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#91 [Permalink] Posted on 24th August 2018 18:01

saa10245 wrote:
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You are hard to understand but I am making the exact opposite point

Cloning is NOT creation by a human being, it is a creation of ALLAH TA'AALA

I don't know how else to say it.

I am not a philosopher so don’t understand what you are talking about to be honest.

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#92 [Permalink] Posted on 24th August 2018 18:45
Muadh_Khan wrote:
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The very first point of my post says

A cloned animal IS a creation/MAKHLOOQ because it exists and it is created by Allahسبحانه وتعالى.

You said
Quote:
Cloning is NOT creation by a human being, it is a creation of ALLAH TA'AALA

FULLY AGREE. But did i say something different in previous posts?
My point is Human Beings CANNOT EVER create. Period. FULL STOP.
This is not restricted only to cloning, Everything else as well is Created and Sustained by Allah سبحانه وتعالى. Everything happens by His Will, Power and Knowledge.

ALLAH is the Creator of EVERYTHING.

Quote:
Allah is the Creator of all things, and He is, over all things, Disposer of affairs. (39:62)


Quote:
That is Allah, your Lord; there is no deity except Him, the Creator of all things, so worship Him. And He is Disposer of all things.(6:102)


This statement of yours

Quote:
Biologically, cloning is not creating or creation, its alteration.


Contradicts this statement (see below).

Quote:
Cloning is NOT creation by a human being, it is a creation of ALLAH TA'AALA


Regarding your first statement "Biologically, cloning is not creating or creation, its alteration."
I agree with the first stem "Cloning is not creating"
I disagree with the 2nd stem "It is not creation" Because it is a creation of Allahسبحانه وتعالى.


This is happening because of you are failing to understand the difference between the two words "Creation" and "Creating"
In simpler terms:
Creation is Makhlooq. You and everything that exists (apart from Allahسبحانه وتعالى) is HIS Creation. Creation means all the things that exist apart from Allahسبحانه وتعالى.
another way to ask (so that you are able to understand) is " Do you believe you are a creation of Allahسبحانه وتعالى?"

Quote:
Cloning is NOT creation by a human being, it is a creation of ALLAH TA'AALA

Did i say cloning is a creation by a human being? Is that even possible? It's NEVER POSSIBLE.
Can humans bring something into existence from non existence? Do they have the power to do that?

In fact i said the exact opposite which is that the cloned animal is a creation (which means it is CREATED BY ALLAH(SWT)

2ndly I denied that Cloning is Similar to "creating". The reasons i gave were
1)Creating is act only attributed to Allahسبحانه وتعالى which means He is the Only Creator. There are no other creators/Partners.
2) Cloning involves modification of existing things hence it nullifies the concept of creating on its own (the act of bringing something from non-existence to existence"

It amazes me what is so difficult to understand. Is my English that tough?
I am not a philosopher either. This is has got nothing to do with it.



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#93 [Permalink] Posted on 24th August 2018 18:55

saa10245 wrote:
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It is NOT a creation of human beings.

Italics were implied and I think you misunderstood from the beginning, thinking that I mean "It is a NOT a creation of Allah Ta'ala"

If this is your misunderstanding, you have groslly misundertood from the very beginning.

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#94 [Permalink] Posted on 24th August 2018 19:08
Muadh_Khan wrote:
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Quote:
It is NOT a creation of human beings.


In Islam there is no such thing as "something" which is a "creation" of Human beings. It Doesn't exist. Human beings CANNOT create. This is both from Islamic point of view (Numerous verses in the Quran and traditions in the hadith) and rational point of view (see the link pertaining to article by mufti Yusuf mullan).

Quote:
Italics were implied and I think you misunderstood from the beginning, thinking that I mean "It is a NOT a creation of Allah Ta'ala"



When i wrote this

Quote:

A cloned animal IS a creation because it exists and it is created by Allahسبحانه وتعالى.
Anything that begins to exist NEEDS A creator.
There is a difference between the word "Creation" and "Creating"
Creation: all things that begin to exist fall in the realm of creation.
Creating: The act of bringing something from non-existence to existence.

Cloned animal is a Creation of Allah سبحانه وتعالى.
Cloning is NOT SIMILAR TO CREATING because 1) Creating is an Act of Allahسبحانه وتعالى 2) cloning involves using modification of already existing living things.

