Submitted by TPOS on 5 September, 2011 - 19:38 #31
lollywood wrote:
You wrote:
the earnings based on alcohol are haraam and their only alternative is not benefits, they could sell other things or do another job.
Your right
But just for argument sake lets say the other things they sell in the shop dont have much profit margin when Alcohol does and if they don't get the profit from Alcohol they could ran out of business
I highlighted something you seemed to have missed
—
"How many people find fault in what they're reading and the fault is in their own understanding" Al Mutanabbi
Submitted by lollywood on 5 September, 2011 - 20:20 #32
ThE pOwEr Of SiLeNcE wrote:
I highlighted something you seemed to have missed
Lets say there are no suitable jobs around
—
My English is not very good
Submitted by TPOS on 5 September, 2011 - 20:23 #33
Then you don't work. Haram income will be of no benefit to you anyway
—
"How many people find fault in what they're reading and the fault is in their own understanding" Al Mutanabbi
Submitted by lollywood on 5 September, 2011 - 20:33 #34
ThE pOwEr Of SiLeNcE wrote:
Then you don't work. Haram income will be of no benefit to you anyway
Lets say I don't work as I can't find a suitable job
I can't claim benefits because they are Haram then how do I eat?
Shops as businesses are a form of wealth, they count towards an individuals own net worth. An owner could at any point sell their shop and begin a new small enterprise with the proceeds, or work at a senior level for an established company which should be feasible if they have already shown an aptitude in management.
Submitted by TPOS on 5 September, 2011 - 20:40 #36
well claiming benefits aint haram, have you not figured this out yet?!
And there's so many jobs out there. Plus, I know it was for arguments sake but saying they would only make money if they sold alcohol is stupid.
—
"How many people find fault in what they're reading and the fault is in their own understanding" Al Mutanabbi
well claiming benefits aint haram, have you not figured this out yet?!
And there's so many jobs out there. Plus, I know it was for arguments sake but saying they would only make money if they sold alcohol is stupid.
It's open for debate.
There isn't really much chance that a jobless person who already owns a house and car(s), with an extended network of kin and a good sense of community could starve to death in this country. So it really isn't a life or death situation here, especially if a person saved something aside during times of prosperity, not forgetting greater availability of halal loans.
Submitted by lollywood on 5 September, 2011 - 21:26 #38
ThE pOwEr Of SiLeNcE wrote:
saying they would only make money if they sold alcohol is stupid.
Why?
Here's a silly rough example - it could be wrong
lets say someone buys a bag of crisps at 40p or something profit 10 to 15p
someone buys a can of beer at say 2.50p or something profit £1
That does not look stupid to me
—
My English is not very good
Submitted by lollywood on 5 September, 2011 - 21:25 #39
knightsbridge_brother wrote:
It's open for debate.
There isn't really much chance that a jobless person who already owns a house and car(s), with an extended network of kin and a good sense of community could starve to death in this country. So it really isn't a life or death situation here, especially if a person saved something aside during times of prosperity, not forgetting greater availability of halal loans.
They might not own a house especially in this day and age
The extended network of kin turn away during the time of need
Its difficult to save if you have bills to pay 3 or 4 kids to feed and all there demands to meet on top
—
My English is not very good
Submitted by Foysol89 on 6 September, 2011 - 00:13 #40
@knightsbridgebrother I Would just like to say i'm happy to see that you are asking these questions and this topic is definitely up for debate. I think we all need to remain consience of how we live these days and our income for one needs to be questioned as to whether it's halal or not. It's easy to live in comfort and say i have no choice but to do this or do that.
I just wanted to say i appreciate that you are trying to make us more aware, after all we will be held accountable for our income. It's become common within muslims to take the easy road out sometimes. Some even take mortgages knowing full well about the punishment of dealing with rib'aa, excusing themeselves by saying they have no choice.
There are alot of muslims though who are aware doing things the halal way and finding an alternative to certain things such as going to uni without paying interest etc.
Saying all this i still don't agree with your theory. I also believe this debate is more for the scholars rather than us regular folk. I do understand that alot of scholars won't give a fatwah against this because they'll lose their benefits. I'm not accusing anyone though and i strongly belive there are scholars out there that fear Allah and will distiniguish halal from haram.
