9/11 and Muslims!


Tahir Aslam Gora, a Pakistani free thinker experienced everything I experienced. Many Muslims believe 9/11 has nothing to do with Islam or Muslims. They still like to believe a bunch of bizarre conspiracy theories.

It’s said that a majority of Muslims have been hijacked by a tiny percentage of Islamic extremists. But it’s also true that many Muslims consider the incidents of September 11, 2001, to have been staged by the Bush administration, the CIA, Jews, etc.

The question arises as to why a majority of Muslims would assume that nothing bad could be delivered by Muslims? And why have many Muslims related all bad things to the United States, other western countries and Israel?

Some of the answers by many Muslims to such questions:

The West and Israel did it to undermine the name of Islam
Muslims are not that high tech that they could have created such a catastrophe
The Bush administration did so to gain more control over Middle East resources, etc.

In order to justify such answers, they present Michael Moore’s or Robert Fisk’s conspiracy theories, or Noam Chomsky’s political philosophies.

Islamic extremists are the true Muslims, they strictly follow Islamic rules. Majority Muslims would have organized a mass movement against Islamists if they did not sympathize with them.

Religion stops a thinking mind. Without having a thinking mind, you can’t go beyond the conspiracy theories. Without a thinking mind, you justify all the violence against humanity in the name of something nonsense.

Illiterate Muslims get easily influenced by the Islamic extremists, but the literate Muslims get influenced by the leftist intellectuals who are the biggest apologists for political Islam.

The notion of majority Muslims being silent is difficult to grasp. They are, in fact, quite vocal, just not very clear. And if they are hijacked or distracted by the tiny extremist class, why is it so? Why are they so helpless in raising their voices? Do they even have their own voices? It doesn’t seem so, since they are distracted by that small percentage of Islamic extremists. There is a fear that Islamist points of view on various issues are close to their hearts.

Today on the eve of 11th anniversary of 911, someone from the same “silent majority” has written on Facebook, “Happy 11th anniversary of 9/11 attacks everyone… may Allah swt bring many more attacks on those coward terrorist American kuffar and other kuffar and their lapdog apostate allies around the world. May Allah swt help the Muslims, release our Prisoners… and give us victory. Ameen.”

This is not a good sign for this so-called silent majority. The silent majority is not supposed to be on the side of such hostile and violent views. It doesn’t matter if they agree with the West on each and every issue. What matters is they need to clear their thinking and rid their minds of conventional rivalry plans with the rest of the world.

I witnessed how Muslims in Bangladesh changed. In 60’s and 70’s, Muslims were secular and socialists. In 80’s, they started becoming conservative and religious because of the Islamization of the country. In 90’s, Islamists were given the power by military rulers. After 9/11, majority Muslims have become Islamists, they may not wear a beard or pray five times a day.
Some other Muslim countries, I believe, went through the similar going down process.

Comments

  1. smrnda says

    I myself can’t figure out what the deal is with the support of ‘political Islam’ by intellectuals. I’m absolutely sure that none of these intellectuals would want to live in a State where religion had any official governmental role. It’s an armchair belief they can support because they’d never have to live with the consequences of getting executed for disbelief in God or disrespecting some allegedly ‘holy’ book.

  2. says

    Most of that conspiracy theory horseshit is conjured up by pre-internet trolls and fed word-of-mouth to feeble-minded fools who will believe whatever garbage they are fed. The muslims are the weakest minded and most vicious of all the religious cretins, in my opinion. If there were a benevolent and all-powerful god then He/She/It (say that fast three times) would sure as hell miraculously appear to the faithful and wipe out of their brains all that phony baloney misinformation spread by the mullahs, the pastors, the priests, and all the other piety promoting con men. Not original, I’ll admit, but I just had to say (write) it.

    • davidhart says

      “If there were a benevolent and all-powerful god then He/She/It (say that fast three times) would sure as hell miraculously appear”

      May I recommend to you the word ‘they’ as a gender-neutral singular, as in ‘if there were a … god then they would … appear’

  3. timberwoof says

    Trazan, how do you know jet fuel couldn’t melt steel? You don’t know what all those added chemicals for the chemtrails would do to jet fuel’s combustion temperature.

    • Zinc Avenger (Sarcasm Tags 3.0 Compliant) says

      There has also been little account taken of the fact that the structure of the roof-cap looks exactly like the kind of telemetry tracker NASA uses to identify dead pulsars in other galaxies.

  4. ... says

    Islamic extremists are the true Muslims, they strictly follow Islamic rules. Majority Muslims would have organized a mass movement against Islamists if they did not sympathize with them.

    Correct. And as the Middle East plunges back into the dark ages, we will see more and more of this.

    I just wish such straight talk could be heard more in our media.

  5. Joy says

    Sad. I wish I could see a religion free world. I can’t help but think that if the whole world could try a NO RELIGION WEEK it would be so wonderful we would just stay like that. Your post makes me sad, the view of the muslims seems so bleak.

  6. sc_770d159609e0f8deaa72849e3731a29d says

    They [muslims] still like to believe a bunch of bizarre conspiracy theories.

    Surely the most important thing about islam and other religions is that they are conspiracy theories- benevolent conspiracy theories, or so believers think, but still conspiracy theories. Isn’t there a quote from the quran about unbelievers plotting against god, but god being a better plotter? There’s a christian hymn which begins ‘God is working his purpose out as year succeeds to year.’
    Given this, it’s almost certain that believers will believe other conspiracy theories- after all, if what you believe is obviously true and good and god is on your side, there must be some very nasty and underhand enemies fighting against you if you haven’t won already.

  7. azizsannie says

    I used to feel less muslim than my counterparts

    nine eleven did not so much change my inlook
    but increase deference to a twisted ideal
    ‘true believer’
    my religiosity complex reinforced
    I was in the shadow of men unafraid to die

    martyrs
    with conviction untainted by doubt
    I thought..
    they must be the elite
    mighty in will to sacrifice

    The ‘west’ had tasted it’s own medicine
    on this underdog’s day..
    the bar of faith was raised
    and lines clearly drawn.

    ..but on the other hand
    I felt horror
    this was not virtue
    these men had staked their claim on history with carnage
    Savages steeped in bloody murder
    immortalised in infamy

    my confliction reflected in two faces:

    appalled around most friends and colleagues

    amongst others of a twisted disposition,
    I would quietly approve

    Islam is an ideology like any
    a pick and mix affair
    I have aged and shed the ugly side
    deference to disdain

    The palatable remains I can fit in one hand.

  8. azizsannie says

    “Illiterate Muslims get easily influenced by the Islamic extremists, but the literate Muslims get influenced by the leftist intellectuals who are the biggest apologists for political Islam.”

    this point is spot on.

    My father is exactly the kind of Muslim you describe in your piece. He will not entertain any argument that Muslims were some responsible for 911, no matter what evidence is put forward

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