On January 19 2015 06:43 lastpuritan wrote:
so is france racist or not, i still wonder.
so is france racist or not, i still wonder.
it fucking is to the roots
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Boonbag
France3318 Posts
On January 19 2015 06:43 lastpuritan wrote: so is france racist or not, i still wonder. it fucking is to the roots | ||
Jockmcplop
United Kingdom9184 Posts
A bit off topic but here's Fox News apologizing to the peeps of France and the UK for their ridiculous lies. LOL | ||
kwizach
3658 Posts
On January 18 2015 22:15 WhiteDog wrote: Show nested quote + On January 18 2015 07:32 kwizach wrote: On January 18 2015 05:27 WhiteDog wrote: You re a joke. Getting a prize means nothing, especially when specialists of the discipline are against it. Social scientist do work on a topic, journalists unveil informations which is entirely different - and it is not what Fourest is doing. But I see how well socialized you are, when three condamnation for diffamation and various specialists putting in question her good will is a minor problem. There is a "ce soir ou jamais" where, facing Tariq she showed not only a blatant lack of rigor but also a tendency for lies - misquoting or cutting sentences halfway. Boniface's book is a pamphlet, who has no rigor, but coming from someone who proved itself : but did you read it ? Also, Fourest is not journalist, she is militant. "Specialists of the discipline" were not "against" Fourest's book for which she was awarded the "Prix du livre politique de l'Assemblée nationale" - first because it's not a social science book, meaning it is part of no discipline as such, but also because it was well-received. She is both a journalist (and certainly DOES "unveil information" on several topics, in particular the French far right, but it doesn't look like you've actually ever read her) and a militant - the two are not antithetical. She's not a social scientist and doesn't claim to be. I addressed the condemnations you mentioned - she was mostly condemned not for making inaccurate claims but for revealing information that was private or damaging, meaning that the condemnations were not at all a statement on the quality of her research. I saw the "Ce soir ou jamais" show, I read the book and I read Ramadan's responses. Contrary to what you're saying, he's the one whose rebuttals focus on small details to discredit the entire book, which analyzes clearly and accurately the positions and discourses of Ramadan. It is indeed also a militant book, since Fourest is clearly opposed to his ideology, but there is nevertheless a real effort to look into Ramadan's views and shifting discourses based on his audience. Finally, saying that Boniface is someone who "proved itself" (sic) is very ignorant of his motivations behind the book and the actual contents of the book (yes, I read several chapters). Again, it is a book made to attack people against whom (for the most part at least) he had personal grudges and scores to settle (see his precedent in court against Mohamed Sifaoui which Boniface happened to lose - yes, you could tell he was going to be totally objective in his treatment of the guy he lost to in court). There is no intellectual honesty whatsoever, quotes are taken out-of-context, etc. If you take his book seriously, that tells a lot more about you than it does Fourest. Also, I invite you to take a look at Libération's recent inquiry into the funding of several French think tanks and institutes - perhaps you'll find Boniface's reaction to the inquiry interesting. Again, I'm not particularly a fan of Fourest and there are plenty of topics on which I'm critical of her positions or her work, but to use her to talk about a double standard is utterly ridiculous. On January 18 2015 05:27 WhiteDog wrote: One of my most favorite book is LTI from Viktor Klemperer - a german jew who lived under the nazi regime. In this book he himself compare Mein Kampf to sionist book (mostly Herlz). Is it antisemite too ? He also affirm that zionist and nazi have the same ideology of "perverted romantism" - and note that it is not humor. I'm not interested in discussing your completely irrelevant comparison. Dieudonné had already been making controversial comments about Jews prior to the sketch, and he made much worse comments (for which he was condemned for racial/religious hatred, like I said) just weeks after it. He was progressively less and less invited in the media as his blatant antisemitism became more and more salient. You are just the pure expression of the double standard. You are carefully putting aside the fact that Fourest is not a simple journalist, but someone who always give her opinion on specific subject (she define herself as engaged on some specific topic), her lack of rigor, pointed out by the CSA (how many journalist have warning from the CSA directly pointed at them and not at a paper ? Fourest, Zemmour, who else ?). Specialist of religion and the "laïcité" - people who actually do work - did oppose giving the prize to Fourest (here for exemple). "La tentation obscurantiste" is not a journalist book, but labelled as an essay. Her "work" is a political act, pro "choice", LGTB and whatever, and nothing more than that, closer to the pamphlet than any form of journalism - which is exactly what Dieudonné has been doing at first. Even your critic of Ramadan's critic is poor (you did not saw the same emission as I did, or maybe it is our eyes that differ). For those who read french and who want a quick and easy explanation of Fourest's way of "working", here is a small exposé of Fourest's "work" on - or against - Jean Ziegler (http://www.acrimed.org/article3119.html). I never said that Fourest was not a militant - in fact, I mentioned it myself in my posts, both for her activities in general and for her books, so I'm not sure what you're basing your accusation on (thin air, I'm guessing). Whether you like it or not, she's still a journalist, and she never claimed to be a social scientist. Please do not attempt to pass a column written by five people who just so happen to have personal ties to Pascal Boniface and/or Tariq Ramadan