Radical Islam

508 Words2 Pages

Terrorism is an act of implementing extreme measures over a group of people in order to restore a balance that was unjustly taken away. Radical Islamist use this form of practice as a way to gain back power and domain over what they believe was once rightfully theirs to begin with. Islamists try to strengthen the role that they have over the world by forcing people to live by what they believe in and to practice those beliefs that they are given. Radical Islamist believe that God is the maker of all laws, and countries that do not rely solely on this belief should be punished by acts of terrorism. Islamic beliefs are centered around “tawhid.” Tawhid is the belief that God is all-powerful, and His all-powerful laws are the only laws that mankind is obligated to abide by. According to Mary Habeck’s article, “Based on the definition of tawhid, the extremists argue that democracy, liberalism, human rights, personal freedom, international law, …show more content…

Regardless of the outcome for the individual performing the act, Islamist believe that credit is given to all attempts of “good works” even if the attempt fails. September 11, 2001 is the most often act of terrorism that is used to support this. According to Habeck, “… extremist decided that the United States had to be destroyed… the United States is recognized by the jihadis as the center of liberalism and democracy... thus must be destroyed along with democracy itself” (citation). Based on the Jihadist beliefs, they used the ideals that the United States is too liberal and too democratic as the reasoning behind why they had to eliminate the population to please God. Although this is prime example of radical Islam, other radical acts such as this have taken place in other parts of the world in order to please God by eradicating citizens who do not believe solely on the laws of

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