💌🙌🪔🙌🧯🙌🎞️🙌📱: “The natural human reaction should be very personal. It should be full of empathy for another being rather than apathy toward them.” – 📝🙌🔥🙌📻
Completely agree with the comments below. Ms. Sayema is the typical educated middle class Muslim. Someone who would use all kinds of specious arguments and rhetoric to defend the violence perpetrated by radical Islamists.
The fact that she was disturbed about the Iranian student’s protest but not by the plight of the Hindus in neighbouring Bangladesh speaks volumes in itself.
I am sure that she is not worried about the dangers posed by fundamentalist Islam and the resultant terrorism which has murdered thousands over the last two centuries. Neither is she worried about the inherent intolerance embedded into Islam for non-believers or the application of the bestial Shariah law.
Her only goal in life is to shift the blame for anything and everything on Hindutva and the RSS. And The Print is glad to provide her with a platform.
Perusing Ms. Sayema’s earlier articles on The Print, one can safely say that she is the ideal representative of the educated Muslim middle class.
The hallmark of this section of Islamic society is that it never unequivocally condemns Islamic fundamentalism and the resultant violence. It never stands up against Islamic fanaticism.
Rather it puts it’s secular education to excellent use by coming up with all sorts of arguments to justify Islamic terrorism. “Ifs” and “buts” are it’s favourite words and it is a master at whataboutery.
This Islamic middle class has benefited immensely from secularism in India and other nations but would never ever want Islamic majority nations to become secular. They want non-Muslim majority nations to be secular but Muslim majority nations to remain Islamic theological states.
Am sure Ms. Sayema is not disturbed by the ongoing anti-Hindu pogroms in Bangladesh.
Such articles simply reinforce the old saying:
Islamic extremism is the snake hiding in the grass, moderate Islam is the grass hiding the snake.
Moderate Islamic people (e.g. Sayema and company) will always fight tooth and nail for their fanatic and fundamentalist counterparts. They really are the grass actively conniving with the “snake” to keep it hidden.
What an article! Sayema ruthlessly tore down feeble layers of hypocrisy of the “we the people”.
Very true and sincere statement – “It’s unfortunate that we have started acting more as communities, tribes, societies, and mobs than human beings.”
लोग…! ख़ैर!!
💌🙌🪔🙌🧯🙌🎞️🙌📱: “The natural human reaction should be very personal. It should be full of empathy for another being rather than apathy toward them.” – 📝🙌🔥🙌📻
– #सा🤲#ये🙏#मा
Completely agree with the comments below. Ms. Sayema is the typical educated middle class Muslim. Someone who would use all kinds of specious arguments and rhetoric to defend the violence perpetrated by radical Islamists.
The fact that she was disturbed about the Iranian student’s protest but not by the plight of the Hindus in neighbouring Bangladesh speaks volumes in itself.
I am sure that she is not worried about the dangers posed by fundamentalist Islam and the resultant terrorism which has murdered thousands over the last two centuries. Neither is she worried about the inherent intolerance embedded into Islam for non-believers or the application of the bestial Shariah law.
Her only goal in life is to shift the blame for anything and everything on Hindutva and the RSS. And The Print is glad to provide her with a platform.
Perusing Ms. Sayema’s earlier articles on The Print, one can safely say that she is the ideal representative of the educated Muslim middle class.
The hallmark of this section of Islamic society is that it never unequivocally condemns Islamic fundamentalism and the resultant violence. It never stands up against Islamic fanaticism.
Rather it puts it’s secular education to excellent use by coming up with all sorts of arguments to justify Islamic terrorism. “Ifs” and “buts” are it’s favourite words and it is a master at whataboutery.
This Islamic middle class has benefited immensely from secularism in India and other nations but would never ever want Islamic majority nations to become secular. They want non-Muslim majority nations to be secular but Muslim majority nations to remain Islamic theological states.
Am sure Ms. Sayema is not disturbed by the ongoing anti-Hindu pogroms in Bangladesh.
Such articles simply reinforce the old saying:
Islamic extremism is the snake hiding in the grass, moderate Islam is the grass hiding the snake.
Moderate Islamic people (e.g. Sayema and company) will always fight tooth and nail for their fanatic and fundamentalist counterparts. They really are the grass actively conniving with the “snake” to keep it hidden.
What an article! Sayema ruthlessly tore down feeble layers of hypocrisy of the “we the people”.
Very true and sincere statement – “It’s unfortunate that we have started acting more as communities, tribes, societies, and mobs than human beings.”