Club Cobra

Club Cobra (http://www.clubcobra.com/forums/)
-   Lounge (http://www.clubcobra.com/forums/lounge/)
-   -   Muslims in the US Armed Forces (http://www.clubcobra.com/forums/lounge/100770-muslims-us-armed-forces.html)

Buzz 11-10-2009 02:23 PM

Muslims in the US Armed Forces
 
The recent shooting rampage at Fort Hood brings up a question that is so politically incorrect and loaded with baggage that most politicians wouldn't touch it with a ten foot pole.

The question is: Is it possible for a devout Muslim or follower of Islam to serve loyally in today's US Military?

Does the reality of war against other Muslims or Muslim nations present an irreconcilable conflict, or would this only be an issue with those who sympathize with the radical Islamic fundamentalists?

Should the military go to extra lengths to confirm the loyalty of currently-serving Muslim soldiers, or would that be unnecessary, reactionary and discriminatory?

Is the average American Muslim soldier no different from the average American Christian soldier in that loyalty to the US and the military they are serving in is of greater consequence than their religious affiliation and that of whomever they are deployed against?

If it is agreed that "normal" Muslims are no more or less prone to acts of treason than any other group, then what about the radicals? Can they be ferreted out by interviews with with all serving Muslims asking them pointed questions regarding their position on the war on terror?

I suppose references to Obama are unavoidable, but to the greatest extent possible - can we discuss the topic and leave the political partisan bashing to the other thread?:)

Maricopa 11-10-2009 02:28 PM

Jihadis (as opposed to Muslims) obviously don't belong there anymore than members of the Church of Jesus Christ Christian
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Church_...rist–Christian
Or any other looney-tunes group.

Gunner 11-10-2009 02:52 PM

Sure. Why not?

Ron61 11-10-2009 03:14 PM

Buzz, that is a good question. I would think that if they are really devout and it goes against their beliefs they could get an exemption like some of our people do. And some that are conscientious objectors due to their religious beliefs can go into the military and be assigned non combat type work which doesn't interfere with their beliefs. Many medics are that way or were when I was in the military and they did a great job, but just didn't carry arms or do any fighting. So to me it seems the same should apply to any person regardless of whether they are Muslims or Christians or whatever. Then they serve a very useful purpose by freeing up others that would have to do those jobs.

Ron

bomelia 11-10-2009 03:14 PM

http://www.clubcobra.com/forums/show...=100672&page=2

That's my answer.

bomelia 11-10-2009 03:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Buzz (Post 1000028)

I suppose references to Obama are unavoidable, but to the greatest extent possible - can we discuss the topic and leave the political partisan bashing to the other thread?:)

I am seriously not sure what you are getting at here. Plus, this is FOURTH thread to get started on the same subject. A while back, threads were getting thinned out because of this silly tactic. If you don't like what you read, then go start another thread and hope nobody disagrees with you? Whats up with that?

Mike

Buzz 11-10-2009 03:33 PM

Relax Mike. I have not seen any other threads dealing with this specific question. The other thread attempts to establish a link between Obama and the shooter. Different issue entirely.

Gunner - interesting point. The Tuskegee Airmen were simply Americans who really wanted to serve at a time when their kind were not generally welcomed into regular service. Quite a different scenario on the surface, but I suppose little different from a Muslim American who really wants to serve his country.

The 442nd Infantry Regiment is a very relevant example.

Is there anything different about the structure, teachings and philosophies of the Muslim faith that differentiates this scenario from the ones you presented?

bomelia 11-10-2009 03:41 PM

Buzz, my only problem with any of this is that you completely discount a theory you disagree with, then you discount the person talking about the theory. At least from my perspective, that is how it is coming off.

In my personal experience here, when folks do that, tempers fly and things get out of control quickly. Over that last day or so of threads, I feel very certain I would have said anything I said here in person to anybody here.

Chances are, if you had said some of those things to me in person, I would have percieved you as a jerk, wholly counseled and comforted by your own theories and thoughts. However, I know you are not a jerk. Neither am I, nor am I a person screaming from the far right wing.

Peace,

Mike

Buzz 11-10-2009 03:54 PM

Peace buddy. We have had our differences, but I do genuinely think you are a good, regular guy who would be fun to hang around with. No hostility intended -the question I posted in this thread is something I would really like to see discussed freely. I actually wish we had a Muslim member here to post from his perspective.

In light of this concilliatory post, please ignore my response in the other thread.:LOL::LOL::LOL:

Jamo 11-10-2009 04:40 PM

I hate duplicate threads...but I don't see this as a duplicate since it presents the question in a vacuum, and not tied to just the Ft. Hood incident.

Personally, I don't want any Gay Japanese Muslim Mormons in the military. If they haven't committed suicide before they joined, then they are really phuked up.

Honestly...we just need to keep phuked up people out of the military. If the screening process ain't working, then we need to fix it. Seems to me we've lowered the standards a bit due to the all-volunteer nature of our forces...gang members, etc. are slipping through. I prefer a draft if we're going to maintain the level of forces we need in order to keep sticking our noses in everyone else's problems, but that's just me.

BTW, people who live on islands scare the sh!t out of me...they tend to walk in circles.

Gunner 11-10-2009 04:45 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jamo (Post 1000074)
Seems to me we've lowered the standards a bit due to the all-volunteer nature of our forces...

The all-volunteer nature is not the problem, any more than drafting unwilling and possibly phuked-up people was the problem in the 60s.

Just *possibly* lowering all the standards and waiving obvious faults to meet the drastic warm-body requirements is the problem.

(By the way, some 8 million served in the Vietnam era. Only two million of those were drafted. So don't knock the volunteer method too hard.)

