Message from @Death Strike's Bat
Discord ID: 305477784623644672
They pick and choose like everyone else.
Compare Aceh to the rest of Indonesia
I like this essay by him but it rings slightly hollow
opportunistic
hahahahaha
They pretty much are fundamentalists and would just sack it
If the government fell
The rest saxkinf the fundamentalists who are unpopular.
Islam, just like Christianity, has passed the point of it's possibilities, this is the only thing that Evola perhaps didn't understand
Also most of the places were Islam thrived were never honest societies
nope
Which is unrelated to the religion
Both Christianity and Islam HAD traditionalist schools, however, these existed IN SPITE OF their non-traditional teachings, not thanks to
they were literally underground movements
what are you referring to
with traditionalist
Sufism, Bektashism, etc
Bektashism is heretical, it isn't Islam
That stuff isnt underground but describes religious practices.
In Christianity it's more difficult to distinguish, but basically look at gnostics
you mean Tradition, the esoteric meaning
@fallot that's what mainstream sunnis think about all whoare not mainstream sunnis, thanks for info
Unless of course you are describing militant Sufiorders who behaved like western military orders
no, they are simply not muslims due to their beliefs and practices
Like the Templars and Teutonic Knights
there are some basics to Islam
Fallot
Are you a capitalist?
Just like alevis
Well I mean alawites
Depends on what that means @Hagel, I don't support evils that are linked to the word capitalism
Bektashi order was basically Mithraic order for Ottoman Muslims, and it possese striking similarities
Alawites only decided to become sort of outwardly Muslims in the 30s
but I'm for the basic human actions of buy and sell
1930s
1. It was dominated by Janissaries, a warrior class, who didn't marry or have families
2. It was initiatic
Economics must be secondary to other goals
if necessary, I would be prepared to do stuff that is called "socialist"
Jannisaries had families