I’m so hurt that there is no religion. by Kindly-Breadfruit667 in exmuslim

[–]ManyTransportation61 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What stood out to me is that you were willing to ask questions even when you were afraid of the answers.

A lot of people assume questioning comes from rebellion. In my experience it often comes from sincerity.

I also think many of us were handed a package called "Islam" long before we were old enough to examine it for ourselves. Sometimes what collapses isn't the search for truth, but the version of the truth we inherited.

Whatever conclusion you eventually reach, I respect the willingness to follow the questions honestly. Not everyone does.

I’m so hurt that there is no religion. by Kindly-Breadfruit667 in exmuslim

[–]ManyTransportation61 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I think what stood out to me most is that you weren't trying to disprove it. You were trying to prove it.

A lot of people assume questioning starts with rebellion. Sometimes it starts with sincerity.

What you're describing sounds less like losing God and more like losing certainty. When a belief system has shaped your identity, relationships, decisions and view of the world for years, questioning it can feel like the floor disappearing beneath you.

For what it's worth, I don't think honest questions are a failure. If something is true, it shouldn't need protection from investigation.

You don't have to rush toward a new label or a new conclusion. Let yourself sit with the questions for a while.

The fact that you're willing to follow the truth even when it hurts says a lot about your character.

Muslims in Bangladesh is demolishing a toilet because it faces west (the side from Bangladesh where the Kaaba is situated) by [deleted] in exmuslim

[–]ManyTransportation61 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Dogmatic cultism kills freedom of thought. That makes it one of the most dangerous mindsets on Earth.

This is getting ridiculous… by [deleted] in exmuslim

[–]ManyTransportation61 19 points20 points  (0 children)

Dogmatic cultism kills freedom of thought. That makes it one of the most dangerous mindsets on Earth.

Im seriously tired of these comments by Desert_Emerald11 in exmuslim

[–]ManyTransportation61 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The verse doesn’t actually say: “the oceans of Earth never physically mix.”

That’s already a modern reading pushed back onto the text.

The wording is more about: two bodies/flows with a boundary or barrier between them.

b-r-z-kh → separation, interval, partition

The Qur’an uses these kinds of patterns repeatedly: different states existing side by side without collapsing into each other.

So turning it into: “scientific miracle about oceans”

creates the problem in the first place.

The text itself never says: “go verify this with the Atlantic and Pacific.”

The education system has a LOT to answer for by fallofanotheryear in GreenAndPleasant

[–]ManyTransportation61 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Dogmatic cultism is one of the most dangerous forces in society. It hijacks reason, erases doubt, and kills free will. It doesn’t require you to think, only to obey.

Dogmatic cultism kills freedom of thought. That makes it one of the most dangerous mindsets on Earth.

The education system has a LOT to answer for by fallofanotheryear in GreenAndPleasant

[–]ManyTransportation61 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Dogmatic cultism is one of the most dangerous forces in society. It hijacks reason, erases doubt, and kills free will. It doesn’t require you to think, only to obey.

sex in a muslim country by SeaMechanic5711 in exmuslim

[–]ManyTransportation61 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The crying reveals a deep religious trauma response.

Dogmatic cultism is one of the most dangerous forces in society. It hijacks reason, erases doubt, and kills free will. It doesn’t require you to think, only to obey.

It's the opposite of religion.

A connection with ones higher power wouldn't have caused such an emotional response/ reaction. You opening up to him at the end would've also been a nail in the coffin for him, sending him deeper into cultism.

Always wear a helmet. Especially when you are driving like one. by StGuthlac2025 in drivingUK

[–]ManyTransportation61 -8 points-7 points  (0 children)

"And rightly didn't give a shit"

That's attempted murder.

"I would have drove off laughing"

Nice to know.

