Posts Tagged ‘bomb’

Religious Head Gear Earns Apology from Credit Union

Thursday, March 12th, 2009

Navy Federal Credit Union (“NFCU”) issued an apology Tuesday to a Muslim woman, who had violated NFCU’s policy against hats, hoods, or sunglasses, because she was wearing “religious head gear.” The policy is apparently a new one for NFCU, and a spokesperson indicated that the policy does not prohibit religious head gear. The Muslim woman, Kenza Shelly, was asked to leave her place in line to be served in a back room.1

The new policy was supposedly created to allow clear identification, but the spokesperson for NFCU admitted that Shelly’s scarf left her clearly identifiable. Although not admitting the incident was a mistake, the spokesperson indicated that the policy should have allowed Shelly to be served at the front counter.

Navy Federal Credit Union is chartered and regulated under the authority of the National Credit Union Administration of the US federal government.2 The question warranted by NFCU’s policy, and its apparent exception or reinterpretation of the policy, is whether NFCU employees allowing special exceptions based solely on religious belief would violate the rights of those not granted the exception. For example, what if a man wearing a tin-foil hat that does not impede clear identification attempts to transact with NFCU’s tellers? What is the proper course of action for the tellers? I’m sure we’d all agree that fingers would be nervously hovering above alarm buttons, calls would be made, and the man would be kindly asked to transact elsewhere. It’s “obvious” that the tin-foil hat is not of religious significance, right? Well, at least not mainstream. At least we won’t have suicide bombers trying to exact revenge against our mistreatment of the apparently mentally ill man.

Why establish an exception and a standard (based on fear?) for one sort of psychosis, but not all the rest? I’ve dealt with this issue before, in Intolerable Tolerance — how some governments are on the verge of caving in to pressure from the religious, and how the government should be neutral and blind to religion, not favorable to it. This is yet another example of an organization too afraid to stand up to the religious, and, in doing so, it creates a special religious exception to an otherwise neutral (and often beneficial) rule. In Intolerable Tolerance, I refer to a case in the UK where a Muslim woman was not allowed to be legal counsel in a court because she could not be clearly heard — a necessity for the operation of the court. If a necessary law or policy is upheld against everyone equally without regard to religious preference, it’s probably a good law or policy. If, however, an exception is given to someone, anyone, based on whatever the person claims is the real world view, it’s a bad practice, and subject to discrimination based on interpretation by the arbiter regarding which world views are acceptable. Mr. Tin-Foil hat, regardless of his assurances that the Tin-Foil Hat Society requires as much conviction and faith as being Muslim or Christian, will undoubtedly never receive an apology or a special exception. Regardless of the likeliness of such a situation, establishing a religiously biased policy is immediately and fundamentally discriminatory toward both the non-religious and the non-mainstream religious, and no affiliate of the government should be making such policy.

The counter-argument is that a policy could be established whereby the employees determine on an individual basis whether any head gear potentially interferes with identification. It could very well be the case that the NFCU employee who accosted Kenza Shelly was biased against Muslims, and made a decision to discriminate against the Muslim woman based on personal belief. This is where good policy should intervene and trump opportunities for bias. A universal policy of “no head gear” can be adhered to without bias if there are no special exceptions, and any cries of discrimination will be drowned out by the argument that all are being treated equally.

On the other hand, aren’t these people customers? Despite their beliefs in the supernatural, do they deserve some respect and deference as long as their behavior doesn’t actually interfere with basic security protocol? The Muslim scarf is one example, and my Tin-Foil hat extreme example is unlikely, but potentially intellectually challenging. To argue that there is a very hazy gray area, my final example is a situation where a chemotherapy patient visits a Credit Union. She has lost all of her hair due to the radiation treatment, and, in her mind, to preserve her dignity and pride, she wears a head scarf, something commonly done by others in the same situation. How should the teller react? The teller could make assumptions (it’s not as if the cancer sufferer is wearing that fact on a badge), could ask questions, could default to strict adherence to policy, could ignore policy or make an exception on the fly (with or without the facts), and could even ask a manager for assistance in the decision. What if it were a regular customer, and the teller was well-aware of the circumstances and reason for the head scarf? Exception?

