When Experts Are a Waste of Money

Corporations have always relied on industry analysts, management consultants and in-house gurus for advice on strategy and competitiveness. Since these experts understand the products, markets and industry trends, they also get paid the big bucks.

But what experts do is analyze historical trends, extrapolate forward on a linear basis and protect the status quo — their field of expertise. And technologies are not progressing linearly anymore; they are advancing exponentially. Technology is advancing so rapidly that listening to people who just have domain knowledge and vested interests will put a company on the fastest path to failure. Experts are no longer the right people to turn to; they are a waste of money.

Just as the processing power of our computers doubles every 18 months, with prices falling and devices becoming smaller, fields such as medicine, robotics, artificial intelligence and synthetic biology are seeing accelerated change. Competition now comes from the places you least expect it to. The health-care industry, for example, is about to be disrupted by advances in sensors and artificial intelligence; lodging and transportation, by mobile apps; communications, by Wi-Fi and the Internet; and manufacturing, by robotics and 3-D printing.

To see the competition coming and develop strategies for survival, companies now need armies of people, not experts. The best knowledge comes from employees, customers and outside observers who aren’t constrained by their expertise or personal agendas. It is they who can best identify the new opportunities. The collective insight of large numbers of individuals is superior because of the diversity of ideas and breadth of knowledge that they bring. Companies need to learn from people with different skills and backgrounds — not from those confined to a department.

When used properly, crowdsourcing can be the most effective, least expensive way of solving problems.

Crowdsourcing can be as simple as asking employees to submit ideas via email or via online discussion boards, or it can assemble cross-disciplinary groups to exchange ideas and brainstorm. Internet platforms such as Zoho Connect, IdeaScale and GroupTie can facilitate group ideation by providing the ability to pose questions to a large number of people and having them discuss responses with each other.

Many of the ideas proposed by the crowd as well as the discussions will seem outlandish — especially if anonymity is allowed on discussion forums. And companies will surely hear things they won’t like. But this is exactly the input and out-of-the-box thinking that they need in order to survive and thrive in this era of exponential technologies.

I tried such an experiment myself, crowdsourcing a book on women in innovation. After researching the exclusion of women from the technology industry, I wanted to propose ideas to fix the problems. It was unlikely that I, as a male, would be able to understand the depth of the problem that women face; to articulate painful stories of sexism and abuse; or to propose meaningful solutions. So I asked the crowd. I enlisted Columbia School of Journalism professor Farai Chideya as my coauthor, and we hired a project manager, Neesha Bapat. Together, we brainstormed questions we wanted to ask and problems we wanted to solve. We placed these on an online discussion forum. Then we approached our women friends and armies of social media followers to ask them to join the discussion. By the end, more than 500 women had come together to share ideas and propose solutions. Within six weeks, we were able to perform research that would have taken years, and developed a consensus on what needed doing. Women documented their own heart-wrenching stories and told the secrets of their success. The result of this effort is a book, Innovating Women, which dozens of women have told me has helped, motivated and inspired them.

Another way of harnessing the power of the crowd is to hold incentive competitions. These can solve problems, foster innovation and even create industries — just as the first XPRIZE did. Sponsored by the Ansari family, it offered a prize of $10 million to any team that could build a spacecraft capable of carrying three people to 100 kilometers above the earth’s surface, twice within two weeks. It was won by Burt Rutan in 2004, who launched a spacecraft called SpaceShipOne. Twenty-six teams, from seven countries, spent more than $100 million in competing. Since then, more than $1.5 billion has been invested in private space flight by companies such as Virgin Galactic, Armadillo Aerospace and Blue Origin, according to the XPRIZE Foundation.

Heritage Provider Network’s CEO, Dr. Richard Merkin, wanted to decrease the number of avoidable hospitalizations — which cost the country more than $40 billion every year. So, in 2011, he offered $3 million to the team that could best predict how many days a patient would spend in the hospital, and 4,500 teams, from 41 countries, provided more than 39,000 entries. The best entries were seven times as accurate as any health-care organization’s predictions. “Health care has become an information science, and health-care organizations that embrace the status quo will become the Kodaks and the Blockbusters of the second decade of the 21st century,” Merkin wrote in an email to me.

