[Rhodes22-list] what is list etiquette? Ignore That!

Cheryl O'Grady cheryl.ogrady at mail.com
Fri May 20 09:17:38 EDT 2005


1) agree with much of the article; it was an excuse, not a reason, for rioting; Islamic fundamentalism is pretty brutal
2)reporters apparently did not get the story wrong, as the Red Cross apparently has reported just such incidents to the US military.  Newsweek just did not have enough sources, did not dig deeper, as they should have done, to verify the initial source.
3)fundamentalism is fundamentalism, whether it be Islamic, Jewish, or Christian.  they preach mostly bigotry and hate, and I sure don't see much Christian in the behavior of so-called "Christian" fundamentalists.  I don't think Jesus would have, either.  He was a pretty inclusive dude.

cheryl




----- Original Message -----
From: "brad haslett" <flybrad at yahoo.com>
To: "The Rhodes 22 mail list" <rhodes22-list at rhodes22.org>
Subject: Re: [Rhodes22-list] what is list etiquette? Ignore That!
Date: Wed, 18 May 2005 09:01:54 -0700 (PDT)

> 
> Ric,
> 
> I was responding to your post when my daughter put her
> elbow on the keyboard (I'm home all week playing Mr.
> Mom.)  Ignore that first post.  At least she didn't
> call 911 like she did when she was 1 1/2.  Those cops
> still think I'm lying.
> 
> Anyway, I've been too busy to make any pithy political
> comments but not to busy to read.  Here's an article
> from today's Chicago Tribune.  Not only is it funny in
> its own way but dead on the money correct.  This is
> neither left nor right folks, just a fastball straight
> down the middle.
> 
> Brad
> "CoraShen"
> 
> 
> Seeking sanity in the asylum
> 
> 
> 
> By Kathleen Parker
> 
> May 18, 2005
> 
> Reaction to an inaccurate Newsweek report that led
> recently to rioting and death in Afghanistan suggests
> that hysteria is, indeed, contagious.
> 
> To briefly recap, Newsweek reported in a small blurb
> May 9 that American interrogators at Guantanamo Bay
> had flushed a Koran down a toilet in attempts to get
> Muslim terror suspects to talk. Once the Newsweek
> story was broadcast abroad, the usually reticent
> hate-America crowd erupted in mass pique. Havoc
> ensued. At least 15 Afghans died and many more were
> injured.
> 
> All because of a story that may not have been true.
> The "knowledgeable U.S. government source" who told
> Newsweek's Michael Isikoff and John Barry about the
> flushing apparently wasn't so knowledgeable. At the
> risk of seeming insensitive, may I suggest that c'est
> la guerre and urge everyone to follow Dr. Lamaze's
> always-useful advice: Breathe deeply and focus.
> 
> What we need here is a little perspective.
> 
> First, we all can agree that flushing a Koran down a
> toilet, if physically possible, would be both
> insensitive and rude, though Westerners generally have
> a higher tolerance threshold for such offenses. Put it
> this way: You could flush a Bible down the toilet in
> front of Goober in Kabul, and it's unlikely that
> Mayberry suddenly would be awash in blood.
> 
> Without disrespecting true believers of Islam, one
> also could debate the relative miseries of seeing our
> favorite scripture disappear into the plumbing versus,
> say, watching airplanes fly into buildings, killing
> thousands of innocents. Remember, these are terrorist
> suspects captured after 9/11, not kidnapped members of
> an Afghan boys choir.
> 
> The apparent Newsweek mistake was regrettable, but we
> should beware of allowing ourselves to mirror the
> emotional reactions of people who were by no measure
> justified in their response--even if the story had
> been proven true.
> 
> The same people foaming over a reported act of
> blasphemy didn't flinch while executing women for
> stepping outside sans burqa. I'm afraid my moral
> outrage in favor of the morally outrageous is tapped
> out.
> 
> While the world was reacting in righteous indignation
> to the Newsweek report, another story was circulating
> about Turkish women in Germany being executed by
> family members in "honor killings" sanctioned by
> certain interpretations of the Koran. Their offense?
> Acting like Western women. Or, in the pithy words of a
> 14-year-old Turkish boy who was justifying an