So Creation is a word that pertains to things that are "Created" or things that begin to exist.
Anything that begins to exist is created by Allahسبحانه وتعالى because He is the Creator of everything.
My original question was "does Cloned Animal has a soul since it is living, moving e.t.c?"
And i believe it has since it moves and is living (not dead) and this soul is given to it By Allahسبحانه وتعالى.


You wrote

Quote:

Personally I don't think that it is creation or creating, its modification of an already existing/created object.

There is no creation or creation going on, in other words the embryo was already created and was going through its normal cycle...All they have done is modified or altered it so it was ALIVE (so to speak) and continued to be ALIVE.

Biologically, cloning is not creating or creation, its alteration.

Nothing new is being created at all.


There should have been no need to highlight anything that you highlighted in response to my post.There is not a single line in my post that implies something along the lines "Cloning is a creation of Human beings." In reality it implies the complete opposite. You are spending too much time on highlighting the obvious and the impossible.
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#95 [Permalink] Posted on 24th August 2018 19:16

saa10245 wrote:
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I give up!

I never claimed or said that cloning is creation ascribed to human and denied any attributes of Allah Ta'ala.

You misunderstood from the beginning and kept on going in loops over something which was never claimed but I end with saying...

“I give up!” I don’t have the same philosophical skills as you do.

You win, you are right and were always right and I am wrong.

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#96 [Permalink] Posted on 24th August 2018 19:27
@ Brother Muad Khan
There's no point in getting heated up brother.
Let's for the sake for Allah سبحانه وتعالى we put it this way That we both misunderstood each others points. Can we do that?
Let's learn all the good that we learnt from this?
I am sorry if i offended you.
Winning is not my intention because it does nothing but feeds one ego.
May Allah bless you.
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#97 [Permalink] Posted on 24th August 2018 19:30

saa10245 wrote:
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Ajeeb people exist in this world.


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#98 [Permalink] Posted on 24th August 2018 19:48
Someone has created some confusion :)

We all know what you both mean.

E.g. Allah didn't create this confusion yet Allah is the creator of ALL things!

We all know what it means, so let's just carry on please.
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#99 [Permalink] Posted on 25th August 2018 16:11

Dajjalic Machinations: Why Explain?

I spent a lot of time explaining some of the intricate details and you must be asking as to why? My reasons are as follows:

  1. When Dajjal displays these supernatural feats there will be many who will be shocked, awestruck and astounded and their Eemaan may be affected. It was my attention (in my little capacity) to show you that there are explanations as to how Dajjal “may” do perform his “miracles”. Even without having a full scientific picture and without understanding it in depth, we can see that many of these are possible. My hope is that the Ummat may be physically and materially overwhelmed but not ideologically and mentally! Sayyiduna Ibraheem (AS) asked Allah Ta’ala the question as to how Allah Ta’ala gives life, this is our evidence that we DO NEED to delve into HOW to satisfy the mental curiosities of the people! 
  2. Secondly, the scientific and technological prowess which Dajjal will display will be INFINTELY SUPERIOR to anything we possess! Some (modernists) claim that Muslims should concentrate on science and technology (and we should) but NO MATTER how hard you try you will NOT be able to match Dajjal! You cannot counter his overwhelming superiority. The answer is not in Dunya but Deen, we need to seek protection in the Greatness, Sovereignty and Powers of Allah Ta’ala. The idea that Mahdi (AS) will be some sort of hidden scientist is baseless and ignorant. Mahdi (AS) will fight Dajjal because Allah Ta’ala will give him up the ability and not because of Dunya (abilities). It also doesn't mean that we give up, either! 
  3. Thirdly, there are those who sun modern sciences and technology intuitively and instinctively believing it to be evil and they are far from Islam. In the battle of Khandaq, Sayyiduna Rasul-ullah (Sallallaho Alahihe Wassallam) sought advice and Salman (RA) gave advice to dig a trench and this was an example of adopting methods/tactics/technology which was alien to Arabs. There are million and one examples in the history of Islam where Muslims have invented, borrowed, used and enhanced technology in all spheres of life and not just battlefield and warfare. Those who are ignorant of our history do us sever injustice!

www.wifaqululama.co.uk/nhs/

Our trust and reliance MUST BE with Allah Ta’ala. We must resort to Allah Ta’ala. We must turn to Allah Ta’ala in earnest, sincerely and devotion. Our powers are not science and technology but our power is Eemaan and YET we are not medieval Christians or Donald Trump supporters who turn away from science. Those who don’t understand what I am talking about, read the history of Medieval Christianity and why Christians are becoming Atheists. We are Muslims and we believe in Islam and Allah has given us this Deen.