I apologize if my initial comment was harsh or offensive. May Allah guide us all jazakallah khair for your concern. Ameen.
Assalamu alaikum
—
Lets reunite the ummah under one flag LA ILAHA IL ALLAH MUHAMMADUR RASULULLAH
Submitted by Ya'qub on 6 September, 2011 - 00:31 #41
You wrote:
the earnings based on alcohol are haraam and their only alternative is not benefits, they could sell other things or do another job.
Kebab shops make about 90% of there money from post-pub drunk people.
No, haraam money doesnt work down the chain and as long as what they sell is halaal, that is what matters.
—
"For too long, we have been a passively tolerant society, saying to our citizens 'as long as you obey the law, we will leave you alone'" - David Cameron, UK Prime Minister. 13 May 2015.
Submitted by Ya'qub on 6 September, 2011 - 00:42 #43
You wrote:
No, haraam money doesnt work down the chain and as long as what they sell is halaal, that is what matters.
ok. but when does the money stop being haraam?
In English law it is illegal to knowingly accept stolen goods.
A shopkeeper is making a halaal living even if the people buying stuff from him didn't earn their money in a halaal way.
If it was earned in a criminal way however and the shop only survives due to thsi criminal enterprise, then the earnings may be questionable.
(PS I am only using my logic with all this, not checking in some book.)
—
"For too long, we have been a passively tolerant society, saying to our citizens 'as long as you obey the law, we will leave you alone'" - David Cameron, UK Prime Minister. 13 May 2015.
Submitted by lollywood on 6 September, 2011 - 16:14 #45
You wrote:
A shopkeeper is making a halaal living even if the people buying stuff from him didn't earn their money in a halaal way.
@knightsbridgebrother I Would just like to say i'm happy to see that you are asking these questions and this topic is definitely up for debate. I think we all need to remain consience of how we live these days and our income for one needs to be questioned as to whether it's halal or not. It's easy to live in comfort and say i have no choice but to do this or do that.
I just wanted to say i appreciate that you are trying to make us more aware, after all we will be held accountable for our income. It's become common within muslims to take the easy road out sometimes. Some even take mortgages knowing full well about the punishment of dealing with rib'aa, excusing themeselves by saying they have no choice.
There are alot of muslims though who are aware doing things the halal way and finding an alternative to certain things such as going to uni without paying interest etc.
Saying all this i still don't agree with your theory. I also believe this debate is more for the scholars rather than us regular folk. I do understand that alot of scholars won't give a fatwah against this because they'll lose their benefits. I'm not accusing anyone though and i strongly belive there are scholars out there that fear Allah and will distiniguish halal from haram.
I apologize if my initial comment was harsh or offensive. May Allah guide us all jazakallah khair for your concern. Ameen.
A shopkeeper is making a halaal living even if the people buying stuff from him didn't earn their money in a halaal way.
Ho does that work?
The person that earned the money earned it in a halaal manner. The person who didn't didn't.
If all money that has come into contact with haraam was to forever be haraam, then all money would be haraam as it does not stay with one person or one type of person.
—
"For too long, we have been a passively tolerant society, saying to our citizens 'as long as you obey the law, we will leave you alone'" - David Cameron, UK Prime Minister. 13 May 2015.
Submitted by lollywood on 6 September, 2011 - 20:20 #48
You wrote:
The person that earned the money earned it in a halaal manner. The person who didn't didn't.
If all money that has come into contact with haraam was to forever be haraam, then all money would be haraam as it does not stay with one person or one type of person.
Doesn't matter. What matters is how you earnt it and if that was halaal.
—
"For too long, we have been a passively tolerant society, saying to our citizens 'as long as you obey the law, we will leave you alone'" - David Cameron, UK Prime Minister. 13 May 2015.
Submitted by TPOS on 6 September, 2011 - 22:28 #50
lollywood wrote:
ThE pOwEr Of SiLeNcE wrote:
saying they would only make money if they sold alcohol is stupid.
Why?
