TerraN_EmpirE
Tyrant King
Thanks Delft I wasn't sure if it was also backwards compatible.
Here in the US it's the other way around.
Here in the US it's the other way around.
Uighur, Hui, Kazak =/= Muslim
清真=/= Halal
Ethic preference or custom =/= religious tolerance (in state institution)
I "hate" you and myself for eating cat and dog, I did once in a customer banquet, that is a sin.
Dogs and cats are animals too, people have pigs as pets and they're still tasty too. It's no sin to eat an animal even as pets.
This is an example of why it is so difficult to have a mature discussion on this forum. You initially mischaracterise the issue of "halal" to Muslims which I corrected and in response you are fabricating something that I never said in my reply to you. Can you simply be honest in the discussions and not make up things because it can be easily proven by the sequencing of and contents of the related conversation.I know someone will say something like this, however that is my fault for using the word "Muslim", instead I should have used "ethic Uighur or Kazakh or Hui" etc.
The issue that you initially raised is not whether there is anything religious on board the Liaoning. How China like any nation that has a minority Muslim population deals with it is both a policy and administration issue. That was not the contention. Your initial assertion that "halal" is not a religious thing to a Muslim is simply wrong - period.As I have said in my previous post, the Chinese 清真餐厅 is NOT strictly Halal cafeteria in the Islamic laws. So Halal is out of the question. As l have also said in the previous post, these servicemen are not religious, so not really Muslim, they're only ethnic Hun, Uighur or Kazakh. Chinese state staff including soldiers CAN NOT be religious, the first thing they do when recruiting a soldier is 政审, political screening extending to ones grandparents. It may have been loosened a bit since my time but I believe the individual and family background is surely to be checked. So again Halal is out of the question. I remind you again that the Xinjiang governor is a Uighur communist, not a Muslim, not following any Islamic rules including Halal practice but may choose not eating Pork, and probably drinks alcohol like some of my Hun friends do.
so there is nothing religious on board Liaoning.
Is this clear to you?
This is an example of why it is so difficult to have a mature discussion on this forum. You initially mischaracterise the issue of "halal" to Muslims which I corrected and in response you are fabricating something that I never said in my reply to you. Can you simply be honest in the discussions and not make up things because it can be easily proven by the sequencing of and contents of the related conversation.
The issue that you initially raised is not whether there is anything religious on board the Liaoning. How China like any nation that has a minority Muslim population deals with it is both a policy and administration issue. That was not the contention. Your initial assertion that "halal" is not a religious thing to a Muslim is simply wrong - period.
Nope. I am specifically challenging two things that the poster mischaracterise.I don't think he's mischaracterized anything.
He's talking about Muslims in China (aka ethnic Uighur or Hui), and the nature of Halal in the Chinese Navy, rather than the relationship of Halal foods outside of China or in other military services around the world.
In the Chinese Navy, he's saying Halal foods are offered not due to the fundamental religious nature of any crew who may be Muslim, but rather as an ethnic variation of a style of food.
This is important, because in Chinese discourse, there is a bit of a separation between what the west considers as "Muslim" and what the Chinese consider to be "ethnic groups who happen to practice certain aspects of Islam".
So he's not being dishonest at all, but rather there is a miscommunication in terms of what Halal foods+being a of an ethnic group with a Muslim background in China means, vs what much of the western world may characterize as Islam.
Nope. I am specifically challenging two things that the poster mischaracterise.
(1) That I said a bunch of things that I did not say (post #26).
(2) That 'halal" is not a religious thing to the Muslim (post #11).
The whole bunch of other istuff about separation was never the contention. Please don't mix them up.
I expected more from you.1: he never accused you of saying things that you did not say, that I can see. In the two posts that you quote form him in #26, he is merely clarifying what he meant, when you challenged him in post #11.
As you said, halal "not related to religion" is a statement that was made and that is categorically not true.2: In the parts you quoted in post #11, he said the muslim food issue (i.e.: halal) in the Chinese Navy is no more than having a vegetarian serviceman.The second part you quoted was him talking about a comment his Muslim friend had made. I'm not sure if his friend is a Chinese muslim or a muslim from elsewhere in the world who is not particularly adherent to their practices, but either way I do not see Taxiya as saying generally that all halal everywhere in the world is "not related to religion," rather that he is talking about the situation in China itself.
Simply because the clarification is not directly connected to the issue.More importantly, the fact is that since you brought up the question of what he meant by "halal" and "muslim" in his original post, he did a good job of clarifying what he meant in post #22 and post #14.
So I'm not sure why you are rejecting his clarifications, when they do such a good job of showing what his original post actually meant.