worldnews: Muslim posts a list of positive quotes from the Quran; user replies with a list of negative quotes. Positive comment stays; mods remove the negative comment and ban its author. : RedditCens

Authored by reddit.com and submitted by G_Petronius

I like your name, if we are referring to the same Qubit.

Otherwise as someone that has humbly studied Islam and governance I do not think it is Islam.

There's a story in Islamic history that says when Umar ibn Khattab, the third caliph of the Muslims conquered Jerusalem he refused to pray in their church. He said it was because future generations would destroy the church and erect a mosque in his name if he did that.

As a Muslim I want to spread a positive message of my Quran.

the-rooster on May 9th, 2017 at 19:35 UTC »

Why is the world so infatuated with muslims? What happened over the past couple years to make everyone in power bend over backwards to force everyone else to welcome them? serious question.

FollowJesus2Live on May 9th, 2017 at 19:13 UTC »

It's gotten so bad that I've just filtered out all these subreddits. It's a shame, because I really enjoy keeping up with dissenting and differing opinions, and having constructive arguments... But subs like worldnews and politics are just creepy. It's all censorship, controlled narrative, astroturfing bots and paid posters. I brought more peace to my life by removing them entirely.

Seeattle_Seehawks on May 9th, 2017 at 19:12 UTC »

I got a ban for referring to that "sexual emergency" case in Austria. Apparently taking a direct quote from a court case is a "racist meme".

And if that wasn't bad enough, the mod that banned me is a fucking law student. Not a very good one obviously, but he still should've known better.

If /r/worldnews mods had a shred of honesty they'd post a rule along the lines of "Don't make comments about Islam or Muslims (even just one) that could possibly be construed as negative". Just cut the shit. They clearly want Muslims to hear nothing but praise, it's absurd.