Would asking a cancer patient to remove her head scarf (or be seen in a private room) because it violates policy be as bad, worse, or not as bad as asking a Muslim woman to remove hers? I’m not asking these questions because I know the answers. I’m asking them because I think that when companies and government create policy, and then try to enforce it, they don’t think about these difficult questions. When they do encounter a potentially delicate situation, they react in ways that are often inconsistent with pragmatism and constitutional ideology. In response to cries of religious discrimination, one bank, PNC, gives tellers “special training on what is and isn’t religious headgear” and tells them not to ask those wearing religious headgear to take it off.3 I’d like to know how PNC and others would react to the cancer patient. And why.

  1. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/03/09/AR2009030902387.html [<]
  2. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Navy_Federal_Credit_Union , http://www.navyfcu.org/about/index.html , http://www.ncua.gov/ [<]
  3. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/03/09/AR2009030902387.html [<]

Protest to take Tamil Tigers off Terrorist List

Friday, February 20th, 2009

There was a marching protest today in front of the White House where activists shouted out for President Obama to “help us”; meaning to take the Tamil Tigers off the terrorist list.

The Tamil Tigers, according to Wikipedia:

The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE, Tamil: தமிழழவிடுதலைப்புலிகள் ISO 15919: tamiḻ iiḻa viṭutalaip pulikaḷ), commonly known as the Tamil Tigers, is a militant terrorist organization that has waged a violent secessionist campaign since the 1970s to secede from the Sri Lankan state in order to create a separate Tamil state in the north and east of the island. This campaign has developed into the Sri Lankan Civil War, one of longest running armed conflicts in Asia. Due to the tactics employed by the Tamil Tigers, including the extensive use of suicide bombing and their recruitment of child soldiers, they are currently proscribed as a terrorist organization by 32 countries. The Tamil Tigers are headed by their founder, Velupillai Prabhakaran.

The Tamil Tigers are notorious for their well-developed militia cadre, atrocities against Muslim and Sinhalese civilians, and high profile attacks, such as the assassination of several high ranking Sri Lankan politicians, and the former Prime Minister of India Rajiv Gandhi. They also have the distinction of introducing suicide bombings as a tactic, and have carried out more suicide bombings than Hamas, Islamic Jihad, and al-Qaeda combined. The LTTE have repeatedly been accused of recruiting child soldiers. The LTTE are the only rebel organization with aircraft.

In January 2009, Canada and the EU notably refused to take the group off its terrorist list, even while the EU agreed to remove the Mujahideen Organization of Iran. The U.S. has had the Tamil Tigers on its terrorist list since the 1990s.

European states agreed on Monday to remove exiled Iranian opposition group the People’s Mujahideen Organization of Iran (PMOI) from an EU list of banned terrorist groups, an EU official said.

The official confirmed that EU foreign ministers approved a decision to take it off a list that includes Palestinian Hamas and Sri Lanka’s Tamil Tigers.

The PMOI is the group which exposed Iran’s covert nuclear program in 2002. It began as a leftist-Islamist opposition to the late Shah of Iran and has bases in Iraq.1

Waving today in the march were the flags of the U.S. and Canada, among others.

(link to short video clips of part of the procession)
Tamil Tiger Protest

tamil2

tamil3

tamil4

(Thanks to sanhedrin and waxpoet at Reddit for corrections/suggestions)

  1. http://www.ynet.co.il/english/articles/0,7340,L-3661977,00.html [<]

WARNING: You May be Part of an Unholy Alliance!

Thursday, February 5th, 2009

On February 5, President Obama held the traditional (at least since the Great Depression) National Prayer Breakfast in DC to clarify issues about his take on the faith-based initiative, and to laud the benefits of faith. Despite the fact that President Obama created the White House Office of Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships made up of both secular and religious components, and despite his suggestion that the separation of church and state is a good thing that needs to be perpetuated, the Prayer Breakfast set an unsurprising, although perhaps subtle, non-rational tone.

