"Just because we as a society do not feel as strongly about our faith as they do does not make us right and them wrong."
I respect the point you're making here, Andy, but I don't think it actually works.
You're right of course - philosophically speaking, there's no way to guarantee that "we" are in the right, and "they" are in the wrong. But I think you're wrong to assume that this means both positions are equal. If your starting point for debating (let alone resolving) this issue is to assume that all stances are equally valid, then you can guarantee that you will never come to any solution or even be able to say anything useful - because it accepts all priorities and agendas which are affected by the issue at once. You begin with an attitude that is very respectful, but utterly vacuous.
If we want to be able to say anything, or make any kind of coherent response to the ongoing protests - or the large numbers of similar events which have happened in recent years - then we need to have some opening standards and priorities. I would put it to you that the best standard we have is the one posited by Sam Harris: whether or not some behaviours, attitudes or beliefs are conducive to human flourishing.
Now, everyone on this board agrees that violent protest is not conducive to human flourishing.
But is it conducive to human flourishing to have a mindset that is insulted 'to the very core of its being' by a convicted fraudster making an otherwise obscure piece of video trash? No, I think we can pretty surely say it isn't.
Is it conducive to human flourishing to be so grievously insulted by even the slightest attempt to depict one's prophet by those who do not share your faith or even live in the same country? Probably not.
These features are just one of many examples of the cultural damage done to human societies by religious faith - these ones happen to be particular to Islam. The history of religion in the developed world indicates that, whether they want to or not, faiths are forced to adapt to modernity. In time, I think as the Middle East develops, Islam will undergo the same change as Christianity has in the West.
Between now and the point when that happens, I actually think a particular kind of intolerance is a perfectly appropriate response for people in the West to undertake. I agree with Lazy Gun and Salman Rushdie - we should have the confidence and the courage to reject the legitimacy of "my faith is insulted" as an argument.
If we carry on speaking as we wish, then ultimately the "I am offended/I am insulted" argument will simply lose any power that it currently is: it relies on people listening to it and accepting it as valid - which it isn't. Without that, it will die - and good riddance.
In fact, there are already signs of this starting to happen. I'd like to draw people's attention to the 'International Draw Muhammed' events that were held all across the internet and prompted completely unsuccessful attempts at censorship in some Islamic countries:
http://en.wikipedia.o...ody_Draw_Mohammed_Day