Hundreds of protesters stormed the Swedish embassy in Baghdad in the early hours of Thursday morning and set it on fire, a source familiar with the matter and a Reuters witness said, in a protest against the expected burning of a Koran in Sweden.

  • @bossitoOP
    link
    English
    221 year ago

    The burning is in Sweden, not Iraq. These poor people only know about it because they’re informed and agitated by religious leaders profiting from this violence. Mobs in Iraq cannot and should not determine the law in Sweden, I think we can all agree on that.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      -3
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      Muslims in Sweden probably don’t love this move either.

      Should Swedes also support demonstrations, where Muslim Swedes burn Bibles, Torahs, LGBTIQ+ flags etc, as long as they cite “freedom of speech” and or wanting to do a “social experiment” as their primary motivation?

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        141 year ago

        They do

        A Muslim activist who had received permission to burn a Torah and a Bible outside the Israeli embassy in Sweden on Saturday said he was backing off from the move, adding that he only wanted to draw attention to the recent burning of the Quran in the country.

      • @bossitoOP
        link
        English
        121 year ago

        It’s not about supporting. Swedish officials have been condemning these acts. It’s about allowing it or not and if not, on which basis? Geopolitics is not the rule of the land… and shouldn’t be. People manipulating mobs against Sweden know all this and still do it, they’re the ones at fault here.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          -10
          edit-2
          1 year ago

          I’m not saying that this demonstration should be banned, because people in Iraq got aggressive.

          I’m saying that this demonstration should be banned, because this demonstration goes against modern Swedish values and laws. Being openly hostile towards certain religious minorities and ethnicities is not something Swedish authorities should protect.

          Burning a Quran is a message of hate towards Muslims, that’s simply it.

          • @bossitoOP
            link
            English
            171 year ago

            Sorry, but if we’re going to be that strict about hate speech then we also must ban the quran itself, where racial violence, ethnic hate and slavery are promoted and justified. If we allow the quran we must allow people to hate the quran as well.

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              English
              -81 year ago

              Swedish law guarantees freedom of religion. You can criticise the Quran, you can hate it, you can promote alternative humanist interpretations of the Quran, but the Quran itself will always be the symbolic representation of Muslims. This is simply reality.

              Every ancient religious text has passages that did not age well, that is still not a reason to spread hate tho.

              • @bossitoOP
                link
                English
                81 year ago

                I know enough about the religious texts to know that’s a huge simplification. And while the old testament does have horrible things in it, the quran goes far beyond. This is something we should be able to discuss freely.

                • @[email protected]
                  link
                  fedilink
                  English
                  -11 year ago

                  Arguing which religious scripture is worse is a useless excercise imo.

                  I don’t argue against criticism of the Quran. Even in Iraq, there are many people, that publicly do this.

                  Burning the Quran is not a critique and is not an invitation of a civil discussion. It is a declaration of extreme hate. Assuming anything different is just being overly charitable to a bunch of literal neo-Nazis.

                  • @bossitoOP
                    link
                    English
                    51 year ago

                    And assuming that the sensitivies of people burning embassies should be accounted for is being overly charitable to a bunch of literal religious-nazis. These are 2 very different degrees of violence. It’s not the same burning a book and burning an embassy (luckily no one died, but not that the mob cared).

              • @[email protected]
                link
                fedilink
                English
                51 year ago

                How does person A burning a book influence person B’s freedom to exercise a religion exactly? Your religion binds you, not everybody else.

                Every single religious person in the world needs to come to terms with the fact that the majority of other people in the world does not believe their religion to be true and does not believe their holy book to be holy. That’s part of living in a connected world.

      • @teslasaur
        link
        English
        4
        edit-2
        1 year ago

        Should Swedes also support demonstrations, where Muslim Swedes burn Bibles, Torahs, LGBTIQ+ flags etc, as long as they cite “freedom of speech” and or wanting to do a “social experiment” as their primary motivation?

        Support? No, and Sweden certainly doesn’t “support” the burning. But the government should absolutely not interfere with the right to demonstrate or burn whatever the fuck the individual owns and paid for with their own money.

        I should probably mention that a record breaking gathering held a muslim prayer (which requires the same permission as the quran-protest) the same day in gothenburg: https://www.gp.se/nyheter/göteborg/tusentals-samlades-för-bön-i-slottsskogen-historiskt-1.103502911

        Should the government block that too?

          • @teslasaur
            link
            English
            11 year ago

            Did you miss the point on purpose?

            I said that the law view them equally because the law/government isn’t supposed to interfere with free speech. That doesn’t mean that the people that make up the government have to agree with what the individual does under their right to free speech.

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              English
              11 year ago

              Bro your point doesn’t make sense.

              Praying in public is a threat to nobody.

              Burning holy books or symbols of ethnic or religious minorities is a potential attempt to cultivate hate among the masses.

              Just look at this comment section, people here pretend that this burning is a proof of every Islamophobic talking point that they have ever read about in some schizo Youtube comments.

              Free speech stops when it has the potential to severly restrict the freedom of other people’s lifes imo. This applies more or less to pretty much every Western country.

              One could argue whether or not this is the case here, but having the police escort and protect the madmen while they burn the Quran, is just beyond free speech under any definition.