hong said:
Saladin
DM_Matt said:
I take issue with that one. He began the grand arab tradition of making and breaking land-for-peace deals
in order to gain territory without war while having time to build up militarily to try to gain some more by means of war. He made peace with the crusader states only to build up his army to slaughter them.
Saladin references are what arab despots and terrorists use to assure their people, in something of a code, that they have no real intention of making peace with the West, and that they WILL do their utmost to conquer the world on behalf of Islam. People who often refer to Saladin include Saddam Hussein, Yassir Arafat, Bashar Assad (and his father before him), and Osama bin ladin.
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Originally posted by DM_Matt
I take issue with that one. He began the grand arab tradition of making and breaking land-for-peace deals
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Keep modern politics out of this, please.
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in order to gain territory without war while having time to build up militarily to try to gain some more by means of war. He made peace with the crusader states only to build up his army to slaughter them.
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Note that the Crusaders themselves were the ones who spread the legend of Saladin as an enlightened ruler to Europe.
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Saladin references are what arab despots and terrorists use to assure their people, in something of a code, that they have no real intention of making peace with the West, and that they WILL do their utmost to conquer the world on behalf of Islam. People who often refer to Saladin include Saddam Hussein, Yassir Arafat, Bashar Assad (and his father before him), and Osama bin ladin.
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People will always abuse a myth for their own ends. The fact that Saladin is considered worthy of such is itself evidence that he fulfils the heroic champion archetype, at least in the Arab world.
There are plenty of separatist right-wing bigots in the US who quote Thomas Jefferson to justify their actions. Does this mean Jefferson is unworthy of reverence?
DM_Matt said:
It's relevant. He started the trend. I did not make any judgements on whether land for peace was practicable, but simply stated that the deals are at times broken. I don't see how anyone can deny that.
See that whole decieving the crusaders thing....The whole point was to look to the crusaders like he was far more enlightened than his predecessors...
Jefferson was a man of complicated and complex political ideals who is quoted by people from accross the political spectrum. Saladin, on the other hand, is the arab symbol of destruction of the west.
While some non-arabs obviously do respect him, the overwhelming majority of Saladin references, especially those made in the Arab world, are in the context of calling for and justifying the destruction of the US and/or Israel.
JRRNeiklot said:I can't believe no one has mentioned Keldorn from Baldur's Gate 2, yet.
kenjib said:To me the most pure distillation of knighthood is Don Quixote - someone who is completely uncompromising in clinging to his ideals in an unidealistic world. He is the ultimate romantic, which is both his greatest strength and his fatal flaw.

(Dungeons & Dragons)
Rulebook featuring "high magic" options, including a host of new spells.