Salmaan Taseer was butchered for protecting Pakistan’s religious minorities from its own blasphemy law.
Author: Ophelia Benson
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Aatish Taseer on his father and Pakistan
Unless Pakistan finds a way to turn its back on Islam in the public sphere, the memory of the late governor of Punjab will fade.
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Who is responsible for the murder?
Mohammed Hanif asks who is responsible for the murder of Salman Taseer? (And who is responsible for the multiple deaths and critical injuries in Arizona? Who is responsible for the attempted assassination of a Congressional representative and the successful assassination of a federal judge outside a Safeway in Tucson? The questions are related. It’s not just a single assassin in either case – it’s also a society, a culture, a discourse, a world view, a rhetoric, a climate, a mindset, and the people who help to create them.)
When Pakistan’s television anchors and newspaper columnists describe Salman Taseer’s assassination [as] a tragedy, they are not telling us the whole truth.
Because many of these very anchors and columnists have stated, in no uncertain terms, that by expressing his reservations about the blasphemy law, Salman Taseer had crossed a line on the other side of which is certain death.
This kind of thing isn’t harmless, nor is it without any effect.
The same Islamabad where Salman Taseer bled to death in the middle of a pretty neighbourhood played host just a couple of weeks ago to a Namoos-e Risalat (Dignity of the Prophet) conference which was attended by individuals whose party manifestos include the death by murder of Shias, Ahmadis, Hindus and Jews.
Were some of our prominent politicians not in attendance?
Do these same people not inhabit our government corridors, media organisations and security agencies? Do we not break bread with them at weddings and funerals?
The same thing, mutatis mutandis, is true here.
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Giffords opponent held “shoot an M16” event
“Get on Target for Victory in November. Help remove Gabrielle Giffords from office. Shoot a fully automatic M16 with Jesse Kelly.”
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Bang bang bang bang bang bang bang bang
Oh jesus god now it’s our turn – a Democratic representative and a federal judge and a bunch of aids shot at an outdoor meeting.
I’ve been to meetings with my representative, often. They’re wide open. You can chat with him up close and personal as well as during the meeting.
Salman Taseer refused to hide, Gabrielle Giffords held a public streetcorner meeting…and look what it got them.
We’re all doomed. I feel sick.
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Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, D-Ariz, shot
Now it’s happening here.
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Ben Goldacre on putting a number in its context
Words can do harm, just as surely as hormones can.
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Brian Deer responds to Wakefield’s wild charges
CNN video and transcript.
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Nonaffiliation is not un-American
Whether they are organized, cohesive or disgruntled, the unaffiliated are the fastest-growing religious category in America.
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Who is to blame for murder of Salman Taseer?
By using words like “ghazi” (warrior) and “shaheed” (martyr) for cold-blooded killers, are we trying to placate the jihadi within?
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Orac on Wakefield and his defenders
With extra added homage to Anderson Cooper.
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Pakistanis mourn a once tolerant nation
Pakistan is a country where fundamentalism is becoming mainstream, leaving even less room for dissent, difference, and equality.
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Is Pakistan past the tipping point?
A lawyer said “the law that says that Mr Qadri is a murderer was not drawn in accordance with Islam.”
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Wot’s a power balance band?
Something that works every bit as well as a lucky charm.
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Brian Deer on “Piltdown medicine”
The modus operandi was essentially the same: the dishonest representation of pre-assembled artifacts.
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Science-based Medicine on Andrew Wakefield
These latest two articles will grind to dust any remaining “scientific resepctability” Wakefield might have enjoyed.
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Taseer had been abandoned by his own party
Back in Pakistan…Salman Taseer is buried.
Taseer’s three sons, men with black shirts and red eyes, flung rose petals into the grave. A bugle sounded; graveyard workers shovelled sticky winter clay on to the fearless politician’s coffin. And across Pakistan, people wondered what was disappearing into the grave with him.
Liberals have long been a minority force in Pakistan, reviled for importing “western” ideas and culture; now they are virtually an endangered species.
As Taseer was laid to rest in Lahore, his assassin, 26-year-old policeman Mumtaz Qadri, was also being showered with rose petals, in Islamabad. Cheering supporters clapped Qadri as he was bundled into court.
Oh dear god…it’s such a nightmare. That people like that exist and are happy with the way they think and feel and act. That Pakistan is full of them. That savage mindless cruelty and bullying are the norm there. That neighbors can first refuse to drink water from a glass offered them by a woman of the “wrong” religion and hence caste, and can then accuse her of the capital crime of “insulting” a guy who’s been dead for 14 centuries. And then rejoice at the murder of a man who tried to protect and support her.
It’s a nightmare.
Taseer had been abandoned by his own party.After Aasia Bibi, a Christian woman, was sentenced to death under the blasphemy laws on 8 November, Taseer visited her in jail with his wife and daughter to show his support. Shortly after, an Islamic mob rioted outside the governor’s house in Lahore, burning his effigy and calling for his death. On television, prominent media commentators joined the chorus of criticism.
Senior figures in his own party turned tail. Awan, the law minister, said there was no question of reforming the blasphemy law.
A nightmare.
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Recursively political
Furthermore, Rosenau’s misreading is itself political, in the sense that I dislike. It’s what one might call a little too convenient. It frames me (as I just told him in a comment on his post) as dogmatic and unreasonable and nuance-free and kind of stupid. Well that’s how accommodationists like to frame gnu atheists, isn’t it – so how helpful it is that his foot slipped just as he was reading what I’d written so that he got it backward.
It’s the usual, usual, usual thing. Claim that new atheists say what they don’t say. Claim that new atheists in general say what one new atheist once said in a bilious moment. Paste in what one new atheist said and still claim that she said something much more simple-minded and doctrinaire.
That is what it is to be “self-consciously political.”
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In which Josh Rosenau does not read carefully
To say the least. To say it more politely than he deserves.
He did a post a couple of days ago on my post about Ben’s post. None of that now; I know you can follow along. It’s a pig’s life in the British army. Pull your socks up.
First he quotes Ben:
[Mooney’s] stance is self-consciously political. At least to some extent, there is a “difference in goals” between Mooney and the activist atheists — by which, I think, he means a difference in priorities. Mooney does not think that speaking out against religion is a priority, and that it is on the whole detrimental to science education; while others think it is a priority, and that it supports science education in some respect.
Then he quotes me:
I think that’s right, and it is the self-consciously political aspect that I have always found somewhat alien. I say “somewhat” because I can’t possibly reject all politics. I realize one has to weigh consequences (as we were just discussing with reference to the Vatican and a life-saving abortion) and consider priorities. But I think when serious discussion becomes too entangled with politics, then it simply stops being serious discussion and turns into some form of campaigning.
Then he responds:
But this is exactly what I find so strange – the ambivalence and even aversion to politics. I don’t know where that comes from. I don’t know why she, and many others in the gnu camp, seem to equate politics with “campaigning” with some sort of sleaze or dishonesty, and think that this is totally distinct from the bullshit that bloggers do on blogs (including gnu atheist bloggers on gnu atheist blogs).
And so on, for the rest of the post.
Do you see? Do you see where his reading skills deserted him? It’s in the part where he responds to me. He ignores what I said. He ignores what I said, and responds to what I didn’t say. I specifically said “I can’t possibly reject all politics” and then said why, yet he responds to me as rejecting all politics.
Bad blogger. No cookie.
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BMJ: How the case against the MMR vaccine was fixed
Brian Deer exposes bogus data behind claims that launched global MMR scare, and how the appearance of a link with autism was manufactured at a London medical school.
