sringwal
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Agreed. And the best way to facilitate it from coming inside is what strategy, do you think?It has to come from reinterpreting the religious doctrine so as to not take it literally.
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Agreed. And the best way to facilitate it from coming inside is what strategy, do you think?It has to come from reinterpreting the religious doctrine so as to not take it literally.
Not sure what you're asking here. Are you asking how outsiders can facilitate internal change? If so, I don't know that outsiders can, in any meaningful way, facilitate such a change any more than the Christian "reformation" came as a result of external influences.Agreed. And the best way to facilitate it from coming inside is what strategy, do you think?
I agree that some people can't be fixed. And this isn't about changing minds at the level of "people in power" in Muslim extremist countries. What I am talking about is in regards to changing hearts and minds at the "street" level. And that is done more successfully through inclusion than exclusion. Once someone is radicalized, I agree with your point. Before the moment of radicalization, though, the United States being a Beacon on a Hill has value. Right now, I'm not seeing that beacon, to be honest.Not sure what you're asking here. Are you asking how outsiders can facilitate internal change? If so, I don't know that outsiders can, in any meaningful way, facilitate such a change any more than the Christian "reformation" came as a result of external influences.