An interesting comment piece in The Guardian by Timothy Garton Ash. Ask yourself what you really think the root causes of the conflict (or conflicts) are. And then tell us.
Six views of the west's problems with the Muslim world reveal as much about those who hold them as the conflict itself
Four years after the September 11 2001 terrorist attacks on New York and Washington, which were perpetrated in the name of Allah, most people living in what we still loosely call the west would agree that we do have troubles with Islam. The vast majority of Muslims are not terrorists, but most of the terrorists who threaten us claim to be Muslims. Most countries with a Muslim majority show a resistance to what Europeans and Americans generally view as desirable modernity, including the essentials of liberal democracy.
Why? What's the nub of the problem? Here are six different views often heard in the west, but also, it's important to add, in Muslim countries such as Iran. As you go down the list, you might like to put a mental tick against the view you most strongly agree with. It's logically possible to put smaller ticks against a couple of others, but not against them all.
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Now, which of the six views got your largest tick? In answering that question, you will not just be saying something about the Islamic world; you will be saying something about yourself. For what we call Islam is a mirror in which we see ourselves. Tell me your Islam and I will tell you who you are.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,3604,1570236,00.htmlSo, where does your biggest tick go? Please read the article before voting - the one-line summaries I give may not do justice to the views that Garton Ash is describing.