We are the Ummah of Sayyiduna Rasul-ullah (Sallallaho Alahihe Wassallam) and we are moderate in all aspects of Dunya and Akhira, we are justly balanced in all aspects, we neither lean this way or that way.



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#100 [Permalink] Posted on 25th August 2018 17:21
We must learn science as much as possible and advance in technology as much as possible to defend and promote our deen. In fact, we from opposite sides of the planet are able to communicate with each other because of this technology.

However, science and technology comes second to the learning and practicing of deen. So our first priority should be to learn our deen and increase our eman and spirituality and then after that we must focus in acquiring material means.

Secondly, the thing to ponder is that do we have much time left to learn and acquire science and technology. Military training is a must in order to prepare to tackle one aspect of the fitna of dajjal. But do we have time to learn and acquire the tools of manufacturing modern weapons. What I mean is that should we spend our time in acquiring military technology or should we focus our energies on getting military training.

Thirdly, institutions like research and education in secular sciences thrive only when the overall system of the state is correct. And Imam Mahdi will come to correct the system. So on individual and on community level we have to be realistic about what we can do and what we can't. Acquiring technology and researching needs resources which needs state funds. It can't be done independently. So we can't do anything which is beyond our power.

Fourthly, there is a concept in Shariah which is called "Barakah". Barakah can be translated as productivity of a Muslim where little resources of a momin have greater impact. In little time a momin can accomplish that which a fasiq or disbeliever can't achieve even in larger amount of time. With less money a momin's needs are fulfilled where as a large sum of money can't fulfill the needs of a fasiq. A short life is enough for a momin to do good deeds where as a fasiq or disbeliever wastes his/her long life in disobedience. Islam is about quality and not quantity. So like Badr, if we practice our deen properly with true understanding and if our eman is of high quality, then our little scientific and material means will be sufficient and we will defeat the overwhelming kuffar. However, if our eman is weak and understanding and practice of deen is poor then , even 10 times more advanced technology than the America has today, can't make us win this war and fight this fitnah. So do try to acquire technology and scientific expertise but most of our effort should be focused on deen.

So it is not a matter of completely leaving science but a matter of priority. That which thing must get the most of our attention. Deen or Science?

Lastly, we must not overlook the ground realities. If we put our full effort on science alone, even then we can't reach where kuffar are today because we have unfortunately neglected the worldly sciences for so long. And the reason we neglected it is because we left our deen. So even in order to gain technology we must first learn and practice our deen, otherwise our dunia will also be lost along with our akhirah.

"And make ready your strength to the utmost of your power..."

If we do what ever we can do and then come in the battlefield then Allah will help us and He will provide us with his unlimited treasures in the areas we lack. He will help us with his angels and with living and non living creation of his. He will help us with the forces of nature. However, our level of success will be based upon our level of "correct" effort in the right direction and our sincerity.

We can see a pattern of believers with less resources overcoming the enemies with superior resources throughout history.

We can see it in Badr, Tabooq, Hunain, Rome, Persia, Crusaders, Soviet Union, Nato. Many examples from the medieval as well as recent history can be given.

In the battle of Trench also, Muslims didn't decide to wait and prepare for superior arrows and swords. The danger was lingering on their heads which they could not over look. So they adopted a foreign strategy which was time efficient as well. And even after that it was the forces of nature which demoralized the kuffar and diplomacy of a great new revert Sahabi RA which discouraged the Quresh from further continuing this evil pursuit. So it was material means in the shape of foreign and alien military strategy, natural forces, taqwa and high eman and diplomacy all combined leading to the victory of Muslims.

To conclude, I would say that we must spend our time wisely in correct effort instead of shooting arrows aimlessly.
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#101 [Permalink] Posted on 26th August 2018 13:16
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#102 [Permalink] Posted on 13th October 2018 20:27
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#103 [Permalink] Posted on 11th March 2019 16:37
The Cultural Assault Open or Close

Dr. Ahmed Afzaal


An unprecedented "explosion" of information has become the hallmark of our age. The technological advancement in the field of mass communication, achieved during the last one hundred years or so, has had a number of important consequences for the human race. Indeed, it is due to the ubiquitous use and influence of mass media that we find ourselves in a world that is radically different from that of our ancestors. In these pages, we wish to bring to the fore the fact that many of the changes brought about by the mass media are neither wholesome nor desirable.