Competitions needn’t be so grand. InnoCentive and HeroX, a spinoff from the XPRIZE Foundation, for example, allow prizes as small as a few thousand dollars for solving problems. A company or an individual can specify a problem and offer prizes for whoever comes up with the best idea to solve it. InnoCentive has already run thousands of public and inter-company competitions. The solutions they have crowdsourced have ranged from the development of biomarkers for Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis disease to dual-purpose solar lights for African villages.

Not long ago, success in business came from hoarding knowledge. Whether in departments, in groups, or in individual experts, the motivations were to keep information confidential and use it to gain an edge. Today, it is all about sharing. When an idea is shared, one plus one equals three, because the parties learn from each another and develop new ideas. In this way, crowdsourcing harnesses the creative and competitive spirit of people all over the world, enabling them to solve big problems as well as small and bypassing the knowledge-hoarders we once depended on.

Students Ask Not To Be Called African-American; Teacher Allegedly Calls Them N-Word

Last week, an Illinois substitute teacher reportedly called a group of four middle school girls the N-word after they asked not to be called African-American.

The incident occurred at Jay Stream Middle School in the town of Carol Stream during an eighth-grade social studies class. When interviewed by local news outlet WMAQ, student Mea Thompson, who is of Jamaican descent, said they asked the teacher not to call them African-American since none of them are from Africa.

“She said, ‘It’s the politically correct term.’ Then she said, ‘Well, back then you guys would be considered the N-word,'” Thompson said, recalling the exchange. “We were so shocked and we were like, ‘What? Excuse me? That’s not correct to call us that.’ She was like, ‘Well, back then that’s what African-Americans were called.’”

The teacher allegedly used the N-word several times over the 80-minute class period.

“After the shock and hurt, I’m angry,” Thompson’s mother, Shayna, said. “It’s a new world, and the people of the past that still hang onto hatred and bigotry don’t belong in this world anymore.”

When reached for comment, the District Superintendent William Shields said the events in the classroom are still unclear, but said the teacher would not be returning to the school.

“We’re finding that an awful lot of the accounts on the specific words and actions are extremely inconsistent, so it’s very hard to judge this situation,” Shields told The Huffington Post. “We’re proud of the kids. We want them to be able to come to administrators and teachers to speak about issues of not feeling safe or secure. That being said … we’re not having the substitute back because the substitute attempted to teach a lesson outside the curriculum, which we didn’t authorize.”

WMAQ readers took to the comments section to weigh in on the story.

“What justifies the use of the N-word in a classroom, regardless what takes place on TV or on the radio?” wrote one.

“What does the history of the N-word have to do with a child requesting to not be categorized in a certain way?” asked another. “She is Jamaican, not African-American.”

Kaya Kwento

kwento (n.): a story, a tale, a narrative.

When my friends come to me screaming, “I have kwento!” in the most Taglish accents they can muster, I always feel a jolt of excitement run through me. I approach them, eyes wide, ears open, ready to listen to their story. Whether it’s a brief kilig moment with their crush, a rant they need to let out, a deep conversation with a friend or a quick update about their day, I always enjoy hearing what they have to say. No matter what they’re itching to tell, the words are etched in their histories, the past gives way to the present, and the stories they share shape a part of who they are.

Everyone has a story to tell, each one unique from any other. Let me tell you mine.

Away but never too far

Unlike most of the other KayaCo fellows, I lived in the land of dried mangoes and colorfully designed vehicles all my life. I had only experienced living away in the past year to go to college abroad, but even so, I always tried to find my way back home. I couldn’t detach myself from the unexplainable beauty my country had to offer.

