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Most Muslims from Arab, Africa, and Asia are Muslim by Born. Arab countries tend to follow Islamic rules hardly. There are a lot of restrictions if you follow all the rules (A lot of freedom too). Nowadays, many Muslims don't care about the rules of Islam. They don't participate in prayers. If you follow the rules, You should pray five times a day which only real Muslims do right now. If you follow the rules, You cannot drink alcohol. You cannot look at girls for the 2nd time (It is okay to see once by mistake). You cannot steal people's money. You cannot gamble. You cannot promote gambling. But, Only a few percent of Muslims follow all the rules of Islam. The rest of us are Muslim by the name only. We don't follow the rules. I am a Muslim. I know I am promoting a casino to get paid, and it's Haram. I believe the same kind of people exists in every religion. So, I respect that guy who tried to follow the rules because of his belief.
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While reading your message, I remembered an interview that Zinedine Zidane gave to The Guardian years ago. Hahahah I'm behaviorally similar to you too.
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Turkey (like Thailand) banned the use of cryptocurrencies as a means of payment, but trading is still allowed. In addition, in the discussion, one member who was obviously from Turkey confirmed that many do not respect this ban and continue to accept cryptocurrencies (restaurants, shops...)
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He may have tried to create an ideological target by keeping Türkiye and Afghanistan together, because the unsourced information he conveyed here is false data. Cryptocurrencies cannot be used only as a means of payment in Türkiye. Also, it is not a law subject to strict control.
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I respect all religions, but I have not yet read anywhere or found out in any way that any other religion expressly forbids cryptocurrencies, except of course Islam, with which this issue has been associated for years.
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I already wrote once before that I would seriously consider belonging to a religion that would limit me in what I would invest in or perhaps how I would dress.
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The ancient world in the examples I listed above has lost all traces of it today. Maybe that's why Islam is somehow creating controversy about itself because, as you mentioned, there is a very strong system of cultural preservation.
Samuel Hutington also mentioned this in his book Clash of Civilizations. I partially agree with the criticism that "it supports the continuation of the West's colonial understanding of the East" about that book, but this religion is "a living civilization even though it is not breathing".
As Zygmunt Bauman said, if history does not have a linear flow, one day moral values will regain strength and the sovereign classes will not be able to oppress the poor as easily as they do today. We must accept that we do not live in a world created by morality-virtue people today. That's why it's so absurd to have such discussions, because they are civilizations that live without breathing. The debate about whether Bitcoin is haram or halal has no value today.