Azahul said:
Therumancer said:
At the end of the day, there is one basic metaculture present through "The Middle East" deriving from very similar interpetations of the Muslim faith.
This is kinda key to the entire argument here. This "basic metaculture" is impossible to define in any meaningful way. "The Middle East" is a region that means nothing in regards to making generalisations about the people that live in it. The fact that you believe otherwise is why the implementation of some of Rath's suggestions is so important.
For example, those links you posted? Two out of the four of them are from Al-Aqsa TV, from the same program no less. Produced by, you know, the state-television studio of Palestine, run by Hamas.
This is pretty much the gist of your point. I simply put up a few quick links in order to demonstrate the problem, but also pointed out that people who are interested can find quite a bit more if they wanted to. In short I started the trail of breadcrumbs, rather than presenting a few links as the entirety of an argument. I think we both know what you'll find if you were to start digging.
What's more you kind of made my own point for me here, this is after all state run TV networks, which are by an large what are defining the culture, and educating the children. This going on in regions where there aren't a whole lot of competing TV channels and such (though they do exist, including some outside ones). These kinds of broadcasts are how you get kids (as per another video) training to be terrorists and suicide troops from a very early age. The state largely controls the information and education, and uses it to control the culture. The whole "get them while they're young" so you can turn them into whatever you want is a very old strategy, and shouldn't surprise anyone.
Now, to be fair, you are correct that the problem does come down to leadership both in terms of clergy and theocrats reaching out to groups like Sunnis and Shiites, to royals who want to keep their people poor and ignorant while they take almost all the money made from their nations for themselves, to "political parties" like Hamas. The sources are different, but at the end of the day it comes down to promoted violent hatred of outsiders, whether it's Jews and Americans, The Western World in general, or simply a message of the supremacy and destiny of all Muslims, it all goes
to the same basic place. There is plenty of infighting through the region between groups that hate each other, but as a general rule a threat from outsiders is one of the things that can unite them, at least for a time due to the similarities in doctrine. The Sunnis and Shiites might be fighting over Syria right now, but that doesn't mean either side is progressive or truly friendly to western interests.
On a fundamental level you are correct that the problem is the leadership, but at the same time the nature of the problem is one where the poison is so deep that simply removing the leadership is not going to change the people due to the way they are conditioned. Sort of like how our actions in Afghanistan and Iraq lead to both nations still defining themselves under religious law, and our objectives to do things like liberate women in the region failed, because at the end of the day the people might have hated the leadership, but embraced a lot of the cultural principles that had been drilled into them over generations.
We took out Saddam, a lot of people felt that would solve the problems in the region. It didn't, because at the end of the day he was only part of the problem. Women we send there still have to make a show of deferring to men in meetings, liberation failed, the place is still under Islamic rule which means the door isn't even open for progress on subjects like that given what the religion says. We removed the Sunnis, put the Shiite majority in power, and at the end of the day it was pretty much the same.
Now, I get why you and others don't like the points I'm making, and like many discussions I've been in here, it's rapidly getting to the point where there isn't much more that can be said, so I'm probably going to drop it before too long (I have no need for the last word). In the end my basic point here is that I do not think video games and popular culture have been particularly unfair to muslims as far as portrayals go. It might not be flattered, but it's not entirely untrue. What's more when you look at the America/Right Wing bashing involved in games like "Bioshock" (pretty much all of them) and other games where we portray ourselves as the bad guys and shine a light of judgement on ourselves, I don't quite think there is much room for complaint, we are our own harshest critics and take that way too far beyond anything else. Overall when you have huge mobs of people attacking embassies over internet movie trailers, claiming fundamental cultural affront, and standing threats against anyone who draws a picture of Muhammad (leading to the "Draw Muhammad day thing on the Internet"), it's pretty obvious how they earned their place as the bad guy in video games. Metacultural examination just takes it beyond that.
To be honest, if The Muslim World chills out and changes, their portrayal in the media will as well. Albiet this will likely take decades. Slow changes that are pretty much unnoticeable to the people they effect aren't particularly relevant to this kind of thing. Try making it so outside female authority figures don't have to defer to men in the region, put a separation of church and state into the constitutions (which does not mean getting rid of religion entirely), and let a few decades go by where we don't have nations like Iran playing with nuclear technology, or
attacks on embassies, and similar things. That said, my points about the media and the metaculture are pretty much pointing out why things are the way they are, and why such changes are unlikely. I do not hate Arabs or Islamics, I judge them entirely by their behavior as a group and what is going on, and this is exactly what things like video games are doing as well... if the US military gets into a pitched firefight nowadays, who is it likely to be with? Muslims are one of the most likely groups... video games trying to have a grounding of reality cannot be blamed for how things simply are.