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In my motherland, I am able to swim among various creatures in a sea known for its rich marine biodiversity, hop on to the most psychedelic transportation vehicles I’ve ever set my eyes on, and taste the sweetness of halo-halo, the sourness of sinigang and the savory flavor of adobo all in one meal. I am able to express myself with the words daw, nako, kase, basta, and all the other mysterious expressions from the Filipino language, experience the power of kinship within my strong web of families, set foot on the shores of some of the best beaches in the world and surround myself around individuals I share a part of who I am with.

Being so far away only brought me closer. I started to appreciate all the small things I used to take for granted in my country. But it also allowed me to understand how much more we needed to grow.

In this same country, there are people who call houses made of aluminum sheets their homes, cities that have drowned in stories deep of floodwater, and thousands of homes and shelters lost annually after several devastating typhoons. We have a number of schools lacking resources and facilities for proper teaching, hospitals dazed by a flux of patients, and a government obscured in a mask of corruption. We have mothers with huge potentials but with no way to unlock them, farmers who receive unjust compensation for their hard work, children who aren’t able to claim their rights to education, and several other problems that overwhelm the nation.

Uncovering those hidden nooks

I thought that as a scholar from a public high school with faculty, staff and students from all types of socioeconomic backgrounds and a campus, which fronted a village of slum dwellers, I was able to keep my privilege in check. I thought that I already knew what it was like to be a Filipino and understood enough about the people to move forward in effecting change. But just in this past year, I discovered the crevices in my culture and a whole new way of looking at my country. I probably still have more to learn.

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KayaCo stepped in at the right time. I knew that I wanted to engage my Filipino community in America, come back to the Philippines, get involved in social work and do something to give back to my country. KayaCo made me more wary of my privilege, helped me realize how much more I had to discover, and paved the way for a deeper understanding of my culture, in many unexpected ways. Ways that sometimes involved my daily commutes.

Realizations on a train

I think my many MRT rides to the internship and fellowship offices served an important purpose. I stood there in my own small and tight space thinking about how I figured out how to ride the transportation system that most of my fellow Filipinos rode everyday only after 19 years of living there. I enjoyed those commutes despite the long waits and the cramped space because it humbled me.

My daily rides did not give me immediate epiphanies about transnational engagement. But it did give me insight about how else I needed to grow. In our fellowship meetings, we learned about human-centered design, the design process in which the end users are given extensive attention throughout each stage. Because of the heavy conversations we had about diaspora engagement and the things we learned from our human-centered design workshops, I was brought a step closer to what it meant to give back to the country that has given everything to me.

Riding the ride

It’s no doubt the Philippines has a plethora of troubles beyond the already stressful adventures of the daily commute. Change is needed and change is sought. But what we sometimes fail to realize is that change is not resting on the shoulders of an individual alone and it is not an effort that starts with just the privileged. It starts with the vendors selling taho at the side of the road or the driver of that jeepney you rode on your way to school. It starts with the farmers hard at work in our fields or the fishermen swimming in our seas.

It begins with the communities deep in our culture, the ethnic tribes in our mountain provinces and the people we take for granted who work hard everyday to bring food to their families. It stems from a collaborative effort with the communities that know most about the change they are working towards. Those seeking change must first understand that they must ride the ride themselves before they enact change for those on it.

These stories are woven together to form the foundations for the Philippines’ transformation. We approach these people, eyes wide, ears open, ready to listen their stories. Whether it’s a moment in the farm, a rant about an angry passenger, their long walk to school, or a tiring day at work, these are stories the global Filipino community must hear out. No matter what they have to say, their words speak strong and clear messages, their perspectives are important for our development, and the stories they share shape a part of what are our country was, is and will become.

Everyone has a story to tell, each one unique from any other. Let them tell you theirs.

Restaurant Hilariously Skewers Hot Dining Trends With Brilliant Halloween 'Costume'

Esoteric name with an ampersand? Check. Artfully coiffed, tattooed waitstaff? Check. Strange “heritage” items of yore used in the kitchen? Check. Absolutely zero menu items that you can recognize? Oh yeah — check.