Jamo 11-10-2009 04:50 PM

I disagree with you...I'm not lumping career folks into the ranks of the all-volunteer folks who sign up for a few years and leave. There is a great deal of discussion going on within the military about the ranks being filled with questionable personalities due to the need to cover so many fronts.

And, you might note the message in my post if you reread it...I am in favor of the draft only if we decide to maintain our current level of involvent in multiple venues around the world as we seem to be currently doing. We keep hearing about shortages of manpower if another front opens up...Iran, Korea, etc.

Gunner 11-10-2009 04:56 PM

You disagree that the armed forces have always been composed of significantly more volunteers than draftees? The facts are against you by a large margin.

I maintain that drafting soldiers does not produce a better army, and never has. It's to be avoided in all circumstances. Accepting any warm body with an IQ over room temperature and cracks from ear to ear is the real problem here.

Jamo 11-10-2009 05:02 PM

I really don't like folks that play on words...I deal with professional pricks who try to do that every day in court. People that do that tend to have an extremely short lifespan around here.

I obviously disagreed with your first statement and clarified that I was not lumping career folks in with the group that appears problematic.

Now...I do agree with your very last sentence of the your most recent post, and that appears to be a symptom of relying on an all-volunteer call-up during a time when we have so many committments (as opposed to times of comparative peace).

392cobra 11-10-2009 06:59 PM

I couldn't find who to give credit to for this quote.

"Not all Muslims are Jihadists but all Jihadist are Muslim".

That is why All Muslims in the military deserve a close look at.

elmariachi 11-10-2009 07:48 PM

All good and timely questions:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Buzz (Post 1000028)
Does the reality of war against other Muslims or Muslim nations present an irreconcilable conflict,

Yes to the power of 10.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Buzz (Post 1000028)
Should the military go to extra lengths to confirm the loyalty of currently-serving Muslim soldiers, or would that be unnecessary, reactionary and discriminatory?

F*&^% discrimination. This ain't Home Depot, its our military and it should not be staffed with an equal rights mandate. It has a sole purpose and we have 233+ years of painful and expensive experience to prove what works and what doesn't. The level of scrutiny for an individual to pursue a career in the military should be the single toughest set of job credentials in this land. But EVERYONE should have to serve. When you graduate from high school you should either have to give two years of mandatory enlisted service or be in an officers training program in college (ROTC, Service Academy etc). Through that we could keep all the good ones we need to be fully-staffed who want a career and say "Thanks for your two years but you ain't got what we need, so get lost" to the rest. Oh, and the bi-product of that would be a much more patriotic and ready-to-work society, instead of all the free-loading wharf rats we got smoking crack and sucking on the FEMA/Welfare/Social Security nipples now.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Buzz (Post 1000028)
If it is agreed that "normal" Muslims are no more or less prone to acts of treason than any other group, then what about the radicals?

What is a normal Muslim? Any faith can produce a radical (Jim Jones and David Koresh for example.) But only the Muslim faith sponsors martyrdom, blatantly harbors extremists and terrorists, assumes control of governments and their militaries and undertakes acts of aggression against other countries "in the name of God." How many Christians have hijacked airlines lately in the name of Jesus Christ?

But alas, its all nothing more than wishful thinking......:CRY:

bomelia 11-10-2009 08:05 PM

OK Buzz, peace.:D I am still searching for the perfect gun for distance running.

Now I need to think of some southern right wing neo-nazi skinhead response to all of this. Jamo gave me some material. Let me ferment upon that.


Mike

Gunner 11-10-2009 08:36 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jamo (Post 1000081)
I really don't like folks that play on words...

I wasn't playing on words. If you reread the posts, it's not entirely clear what you were disagreeing with. I restated one possibility; you were free to - and did - clarify.

I will maintain that the draft is always a bad idea. If a war can't be fought with volunteers - as Viet Nam was, 3 out of 4; as WWII was, well over 9 out of 10 - then maybe there's some fundamental question about the validity of the war - and the population as a whole knows it.

SPF2245 11-10-2009 08:44 PM

I believe a Muslim soldier could serve (and I'm sure there are plenty that currently serve) in the US Military. This question has been asked in different ways in each war, ie, Germans or Japanese soldiers in the US Army serving in WW2. I believe they (soldiers with a relationship/ties/understanding) should be a major part of every war because they expose some of the reasons for tactics, beliefs, character, ect of the soldiers we might be fighting. Granted, there needs to be a close look at their personal bias or potential to leak information, but in some cases...how can you translate or interrogate subjects without someone who understands the language, history or common background needed to build rapport?!

elmariachi 11-10-2009 08:45 PM

Just my opinion....but the quality of 18 year-olds being produced by this country today pales miserably in comparison to 1945-1960. The majority of young men were strong, motivated, ethical, hard-working, patriotic God-fearing heterosexuals. Such is not the case today in our "All volunteer" military.


All times are GMT -7. The time now is 04:02 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.0
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO 3.6.0
The representations expressed are the representations and opinions of the clubcobra.com forum members and do not necessarily reflect the opinions and viewpoints of the site owners, moderators, Shelby American, any other replica manufacturer, Ford Motor Company. This website has been planned and developed by clubcobra.com and its forum members and should not be construed as being endorsed by Ford Motor Company, or Shelby American or any other manufacturer unless expressly noted by that entity. "Cobra" and the Cobra logo are registered trademarks for Ford Motor Co., Inc. clubcobra.com forum members agree not to post any copyrighted material unless the copyrighted material is owned by you. Although we do not and cannot review the messages posted and are not responsible for the content of any of these messages, we reserve the right to delete any message for any reason whatsoever. You remain solely responsible for the content of your messages, and you agree to indemnify and hold us harmless with respect to any claim based upon transmission of your message(s). Thank you for visiting clubcobra.com. For full policy documentation refer to the following link: