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Originally Posted by solomon
I think realistically
Western Countries have more potential to deal with the lives of radicalized or potential radicals in their own countries.
Reading up on Mr. Nawaz's views, it seems like there needs to be a combination of law enforcement and civil community engagement/education along with a competing narrative of what it means to be a Muslim in a western country.
That needs to be done both by the Muslim community and the larger community as a whole.
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The thing is, the Muslims want their hijabs, daily prayers regardless of work-timings, halal food, etc. There are so many religious restrictions that put off the people they work and live with.
You can't "law enforcement" on those things, they are human rights. Neither can you force the people who live there to "deal with it" because it is also their right not to put up with such oddities.
It is kind of like a quagmire that nobody wants to talk about. It segregates communities because to live together means that there is a certain social standard to adhere to, and people of certain religious affiliations cannot do that due to their commitments.
Quote:
Originally Posted by RRW
Not saying they are wrong. But this day western media is pretty much equivalent to global media. Majority of people in this world. only believe what this media is been told and forced to go bond the other part of the world. Which pretty much sad reality really
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That is because most alternative media don't know how to report from a neutral point of view. The reason why people don't read certain stuff is because the agenda it pushes is obvious in the print.
The art of writing a good piece has to be subtle even if it has to skew a POV.