It’s Halloween at Chicago eatery Real Kitchen, where this year’s “costume” is a biting takedown of popular — and sometimes ridiculous — restaurant cliches. Real Kitchen branched out and dressed itself as “that new trendy restaurant, whatever one it is today.”

The hilarious idea, documented in the video above, comes a year after Real Kitchen famously dressed up as fancy-schmancy, world-renowned Chicago restaurant Alinea. As the folks at Real Kitchen Real Kitchen jokingly lament in this year’s Halloween video, when the attention from that stunt died down, they were back to being mistaken for a neighboring pizza chain.

Clearly, this year’s “costume” had to be even better. The result? Real Kitchen became the inanely-named “Veritable & The Scullery,” featuring all the things the most pretentious of foodies have come to embrace: really expensive cocktails made from hundreds of ingredients, bizarre foraged items, and terribly uncomfortable (but chic!) furniture.

After Halloween, Real Kitchen will go right back to being a gourmet-to-go cafe that’s decidedly unpretentious — but hopefully not mistaken for a pizza place, again.

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A Photo Tour: Chocolatiers in Brussels

I fly to Brussels every month so I decided to devote my recent trip to chocolate shops. The World Capital of Chocolate’s cobbled back streets led me to shops where chocolate is elevated to an art form.

Belgium has been at the center of Europe’s chocolate trade since the 1690s. With a million residents and about 500 chocolatiers, the average Belgian consumes over 15 pounds of chocolate annually.

Take a peek at some of the window displays:

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Neuhaus opened its doors in 1857. In 1912, Jean Neuhaus Jr. created a chocolate that he named praline (a hard chocolate shell with a filling). This was to become one of the best known and most appreciated of Belgian creations worldwide. Jean’s wife, Louise, invented the “ballotin” the cardboard chocolate box. Photo ©Susan Fogwell

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Leonidas is one of the largest chocolate companies in the world.
Photo ©Susan Fogwell
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Galler Photo ©Susan Fogwell
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Galler’s Window Display Photo ©Susan Fogwell
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Photo ©Susan Fogwell
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Photo ©Susan Fogwell

On Non-Violent Islamic Extremism (3/3)

Non-Violent Extremism – the Breeding Ground for Violent Extremism

The fact that Islamic religion has yet to go through a reformation process has made it an easy target for political manipulation — changing according to the political contexts, the leaders and the Geist of the time. With the rise of political Islam, religion started to be shaped by this ideology of domination, brought back to the public sphere, and used as a tool for legitimization. Slowly it turned into a hegemonic message that seeks to shape the political, social and legal orders according to its ideological canons. Instead of a message of love and tolerance, it became a message of Jihad, hatred of others, supremacy of Muslims, and a call for the establishment of a theocratic Islamic state.

This process did not happen over night. It took decades to mainstream this ideology of extremism by different actors.

Three types of actors have shaped these events: Political Islam movements, Societal Islamism, and Islamic and Arab/Islamic political states/elites.

First, Political Islam

Political Islam is an ideology — a modern ideology that seeks state’s political power as a means of changing and transforming existing societies. For them power is only a means to an end, its goal is a revolutionary change compelled by a vision of a puritanical society and state. A society that is governed by God’s law not man/woman’s made laws. And a state where identity and citizenship are based and defined by religious affiliation and observance. Human rights, citizenship rights, minorities and women’s rights are accordingly violated with impunity.

There are different versions of political Islam. Some movements seek to create this vision of society and state through outright violence — ISIS is one example of this type of movements. The most dangerous version, in my opinion, uses an incremental approach. Violence is still Salonfähig, but the strategy is to change gradually through a process of Islamizing society by means of the education system, the mosque, religious teachings and the media. It is no coincidence that every time Islamists enter a government, Arabic or Islamic, the first ministry they insist on having is the education ministry and the first measure they undertake is changing the curriculum to mold it according to their ideology.

This strategy is not confined to Arab and Islamic states. It is practiced in Western societies, where Muslim minorities are living. Just make a survey and check whom the Western governments consider ‘partners’ in designing the religious teachings of Islam for their minorities. You won’t like the answer!