as some kind of evidence that there is a consensus in the scientific community (which, again, Fourest does not pretend to be a part of) against Fourest's work. Again, I'm certainly not saying that her work is devoid of criticism, and I said myself that it was militant. That doesn't mean she has not done valuable investigative work in several of her books (which I'm guessing you haven't read?). For the Ziegler case, I invite you to read her response, again on the facts. On January 18 2015 22:15 WhiteDog wrote: But somehow, when you talk about Fourest. While, when you talk about the racist Dieudonné, the contextualization and the interpretation are nowhere to be found, and it's the simple knowledge of a condamnation and the fact that he made "controversial statement" that suffice to refuse him the right to speak and argue for his case. I wonder if you ever read anything from Boniface in le monde diplomatique (by far the best newspaper still existing in France, with mediapart I'd say) - do you think he ever discuss Fourest or the parisian little world ? Your selective information is a good exemple of Fourest - and its group of people - state of mind. When it is about Fourest, again, you check not only the judgement, but argue the specifics (coincidently by using Fourest's arguments) of it - because she's from the "light" of the "left", and has the "moral" of "universalism" that shine on her ? - just like you are giving an interpretation of Charlie Hebdo's caricature ("it's not racist because they are criticizing the far right"). But when it's Boniface - or Dieudonné - the court ruling by itself suffice, and the core of his arguments are not only judged irrelevant but are eventually tainted. Can you tell me if Boniface has ever been accused of diffamation (even for his pamphlet) ? The answer is no (unlike Fourest), and now you're finding this case about the financing of the IRIS to discredit the man (which is funny considering what is the IRIS) - which is the same discursive tactics as to point out my fault of language (but I'm perfectly okay with that, my english vocabulary and grammatical skill is effectively a good way to judge the value of my arguments). Again, it is a perfectly good exemple of the double standard. I've never valorized Dieudonné, I don't really care about him (an antisemite guy who lost itself in a pointless crusade), it's just amazing to see that some people can stay in the media despite condamnations and warnings, and that some other (despite no condamnation for Boniface) are always discredited and eventually silenced. This entire paragraph is you ignoring what I wrote and being willfully misleading when it comes to the types of condemnations the people you mention faced. You pretend the "contextualization and the interpretation are nowhere to be found" when I talk about Dieudonné, and that the "simple knowledge of a condemnation" sufficed to deny him the right to speak - that is utterly false. I explained the chronology of events which led him to progressively be less and less welcome in the media. Contrary to your earlier assertion, he had made controversial statements before his sketch, then he received backlash for his sketch which indeed had problematic undertones, then he proceeded right after the sketch to make blatantly antisemitic statements which got him condemned in court, and followed suit with barely veiled antisemitism in his following shows. While this was going on and his antisemitic obsession with Jews became more and more apparent, he was less and less invited in the media, as I already explained. Next, about Boniface - where exactly am I supposed to have argued against his articles on completely different topics? You mentioned his book to support your case, and I replied on the contents of his book, which like I said is the result of his personal vendettas against many of intellectuals he mentions in it. You can take a look at his lost battle in court against Sifaoui to understand how intellectually honest he is in his opposition to Sifaoui. About Libération's inquiry into the funding of the IRIS, I did not mention it to discredit Boniface - I mentioned his reaction to the inquiry and response to Libération, which should tell you a lot about his intellectual integrity (I wonder what's funny about looking into the sources of the funding of think tanks, btw). More fundamentally and more to the point, your entire example of a double standard based on the differing treatments of Dieudonné and Fourest completely crumbles if you look, as I did, at the motives for their respective condemnations. You accuse me of a lack of contextualization, but it's you who tries to equate Fourest's condemnations for defamation (which were often, as I explained, based on the revealing of private details of the lives of the people she was talking about) and Dieudonné's condemnations for incitement to racial/religious hatred. Do you somehow fail to see the difference between the two? How exactly is Fourest getting condemned for publishing private details of the life of the Le Pen family supposed to be comparable to Dieudonné getting condemned repeatedly for blatant antisemitic statements? How is that example supposed to illustrate a double standard? Stop focusing on Fourest already - you'd have more of a point if you focused on assholes like Zemmour, who's still everywhere you look in the media even though he's been losing a couple of contracts recently. Finally, please stop playing the victim card for me quoting you accurately when you're the one who started one of your posts with the personal attack "You're a joke". | ||
keioh
France1099 Posts
On January 19 2015 07:39 Boonbag wrote: Show nested quote + On January 19 2015 06:43 lastpuritan wrote: so is france racist or not, i still wonder. it fucking is to the roots Care to elaborate ? | ||
SoSexy
Italy3725 Posts
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Paljas
Germany6926 Posts
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Dangermousecatdog
United Kingdom7084 Posts
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lastpuritan
United States540 Posts
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rezoacken
