Speedhump wrote:I agree that cultural norms are what set the level of freedom of expression. I think we have to accept that these norms change constantly. The US is in a state of high excitement over Islamist terrorism being carried out wordwide.
Agreed. I have argued that to a large extent the excitement is due to hype and misrepresentation - but that is another discussion. (Recommend a bbc documentary called 'the power of nightmares' that deals with the subject over the years.
Speedhump wrote: Against that backdrop it is hardly surprising that the US has this quite minor outburst of fanaticism (minor compared to the regular anti-US hysteria exhibited in the streets of Iran, say).
I agree that is how it appears on the media. I'd be interested to hear from Iranians (spoonman, where are you?) on what the reality is - the last documentary I saw, showed most young Iranians actually drinking coke etc. But I agree with your main point - that it is hardly surprising that there are some in the US who are acting fanatically against Islam.
Speedhump wrote:I still disagree strongly with the OP's insinuation that the US is 'the land of freaks', thereby tacitly inferring that he does not feel that any Muslim countries have exactly the same problem of xenophobia against the West.
With your obviously strong command of semantics, you can't disagree that his post was deliberately skewed in this way. He has a problem.
To be honest, I didn't see this deliberate skewness and thought his closing quip to be an attempt at humour - the land of the free and freaks - and no different from say Louis Theroux's excellent shows where he shows the freaks of different communities - proving the adage, give them enough rope and they'll hang themselves!
To be honest, it's a bit of a non-story all round - fanatical parents make kids wear outrageous t-shirts, school says no.
I'm appalled when I see muslim toddlers in suicide belts and Jewish kids writing on bombs - but I'm not surprised, as fanatics have kids.
So, apart from not seeing the 'obvious bias' in nostramus' original post (and he hasn't posted since), I think we are in agreement. I don't recall what nostramus' views are generally - so perhaps that's why I just read his first post at face value - as a description of some 'freaks' in the US.
Speedhump wrote:I don't disagree that the children had to be sent home as I can see that they were being used as mouthpieces for their parents' intolerance; however I wish that flag burning mobs were treated the same way and set upon with the water cannon in some other countries also, rather than incited.
I agree.
(However, sometimes reporting is skewed - an otherwise peaceful march in London will almost certainly be overshadowed in the media if a small group chooses to burn a flag etc. The skewing also happens in Eastern media as well - don't get me wrong, and I also condemn the manufactured protest that occur in many countries in the East - eg the riots about the Danish Cartoons - incited by politically minded mullahs and opportunistic politicians..)
Cheers,
Shafique