Muslim Brotherhood and Jamaat-e-Islami

Political Islam was originally spearheaded by two main political movements, from which other groups (violent and non violent) sprang: a) Muslim Brotherhood created in Egypt 1928 by Hassan Al Banna, a primary school teacher; and b) Jamaat-e-Islami created in British India in1941 by Abu Alaa Al Maududi, an Indian born Journalist who later moved to Pakistan.

The ideology of Muslim Brotherhood and Jamaat e Islami divides the world into two competing camps — Islam and the West — which are engaged in an existential confrontation and war.

Both movements insist that Islam is a way of life! It governs every aspect of society including politics! And Muslims have to surrender their wills to its stipulations.

It was political Islam that first articulated this ‘concept’ ideologically. Yet it succeeded in mainstreaming it to the extent that people today repeat this statement like parrots.

According to the political ideology of Al Maududi, sovereignty (hakimiyya) does not belong to the people, but to god alone and power is only legitimate if governed according to the commands of god. Hence, the only legitimate state is an Islamic state with the sole aim of applying sharia. Needless to say that Khomeini’s writing on the Islamic Government emphasized the same principle for his theocratic state in Iran.

The world is divided into two camps, Islam is a way of life, an Islamic state applying Sharia.

And Jihad!

“Jihad is a religious duty obligatory on every Muslim.” Jihad is thus the fourth component of the ideology of political Islam.

Hassan Al Banna was clear about the Jihad he meant, and it was not a peaceful one! He said:

God has imposed jihad as a religious duty on every Muslim, categorically and rigorously, from which there is neither evasion nor escape. He has rendered it a supreme object of desire, and has made the reward of martyrs and fighters in his way a splendid one, for he has conjoined with them in their reward only those who have acted as they did, and have molded themselves upon them in their performance of jihad.

Although I know some would argue that both movements belong to a ‘nonviolent’ Islamism and therefore they should be treated as ‘moderate’ — a view espoused and propagated by some ‘advisors’ working at the British government and American administration. The fact remains though that the objective of the two movements is not to follow the rules of the democratic game. If they participate in the political system, it is with the aim of changing it to their version of a theocratic state, even if this took decades.

Listen to what they say, read their literature and research their policy measures and this will become clear.

Al Banna is of the opinion that the aim is “to guide mankind by means of the light of Islam and to raise the banner of Islam in all parts of the world.”

And Al Maududi vision of an Islamic state is clear: an ‘Islamic state with the Quran as the constitution; legislation would be limited to the interpretation of Sharia; and its president would be devout Muslim surrounded by an all-Muslim council. Non-Muslims would return to dhimmi status’. Muslims who do not conform to the Maududi worldview are cast away all together.

It was because of his ideology and the work of Jamaat-e-Islami in Pakistan that the Ahmadiyya community was stripped from its ‘Muslim Status’. The law was consequently changed making it a crime to use the word ‘Muslims’ to describe Ahmadiyya or ‘Mosque’ to describe their prayer house. There are Pakistani Ahmadiyya persons serving 5 to 6 years in prison today because they did just that: called themselves Muslims!

Perhaps you will understand my exacerbation when I realized that the writings of Maududi has been distributed in British schools as ‘standard readings on Islam’! I hate to use this analogy, but imagine assigning the writings of Mussolini or Hitler as ‘standard reading on Italy/Germany’ and the picture will be clear.

Second, Societal Islamism

Societal Islamism is an expression I used in my book The Arab State and Women’s Rights: The Trap of Authoritarian Government (London: Routledge, 2011,) and it is an expression that I am using now in my book Islamic Law in the West: The Essentialists. It refers to these puritanical religious movements, which concern themselves with changing social behaviors that conform to their rigid worldviews, call for an Islamic mode of life, refrain from politics, and often are loyal to the regimes in their respective Islamic states. Concepts of Jihad as a duty, the creation of an Islamic state, the insistence that others who consider themselves Muslims and practice the main tenets of the religion are in fact non-Muslims (Takfir) — a concept espoused by political Islam as well — are part of their worldview. In addition, the West is an enemy that should be fought, if not by violence, then by separating oneself of its influence and propagating this interpretation of Islam worldwide.

