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airmano
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Posted: 26 January 2016 at 12:49pm |
Ahmad:
Since the embargo was only against the Meccans and allied tribes, hence only they were the targets. |
I think you don't need a psychology degree in order to understand what happened:
A) The Meccans got fed up with the troublemaker and kicked him out.
B) He got very angry about it and said: "This I will pay you back".
C) He did.
Airmano
Edited by airmano - 26 January 2016 at 12:52pm
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The word God is for me nothing more than the expression and product of human weaknesses (Albert Einstein 1954, in his "Gods Letter")
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Ron Webb
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Posted: 26 January 2016 at 2:54pm |
AhmadJoyia wrote:
Since the embargo was only against the Meccans and allied tribes, hence only they were the targets. Your assumption that they were the only rich tribes, must be supported through evidence from you. |
I'm not assuming that. I honestly don't know. What I'm saying is that neither do you.
Here is what we know, or at least what I think we can agree upon:
1. Muhammad and his companions were stopping Quraysh caravans, threatening them with violence and stealing their merchandise.
2. This would be a criminal offense (highway robbery) by any modern standard; but
3. By the unenlightened standards of the "Age of Ignorance", it was called ghazu, and according to Karen Armstrong it was considered a sort of national sport. On the other hand,
4. Even by those standards, robbing your own tribe was outrageous and totally against the rules.
So far, it looks bad for Muhammad as an exemplar of morality, whether modern or ancient. However, you want to engage in a sort of "special pleading" in which you claim that Muhammad's case is exceptional. You claim that:
a. Muhammad had a moral right to retaliate against the Quraysh because he had been mistreated by them.
b. Muhammad limited his attacks to Quraysh caravans because his grievance was only with the Quraysh.
c. Attacking and robbing the caravans of individual Quraysh tribe members is a legitimate form of retaliation.
It is up to you to offer evidence in support of the above three claims. If you could, then you would have a strong case for your special pleading argument. Without that evidence, however, all we have are the four facts I listed above. Those facts by themselves do not paint a very flattering picture.
On the other hand, the mere presence of rich Jewish establishments in the area are recorded in the history. |
I'll take your word for it; but did they operate caravans? Would Muhammad have known enough about them to undertake an attack on them?
How was it difficult for the �Helpers� of Medina to pass this information to the �Migrants�, if that was such an essential for the survivability of their brethren? |
Would the "helpers" have known enough about them? After all, in a lawless culture that apparently considered ghazu a normal part of business, a caravan operator would have to be crazy to make such details widely known.
AhmadJoyia wrote:
This is not what I meant. From your own example, if there is an embargo against Canada, then it is expected that all its citizens including companies etc, would not be allowed to make trades just like Iranian companies/banks are not allowed to do the same, up until few days ago. The only thing is, that you so sagaciously miss out; who is so powerful to do it against the Canadians, if it is not done on moral grounds? Thus it was Muslims� moral high ground that enabled them to tease the superpower of that time and it was this �temerity of the Muslims� that amazed the other Arab tribes. | Muhammad was engaged in what would now be called "asymmetric warfare". It has nothing to do with "moral high ground". Quite the opposite, in fact: it is especially effective because it is a level of moral depravity which civilized societies find abhorrent. Terrorism is a good example of this. | How quickly you change your spectacles to analyses the centuries old situation with those of modern day by drawing flimsy analogies, is nothing but called as �totally out of context�. However, from your perspective being a part of Superpower, you may call your actions as justified as what governed the expulsion of �Mormons� internally, or to the Japanese in WW2, internationally. | My analysis does not depend on context. You were suggesting that Muhammad's tactics were successful because he occupied the "moral high ground". | No! I only said, and as supported by Karen, that it was perceived acceptable to the other tribes of the area. |
I am unable to find your reference to "perceived acceptable". I was responding to your statement in bold above.
