IrishAlzheimer
Today: 7:22 am
“In Islam, there is no separation of mosque and state.”
That’s not how Islam actually operates in real life. It’s a theoretical claim based on selective religious texts, not a description of how Muslim societies function.
“Sharia governs everything.”
This is simply false as a descriptive claim. Sharia is not a single legal code, not uniformly interpreted, and not uniformly applied. Across Muslim-majority societies, you find:
• Secular civil law systems
• Hybrid legal systems
• Customary law overriding religious law
• Sharia limited to family or inheritance law
• Sharia ignored altogether in daily governance
To say “Sharia governs everything” is like saying “Christianity governs everything in Europe” because canon law exists. It confuses normative ideals with historical reality.
bringstheeagle Colorado
Dec 20, 12:53 pm
I think the harder truth is that many Americans already accept religious influence in governance—so long as it’s their religion.
We routinely see political arguments grounded explicitly in Christian theology: on abortion, LGBTQ rights, marriage, education, and public morality. It’s also common to hear claims that the Founders were Christians who never intended a strict separation of church and state. That’s not a fringe position; it’s mainstream in some circles.
Seen that way, the objection to Islamic governance isn’t really about religion mixing with politics—it’s about which religion does the mixing.
That doesn’t mean all theocratic systems are compatible with liberal democracy. Many aren’t. But it does suggest that cultural incompatibility is often overstated, while selective comfort with religious authority is understated.
In practice, the debate isn’t “theocracy vs. secularism.”
It’s which religious values people are willing to see encoded into law—and which ones they aren’t.
Odysseus We All Need A Fantasy
Dec 20, 10:12 am
I am not here to defend Islam in any way but we need to attempt to be fair.
We usually think of Muslim Middle East theocracies but the largest Muslim nation by far is Indonesia.
Indonesia is not a theocracy; it's officially a secular, democratic republic with a state philosophy called Pancasila that requires belief in one God but doesn't establish an Islamic state, blending religious values with a diverse, pluralistic foundation, though it officially recognizes six religions and sometimes faces issues with applying blasphemy laws. It's considered a "middle ground," recognizing religion's public role while avoiding the extremes of a pure secular state or an Islamic theocracy.
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