(urth) This Week in Google Alerts: Home Fires
David Stockhoff
dstockhoff at verizon.net
Wed Apr 11 04:45:09 PDT 2012
On 4/11/2012 12:15 AM, Matthew Knight wrote:
> 2012/4/10 António Pedro Marques <entonio at gmail.com
> <mailto:entonio at gmail.com>>
>
>
> Only someone who thinks sharia has no business in Europe can
> consider that the mention of sharia in Europe is objectionable
> politics. Who's the xenophobe then? One might as well ask what
> effect does a protagonist being black has on a story written by a
> white author, and leap to the conclusion that the author is a
> white supremacist who's subtly complaining that blacks may one day
> be protagonists of something.
>
>
> Sorry, this doesn't ring true. Sharia isn't just "mentioned" here,
> but framed in a specific way. The kind of sharia we are presented
> with is far from the kind which has gone into effect in parts of the
> UK. Rather than that form, restricted to certain issues of family law
> and civil disputes over things like inheritance, we are presented with
> sharia-as-bogeyman, where theft results in severed limbs, and
> (probably) blasphemy of the prophet or adultery lead to death by
> stoning. Sharia law is about much more than violent punishment, but
> it's not usually presented with nuance in the West, including in this
> book. At least, the part I've read thus far.
I almost posted the same response. A tiny and backward part of sharia is
used as a bogeyman, whereas 99% of the time it's as dull as dishwater.
And amputation is presented not as chance or opinion, but as fact. I
don't see any purpose for depicting the protagonist as a misinformed
crank, even if he's as much antihero as hero, so it probably should be
taken as true and as a plain extension of "today's headlines" into Tomorrow.
The question is, which headlines? Hint: There is no Wolf News channel.
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