You (by person Mr Ron Webb) don�t have to be apologetic here and I don�t think I have committed a Tu-quoque fallacy here as yet; simply because my use of word �superpower� implied the �superpower� of the time, that is, the Meccans; and then drawing an analogy with such justification as our present day superpowers do give to their similar actions. Thus, if you are abhorrent of, as you seems to be (as you gave reference to this fallacy), you should also be abhorrent of the similar actions committed by the then superpower i.e. the Meccans against the Muslims in their expulsion from the homes. Aren�t you? |
What we did to Canadian citizens of Japanese descent during WW2 was indeed abhorrent, because they did nothing to deserve such treatment. As for the Muslim/Quraysh conflict, I don't think we'll ever know who was principally to blame. Of course the Muslims will blame the Quraysh, but we know that the message Muhammad was preaching was extremely offensive to them, and we know that he refused to stop when requested to do so. There is no doubt that anyone preaching against Islam would be forcibly expelled from an Muslim country. Fair or not, it is at least understandable. It can't be compared with Japanese Canadians, who were about the least offensive people imaginable, and wanted only to be accepted by their adopted country.
I know that. But you should rather be happy that I didn�t change it to my liking while quoting Karen! But the question is, do you agree with her notion of head on against the superpower? |
I don't know what you mean by "head on against the superpower". I don't approve of attacking private citizens, and I don't think that is a head-on attack on the superpower as a whole. I see echoes of that attitude in modern terrorist attacks, and I think it is reprehensible.
As I keep trying to tell you, there was no embargo. What right did Muhammad have to impose an embargo anyway? | Moral high grounds as listed above. |
Every terrorist claims the same moral high ground. That's why true justice must be decided and rendered by an independent authority. Otherwise it is nothing more than revenge and self-interest.
No,not even here you can call it tu quoque fallacy, simply because I don't think that the Caravans were innocent but guilty of violating the embargo. Secondly, the Muslims weren't even close to be called as 'Superpower'. |
You weren't comparing superpowers. You were comparing innocent (until proven guilty) persons -- the innocent Quraysh caravan owners/drivers attacked by Muhammad, and the innocent Japanese citizens killed in the nuclear strikes. IMHO the nuclear strike and the killing of thousands of innocent Japanese was a necessary evil that averted the deaths of ten times that many soldiers on both sides if the war had been prolonged. The same cannot be said for the attacks on the Quraysh caravans.
However, I did ask you to tell us if you consider the civilian victims of your Nuke attack as 'innocent' or not? |
Again, not "my" nuke attack. But I repeat: the American nuclear strike in WW2 is irrelevant. It may be morally indefensible, or not; but that would not affect the moral indefensibility of Muhammad's career as a highwayman.
Taking a testimony of a witness/evidence (eg a particular hadith) in an argument whose import could be legal, is all that we aim to look at the Islamic history. Isn�t it? Rejecting such a reliable evidence merely based on �adhoc�, �non-specific� and �frivolous� reason, and in contrast, of accepting a random (whose own truthfulness may be doubtful) person�s testimony (�gossip� or not), is still not convincing, at all. |
(I'm not sure I understood your point, so I hope I am responding to it sensibly.) The hadith narrators are not on trial. The presumption of innocence is to protect persons from the harsh consequences of a wrongful conviction -- better that several guilty caravan drivers should go free, for instance, rather than that a single innocent caravan should be attacked.
In the case of a trial, the benefit of doubt would be applied in whatever way favours the accused. So for instance, if a Muslim judge were to try to impose the death penalty on an apostate, on the basis of a hadith that stipulates it, the defense would be that there is at least a reasonable doubt in the reliability of that hadith. The presumtion of innocencs of the accused means the presumption that the hadith by which he is to be condemned might be false.
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AhmadJoyia
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Posted: 27 January 2016 at 12:46am |
Ron Webb wrote:
AhmadJoyia wrote:
Since the embargo was only against the Meccans and allied tribes, hence only they were the targets. Your assumption that they were the only rich tribes, must be supported through evidence from you. | . I'm not assuming that. I honestly don't know. What I'm saying is that neither do you. |
Thanks Ron for wonderful summarization of your views and let us see how they can logically be addressed; each one of them. Secondly, I already gave you the example of the presence of rich Jewish tribes eg the Banu Nadir tribe, probably equal to, if not bigger & richer than the Quresh.
Now coming to your so called universal known facts, I tend to be selective about them, as below.
