tl;dr version: Extremism is bad. Going to extreme lengths to offend people already experiencing a social tumult is bad. Murdering those offensive people is an unacceptably extremely bad response. Saying that Charlie Hebdo were just harmless satirists is ignoring the evidence that they were still racist assholes.
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Like I've said before though, whether you find it funny or not has nothing to do with it, the point is it's not to be taken seriously.
It's shock humor, an "oh I can't believe they just did that" sort of thing. There's entire franchises built around that kind of humor.
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You don't make a conscious choice to be offended. It happens, and how you respond to that trigger is subjective, but when people are taught that the image of their most revered prophet is holy and should be respected, they have every right (down to the juices in their brains) to find it offensive and desire not to see it. It's documented that Charlie Hebdo repeatedly published front-page comics whose purpose was to skewer Mohammed in unflattering and disrespectful ways. That isn't to say murdering those responsible is the answer, I think the majority of Muslim people aware of Charlie Hebdo made a conscious choice to ignore it, or even to interpret it as the lazy, half-baked attempt at satire that it was and not think about it.
Tell me something, Nepsotic. Do you think it would be fair to cast judgements on you for the rest of your life because of all that pony-related content you used to post? That was pretty recent in my opinion, within the last several years.
So imagine instead of being one person you're a few thousand, and instead of ponies you believe there was a dude who spoke for God (or at least with some authority on behalf of the God he believed in). This guy is a highly respectable figure in your life. And that about 1000 years of varying levels of dominion, peace and violence, history books full of events, occurred as a result of your pony nonsense/what this Holy Guy got up to. So much has happened that you can't really look at this guy or the book he came from the same way, and you have to look at the world with the scope of history available.
Now your tastes have changed, you've learned more, you've got more to talk about and offer, but people won't stop associating you with a past snapshot of how you interpreted things and presented yourself. And also there's a magazine that deliberately singles you out and makes sure to take every oppurtunity to target you with unflattering imagery and poorly-written editorials.
Charlie Hebdo took the opportunity to single out Islam because it's an easy target because people like you would stand up and say 'Duuuh, it's just meant to be a joke!' when its purpose was to disinform and play on people's preexisting prejudices.
That rampant disregard for the modernization of a billion people and the assumption they're all raging, kamikaze savages is what Charlie Hebdo was all about. They were insular, hateful old men.
Charlie Hebdo capitalized on a specific brand of xenophobia, or anti Islamic sentiment if you'd like, that didn't attempt to shock people for the sake of humor but was really, truly toxic and hateful. We already know the mag was run by people who did and said racist or offensive things, outside the context of cartoons. We already know they
didn't deserve to die for this, but it does not give you or anyone else license to pass them off as harmless comedians poking fun. They were
assholes who didn't deserve to die. They deserved criticism, and maybe a lil smack on the bottom, but nobody is saying they deserved it. Stop making that association.
It's so easy to disregard people as reasonable and 'like you and me' by assuming they're all mad about the same things and capable of the same things due to that anger, but this is clearly not the case. I'm not a Muslim person, I'm not someone who grew up in the same environment of worship and dedication to Mohammed, and I find the comics offensive, disrespectful and lazy. Does that mean I'm going to go firebomb some Europeans over it? According to you, it does. After all, I took offense, something a thousand times more terrible than publishing nasty cartoons that play on peoples fears. Nope, all I'm doing is letting people know 'Yo, that's fucking bad!'
Look up some of the really bad Charlie Hebdo comics, the ones that
aren't being republished because they're too offensive. if you can't honestly agree that the lengths they went were for the explicit purpose of pissing people off, and not purely for the sake of humor, then I'll let you continue espousing ignorance without reply.