For instance,

He said even though a diverse group of faith leaders and lawmakers read different religious texts and follow different traditions, one law unites them all — “the Golden Rule” — the call to love one another; to understand one another; to treat with dignity and respect those with whom we share a brief moment on this Earth.”1

Implying simultaneously that faith is acceptable as a source of guidance, but is not the foundation of morality, which brings into question the purpose of focusing on faith as a benefit rather than merely focusing on benefit. (In other words, why not laud, in general, those people who help others, rather than trying to establish that there’s something inherently good about faith itself?)

More disturbing, and fringing on an attack against non-believers, a guest speaker at the Prayer, former Prime Minister Tony Blair, stated that “The extreme believers and aggressive nonbelievers come together in an unholy alliance.” Funny, I don’t recall, by the nature of my aggressive nonbelief joining up with suicide bombers and bible-thumping clinic bombers. Non-belief is non-belief. It’s the lack of something, whereas belief is the addition of something, and extreme belief is the extreme addition of something. How can one have an extreme absence of something? It’s like trying to multiply by zero.

But, am I even remotely satisfied that Obama has taken Bush’s outlandish and non-working faith-based extremism and molded it, through compromise, into something that somehow includes non-believers with an overall goal of improving the lives of others? No. I can’t say that I am satisfied at all. I think every moment that Obama takes to focus on faith itself as a benefit is a moment that he tramples upon his own assertion that there exists and should be maintained a separation of church and state. Obama even recognizes that not all faith-based actions are beneficial, and excludes the extremists and the self-righteous, but he still can’t bring himself to the logical conclusion that if instead of focusing on “faith” as a factor, we focused on actual benefit as a factor, we could accomplish the same goals without risking establishment and without isolating those who would bring benefit to others without unsupported belief in the supernatural. Is this just another political maneuver to keep the religious groups from rioting, or is this Obama continuing to show his religious favoritism?

Regardless, President Obama isolates religion from scriptural fact when he says that “No matter what we choose to believe, let us remember that there is no religion whose central tenet is hate…. There is no God who condones taking the life of an innocent human being. This much we know.” He might actually be correct with regard to religion, but he’s certainly way off the mark with regard to God, depending on which god is the subject, and depending on one’s definition of “innocent.” Did Obama skip his bible lesson where the God of the Old Testament laid waste to millions of people, or does Obama consider them all to have been guilty in the eyes of the Lord, and thus not innocent? Either answer indicates that Obama is either fabricating a reality that doesn’t match what the good books say, or he truly believes that God’s word is the higher law. If the former, should we worry about his ability to read and comprehend? If the latter, is he not advocating the combination of church and state while alleging that he supports separation? Remember, he thinks having faith in such a deity is a good thing.

By the way, there will be an Unholy Alliance meeting at the Elk’s Lodge on Main Street this Sunday. Coffee, donuts, and pitchforks will be served.


Carnival of the Godless #110 at The Greenbelt

Carnival of the Godless entry at The Greenbelt

State of Unholy Protest

  1. Washington Times [<]

God Hates Co-Ed Sports (And Women)

Tuesday, January 27th, 2009

When I get hyperbolic in my ranting against religion, my tirade doesn’t come close to the atrocity that is the manifestation of religion in reality. When people ask, “What’s the harm in non-extremist religious belief?” I reply with reports like the enforcement of the Iranian law that bans any physical contact between unrelated/unmarried men and women. Case and point, an Iranian Co-Ed soccer game arranged in Tehran last week by the Esteghlal football club (yes, it’s “soccer” football) resulted in the punishment of the managers — because the game was between the men’s youth team and women’s first team. The male manager was suspended for a year and fined 50 million rials ($5,000), and the female team’s woman coach was suspended for six-months and fined 20 million rials ($2,000). 1

Apparently, cellphone camera footage provided sufficient evidence of such a sinful deed. I find it despicable that when something like this happens, nations don’t stand up in protest because religious custom must be respected. The oppression of women by Muslim nations needs to be stopped, whether from the inside or the outside or a combination of efforts. Women are intentionally undereducated, segregated, violated, and otherwise mistreated. It’s not always in Muslim countries, of course. All such behavior worldwide should be targeted for annihilation, and given priority over religious deference and political wars.