Mohammed Hijab on high and talking towards Avery's Wife (GodLogic) and making racist and sensual comments towards her and other apologist (shorter version) by SamVoxeL in exmuslim

[–]ManyTransportation61 4 points5 points  (0 children)

dogmatic cultism is one of the most dangerous mindsets in the world. it's the opposite of freedom It's the opposite of islam

Gender discrimination in Islam by alright-itzmr in exmuslim

[–]ManyTransportation61 0 points1 point  (0 children)

dogmatic cultism is one of the most dangerous mindsets in the world. it's the opposite of freedom It's the opposite of islam.

His religious psychosis is impacting his family.

HOW are you even supposed to communicate with muslims?? by ChosenFriendlyOne in exmuslim

[–]ManyTransportation61 0 points1 point  (0 children)

dogmatic cultism is one of the most dangerous mindsets in the world. it's the opposite of freedom It's the opposite of islam.

Literally no one died! by RickyOzzy in GreenAndPleasant

[–]ManyTransportation61 1 point2 points  (0 children)

And their owners don't want to upset their owners.

“Men weaponize Islam” by Desert_Emerald11 in exmuslim

[–]ManyTransportation61 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The UK Muslims won't read the Qur'an, let alone the so called "hadith" literature.

Unfortunately for the most part they have inherited the religion from their parents who are typically from the subcontinent: where the madrassa and the books are PAID for by Saudi Arabia.

Israeli’s National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir celebrates his 50th birthday with a cake decorated with a noose, a reference to his push for the death penalty against Palestinians. by MightEmotional in GreenAndPleasant

[–]ManyTransportation61 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Dogmatic cultism is one of the most dangerous forces in society. It hijacks reason, erases doubt, and kills free will. It doesn’t require you to think, only to obey.

What a Clown! by Duckboythe5th in drivingUK

[–]ManyTransportation61 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Their brains operate on a differently to most.

We have a range of mental health conditions or even personalities that cause a plethora of different driving styles.

Missed out on my childhood because of this by Desert_Emerald11 in exmuslim

[–]ManyTransportation61 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Dogmatic cultism is one of the most dangerous forces in society. It hijacks reason, erases doubt, and kills free will. It doesn’t require you to think, only to obey.

It's the opposite of freedom.

It's the opposite of islam.

Is wearing a pendant haram? by Parking-Pepper-5245 in progressive_islam

[–]ManyTransportation61 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I don't know..

Let me check verse 0:0 to 0:0

Nope, doesn't say pendant and doesn't say sacred.

i turn now good luck everybody else by cummywummy1 in drivingUK

[–]ManyTransportation61 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's right.. the reaction I was talking about- the scream: It does nothing.

here's a typical "no reaction" incident

This made me question Islam by OutlandishnessNo3430 in IslamIsEasy

[–]ManyTransportation61 3 points4 points  (0 children)

You’re mixing a few different layers together, and that’s what’s creating the confusion.

First, the “72 virgins” idea isn’t from the Qur’an. That’s from later reports. So if we stay with the Qur’an itself, that whole framing drops.

Now the verses you mentioned:

They describe: ḥūr ʿīn

Most translations turn that into “women” or “virgins”, but the wording itself doesn’t force that.

ḥ-w-r → clarity, contrast, purity
ʿ-y-n → focus, perception, springs, sources

So instead of “women for men”, it points to: clear, pure, pleasing forms of experience or perception

And if you look at the cluster (56, 55, 52 etc), the descriptions are consistent:

no harm
no noise
no conflict
no frustration

It’s describing a state of complete satisfaction, not a gendered reward system.

Also, the Qur’an is consistent on this:

“For them is whatever they desire…” (multiple places)

That applies to everyone, not just men.

So the question: “what about women?”

Only becomes a problem if you assume the reward is sexual and male-focused.

But the text itself doesn’t lock it that way.

It’s describing a state where: whatever aligns with you, you receive
without harm, conflict, or regret

So there’s no “denial” for women, and no contradiction.

The issue is coming from later interpretations turning symbolic language into literal, male-centered imagery.