Here's a silly rough example - it could be wrong
lets say someone buys a bag of crisps at 40p or something profit 10 to 15p
someone buys a can of beer at say 2.50p or something profit £1
That does not look stupid to me
Are you tryna say selling some alcohol will out-do the profit made by selling everything else?! From milk and bread, to other food and drink, to toiletries etc?!
—
"How many people find fault in what they're reading and the fault is in their own understanding" Al Mutanabbi
Submitted by lollywood on 6 September, 2011 - 22:45 #51
ThE pOwEr Of SiLeNcE wrote:
Are you tryna say selling some alcohol will out-do the profit made by selling everything else?! From milk and bread, to other food and drink, to toiletries etc?!
Alcohol is getting expensive day by day, the government keeps adding to its cost in the form of taxes because they don't want young people buying it for obvious reasons
The other everyday items such as Bread, Milk, and Eggs are way cheaper then alcohol
I read that a can of beer is cheaper then a bottle of water- that's just crazy
—
My English is not very good
Submitted by TPOS on 6 September, 2011 - 22:52 #52
Seriously? You're seriously telling me that alochol will out sell and out profit everything else. Facepalm.
—
"How many people find fault in what they're reading and the fault is in their own understanding" Al Mutanabbi
Submitted by lollywood on 6 September, 2011 - 22:57 #53
ThE pOwEr Of SiLeNcE wrote:
Seriously? You're seriously telling me that alcohol will out sell and out profit everything else. Facepalm.
I think so
Especially on a Friday and Saturday night
—
My English is not very good
Submitted by TPOS on 6 September, 2011 - 23:36 #54
you think wrong.
If it's a small corner shop, then that *might* be the case but they should just change location then.
I know this family that own a small newspaper shop. They don't sell alcohol and there's hardly any people going in there. Yet they regularly give the largest sum of money towards the building of our new mosque and then obviously are living fine. MashaAllah
Have trust in Allah and live halaly.
Oh and there's this other supermarket which started off as one small shop. They don't sell alcohol either and now like 10years later they have about 4 big branches and they are rich.
—
"How many people find fault in what they're reading and the fault is in their own understanding" Al Mutanabbi
Submitted by Ya'qub on 7 September, 2011 - 02:22 #55
You said the price of alcohol goes up all the time because of government raising taxes, but those increases don't translate into more profits to the shopkeeper, cos the money goes to the government not him/her. Vast majority of cigarette or alcohol price is tax, & shopkeepers use these products to entice customers, but make most of their money from putting everyday things on display so ppl pick them there out of convenience; milk & bread r much more expensive in little shops than supermarkets.
@admin, what about ppl standing outside nightclubs selling water, knowing that most ppl coming out of there thirsty will be because of drugs. even tho water is a good thing, would u say that's a decent way of making a living? I think it's same with kebab shops (depending on the area it's in).
—
Don't just do something! Stand there.
Submitted by lollywood on 7 September, 2011 - 18:49 #56
ThE pOwEr Of SiLeNcE wrote:
you think wrong.
If it's a small corner shop, then that *might* be the case but they should just change location then.
I know this family that own a small newspaper shop. They don't sell alcohol and there's hardly any people going in there. Yet they regularly give the largest sum of money towards the building of our new mosque and then obviously are living fine. MashaAllah
Have trust in Allah and live halaly.
You've proved my point by saying what you have above about not many people going there
ThE pOwEr Of SiLeNcE wrote:
Oh and there's this other supermarket which started off as one small shop. They don't sell alcohol either and now like 10years later they have about 4 big branches and they are rich.
[/quote]
That is just good business skills
—
My English is not very good
Submitted by TPOS on 7 September, 2011 - 19:28 #57
lollywood wrote:
You've proved my point by saying what you have above about not many people going there
what?? I have NOT proven your point. I've proven the fact people can live comfortably and halaly despite such 'conditions'
Quote:
That is just good business skills
*bangs head on table*
—
"How many people find fault in what they're reading and the fault is in their own understanding" Al Mutanabbi
Submitted by lollywood on 7 September, 2011 - 19:37 #58
ThE pOwEr Of SiLeNcE wrote:
what?? I have NOT proven your point. I've proven the fact people can live comfortably and halaly despite such 'conditions'
How do you know that the money there giving to the mosque is the money from that Business? they might be doing something else as well as the Business
lollywood wrote:
That is just good business skills
ThE pOwEr Of SiLeNcE wrote:
*bangs head on table*
Don't hurt self too much
—
My English is not very good
Submitted by TPOS on 7 September, 2011 - 19:41 #59
They aren't. Just accept it.