Ron Webb wrote:
Here is what we know, or at least what I think we can agree upon:
1. Muhammad and his companions were stopping Quraysh caravans, threatening them with violence and stealing their merchandise. |
Agreed. Since the Quraysh were the oppressors and persecutors of the expelled Muslims, therefore, these caravans were the natural targets of enemy for retaliation. More on this topic, kindly read the Constitution of Medina, where all adherents (including the Jews and other non-Muslim tribes) of this constitution, explicitly and unanimously agreed to consider Quraysh as their common enemy. Hence, it was only through this constitution that the Prophet was authorized to wage ghazu only against the Quraysh and not against any other random tribe not involved in this conflict.
Ron Webb wrote:
2. This would be a criminal offense (highway robbery) by any modern standard; but |
Your tool of using �any modern standard� is in appropriate simply because there was no concept of nation-state. in those times of tribal civilizations. I hope you would know that the commonly used Arabian trading routes of those times, as you call them highway, weren�t owned (or governed) by any single entity or kingdom except when it passes through respective territory of a tribe or a city. The tribal territories weren�t essentially contiguous, all the way from one trading city to another.
Ron Webb wrote:
3. By the unenlightened standards of the "Age of Ignorance", it was called ghazu, and according to Karen Armstrong it was considered a sort of national sport. On the other hand, |
This part doesn�t belong to your list of objection, but part of my reply as supported by Karen.
Ron Webb wrote:
4. Even by those standards, robbing your own tribe was outrageous and totally against the rules. |
Permanent expulsion from one�s tribe was more outrageous than obvious retaliation. It is at this point the �word� temerity� used by Karen can�t be associated with your connotation of �against own tribe� but more closely to �taking head on with the superpower�. .
Now that I have appropriately replied as well as questioned your basic premise for all this debate, it is all the more reason not to talk whatever I have said up till now. But probably that may not quench your thirst. So, going forward to defend all my statements, I present the following, para wise.
Ron Webb wrote:
So far, it looks bad for Muhammad as an exemplar of morality, whether modern or ancient. However, you want to engage in a sort of "special pleading" in which you claim that Muhammad's case is exceptional. |
On the very onset, since you have picked a wrong tool of any modern standard� , hence there is no �special pleading� here. Regarding �ancient�, I think Karen�s analysis should have sufficed. Anyhow, I have now presented you with further evidence from the Constitution of Medina.
Ron Webb wrote:
You claim that:
a. Muhammad had a moral right to retaliate against the Quraysh because he had been mistreated by them. |
You think �Years of persecution and then permanent expulsion� gave no moral right for retaliation?
Ron Webb wrote:
b. Muhammad limited his attacks to Quraysh caravans because his grievance was only with the Quraysh. |
Absence of any proof suggesting otherwise; IHMO, benefit of doubt must go to the accused. Simply, and as per your own acknowledgement, on the principle of �Innocent until proven guilty�. However, now the clear proof from the Constitution of Medina supports my point of view.
Ron Webb wrote:
c. Attacking and robbing the caravans of individual Quraysh tribe members is a legitimate form of retaliation. |
May be not. Kindly provide any evidence in which you think an �Innocent� individual was robbed or killed. The history treats the persecutors as all of �Meccans� or �Quraysh�; it�s up to you to make exceptions, but with solid evidence only.
Ron Webb wrote:
It is up to you to offer evidence in support of the above three claims. If you could, then you would have a strong case for your special pleading argument. Without that evidence, however, all we have are the four facts I listed above. Those facts by themselves do not paint a very flattering picture. |
Your assumed facts have appropriately been answered/questioned. Thus, my 4 replies are redundant, though I have provided appropriate response to each one of them as well.
Ron Webb wrote:
ahmadjoyia wrote:
Taking a testimony of a witness/evidence (eg a particular hadith) in an argument whose import could be legal, is all that we aim to look at the Islamic history. Isn�t it? Rejecting such a reliable evidence merely based on �adhoc�, �non-specific� and �frivolous� reason, and in contrast, of accepting a random (whose own truthfulness may be doubtful) person�s testimony (�gossip� or not), is still not convincing, at all. |
(I'm not sure I understood your point, so I hope I am responding to it sensibly.) The hadith narrators are not on trial. The presumption of innocence is to protect persons from the harsh consequences of a wrongful conviction -- better that several guilty caravan drivers should go free, for instance, rather than that a single innocent caravan should be attacked.