In general, we regard the marvels of modern science like the cinema, television, computer, satellite dish, and the Internet as wonderful inventions that have enriched our lives and made them less burdensome. When someone points out the negative aspects of all this technological progress, the immediate response one gets is that all inventions are neutral in themselves, their good or evil lies only in the manner of their use. But is it really so? Social scientists do not agree on this issue. The debate is between the Instrumental theory of technology and the Substantive theory. The former is based on the common sense idea that technologies are neutral and have no valuative content of their own. They are not inherently good or bad, and they can be used to attain different ends as desired by the persons or institutions in control. The latter theory argues that each new technology brings with it a new cultural system and restructures the society as an object of control. Every new technology is designed to function in a particular and limited way, and, in practice, it does interact with the rest of the reality in specific and unique ways. Inventions cannot be judged in a vacuum, disassociated from the human beings who use them. As such, every new invention leads to changes in human activities, life-style, and even values. Technology, therefore, is not essentially neutral. While it often has beneficial effects, there are darker sides too that are usually ignored or accepted as a normal part of modern living. According to Neil Postman, Chairman of the Department of Culture and Communication at New York University, "anyone who has studied the history of technology knows that technological change is always a Faustian bargain: Technology giveth and technology taketh away, and not always in equal measure. A new technology sometimes creates more than it destroys. Sometimes, it destroys more than it creates. But it is never one-sided." (Speech to German Informatics Society, October 11, 1990)

Unfortunately, the recent development of science and technology has taken place in a milieu that is bereft of a stabilizing principle, devoid of a faith in Divine Guidance that would have ensured the ethical use of new inventions and gadgets, limiting their deleterious effects to the minimum. Consequently, technological progress has turned out to be more of a menace for humanity in many respects than a blessing. American social philosopher and historian Lewis Mumford (1895-1990) writes, "scientific knowledge has not merely heightened the possibilities of life in the modern world: it has lowered the depths. When science is not touched by a sense of values it works ´ as it fairly consistently has worked during the past century ´ toward a complete dehumanization of the social order. The plea that each of the sciences must be permitted to go its own way without control should be immediately rebutted by pointing out that they obviously need a little guidance when their applications in war and industry are so plainly disastrous.…" (The Lewis Mumford Reader, edited by Donald L. Miller, New York: Pantheon Books, 1986)

There can be no doubt that as far as the basic human predicament is concerned, the explosion of scientific knowledge and rapid growth of technological expertise have failed to provide any solutions. Industries have grown, but the environment has been shamelessly abused and at places destroyed acceleration of the production-consumption cycle has brought natural resources to the verge of depletion. Life has become easier and the standard of living has improved, but only for a chosen few in selected parts of the world. Sophisticated weapons have been developed, but are almost always used to achieve unjust and immoral ends. Extraordinary prosperity has arrived in the industrialized world, but only at the cost of hunger and repression in poor nations. Amazing progress has occurred in various medical sciences, but the major part of humanity continues to languish in its misery and suffering. Flow of information and ideas is taking place with remarkable swiftness, but generally in a manner that safeguards and promotes the interests of a small privileged group. As a matter of fact, the very idea that technological progress could somehow cure the afflictions of mankind is seriously flawed. No technology ´ no matter how wonderful ´ can provide solutions for the age-old dilemmas facing humanity. Rather, it is only through a recourse to Divine Guidance that we can avoid these pitfalls, and achieve a balance between justice and prosperity, between freedom and equality, between material progress and respect for nature.

Easy and quick availability of information is the most prominent consequence brought about by the communication media. This in itself is often viewed as the panacea for human race. But we too often forget that information is not synonymous with knowledge, data is not understanding, mere facts do not constitute wisdom. We are constantly being bombarded with the latest and most up-to-date pieces of information about all conceivable subjects. A great deal of this information consists of disconnected facts and half-truths that are lacking in perspective, background, and relevance. Instead of making our lives more meaningful, therefore, this flood of information is only adding to our perplexity and alienation. The basic problem is that we do not have a holistic conception of reality, a coherent world-view that can provide us with a sense of meaning and purpose amid this deluge of data. In the absence of authentic knowledge of reality, we are like a little boy who, unable to see the big picture, is mystified by the small pieces of a jigsaw puzzle. Obviously, giving him more and more pieces of the puzzle will only increase his confusion, unless the overall pattern is first pointed out to him. Here again, technology is of no use in answering the age-old questions that have been tormenting mankind. Instead, it is only through a recourse to Divine Guidance that we can acquire reliable and authentic knowledge of reality it is only on the basis of this knowledge that we can make sense of the world and sift the relevant from the extraneous.

