It's actually quite interesting to bring up the skeptic's annotated Bible, since that website has found the Koran contains a higher ratio of violent/hateful passages per verse than the Bible. I believe the ratio of violent/hateful passages in the Koran is twice as high as in the Bible.
2. The Bible contains crimes supposedly sanctioned by God that the Quran does not - eg genocide (killing of women, children, livestock.
Unfortunately, the Koran DOES contain passages where entire peoples were wiped out because they rejected the messages of prophets.
3. The vast majority of Jews and Christians rightly reject these verses as 'prescriptive verses'
The passages are clear in themselves.
4. Some Jews and Christians DO view these verses as prescriptive and have carried out these Biblical crimes (eg religous terrorist Baruch Goldstein and historically all the pogroms, Crusades etc done in the notion of Christian penance etc)
Cite specific examples, or you're talking out of your rear end.
6. The majority of Muslims don't consider the fewer violent verses of the Quran to mean global jihad against all non-Muslims.
Let me know when the ulema 'abrogated' the concept of offensive Jihad.
Otherwise, see above.
7. the majority of Islamophobes think their interpretation of the Quran concerning jihad is more valid than what the majority of Muslims (scholars and believers alike) say. (What is especially funny is that so-called experts - such as Guru Bob - admit to not actually having read the whole Quran or understand Arabic.)
No need to cite Robert Spencer. I'll simply cite uncontested scholars of Muslim history:
Middle East historian Bernard Lewis argues that "the overwhelming majority of classical theologians, jurists, and traditionalists (specialists in the hadith) understood the obligation of jihad in a military sense."[40] Furthermore, Lewis maintains that for most of the recorded history of Islam, from the lifetime of the Prophet Muhammad onward, the word jihad was used in a primarily military sense.[41]
In reading Muslim literature -- both contemporary and classical -- one can see that the evidence for the primacy of spiritual jihad is negligible. Today it is certain that no Muslim, writing in a non-Western language (such as Arabic, Persian, Urdu), would ever make claims that jihad is primarily nonviolent or has been superseded by the spiritual jihad. Such claims are made solely by Western scholars, primarily those who study Sufism and/or work in interfaith dialogue, and by Muslim apologists who are trying to present Islam in the most innocuous manner possible David Cook, Understanding Jihad, University of California Press, 2005, p.165-6
8. The reality is that it is equally wrong to view Islam as a violent religion because of the fewer and less violent verses in the Quran (as compared to the Biblical verses) - for the same reason in point 5.
And here we go back to what I brought up to rudeboy before:
Muslims have craftily changed the terms of debate to focus on descriptive acts of violence in the Bible or passages that regulate warfare (jus in bello).
Just out of curiousity, but do you not see a great deal of dishonesty from the Muslim apologetic side in this debate?
Why are Muslims so lousy at addressing what's actually been said by Robert Spencer, et al, by creating straw-men responses rather than addressing what is in the Koran or finding similar passages from the Bible?
I feel Muslim apologists only prove Robert Spencer's point by avoiding the terms of the debate.
What would you think if someone made a statement and the other side, in a frenzy, went off topic with wild tirades that do not address the carefully considered comments made by the opposing side?