In the case of a trial, the benefit of doubt would be applied in whatever way favours the accused. So for instance, if a Muslim judge were to try to impose the death penalty on an apostate, on the basis of a hadith that stipulates it, the defense would be that there is at least a reasonable doubt in the reliability of that hadith. The presumtion of innocencs of the accused means the presumption that the hadith by which he is to be condemned might be false. |
So what I meant was to consider yourself (and myself) as the prosecutor (defense lawyer) about what happened in the past, in which our Prophet is blamed for ���..Obviously, our Judge/s are our reader/s of this debate (to make their own informed opinion) based upon reliable and trust worthy evidence that we both present here to support our arguments. Thus if you bring a piece of evidence from a �random� person, on a �Witness stand�; should he not be questioned about his source of information especially if he is not the �eye witness� to such an event in history?
Edited by AhmadJoyia - 27 January 2016 at 12:49am
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AhmadJoyia
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Posted: 27 January 2016 at 1:13am |
airmano wrote:
Ahmad:
Since the embargo was only against the Meccans and allied tribes, hence only they were the targets. |
I think you don't need a psychology degree in order to understand what happened: |
Thanks for your enlightenment with paraphrasing from your imagination, but for more details, please see my rebuttal to Ron' post.
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Ron Webb
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Posted: 27 January 2016 at 10:27pm |
AhmadJoyia wrote:
Agreed. Since the Quraysh were the oppressors and persecutors of the expelled Muslims, therefore, these caravans were the natural targets of enemy for retaliation. More on this topic, kindly read the Constitution of Medina, where all adherents (including the Jews and other non-Muslim tribes) of this constitution, explicitly and unanimously agreed to consider Quraysh as their common enemy. Hence, it was only through this constitution that the Prophet was authorized to wage ghazu only against the Quraysh and not against any other random tribe not involved in this conflict. |
The Constitution of Medina begins, "This is a writing of Muhammad, the Prophet, between the believers and the Muslims of Quraysh and Yathrib and those who follow them and are attached to them, and who fight together with them in war." I see no specific mention of Jews or non-Muslims. Is there any reason to suppose that they consented to this, or had any hand in drafting it?
Your tool of using �any modern standard� is in appropriate simply because there was no concept of nation-state. in those times of tribal civilizations. I hope you would know that the commonly used Arabian trading routes of those times, as you call them highway, weren�t owned (or governed) by any single entity or kingdom except when it passes through respective territory of a tribe or a city. The tribal territories weren�t essentially contiguous, all the way from one trading city to another. |
I'm not sure why it matters who owns the highway. It's still wrong to attack a traveller on that highway, regardless of his nationality, tribal affiliation, etc. Muhammad was engaged in what the Geneva Convention refers to as collective punishment: "No persons may be punished for an offense he or she has not personally committed." No matter what your grievance with the Quraysh tribe as a whole, you can't assault and rob an individual caravan driver simply because he is Quraysh.
Permanent expulsion from one�s tribe was more outrageous than obvious retaliation. |
Depends on the "obvious retaliation", I suppose. It's not as outrageous as the penalty for apostasy, for instance. No doubt you believe that Muhammad and his followers did nothing to provoke their expulsion, but no doubt you are basing that solely on Muslim sources. How likely are they to report incidents that reflect badly on Muhammad and his followers?
On the very onset, since you have picked a wrong tool of any modern standard� , hence there is no �special pleading� here. Regarding �ancient�, I think Karen�s analysis should have sufficed. Anyhow, I have now presented you with further evidence from the Constitution of Medina. |
Well, if you want to claim that Muhammad's behaviour was fully in keeping with the moral standards of the "Age of Ignorance", I suppose I won't argue with you. As for the Constitution of Medina, I'm not sure what your point is. Does it say anything about ghazu?
