Sangman, on 31 July 2012 - 02:39 AM, said:
It's ideas like these (I'm not saying wayskobf has that himself, just in general) that make me think people actually need to meet some people from the Middle East. It really looks as if Westerners assume anyone from the Middle East will turn to terrorism unless they are "educated". This is all bollocks of course.
You are right, it is bollocks. Many terrorists are well educated, and some even graduated from respectable universities. It's the height of western arrogance to assume that deeply held ideological convictions can be swept away with some western style education. To be fair, though, that is not what wayskobfssae said. He said that the "power" of the terrorists might get "dissolved" as a "side-effect" of improved education. Whatever that is supposed to mean.
Sangman, on 31 July 2012 - 02:39 AM, said:
Yeah, there are people who turn to terrorism but they are an absolute minority. The past year I've met people from Iran, Iraq, Oman and whatnot. They're nice people.
First of all, whether terrorists are a minority is really beside the point.
If terrorism is a serious problem, it's a serious problem whether terrorists and potential terrorists constitute 1% of the population or 50%.
Secondly, the people you are meeting in Europe are not a random sample of the native populations of Iran, Iraq, etc. Either they have enough money to travel, or they have chosen to permanently leave those countries. The very fact that you are meeting them and speaking to them in a language that isn't Arabic already sets them apart.
Third, having a discussion as though "terrorism" is the biggest threat from Muslim countries is very 2002. The question you need to be asking is whether the cultural transformation of Europe that is being brought on by a huge influx of immigrants from Muslim countries is a good thing.