(or don't, but I will stop replying)
—
"How many people find fault in what they're reading and the fault is in their own understanding" Al Mutanabbi
It is a high margin product and you can make loads of money, so where is the harm? its just good business skills.
Or you can ask "is this product harming the community?" and if the answer is yes, avoid it.
—
"For too long, we have been a passively tolerant society, saying to our citizens 'as long as you obey the law, we will leave you alone'" - David Cameron, UK Prime Minister. 13 May 2015.
I highlighted something you seemed to have missed
"How many people find fault in what they're reading and the fault is in their own understanding" Al Mutanabbi
Lets say there are no suitable jobs around
My English is not very good
Then you don't work. Haram income will be of no benefit to you anyway
"How many people find fault in what they're reading and the fault is in their own understanding" Al Mutanabbi
Lets say I don't work as I can't find a suitable job
I can't claim benefits because they are Haram then how do I eat?
My English is not very good
Shops as businesses are a form of wealth, they count towards an individuals own net worth. An owner could at any point sell their shop and begin a new small enterprise with the proceeds, or work at a senior level for an established company which should be feasible if they have already shown an aptitude in management.
well claiming benefits aint haram, have you not figured this out yet?!
And there's so many jobs out there. Plus, I know it was for arguments sake but saying they would only make money if they sold alcohol is stupid.
"How many people find fault in what they're reading and the fault is in their own understanding" Al Mutanabbi
It's open for debate.
There isn't really much chance that a jobless person who already owns a house and car(s), with an extended network of kin and a good sense of community could starve to death in this country. So it really isn't a life or death situation here, especially if a person saved something aside during times of prosperity, not forgetting greater availability of halal loans.
Why?
Here's a silly rough example - it could be wrong
lets say someone buys a bag of crisps at 40p or something profit 10 to 15p
someone buys a can of beer at say 2.50p or something profit £1
That does not look stupid to me
My English is not very good
They might not own a house especially in this day and age
The extended network of kin turn away during the time of need
Its difficult to save if you have bills to pay 3 or 4 kids to feed and all there demands to meet on top
My English is not very good
@knightsbridgebrother I Would just like to say i'm happy to see that you are asking these questions and this topic is definitely up for debate. I think we all need to remain consience of how we live these days and our income for one needs to be questioned as to whether it's halal or not. It's easy to live in comfort and say i have no choice but to do this or do that.
I just wanted to say i appreciate that you are trying to make us more aware, after all we will be held accountable for our income. It's become common within muslims to take the easy road out sometimes. Some even take mortgages knowing full well about the punishment of dealing with rib'aa, excusing themeselves by saying they have no choice.
There are alot of muslims though who are aware doing things the halal way and finding an alternative to certain things such as going to uni without paying interest etc.
Saying all this i still don't agree with your theory. I also believe this debate is more for the scholars rather than us regular folk. I do understand that alot of scholars won't give a fatwah against this because they'll lose their benefits. I'm not accusing anyone though and i strongly belive there are scholars out there that fear Allah and will distiniguish halal from haram.
I apologize if my initial comment was harsh or offensive. May Allah guide us all jazakallah khair for your concern. Ameen.
Assalamu alaikum
Lets reunite the ummah under one flag LA ILAHA IL ALLAH MUHAMMADUR RASULULLAH
Kebab shops make about 90% of there money from post-pub drunk people.
Is this money haraam also?
Don't just do something! Stand there.
No, haraam money doesnt work down the chain and as long as what they sell is halaal, that is what matters.
"For too long, we have been a passively tolerant society, saying to our citizens 'as long as you obey the law, we will leave you alone'" - David Cameron, UK Prime Minister. 13 May 2015.
ok. but when does the money stop being haraam?