None of the most basic problems being faced by the human race ´ repression, tyranny, injustice, social disintegration, exploitation, alienation, and spiritual emptiness ´ is caused by a shortage of information or lack of latest technology. None of these problems can be solved, therefore, by just increasing the quantity of information that is easily available. On the contrary, the vast amount of data that are now accessible to us often serve to obscure the real issues, hiding them in a cloak of technological brilliance. In ancient times, the weak and the oppressed were excluded from learning the truth, lest they should rebel today, the truth itself is lost in a plethora of irrelevant and inapplicable information. A whole entertainment industry has sprung up to keep the minds engrossed in an overwhelming ambiance of fun and enjoyment, arousing wayward carnal desires while discouraging any serious and substantial thought. While this state of affairs has a lot to do with the vested interests of those who control the mass media and the flow of information, the role of the nature and bias of technology itself should not be overlooked.

In order to make sense of the contemporary scenario, we first need to comprehend a basic fact. In every society, there is a small minority of intelligent and powerful individuals that enjoys a position of leadership vis-à-vis its values, ideals, trends, and the general direction of its drift this is also true at the global level. We are living in an age of materialism, not because this viewpoint has triumphed over religion in a fair battle, but only because it happens to be the creed of the powerful elite of our times, with rare exceptions. This elite is able to exert an immense amount of influence over the thought and behavior of the masses ´ the majority of human beings who tend not to think on their own but to follow the dominant current of their time. In the contemporary world, the most effective means through which the elite is able to guide its followers is the mass media.

Today, the mass media is being used to propagate and reinforce a materialistic culture throughout the world. This culture is characterized by a strong emphasis on the pursuit of material possessions and sensual gratification, along with a corresponding disregard for spiritual and other-worldly ends. Since ours is the age of mass communication, trends and ideas rapidly diffuse throughout the world and quickly become global in their scope and influence. Consequently, the materialistic mindset that originally took shape in Europe during the 18th century has now become so pervasive that it transcends geographical and political boundaries as well as religious affiliations and linguistic or ethnic divisions. There is virtually no escape from the global culture!

Of all the modern mass media, television is the most powerful because of its omnipresence. We have come to accept this little piece of technology as an indispensable part of our lives, and only rarely do we pause to think whether it has any adverse effects, whether we can live without it, or whether we should put serious limits on its use. Those of us who have been raised on a continuous and heavy diet of daily television viewing would find the idea unacceptable ´ even horrible ´ that television should be altogether eliminated from our lives or, at best, allowed a very restricted and carefully monitored role. This, however, is precisely what we need to do in order to avoid its deleterious and addictive influence.

Although they are deeply interconnected and probably inseparable, the harmful effects of television can be classified into two categories: those caused by the very nature of its technology, and those related to the peculiar manner in which it is being used in today´s world. First of all, we need to categorically reject the myth that television depicts reality as it exists.
The spokesmen for the popular media often argue that they are just showing a mirror to society. Not at all. Television is, in fact, a perpetual guide and mentor for the audience. It gives legitimacy to certain ideas and informs the viewers as to what forms of behavior, dress, and manners are currently in style. It provides them with a framework of conduct, determines their value structure, and gives them role models to emulate. Television deeply influences the viewers´ sense of right and wrong, and sets for them the criteria for success and failure. It even affects the pattern of their conversations and fantasies.

The depiction of "reality" by television is almost always selective and biased. Television guides our attention towards certain specific topics, deciding for us as to what issues deserve our focus and what are merely frivolous. The overwhelming emphasis today is on entertainment. As a result, the viewer´s attention is diverted from serious and relevant problems to sex, fashion, sports, and music, until critical thinking gives way to a mentality that will trivialize anything and everything. Indeed, why would anyone bother to grapple with questions about God, the purpose of life, and the accountability in the Hereafter when he or she can enjoy TV shows that are much more exciting and amusing? Why would anyone take the trouble of thinking through the question of exploitation and injustice that have become rampant in the world when he or she can spend the same hours sitting zombie-like in front of a flickering screen, drowning the tribulations of life in a sea of entertainment? According to Marie Winn, "the television experience allows the participant to blot out the real world and enter into a pleasurable and passive mental state. The worries and anxieties of reality are as effectively deferred by becoming absorbed in a television program as by going on a ´trip´ induced by drugs or alcohol." (The Plug-In Drug by Marie Winn, New York: Penguin Books, 1985) Indeed, for many viewers, television is just a method to cope with boredom and a meaningless existence.

