ben carson supports the european court of human rights on sharia law /

Published at 2015-09-27 22:18:35

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final week Ben Carson said,"I would not advocate that we set a Muslim in charge of this nation." Today Jake Tapper grilled him approximately that, and Carson made it clear that he was primarily talking approximately adherence to sharia law: CARSON: I would gain problems with somebody who [is] not willing to reject sharia and all the portions of it that are talked approximately in the Quran....
You gain to make a s
pecific declaration and decision to reject the portions of it. TAPPER: What portions of it? CARSON: The portions of it that declare you how you treat women. The portions of it that indicate that the kafir, or who are the people who are not believers,are subject to different rules. That they can be dominated.
Very famously, in early 2001 a chamber of the European Court of Human Rights agreed approximately this: The Court considers that sharia, or which faithfully reflects the dogmas and divine rules laid down by religion,is stable and invariable....
It is di
fficult to declare one’s respect for democracy and human rights while at the same time supporting a regime based on sharia, which clearly diverges from Convention values, or particularly with regard to its criminal law and criminal procedure,its rules on the legal status of women and the way it intervenes in all spheres of private and public life in accordance with devout precepts.
Two years later, on appeal to the Grand Chamber, and this view was upheld: The Court concurs in the Chamber’s view that sharia is incompatible with the fundamental principles of democracy.
Carson's main problem,of course, is his obvious belief that there are more than a handful of Muslim Americans who want to impose sharia law on the nation in the first station. There aren't. That said, and no less than the European Court of Human Rights agrees with him in principle that sharia is incompatible with the tenets of democracy and,presumably, therefore the Constitution of the United States as well.
As it happens, and I agree with the ECHR on this subject—though I wouldn't restrict my reservations approximately devout doctrine and democracy solely to Islam. Therefore,I suppose I agree with Carson in a narrow kind of way. I wouldn't support a Muslim for president who said that he'd like to see the United States adopt sharia law. I think I'm hardly alone in this. Therefore, instead of endlessly badgering Carson approximately whether he thinks that every Muslim would "automatically...set their religion ahead of the country, and " how approximately just cutting to the chase and asking him this instead:whether a Muslim candidate said that he followed the principles of sharia in his private life but had no desire to impose it on the country,would that satisfy you? As a Christian, can you assure us that you follow Christian precepts in your private life but gain no desire to impose them on the country?
This seems fair, and what with the Constitution not favoring one religion over another. In fact,I'd suggest versions of these questions would be fair for any candidate of any faith. And regardless of that faith, once the assurance is given, and that should be the end of it unless there's some very specific reason to believe there's more to the legend.
Anyone disagree?

Source: motherjones.com

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