Canada2719 Posts
Congratulations to France (press) there. | ||
lastpuritan
United States540 Posts
and this is not nice. http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/charlie-hebdo-pope-francis-says-those-who-ridicule-others-religions-should-expect-a-punch-9980192.html http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2915662/Cameron-says-Pope-wrong-claim-people-mock-Islam-religions-expect-punch.html am i wrong to love this cameron guy? | ||
Yoav
United States1874 Posts
On January 19 2015 06:43 lastpuritan wrote: so is france racist or not, i still wonder. Yes. I mean, like a lot of places, but still a problem that needs to be looked at. Most of continental Europe has serious prejudice against people from whatever poor country happens to feed into them. Not that this is a uniquely European phenomenon, but the mass migration there is so recent that it has really strongly upset a lot of things. There's no real tradition of integration, which is why you find Europeans who say they don't like "multiculturalism." The racism is usually couched by criticism of some trait of immigrants, most often Islam, but you find all sorts of other things ranging from the sartorial to the culinary to the linguistic. The usual criminal/dirty smears are common as well, as with any poor population. Open racism is rare, but the truth is if you send identical resumes to companies with the name "Ahmed" or "Mark," you'll get a very different rate of response. Edit: On January 19 2015 10:51 lastpuritan wrote: if you commit blasphemy and im offended, i still can punish you with law, i guess. so practically thinking there is not much difference between how religion is important to pakistan, and us. What? Where? Nowhere in the free world does blamphemy get you the death sentence, nor does it carry any penalty at all in any free country I'm aware of. Also, in (sorta) defense of the Pope, there is a difference between his position and Camerons. Governments write laws. The Catholic Church is a bully pulpit. The PM says what should be legal and what shouldn't. The Pope says what we should do or not. The Pope gets to be the "I disagree with you" and the PM has to be the "but I defend to the death your right to say it." | ||
rezoacken
Canada2719 Posts
On January 19 2015 10:51 lastpuritan wrote: if you commit blasphemy and im offended, i still can punish you with law, i guess. so practically thinking there is not much difference between how religion is important to pakistan, and us. What are you talking about ? Blasphemy (not to be confused with hate speech) is not condemned by law, your feeling of offense is irrelevant, at best you'll pressure some people to not offend you. No difference with a state having a state-religion... sure. Although yes I agree with Cameron there but I don't think it's a very relevant debate here. The pope is not supposed to be some figure of authority in what happens in secular country. | ||
Yoav
United States1874 Posts
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lastpuritan
United States540 Posts
im not seeing any news about punishing blasphemy recently but here lies: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blasphemy_law its 2015, it must be okay to say fuck your mohammed or jesus or moses whatever. and pope (as a religious leader) says you get punch ! if you dare to do that. a punch can kill a human being, you know. | ||
rezoacken
Canada2719 Posts
On January 19 2015 11:10 lastpuritan wrote: there is no death penalty but these are : http://archive.maltatoday.com.mt/2009/03/08/t13.html and http://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2014/05/28/which-countries-still-outlaw-apostasy-and-blasphemy/ im not seeing any news about punishing blasphemy recently but here lies: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blasphemy_law its 2015, it must be okay to say fuck your mohammed or jesus or moses whatever. and pope (as a religious leader) says you get punch ! if you dare to do that. a punch can kill a human being, you know. Oh yeah. If your statement meant "there are some laws in some european countries". Then sure. Kind of different than a wide "us". | ||
Incognoto
France10239 Posts
Tomorrow you'll have to tell me whether or not I'm homophobic please. | ||
Yoav
United States1874 Posts
On January 19 2015 11:10 lastpuritan wrote: there is no death penalty but these are : http://archive.maltatoday.com.mt/2009/03/08/t13.html and http://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2014/05/28/which-countries-still-outlaw-apostasy-and-blasphemy/ im not seeing any news about punishing blasphemy recently but here lies: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blasphemy_law Interesting articles. But I'm noticing a conspicuous lack of free world prosecution for blasphemy, even in places with outdated laws. Denmark has a law, but it was last used in '38 to prosecute Nazis (get rekt). And the "blasphemy law as a part of hate speech" regulation seems pretty common. As an American, I'm skeptical of hate speech regulation, but plenty of free countries have it without letting it get into "prosecution for blasphemy" territory. I'll grant that Greece, Spain, Italy and India seem to have actual, enforced blasphemy laws. | ||
Makro
France16890 Posts
On January 19 2015 14:17 Incognoto wrote: Ah, the joys of waking up at 6 AM to browse the internet and learning you're apparently racist. I never knew! Thank you TL, thank for enlightening me. Tomorrow you'll have to tell me whether or not I'm homophobic please. i had more or less the same feeling :D | ||
Yoav
United States1874 Posts
On January 19 2015 15:12 Makro wrote: Show nested quote + On January 19 2015 14:17 Incognoto wrote: Ah, the joys of waking up at 6 AM to browse the internet and learning you're apparently racist. I never knew! Thank you TL, thank for enlightening me. Tomorrow you'll have to tell me whether or not I'm homophobic please. i had more or less the same feeling :D Ever taken the unconscious bias test? It's the same thing but objective. | ||
Incognoto
France10239 Posts
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