Fast Food Religiosity

Oct 2nd, 2006, in IM Posts, by David

View the original article here.


12 Comments on “Fast Food Religiosity”

  1. Mad Muhaa Says:
    October 2nd, 2006 at 8:42 am

    It’s a good policy. Such as it is, the zimmis need to understand clearly their places. Islam is The Religion of Peace everybody has to acknowledge and respect, otherwise it can easily arrange peaceful riots and peaceful blasts to prove it. So wake up zimmis! Pay your jizyah, cower and whimper, or peaceful Islam will come after you! Peace!

  2. Andrew Says:
    October 2nd, 2006 at 10:13 am

    Ridiculous policy – apply it to Muslims, I don’t care, but don’t force others.

    BTW, who let the psycho out again?

  3. Mohammed Khafi Says:
    October 2nd, 2006 at 6:31 pm

    All A&W stores in Indonesia had the same policy and it was largely a marketing tactic to entice more Muslims to visit.

    They could do that more easily by producing food that people want to eat and reducing their profit margins! I personally think they were just following a trend. A pity that A&W management are not more freethinking in their style that they have to start dragging religion into their campaigns.

    Religion should be something that people want to apply to themselves in their private lives, not something that they should have forced on them by people who are trying to maximise their company profits. It is shameful to use religion for commercial purposes. It should just be between the individual and God.

    Peace

  4. Oigal Says:
    October 2nd, 2006 at 7:18 pm

    Makes it easy never to set foot in an A&W store again..thugs

  5. Julita Says:
    October 2nd, 2006 at 10:38 pm

    Great Khafi, Roy Allen & Frank Wright, again cuma jilat supaya dapat ijin, their aim is only money. Shame on you, again they are afraid of some of the people, sorry!!! We know why Menado and Ambon. Poor people.

  6. Tomaculum Says:
    October 2nd, 2006 at 11:28 pm

    Fast food religiosity, ghost catchers wriggle along a TV-Program, a tree cuted bald because of demolision of the believe (read it in an Indonesian newspaper: an old tree in Jakarta was cuted bold by an Islamic youth group, because people believe that there are ghosts reside in this tree. An this believe disturb the Islamic believe. My opinion: if a belief is strong, then it is surely stable enough to resist such disturbance, isn’t it? So maybe this youth group beware of the weakness of their believe? Beside: what about the conviction of the people who believes in the ghosts? is it like an illegal site/place for worship, so to be closed? Like the illegaly or legally closed illegal and “illegal” churchs). Very sad, isn’t it? Or very funny?
    One question: is this all “sesuai dengan kebudayaan Indonesia” (=suitable with the Indonesian culture.

    This was, and maybe still is, a common statement to critisize a foreign culture or impoliteness or something people don’t like. May be we should modificate this sentence nowaday?).

    To Andrews: I’m not agree with you, because there are many Muslimahs who don’t need Jilbab or Burka or else to stable their believe. So why should they be forced to wear those?

  7. Julita Says:
    October 3rd, 2006 at 8:44 am

    I forgot, how come A&W can sell food and poor abang baso was not allowed. I am really confused.

  8. Molisan Tono Says:
    October 3rd, 2006 at 12:31 pm

    money… my friend… it’s money.

    old Chinese folkrole saying “Man may have so many ideas, but Money always the thing” — it’s always money decide things for you.

    no wonder Mr. Basoman cannot fly high. : (

  9. Miss Indo 07 Says:
    October 4th, 2006 at 5:20 pm

    uugh,
    u make me sad when u bring out the abang baso again T.T

  10. Molisan Tono Says:
    October 5th, 2006 at 10:07 am

    Oh… my bad… but really, Mr baso deserves better than this A&W. they are minor economic people try to earn for living.

  11. Chris Says:
    September 21st, 2007 at 5:23 pm

    It’s the same this year (2007) in Jakarta, how about in Manado?

  12. Dragonwall Says:
    December 6th, 2007 at 7:32 am

    Capitalizing on religion to attract consumer is a mass media failure. Looking at competition like McD, KFC, Popeye, the competition gets tough…Nice try..



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