You think �Years of persecution and then permanent expulsion� gave no moral right for retaliation? |
Assuming the Muslim claims of persecution can be relied upon, the answer is still no, it doesn't give them the right to retailate against any random caravan driver who might have had nothing whatsoever to do with the persecution.
Absence of any proof suggesting otherwise; IHMO, benefit of doubt must go to the accused. Simply, and as per your own acknowledgement, on the principle of �Innocent until proven guilty�. However, now the clear proof from the Constitution of Medina supports my point of view. |
It supports your contention that Muhammad had a grudge against the Quraysh. It doesn't change the fact that he was a thief. Allow me to repeat: an embargo/blockade would involve blocking trade, not robbing it.
May be not. Kindly provide any evidence in which you think an �Innocent� individual was robbed or killed. The history treats the persecutors as all of �Meccans� or �Quraysh�; it�s up to you to make exceptions, but with solid evidence only. |
Do you think it is okay to rob and/or kill anyone who can't provide solid evidence of innocence?
So what I meant was to consider yourself (and myself) as the prosecutor (defense lawyer) about what happened in the past, in which our Prophet is blamed for ���..Obviously, our Judge/s are our reader/s of this debate (to make their own informed opinion) based upon reliable and trust worthy evidence that we both present here to support our arguments. Thus if you bring a piece of evidence from a �random� person, on a �Witness stand�; should he not be questioned about his source of information especially if he is not the �eye witness� to such an event in history? |
As far as I know, the only evidence we have are via the hadith, i.e. the testimony of Muhammad's most committed followers, who about as biased a group as could be imagined. You're right -- if this were a criminal case, we would have to give the hadith narrators the benefit of the doubt, rather than risk imposing a severe penalty on a possibly innocent person. But we're not doing that. We're just trying to decide, on the balance of probabilities, whether a succession of heavily biased narrators is likely to have some influence on the content and reliability of the hadith. To me the answer is obvious. How could it not?
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airmano
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Posted: 28 January 2016 at 12:18pm |
Ahmad:
Permanent expulsion from one�s tribe was more outrageous than obvious retaliation |
When your country did everything that was needed to get rid of Abdus Salam (pbuh), did he go and rob other Pakistanis during his exile ?
Airmano
Edited by airmano - 28 January 2016 at 12:35pm
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The word God is for me nothing more than the expression and product of human weaknesses (Albert Einstein 1954, in his "Gods Letter")
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AhmadJoyia
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Posted: 29 January 2016 at 1:09pm |
Ron Webb wrote:
AhmadJoyia wrote:
Agreed. Since the Quraysh were the oppressors and persecutors of the expelled Muslims, therefore, these caravans were the natural targets of enemy for retaliation. More on this topic, kindly read the Constitution of Medina, where all adherents (including the Jews and other non-Muslim tribes) of this constitution, explicitly and unanimously agreed to consider Quraysh as their common enemy. Hence, it was only through this constitution that the Prophet was authorized to wage ghazu only against the Quraysh and not against any other random tribe not involved in this conflict. |
The Constitution of Medina begins, "This is a writing of Muhammad, the Prophet, between the believers and the Muslims of Quraysh and Yathrib and those who follow them and are attached to them, and who fight together with them in war." I see no specific mention of Jews or non-Muslims. Is there any reason to suppose that they consented to this, or had any hand in drafting it? |
Probably you may like to specifically read No un-Believer will intervene in favour of a Quraysh, (because the Quraysh having declared war are the enemy) . Looking at this source, hopefully you would not miss specifically the names of all the participating tribes. With this background, the purpose of ghazu specifically against Meccans becomes fairly clear.
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airmano
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Posted: 29 January 2016 at 1:44pm |
Ahmad:
Looking at this source, hopefully you would not miss specifically the names of all the participating tribes. |
The link you post is based on Ibn Ishaq.
Only a few pages earlier you posted that he is not a reliable source.
What made you change your mind all of a sudden ? Gabriel ?
Airmano
Edited by airmano - 29 January 2016 at 1:48pm
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The word God is for me nothing more than the expression and product of human weaknesses (Albert Einstein 1954, in his "Gods Letter")
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