“Consuming alcohol is forbidden in Islam, and some Muslims refuse to handle it at all.”/......
......./ “A spokesperson for M&S said: "Where we have an employee whose religious beliefs restrict food or drink they can handle, we work closely with our member of staff to place them in suitable role, such as in our clothing department or bakery in foods.”/.........
......./“But Khola Hasan, an Islamic law consultant, told Radio 4's Today programme she thought the M&S employee's refusal to serve the customer was "ridiculous"./..........
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-25488259[/QUOTE]
This article makes it quite clear that there was one member of staff involved. It also makes it quite clear that although there is no requirement for muslims to refuse to handle such commodities, some do. We have no data on the number involved.
Despite this your initial response was:
They want "us" to stop drinking and eating it, so this furthers their agenda by making it more difficult for shops to sell it. Obviously waited till enough muslims were in the job before coming out with this crap.
Later you claimed that you had read the article. Maybe, but through those glasses tinted with your cognitive biases:
…../
I did already say that it was an agenda of some muslims, not all, to push islamic law on the west, as I had already read the articles that you are quoting from.
It's good business acumen to be aware of employees' abilities, faiths, and needs.
If you were in charge of a swimming pool, would you insist that the non-swimmers work in that environment? Of course you wouldn't.
If you were in charge of a blood bank or transfusion centre, would you insist that the Jhehova Witness works there? Of course you wouldn't.
You'd be sensitive to the abilities, faiths and needs of your employees, or at least I hope that you would.
What you are doing is making a strawman of my argument and then knocking it down. It's called the strawman fallacy. Look it up and feel free to pretend you introduced it later.
Ahh, the good old red herring, otherwise known as a diversionary argument or tactic. Look it up and feel free to pretend you introduced it, because you did. I just labeled it.
What I have attempted to do is to reveal your cognitive biases and illustrate them with your posts laid naked in all their shame.
I thank you for your time and energy in this discussion.
I'm also grateful to you because you have helped me in refining my strategy in dealing with the exposure of such cognitive biases.
It's useful to wait for a few pages of diatribe to be written in order to provide ammunition for the later
exposé.
Now I feel that this discussion has run its course. Any further discourse has the potential to go the same way as many DIYnot threads, such as:
"answer the question (he won't)"
"tell us what you think (he won't)"
"prove it (he can't)"
and even
"I kicked your ass (again)".
So, that's me signing off this thread, unless there are any significant developments in this discussion.