These movements include the Saudi Wahhabi/Salafi movement (and Ahl Al hadith in its South Asian Version), South Asian Deobandi and Barelvi movements and Tablighi Jama’at.

What these movements do is propagate a message of separation and intolerance. They call on their supporters to separate themselves from those surrounding them (Muslims and non Muslims alike) by their behavior, to hate them in their heart, and to strictly adhere to their puritanical teachings to the letter.

When their rigid intolerant interpretation of Islam intertwines with the ideology of Political Islam, the outcome is toxic. We see its embodiment in the deeds of ISIS today.

If you are asking yourselves why so many British citizens of Islamic heritage are drawn to the ideology of ISIS; I suggest that you look closer at the British context: half of the mosques in Britain are controlled by the Deobandi and Tablighi Jama’at. In addition, as Innes Bowen observes in her book Medina in Birmingham, Najaf in Brent: Inside British Islam (2014), between 2009 and 2013 the number of Salafi mosques in the UK increased by 50 percent. This made the movement the fastest growing of the UK’s major Islamic trends. In fact, half of all new mosques opening each year are Salafi controlled.

All these mosques are allowed to have their Madrasas to teach children Islam. Moreover, the Deobandi movement has established 25 dar al-ulums (seminaries) in the UK responsible of training the Imams for their mosques. These Imams, as a Quillum report accurately argued, are ‘British made’ but fail to support the humanist values of equality, tolerance, liberty and religious pluralism.

Did I tell you that Taliban members have been taught Islam in Deobandi seminaries built in Afghanistan?

No?

Now you know.

And it is this line of Islamic teaching that is being propagated in Britain as ‘mainstream’!

If the British government is serious about tackling the ISIS threat, I suggest that it dismantles its non-violent extremist infrastructure in UK first. Start with the ‘religious teaching’ provided by these institutions and mosques, look at its content, and make sure you are not propagating an ISIS ideology in the name of religious freedom.

Third, Arab/Islamic political states/elites — and their Western counterparts!

Arab and Islamic states and leaders have exploited political Islam and societal Islamism. And in their Machiavellian politics of survival, they helped mainstream an ideology of extremism. This trend is not confined to them. Western leaders and states have also exploited these two phenomena as well.

In the unscrupulous context where Arab/Islamic leaders lack legitimacy, the Islamist/Islamic card has become the tool to compensate for their deficit. Saudi Arabia, it is well-known, was built on a 1747 alliance between the founder of the Wahhabi/Salafi movement and the forefather of the Saudi dynasty. The first needed political power to implement his ‘reading’ of Islam by force. The latter was in need of legitimacy that compensates for his lack of proper ‘tribal lineage’ necessary in his region, Najd, for leadership. Only when he embraced the Wahhabi movement was he able to extend his authority outside his small town of Al Dir’iyya. His grand grandson Ibn Saud made use of this very alliance a century and half later to create a kingdom that exceeds the boundary of the Najd region.

Starting from the late ’60s, Saudi Arabia and Gulf countries used the Wahhabi teachings as an important tool to fight the ideology of leftist Pan Arabism that threatened their monarchies. Using their newfound oil money, they spread it first in the Arab region and then worldwide. The United States joined in later. Karima Bennoune author of Your Fatwa does not apply here (2014), highlighted how in the ’80s the U.S. spearheaded an effort that trained jihadists from Morocco to Indonesia in its Cold War struggle against the Soviet Union in Afghanistan.

Put simple, religion was a tool in the Cold War rivalry, but it was not any religion that the US propagated; it was one of the most reactionary fringe readings of Islam that it helped spread.

Pakistani political elites did the same and exploited political Islam in its Maududi version and later societal Islam in its Deobandi version as a means of cheap legitimizing method that guarantees their survival. The outcome was a mainstreaming of their ideology and interpretation on the expense of other strands and readings of south Asian Islam.