This is precisely what Aldous Huxley (1894-1963) predicted in his celebrated satire Brave New World: that people would be laughing instead of thinking, and they wouldn´t even know what they were laughing about and why they had stopped thinking. The Huxleyan nightmare is one in which the government has no need to censor dissenting viewpoints or to hide the truth. It is much easier to control the masses through a tyranny of pleasure. In the brave new world, the masses are offered a surfeit of entertainment, non-stop distractions of the most fascinating nature that ensures a state of perpetual amusement and happiness. According to Huxley, these non-stop distractions "are used as instruments of policy, for the purpose of preventing people from paying too much attention to the realities of the social and political situation." That nightmare has now become a reality. Television not only numbs the viewers´ sensibilities, it effectively isolates individuals from each other so that they can no longer participate in an organized effort to reform the society.

Probably the most frightening aspect of television is its ability to indoctrinate. Hooked on TV, the viewer becomes a passive recipient of ideas and opinions that are deliberately presented in a way so as to give him or her certain specific impressions. The contents of television programs can be controlled, their messages can be kept more or less uniform, and they can be repeatedly shown to the same audience. It is well-known that images which are seen over and over again, especially in a relaxed state, get deeply ingrained in the viewer´s memory from where they profoundly affect the manner in which he or she feels, thinks, and behaves. Research has also shown that the brain´s left hemisphere, which processes information logically and analytically, tunes out while a person is watching television. This allows the right hemisphere of the brain, which processes information emotionally and non-critically, to function unimpeded. All this make television a powerful tool of mass manipulation.

The same fact can be explained in another way: The key to enjoying any tele-drama is suspension of disbelief the viewer must withhold his or her faculty of critical analysis in order to enjoy television´s images and sounds. Consequently, one cannot enjoy television and not get influenced, at the same time, by the world-view and values that the producers are trying to promote. The potential for control is enormous. It has been pointed out that, "as real-life experience is increasingly replaced by the mediated ´experience´ of television-viewing, it becomes easy for politicians and market-researchers of all sorts to rely on a base of mediated mass experience that can be evoked by appropriate triggers. The TV ´world´ becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy: the mass mind takes shape, its participants acting according to media-derived impulses and believing them to be their own personal volition arising out of their own desires and needs. In such a situation, whoever controls the screen controls the future, the past, and the present." (The Perfect Machine by Joyce Nelson, Philadelphia: New Society Publishers, 1992)

Here, the difference between printing press and television is quite significant. In contrast to a reader who must actively use a considerable amount of mental effort to gain understanding from what he or she reads, television viewers passively receive images and sounds that stimulate and delight the senses but provide very little insight or awareness. When ideas are presented before us in a book or newspaper, we are usually able to analyze them critically, judge their value, challenge and refute them if need be. However, when the same ideas are injected into unsuspecting minds through captivating images, it becomes practically impossible to resist them. Since television´s non-discursive visual imagery is emotional and associative, it acts sub-consciously by sanctioning some forms of thought and behavior while invalidating others. Indeed, the value structure of an entire people can be transformed by means of the subtle messages and indirect suggestions found in apparently innocent television programs and commercials.

Some critics have pointed out that serious and substantial discourse is impossible to achieve within the format provided by contemporary television programs. This is because the goal in all TV shows is to have very short segments that can stand on their own the basic idea is that the programs must be fun to watch, and that they should never be a burden on the viewer´s intellect or memory. As a result of this format, the most serious of happenings and the most solemn of ideas appear trivial on television. According to Neil Postman, it is not just that the television is entertaining, "but that it has made entertainment itself the natural format of the representation of all experience…. No matter what is depicted or from what point of view, the overarching presumption is that it is for our amusement and pleasure." (Amusing Ourselves to Death by Neil Postman, New York: Penguin Books, 1985)

Television has an inherent bias towards presenting ideas and events as disconnected from everything else it must provide constant stimulation through variety, novelty, and movement in order to keep the viewers glued to the set and to prevent them from changing channels. The emphasis in television shows is always upon performance, not on ideas the aim is to get applause, not to encourage reflection. Since television must turn the most serious of enterprises into entertainment, it has a tendency to promote a muddled view of reality among heavy viewers, a mindset that is not willing to see anything as deserving serious attention. Even its news bulletins suffer from this ailment. Postman writes: "TV news has no intention of suggesting that any story has any implications, for that would require viewers to continue to think about it when it is done and therefore obstruct their attending to the next story that waits panting in the wings…. [No] matter how grave any fragment of news may appear…, it will shortly be followed by a series of commercials that will, in an instant, defuse the import of the news, in fact render it largely banal." (Ibid.) A prime example of the trivializing effect of television news came in 1991, when wholesale killings and devastation in Iraq were presented to the global audience as nothing more than an amusing show.

