kenberg, on 2015-February-19, 12:59, said:
Don't hold me too literally to the word "interpretations". I was trying to get at the difference between "Did this or did this not happen?" and "What lessons can be drawn from what happened". A current example would be Obama's recent reference to the horrors of the Crusades and the Inquisition in discussing current terrorism. Exactly what happened during the Crusades and the Inquision can be, and is, debated but they toook place and few would deny that they were awful, even if some would downplay some of the horrs. That takes care of "Did it happen?". Turning to the second question about lessons to be drawn. What are they? Presumably no one is arguing that because of the Inquisition we should simply say "Oh well, beheading people, shooting school children and setting peoople on fire is just one of thoise things humans do, no big deal". But if that is not the purpose of bringing it up, what was the purpose? So people would not get on their high horse? That's it?
So I am claiming: Learning facts about the Inqusition is one thing, students should learn these facts. How these facts apply to ISIS is another matter.
I mean this as an example of the distinction between facts and interpretations. Pick another example if you don't like this one.
Bear in mind that Obama is speaking as a politician and also a statesman, with motivations that have very little to do with conveying a history lesson. He needs the majority of Muslims in the US and the rest of the world to see efforts against ISIS and other (Muslim) terror organizations as being actions against terrorists and not Muslims. He desperately wants, and the West needs, to avoid allowing extremist propaganda to describe the Western response as part of a clash of cultures or beliefs, lest even more disaffected young men join the terrorists.
Fox News and most of the Republican Party play directly into the aims of the terrorists, as did that US general who famously told his troops, priortothe invasion of Iraq, that they were modern-day crusaders
As an atheist, I do fear that we are indeed facing a clash or war of cultures. There are striking similarities between the world views of Xian and Muslim extremists, the main difference, it seems to me, being that there are far more Muslims living lives of humiliation, desperation and futility than there are Xians in the same boat. It seems to me that the reason for religiously-inspired terror is not found in the religion, although religion makes for a powerful tool, but rather in social and economic factors. It is too bad that the US government, and the Israelis, see economic repression and remote-control killing as the appropriate response rather than economic aid. Give the Palestinians equal financial aid as is given to Israel, and the hatred of Palestinians for the US would likely fade away. Of course, preventing that aid from being used to attack Israel might be a problem.
I admire Obama for doing his best to show Muslims that he knows that the West ought not to be at war with Islam, but I fear it is too little, too late, since far too much of the US establishment acts as if it were.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari