

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Re: The friendly and polite Europe related terrible jokes thread
« Reply #10934 on: October 30, 2020, 10:11:26 am »

Nobody likes being condescendingly lectured with self-obviousities either, hector.

Nobody likes a smartass, scriver.

If you already have 3 generations worth of immigration, how does stronger border control now prevent the spectre of radicalization from rearing it’s ugly head?

Refusing to not make more mistakes because mistakes have already been made and there's already radical rightwing terrorists here now so there's no point in not making the problem with rightwing terrorists grow larger over time is a very strange way of thinking and I don't think it would be responsible for any government to act according to it.

If we for the sake of the argument accept migration as the root cause then the reasonable course of action is to diminish that inflow so that countries can deradicalise the radicals who have already established themselves in the country without additional radicals constantly flowing in and making the groups even larger.

Why not both at the same time? While you’re deradicalising you learn the process of radicalization and find common themes in populations prone to extremism that can be targeted to reduce the incidence, similar to the research LW posted.

I literally said why in the post you quoted.

It presupposes radicalization in immigrants, which could be rooted out while doing what you said in your post, and doesn’t tar a third of the world as potential terrorists who need to be kept away at all cost.

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Migration during this means you know who is susceptible to it, what signs to look out for, and can guide the migrants toward resources that will prevent it from happening.

Teaching critical thinking in schools (while being a good idea in general for everyone) will also provide folk with the tools necessary to question potentially radicalizing material, reducing incidence further. Heck, just classes on the signs of radicalisation would be useful, and isn’t limited to the Islamic world either.

Spoiler (click to show/hide)

It's a migration issue because it roots itself from migration. Pretending it isn't is just posturing; likely for the ideological sake of refusing to acknowledge that migration has bad sides and not just good.

I suspect you and I are thinking of different things when we say migration, because when I say migration I mean people moving from one sovereign territory to another, whereas you seem to be focused on the Muslim world, which is why I said the allegedly self-obvious things you got snarky over.

No, we don't, your "sneaking suspicion" is just your own sense of self-superiority.

The reason only Muslim migrants are relevant to the discussion of islamist terrorism is because radical islamists are generally Muslims.

If I felt superior I obviously wouldn’t need to engage you in this because I’d be right and you’d be wrong and understanding your position better wouldn’t change that, but that’s why I’m continuing this; I want to understand your position, despite the snarky snippets which I could really do without.

Let’s explore your idea then. You can start deradicalisation programs, but how do you identify those that need to go through them? How do you get them onto the program? What should happen to someone who doesn’t complete the program successfully? How does stopping Muslim migration while doing this help?

You said we should consider the long term effects, good and bad, of our decision making on our communities. What do you think are the long term effects of your idea, which I see as stopping specifically Muslim migration and profiling what’s left for deradicalisation, correct me if I’m wrong?

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As for the latter part, I don't see any problems at all with a lowered migration rate resulting in average Muslims not getting in if does mean a lowered rate of rightwing terrorists in the future. We as people in a community must consider the effects of our actions upon our communities even in the long term. It's not really that unlike our environmental situation right now, except your the boomer who is refusing to change because the consequences of not changing will lay upon future shoulders rather than their own.

Your way is shifting the problem onto someone else, too. This is how you end up with immigrants being treated like cargo on a ship in the Med for weeks on end.

Taking responsibility for a problem is not shifting the problem onto others. And no, the current policies is how we ended up with migrants being treated like cargo on the Med.

Matteo Salvini wasn’t exactly an open doors guy, scriver, and he’s the reason why there are (or were, at least) ships of migrants sitting around in the Med.

Do you think the newly turned away migrants are going to go back home because you said no at the border, wherever that border may be? There’s a reason they packed up their shit and left, so if you say no, they’re going somewhere else. That’s not taking responsibility, that’s making it someone else’s problem.

That not all religious people become extremists does not mean religion does not play a role for the ones who do.

Urge to snark rising.
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Look, we need to raise a psychopath who will murder God, we have no time to be spending on cooking.

If you struggle with your mental health, please seek help.
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