A number of reforms have been suggested to reduce the addictive and trivializing effects of television. These suggestions, however, are not likely to be implemented as long as the mass media is controlled by huge multinational corporations. The immense power of television is today being used mostly to serve the interests of these corporations on a global level. How is this possible? The spread of Western capitalism has ensured that the primary messages being conveyed through television will be more or less identical throughout the world. As a result of competitive as well as "imitative" pressure, even public television in countries like Pakistan is now following in the footsteps of commercial media. At the heart of this uniformity of content lies the capital-media nexus, a system that works in specific ways to promote a global culture of mindless consumption and hedonism.

Today, most of the mass media is controlled by large corporations that are themselves parts of even bigger conglomerates. Their goal is to catch viewers by seducing them with non-stop, round-the-clock entertainment and news. Once the viewers are caught, they are "sold" to other businesses who want to advertise their products. It is important to understand that the audience does not provide the money that makes the media work, advertisers do. It is not difficult to see, therefore, that the mass media serve the interest of the advertisers and not that of the viewers. An audience that thinks critically does not provide the happy and relaxed atmosphere in which advertisements can have their persuasive effect. Television ´ by encouraging us to enjoy and laugh but not to think and question ´ is serving the purpose of these corporations very well.

The businesses that buy time on electronic media have just one goal: to sell their products. This requires that a consumer mentality be cultivated among the viewers. Indeed, consumerism cannot survive unless the masses are preoccupied with enjoyment and pleasure-seeking. It is the desire to own better and more expensive items than one´s neighbor that drives a consumer economy. It is obvious, therefore, that the global media must use highly sophisticated methods of indoctrination to destroy traditional values and eliminate simple and austere life-styles, as these constitute major obstacles in the way of consumer capitalism. Their methodology is to spread the secular mindset on a global level so as to achieve a certain uniformity of thought and life-style, this homogenization of culture being an essential requirement for the flourishing of market economy.

With a disturbing sense of déjà vu, one is reminded here of the numerous reports prepared for the East India Company in the 19th century. These reports dealt with the steps needed to be taken in order for the British economic enterprise to succeed in India. Invariably, they concluded that the indigenous culture of the natives had to be dismantled if the British economic enterprise was to have any chance of prospering in this part of the world. Thus, it can be seen that the cultural assault by the mass media in our own times is actually an extension of the colonial offensive on the cultural and religious traditions of non-Western nations. One may ask, in the words of the Qur´an, "is this the legacy they have passed down from one to the other?" (Al-Dhariaat 51:53)

It is easy, therefore, to pinpoint the basic idea that is being ingrained in our minds through the popular mass media. Gently and skillfully, we are being led to believe that the life of this world is the only thing that really matters that we should get our pleasure right here and right now that we must not delay our gratification for there is no Hereafter and that life itself is a game in which the one who owns the most expensive consumer products is the ultimate winner.

What effect does all this have on the viewer? A constant sense of aimlessness and alienation is probably the most common disease of our age. This is further amplified by television shows and advertisements that foster the feelings of self-doubt, inadequacy, and anxiety among the viewers regarding their standards of living and material possessions. The emphasis, therefore, is shifted from who you are as a person to what you own. Heedless or unaware of Divine Guidance, one feels spiritually empty and, searching for solace, gets carried away in the never-ending cycle of wanting, working, and having. But the pain does not stop. So one works harder ´ disregarding all scruples ´ and buys still more, hoping that the promise of eternal bliss will be fulfilled if he could just have a microwave oven, a bigger refrigerator, a latest car, a better house, a holiday trip to Europe. Things continue to accumulate, but the heart is hardened in the process. The promised peace never arrives, but death does. A life-time spent in running after illusions is nothing but a Satanic hoax, about which Allah (SWT) had warned us: "He makes promises to them, and arouses in them vain desires and Satan´s promises are nothing but deceptions" (Al-Nisa 4:120). Today, this function of deceiving mankind by arousing false hopes is being performed quite ingeniously by television. Satan must be smiling!

