A football support has no policies or dogmas that would make them misogynist. Every KKK member I've heard talk has been a racist, a difference between causation and correlation.
Which, as already established, doesn't apply to religion which is the point being talked about. Further the KKK doesn't cause people to be racist.
I thought you were talking about intrinsic, the KKK is intrinsically racist. The KKK might cause people to be racist.
I'm not sure, but I think Gabriella disagrees as her posts suggests Islam caused her to give up drinking.
Not sure if Gabriella's point related to this. But how does the KKK cause racism by it's own intrinsic qualities i.e. not those given to it by humans?
I agree with NS - it is a quality given by humans - because firstly humans have to interpret what they think the religion is requiring of them, which may involve considerable thought of running through and discarding various options or may be an instant decision - it really depends on how aware the individual is of the various possible options and their consequences out there (based on nurture/ education) and whether their personality is such that they will carefully consider options and potential consequences or they are impatient and want a quick easy answer at that particular moment in time (which would be influenced by any other thoughts, pressures, stresses, emotions they are experiencing at that moment and their reaction to whatever else is going on in their lives at that time).
And secondly the individual has to decide that they are actually going to follow their interpretation of the religious requirement, which again is a decision driven by nature/ nurture and their current circumstances, and is a decision that has to be repeated every time they have the opportunity to make a different decison, for example, to have a drink. I know Muslims who drink - I was one of them.
So giving up drinking based on my religion was a little more complicated than simply following the instruction to shun/avoid/ leave aside/ eschew intoxicants/wine/strong intoxicants (depending on whose translation you read) in Chapter 5 verse 90-91 of the Quran.
I was drinking after I became a Muslim - it was almost mandatory in the investment banking industry if you wanted to build business relationships and get ahead and I won't deny I really enjoyed that aspect of the job. When I decided to have a child, the responsibility to be a role model as a Muslim parent and to be clear-headed when responsible for a child that was totally dependent on me took precedence over my personal enjoyment or my career.
Also I saw drinking as creating an opportunity for me to behave in a different way or say something that I would not have done if the chemicals in alcohol had not been affecting my judgement and it seemed that this might create unnecessary complications in my life and be a waste of my time - I think this is covered by Quran 5:91 which says intoxicants can create enmity amongst people, which made sense to me - it can in many cases in terms of things said, decisions made, even violence that might not have happened if the people had not had their judgement altered while intoxicated. By the time I got to 27, I figured that the sober me was the real me, and this was the me I wanted to be and improve on, especially as a parent.
Also, my parents did not drink (my dad did very very rarely as he didn't enjoy it) and I had not grown up seeing my parents drink so this had subconsciously informed my understanding of parenting.
I think some people have a very simplistic understanding of the human decision-making process.