(Yes, I know the Iranian football situation is not an example of “violence” against women, but it is a good example of how women are oppressed in all facets of some societies, and how that treatment is justified with religion or other superstition (like genital mutilation justifications, none of which are sufficient for what’s done to the little girls who suffer it) )

Thus, Some links:

NOW and Violence against Women

UNIFEM

Amnesty International

Violence Against Women Online Resources

World Health Organization

Parliamentary Campaign: Stop Violence Against Women

UN: Women and Violence

The position of women in Islamic countries: possibilities, constraints and strategies for change, Report prepared for the Special Programme WID, Netherlands Ministry of Foreign Affairs (DGIS), by Sally Baden

Wikipedia: Women in Islam

Human Rights in Arab Countries, by Mitchell G. Bard

Acid Attacks – New York Times(video) (“Westerners associate terrorism in Pakistan with suicide bombers, but an emerging terrorist threat for Pakistani women is acid attacks, often by their own husbands, Nicholas D. Kristof says.”)

State of Protest

  1. Details from The Express (from The Washington Post) as well as The Offside [<]

Time Bomb Torture Test Revisited

Thursday, January 15th, 2009

Considering events of late regarding accusations against President Bush, Vice President Cheney, and others, for the essential authorization of torture, I felt it was necessary to revisit a topic I touched on back in August — Whether in extreme circumstances, you would choose to torture someone in the hopes of saving the lives of others.

Here is the question I asked, abridged (please go read the full question if you need clarification):

You are leading an investigation regarding a potential terrorist plot to set off a bomb in the middle of Manhattan. You have good reason (accuracy of 90%) to believe that the bomb is set to go off in approximately 12 hours, and would kill about one million people. You lack the resources or time to successfully search for the bomb.

You have captured a person whom you have verified as being a member of the terrorist group in question. You have reason to believe that this person knows where the bomb will be planted and knows the location of the other members of the terrorist group. Assume for purposes of this question that you are immune from liability (you’ve been promised a presidential pardon). You have unrestricted access to the prisoner (who speaks English), and unrestricted access to any devices that may be acquired and used within a 12-hour period.

Assuming that the prisoner is adamant about trying not to reveal any information regarding the whereabouts of the bomb or the other members of the terrorist organization,
What do you do to try to extract the necessary information from the prisoner?

Here are the options I originally gave, and beneath each option is the (rounded) percentage of people who chose that option, out of those who chose anything (note: this is not a scientific test)

1: Use unrestricted torture devices and methods
[32%]

2: Use torture devices and methods, but limited in a certain way
[7%]

3: Use only methods authorized by the Human Rights Convention and other applicable humanitarian international and domestic law
[21%]

4: Only interrogate verbally (including any sort of psychological methods)
[18%]

5: Only interrogate verbally (without resorting to psychological manipulation)
[7%]

6: Something else
[14%]

Recently, top torture experts declared that torture is ineffective. Not only that, but it violates international law and human rights laws and doctrines.

Although the situation in Guantanamo, for instance, wasn’t a “24″-esque time bomb scenario, if a person in a superior position did find him or herself in such a situation, considering what’s at stake, would you accept torture as a necessary evil, perhaps as a last resort? And would you forgive those who authorized it and carried it out?

This really isn’t a question about Guantanamo’s conditions, about the lengthy and humiliating torture that those men endured that effectively accomplished nothing except maybe a get-out-of-jail-free card for the most brutally tortured of them (if not all). It’s more about the scenario that those opposing torture often refer to as being incredibly unlikely. But let’s say it did happen, and let’s say you were living in Manhattan at the time. Would you give the thumbs-up?

If not, what are your justifications for opposing it in certain scenarios? If it’s because it’s unreliable or ineffective (according to experts), are those experts basing their opinions on facts derived from only non-situational torture sessions, (i.e., no imminent threat)? And how often did that happen in order to give the experts enough data to make a fully informed opinion about torture in general?

So, in this time bomb test, torture or no?

State of Protest