In English law it is illegal to knowingly accept stolen goods.
Is there a parallel in Shariah to this?
Don't just do something! Stand there.
A shopkeeper is making a halaal living even if the people buying stuff from him didn't earn their money in a halaal way.
If it was earned in a criminal way however and the shop only survives due to thsi criminal enterprise, then the earnings may be questionable.
(PS I am only using my logic with all this, not checking in some book.)
"For too long, we have been a passively tolerant society, saying to our citizens 'as long as you obey the law, we will leave you alone'" - David Cameron, UK Prime Minister. 13 May 2015.
Ho does that work?
My English is not very good
Wa 'alaykumusalaam wurahmatulaah wa barakatu'.
The person that earned the money earned it in a halaal manner. The person who didn't didn't.
If all money that has come into contact with haraam was to forever be haraam, then all money would be haraam as it does not stay with one person or one type of person.
"For too long, we have been a passively tolerant society, saying to our citizens 'as long as you obey the law, we will leave you alone'" - David Cameron, UK Prime Minister. 13 May 2015.
But the source of the money was Haram
My English is not very good
Doesn't matter. What matters is how you earnt it and if that was halaal.
"For too long, we have been a passively tolerant society, saying to our citizens 'as long as you obey the law, we will leave you alone'" - David Cameron, UK Prime Minister. 13 May 2015.
Are you tryna say selling some alcohol will out-do the profit made by selling everything else?! From milk and bread, to other food and drink, to toiletries etc?!
"How many people find fault in what they're reading and the fault is in their own understanding" Al Mutanabbi
Alcohol is getting expensive day by day, the government keeps adding to its cost in the form of taxes because they don't want young people buying it for obvious reasons
The other everyday items such as Bread, Milk, and Eggs are way cheaper then alcohol
I read that a can of beer is cheaper then a bottle of water- that's just crazy
My English is not very good
Seriously? You're seriously telling me that alochol will out sell and out profit everything else. Facepalm.
"How many people find fault in what they're reading and the fault is in their own understanding" Al Mutanabbi
I think so
Especially on a Friday and Saturday night
My English is not very good
you think wrong.
If it's a small corner shop, then that *might* be the case but they should just change location then.
I know this family that own a small newspaper shop. They don't sell alcohol and there's hardly any people going in there. Yet they regularly give the largest sum of money towards the building of our new mosque and then obviously are living fine. MashaAllah
Have trust in Allah and live halaly.
Oh and there's this other supermarket which started off as one small shop. They don't sell alcohol either and now like 10years later they have about 4 big branches and they are rich.
"How many people find fault in what they're reading and the fault is in their own understanding" Al Mutanabbi
You said the price of alcohol goes up all the time because of government raising taxes, but those increases don't translate into more profits to the shopkeeper, cos the money goes to the government not him/her. Vast majority of cigarette or alcohol price is tax, & shopkeepers use these products to entice customers, but make most of their money from putting everyday things on display so ppl pick them there out of convenience; milk & bread r much more expensive in little shops than supermarkets.
@admin, what about ppl standing outside nightclubs selling water, knowing that most ppl coming out of there thirsty will be because of drugs. even tho water is a good thing, would u say that's a decent way of making a living? I think it's same with kebab shops (depending on the area it's in).
Don't just do something! Stand there.
You've proved my point by saying what you have above about not many people going there
[/quote]
That is just good business skills
My English is not very good
*bangs head on table*
"How many people find fault in what they're reading and the fault is in their own understanding" Al Mutanabbi
How do you know that the money there giving to the mosque is the money from that Business? they might be doing something else as well as the Business
Don't hurt self too much
My English is not very good
They aren't. Just accept it.
(or don't, but I will stop replying)
"How many people find fault in what they're reading and the fault is in their own understanding" Al Mutanabbi
What about selling cocain on the street?
It is a high margin product and you can make loads of money, so where is the harm? its just good business skills.
Or you can ask "is this product harming the community?" and if the answer is yes, avoid it.
"For too long, we have been a passively tolerant society, saying to our citizens 'as long as you obey the law, we will leave you alone'" - David Cameron, UK Prime Minister. 13 May 2015.
Pages