> execution: "The whore lived like a German."
> 
> Before the good Muslim world objects, let me assert
> what shouldn't need saying: Islam isn't the problem
> here. The problem is ignorance and the right-wing
> Islamist faction that will use the Koran for its
> purposes, whether to incite a riot or murder a woman
> who refuses to wear her headscarf. The enemy is
> extremism.
> 
> I have no interest either in defending Newsweek or in
> justifying interrogators' methods, but let's be blunt:
> Those rampaging in Afghanistan didn't need a reason to
> riot; they needed an excuse. That the media provided
> one is regrettable, but that regret needs to be
> tempered by perspective and objectivity.
> 
> Instead, much of the anger the past several days has
> been directed not at the Islamist extremists who went
> berserk, but at the reporters who apparently got the
> story wrong. What if they'd been right? Should
> Newsweek not have reported it? Would the riots have
> been justified if someone had flushed a Koran?
> 
> We might debate those questions, but meanwhile we
> should resist the urge to overreact as some have in
> suggesting that the press should be restricted or
> stifled. Although imperfect, a free press is one of
> our nation's highest expressions of freedom and the
> thing that separates us from the same right-wing,
> authoritarian, extremist forces that we condemn. Yet,
> an alarming number of Americans, their faith in
> journalists damaged by recent scandals, have lost
> sight of the meaning and importance of a free press.
> 
> A recent University of Connecticut survey found, for
> example, that only 14 percent of respondents knew that
> freedom of the press was part of the 1st Amendment.
> Only 55 percent of those surveyed strongly agreed that
> newspapers should be allowed "to publish freely
> without government approval of a story." Now there's a
> finding to warm the cockles of a Taliban heart.
> 
> Once we start asking the government for permission to
> publish, we become partners in propaganda and cohorts
> of authoritarianism. Far better to risk mistakes--and
> even riots from the lunatic fringe--than to forfeit
> the right to question authority.
> 
> Mistakes will be made, but freedom means living to
> say, "I'm sorry."
> 
> Kathleen Parker is a syndicated columnist for the
> Orlando Sentinel, a Tribune newspaper. ----------
> 
> E-mail: kparker at kparker.com
> Copyright © 2005, Chicago Tribune
> 
> 
> --- brad haslett <flybrad at yahoo.com> wrote:
> >
> > --- Rik Sandberg <sanderico at earthlink.net> wrote:
> > > Cheryl,
> > > > Somehow, I don't think that "political screed" was
> > > all there was to that message, was it? Wasn't it
> > > just one of Ed's little signature addendums? I
> > think
> > > I'd do my best to get over it if you want to hang
> > > out on the Rhodes list, because, we talk about
> > most
> > > anything here, sometimes even politics. Maybe it
> > > would be good if you went to > > www.rhodes22.org/list
> > > > and read the charter. Then you can decide what is
> > > appropriate .... or not and and decide whether you
> > > want to stay .... or not.
> > > > Rik
> > > > -----Original Message-----
> > > From: Cheryl O'Grady <cheryl.ogrady at mail.com>
> > > Sent: May 18, 2005 8:49 AM
> > > To: The Rhodes 22 mail list
> > > <rhodes22-list at rhodes22.org>
> > > Subject: [Rhodes22-list] what is list etiquette?
> > > > I don't think it is kosher for someone to use my
> > > email address from the list to send political
> > > screed.
> > > > > > > "All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is
> > > that good men do nothing."  Edmund Burke, Irish
> > > philosopher
> > > > __________________________________________________
> > > Use Rhodes22-list at rhodes22.org, Help?
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> >
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> >
> 
> 
> 		
> Yahoo! Mail
> Stay connected, organized, and protected. Take the tour:
> http://tour.mail.yahoo.com/mailtour.html
> 
> __________________________________________________
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"All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing."  Edmund Burke, Irish philosopher



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