If you think that India is immune to this politics, I suggest you look at the main Islamic ally of the ruling elite: the Deobandi movement!

Semi secular Arab states used the Islamist/Islamic card as well. In Egypt, President Sadat was the first to exploit the Islamist card in the ’70s to face his leftist opponents — releasing Muslim Brothers leaders from the prison, giving them a free platform to spread their politicized message in the education, religious and media sectors. Former President Mubarak followed suit but allied himself instead with the Salafi movement to weaken the Muslim Brothers — a strategy emulated by current President Sissi.

Western democracies are participants in this Machiavellian game. In Britain the rise of identity politics have led to an endorsement of groups affiliated with political Islam and Societal Islamism. This policy came in handy to counter the leftist oppositional trends within the South Asian communities prevalent in the seventies and eighties of last century. It was also useful to galvanize and win the ‘Asian vote’.

Until the London 2005 terrorist attacks, it was representatives of political Islam that the British government considered the speakers of Muslim community. These were not ‘elected’ Muslim leaders, rather hand picked by the government.

A similar condition persists in the United States. Organized supporters of political Islam are the loudest in the political field and claim to be the ‘speakers of Islam and Muslims’.

__________

I apologize if I have overwhelmed you with this amount of information. But it was necessary because of the complexity of the situation. I argued that there are two aspects that should be addressed if we are to fight Islamic extremism.

One aspect pertains to a long-term project — the theological reformation of the Islamic religion. This project is the responsibility of Muslims themselves. It cannot be imposed from the outside. But it is necessary to tame religion, bring it back to the private sphere, and separate it from politics. Secularism is the first step (among others) that guarantees that the state treats its citizens with neutrality, without distinction because of religion, sect, gender or belief.

This is a difficult and painful project and it will take a long time. Yet I dare say that to launch it demands articulating this one sentence: Quran was composed and written by humans.

The lack of this reformation made the Islamic religion susceptible to exploitation, which brings us to the second aspect that should be addressed: non-violent extremism. Three actors driven by different reasons helped mainstreaming non-violent extremism: political Islam movements, societal Islamism and political leaders. To counter violent extremism, we need to dismantle the educational, religious and media infrastructure that mainstream non-violent extremism in Islamic and Western societies. In other words, we need to dry the ideological and religious swamps of political Islam and societal Islamism. Yet doing that will require state leaders, who are both legitimate and featured by intellectual honesty and courage. Not an easy combination!

Chuwi DX1: 7” Android Tablet With Reversible Camera

While hardly a new concept, Chuwi’s DX1 tablet features a single camera that can rotate to face front or back or any angle in between. That presumably helps this cellular modem-toting device reach its low price tag.

Verizon wants AT&T, T-Mobile customers, offers more data

verizonhtcone-1Today, Verizon is taking steps to bring in new customers, offering them more data and credit for switching service. Starting November 1, if you move to Verizon, and choose a More Everything plan at the $80 or $100 price points, you’ll get an extra chunk of data. For a limited time, Verizon is giving new customers 10GB data on the … Continue reading

Samsung cites “collusion” as reason they didn’t pay Microsoft

samsung-8201-600x400Earlier this month, news broke that Microsoft had sued Samsung for unpaid royalties. The South Korean electronics giant is being sued for $6.9 million in unpaid interest on a $1 billion patent royalty charge. Rather than pay the relatively small amount, Samsung is fighting this one in court. Samsung is now saying Microsoft’s acquisition of Nokia violated the terms of … Continue reading

Morphing Cocktails Are the Perfect Halloween BOOze

Morphing Cocktails Are the Perfect Halloween BOOze

Look, cocktails are great. You know it, I know it. But after you pour one and then it just sits there, being all delicious. How mouth-wateringly boring, right? Well, in honor of tonight’s revelry, we’ve got a handful of morphing cocktails that bring a heavy dose of eye-candy. They should pair nicely with the heavy dose of regular candy that you’re about to eat.

Read more…