Geuze wrote: » It was never illegal to be gay. Homosexual acts were illegal. You could walk arm in arm with your gay partner up Grafton street, and that was not illegal. If you think about it, you can't make being something illegal, but you can make doing something illegal.
smacl wrote: » Either way, Ireland was a deeply homophobic and misogynistic country in the recent past, largely as a result of the Catholic church and the power it wielded. While far from perfect, we've certainly come a long way in my lifetime. My take on Islam in the West is that it has a similar journey to take and I'm of the opinion that this is a journey that it has already started out on.
smacl wrote: » My take on Islam in the West is that it has a similar journey to take and I'm of the opinion that this is a journey that it has already started out on.
recedite wrote: » Oh wait... you said Islam in the West. But isn't that just the same as Islam in the east, except that they have to keep a lower profile because they haven't yet got the numbers and the power to exert control?
Beechwoodspark wrote: » Just from listening to morning Ireland it seems the parents have already shot down any change of patronage in the school and if anything they are more determined than ever to keep it catholic ethos
tretorn wrote: » You are so so naive.
Geuze wrote: » https://www.cso.ie/en/csolatestnews/pressreleases/2017pressreleases/pressstatementcensus2016resultsprofile8-irishtravellersethnicityandreligion/ Catholics are 78.3% of the pop. Yes, many Catholics did vote for SSM and abortion, which in one sense is odd, but I like the way Irish Catholics are flexible in that way..............
gaius c wrote: » 74% of them have indicated so.
smacl wrote: » Nah, much like the Catholics in Ireland voting to demonstrate they're pro-choice and egalitarian, there are plenty of Muslims in Europe out there making similar moves, e.g. the Inclusive Mosque Initiative. The far right's attempt to paint all Muslims as a bunch of crazed jihadist's bent on world domination says more about the far right than it does about anyone else. In all honesty, I have very little time for Islam, way less even than for doctrinaire Catholicism, but the nonsense that I see from those seeking to demonize Muslims based on their religion is as deplorable as it is paranoid. All the frothing from the far right actually achieves is to push those to their left (i.e. most people) towards the defense of Islam. It is ironic that right wing Islamophobic rhetoric would suggest those of us that aren't overly critical of Islam are acting out of fear, in truth we're doing it to gain as much distance from far right nutters as is humanly possible.
Franz Von Peppercorn wrote: » Plenty is too far really, although people will probably integrate over time. In the UK Muslim attitudes are quite illiberal.https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2016/apr/11/british-muslims-strong-sense-of-belonging-poll-homosexuality-sharia-law There’s some examples of integration there, nevertheless.
gaius c wrote: » Suspect that we'll find that somebody is after doing a Katie Asclough style solo run under the auspices of the school as a whole.
smacl wrote: » there are plenty of Muslims in Europe out there making similar moves, e.g. the Inclusive Mosque Initiative.
"The Koran is not going to change, the prophetic position is not going to change. Muslim thinking and practices are not going to change. "So I don't know what the point of this mosque is."
Hotblack Desiato wrote: » 26% across 8 schools is enough to justify divestment of 2 of them.
Hotblack Desiato wrote: » You gotta love the way the desperadoes keep trotting out the 78% census figure. Why should some OAP ticking a box on a form in Donegal have any influence on the patronage of a school in Cork?
tretorn wrote: » ........................The Muslims have built their own primary schools and are probably imparting an education which is at odds with the ideals of the society we live in, ie gender equality and rights for LGBT people. They are in the process of building their own secondary schools too so there are a lot of them here and they have a lot of money. .................
Hotblack Desiato wrote: » Insanity?
Odhinn wrote: » On a lighter note - does anybody have a clue what was behind the "grandparents" remark?
Hotblack Desiato wrote: » Exactly, but some meatheads have to ruin everything by trying to shoehorn religion into it.
evolving_doors wrote: » Go and find another school for your child, cos there's a choice don'tcha know.
Hotblack Desiato wrote: » Not where I live. Maybe I should move? Or emigrate? :rolleyes:
smacl wrote: » That's it exactly, in many areas there is no choice and demand for non-Catholic ethos cannot be met. The number negatively affected by divestment is considerably smaller than those affected by no divestment taking place. Similarly those who feel that strongly about wanting a Catholic ethos school clearly do have considerably more choice than those that do not.
Peregrinus wrote: » This isn't an easy problem to solve
It may be easier to say than to do, but I think this calls for a lot of flexibility, maybe things like phased transitions so that the wishes or expectations regarding the current generation of students are not abruptly disrupted, and the like.