That the international media has practically become a manipulation tool in the hands of a small financial aristocracy is a fact too obvious to miss. Jerry Mander, a former advertising man, wrote two decades ago: "Without such a single, monolithic instrument as television, the effective power and control of these huge corporations could not be harnessed as it presently is. Monolithic economic enterprise needs monolithic media to purvey its philosophy and to influence rapid change in consumption patterns. Without an instrument like television, capable of reaching everyone in the country at the same time and narrowing human needs to match the re-designed environment, the corporations themselves could not exist." (Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television by Jerry Mander, New York: Quill, 1978) With the growing popularity of American movies and TV shows, advent of the satellite dish, and the drive towards globalization, Jerry Mander´s observations have now become as much applicable to the whole world as they were to the American society of twenty years ago.

More recently, Edward S. Herman and Robert W. McChesney, co-authors of The Global Media: The New Missionaries of Corporate Capitalism (Washington D.C.: Cassel, 1997), have shown that most of the mass media today is controlled by the Big Ten, giant corporations that are global in their scope, although a majority of them is based in the United States. During the past two decades, corporate capitalism has greatly increased in its global perspective and reach, and the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, and the World Trade Organization are serving its interests in different ways.

The authors argue that just as the world is being pushed towards a socio-economic model similar to that found in the United States, the world´s media are also being pushed towards a model found in the United States. The American socio-economic model is one of market hegemony, minimal state provision, the supplanting of the citizen by the consumer, and a commercial media providing the entertainment-cum-advertising culture appropriate to the socio-economic model. The U.S. model entails a displacement of the public sphere (forums where issues related to the community can be discussed and debated) with entertainment mixed with serviceable propaganda, as this is what the corporate system prefers. The authors aver that the spread of the U.S. media model is weakening public broadcasting systems and strengthening the commercial media in the rest of the world. Consequently, advertisers are increasingly in a position to shape media performance and standards as a result, we should expect an increase in light entertainment, sex, and violence on television, and a parallel decrease in hard news, investigative reporting, documentaries, and debates on public and community issues.

Closely related to the commercial exploitation by mass media is the issue of propaganda, as alluded to above. Ours is the age of dajl, or deception: things are rarely what they are made to appear before us. Many of us are enchanted by foreign media because their news ´ in contrast to that of the government-owned local television ´ gives an impression of variety, objectivity, and neutrality. This impression, however, is often illusory. In addition to the promotion of a materialistic mindset, the involvement of the financial and political stakes of the elite in the international broadcasting industry ensures that only certain news stories will appear on the screen, that these stories will be presented with a predictable slant, and that all facts and happenings that may be damaging to the interests of this elite will not be shown at all.

Noam Chomsky and Edward S. Herman, co-authors of Manufacturing Consent: The Political Economy of the Mass Media (New York: Pantheon Books, 1988), have presented a wealth of evidence to show how a propaganda system works in apparently free societies. The authors describe five "filters" through which the news has to pass in a capitalistic-democratic country like the United States before it can appear on television. They argue that since the powerful elite share the same values but disagree on the tactics needed to attain their common aims, this disagreement is reflected in media debates and gives a false impression of diversity and free expression. On the other hand, views that challenge the legitimacy of those aims or suggest that state power is being exercised in elite interests will be completely excluded form the mass media.

In this perspective, what course of action should a Muslim adopt? Understanding the intricate and deceptive workings of the modern world and sharing this knowledge with others is obviously the first step. At the same time, Muslims need to realize that the influence of global culture is so powerful that a single individual has no chance of successfully resisting its onslaught therefore, closer links, greater cooperation, and cultivation of mutual support among like-minded people is urgently required. Prophet Muhammad (SAW) has said: Be with the jama´ah and avoid firqah, for surely Satan is with the (one who remains) alone, but he stays away from the two. (Tirmidhi)

It is also important to realize that we cannot go out on a mission to save the world unless we first save ourselves and the members of our immediate family. In this respect, we need to replace television viewing with positive, healthy, and family-oriented activities in accordance with Islamic teachings. We must realize that life has a definite purpose, and squandering our time away for the sake of superficial entertainment is an insult to the human soul. The only weapon with which we can fight the deception of our age is the Holy Qur´an, the Book of Allah (SWT). The choice, therefore, is clear: either we turn towards Divine Guidance, or we lose ourselves to dehumanizing materialism.

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