SOURCE: FrontpageMag.com (2-1-07)
Text of a talk presented by Daniel Pipes on January 20, 2007, in London in a debate with the mayor of London, Ken Livingstone, as transcribed by the 910 Group with the help of others. The original posting of the video can be seen at YouTube; for a single clip version, see the posting at the Global Defense Group. For accounts of the debate, see the bibliography at"My Debate with London Mayor Ken Livingstone."
Thank you so much. I'd like to begin by thanking Mayor Livingstone for his kind invitation to join you today and I thank the Greater London Authority for the hard work it put into what is obviously a successful event. I am delighted by the interest that you, the audience, has shown. And I'm grateful to my supporters who have come from four different countries to be with me today.
The Mayor is an optimistic man. I'm generally invited to bring along some gloom, and I will, true to form, provide some for you. [audience laughter]
Let me start with my position on the question of world civilization or clash of civilizations. One: I am for world civilization, and I reject the ‘clash of civilization' argument. Two: The problem is not so much a clash of civilizations, but a clash of civilization and barbarism.
I'd like to begin by looking at Samuel Huntington's idea. He argued that cultural differences, in his 1993 article, are paramount."The fundamental source of conflict … will not be primarily ideological or primarily economic. The great divisions among humankind and the dominating source of conflict will be cultural." And in all he finds seven or eight set civilizations, namely,"Western, Confucian, Japanese, Islamic, Hindu, Slavic-Orthodox, Latin American and possibly African."
My response is that civilization is useful as a cultural concept but not as a political one. There are three problems with seeing civilizations as actors in the way that Huntington suggests. It can't account for tensions within a single civilization, it can't account for agreement across civilizations, and it doesn't account for change over time. Let me give you three quick examples. I'll take them from the area that I have studied, which is the Muslim world.
First, it cannot account for Muslim-on-Muslim violence, of which there is a great deal: We have the civil war in Lebanon, the Iraq-Iran war, the Islamist insurgency in Algeria, the Sunnis vs. Shi‘is in Iraq at present, the near civil war in the Palestinian Authority, the Sudanese government against the people of Darfur. This cannot be accounted for in civilizational terms.
Second, it ignores the agreement across civilizations. I'd like to take a UK-based example, namely the edict of Ayatollah Khomeini in 1989 against Salman Rushdie, who at that time was living in London. It appeared, at first glance, to be a question of Muslims on one side and Westerners on the other. Muslims were burning The Satanic Verses novel, there was violence in India, etc. But a closer look showed that in fact it was quite something different, it was far more complex. There were plenty of Westerners who were against Rushdie and plenty of Muslims who supported him.
Let me give you just a couple of quotes,. The foreign secretary of Britain at that time, Sir Geoffrey Howe, said"the British government, the British people do not have any affection for Rushdie's book." On the other hand, the Egyptian foreign minister said"Khomeini had no right to sentence Rushdie to death." And another Egyptian minister said"Khomeini is a dog, no, that is too good for him, he is a pig." [audience laughter]
Third point, Huntington in his analysis can't account for change over time. And I can best illustrate this by giving you a quote from his 1993 article, He said"The economic issues between the United States and Europe are no less serious than those between the United States and Japan, but they do not have the same political salience and emotional intensity because the differences between American culture and European culture are so much less than those between American civilization and Japanese civilization."
Well that was true enough in 1993, but it sounds pretty silly in 2007 where there are virtually no tensions between the United States and Japan and I'm sure you are aware there are tensions between the United States and Europe. The vituperation is far more severe across the Atlantic than the Pacific.
What Huntington did was to take an incident of the moment and turn them into something civilizational and it didn't work. In short the clash of civilization idea fails, it does not fit the facts, it is not a good way to understand the world.
What about then a world civilization? Can it exist? If one defines it as Huntington does, as a culture, basically then, no, it can't. As he puts it, correctly,"for the relevant future there will be no universal civilization but instead a world of different civilizations, each of which will have to learn to coexist with the others." I don't think there is anyone who would dispute that.
But yes, there can be a world civilization if one defines it differently. Civilization can be the opposite of barbarism. And civilization in this sense has a long history. In the Bible, there is a passage,"And ye shall… proclaim liberty throughout all the lands and unto all the inhabitants thereof." In the Koran,"you are the best community ever raised among mankind, you advocate righteousness and forbid evil, and believe in God." The American byword is ‘the pursuit of happiness', the French is"Liberté, Egalité, Fraternité" Winston Churchill in 1898, writing about the Sudan, said that civilization is"sympathetic, merciful, tolerant, ready to discuss or argue, eager to avoid violence, to submit to law, to effect compromise."
So the question is, can this state of being, of being civilized, can it exist on a world level?
It can, in so far as those who are civilized confront those who are not civilized. The world civilization exists of civilized elements in every culture banding together to protect ethics, liberty and mutual respect. The real clash is between them and the barbarians.
Now what do I mean by barbarians? I do not mean people who are of lower economic stature. What I mean by barbarians – and I think all of us mean by barbarians in the past two centuries – are ideological barbarians. This is what emerged in the French revolution in the late 18th century. And the great examples of ideological barbarism are fascism and Marxist Leninism – they, in their course of their histories have killed tens of millions of people.
But today it's a third, a third totalitarian movement, a third barbarian movement, namely that of radical Islam. It is an extremist utopian version of Islam. I am not speaking of Islam the religion, I am speaking of a very unusual and modern reading of Islam. It has inflicted misery (as I mentioned Algeria and Darfur, before), there is suicide terrorism, tyrannical and brutal governments, there is the oppression of women, and non-Muslims.
It threatens the whole world:. Morocco, Turkey, Palestinian Authority, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Iran, Pakistan, you name it, Afghanistan, Tunisia, and not just the traditional Muslim world, but also Russia, France, Sweden, and I dare say, the United Kingdom.
The great question of our time is how to prevent this movement, akin to fascism and communism, from growing stronger.
Now, I believe the mayor and I agree on the need to withstand this menace, but we disagree on the means of how to do it. He looks to multiculturalism, and I to winning the war. He wants everyone to get along; I want to defeat a terrible enemy.
The mayor defines multiculturalism as"the right to pursue different cultural values subject only to the restriction that they should not interfere with the similar right for others." And he argues, as you just heard, that it works, that London is a successful city. I won't dispute his specifics, but I do see the multicultural impulse creating disaster by ignoring a dangerous and growing presence of radical Islam in London.
One evocative sign of this danger is that citizens in your country have become a threat for the rest of the world. In 2003, Home Secretary David Blunkett presented a dossier to a Special Immigration Appeals Commission in which he"admits that Britain was a safe haven for supporters of worldwide terrorism" and in which he said Britain remains a"significant base'" for supporting terrorism.
Indeed, British-based terrorists have carried out operations in at least fifteen countries. Going from east to west, they include Pakistan, Afghanistan, Kenya, Tanzania, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Iraq, Jordan, Israel, Algeria, Morocco, Russia, France, Spain, and the United States. I'll give you one example, from the United States: it was Richard Reid, the shoe bomber, who I am primarily thinking of, but there is also the [End of clip #3; Start of clip #4] British involvement in 9/11 and in the Millennium Plot that did not take place in Los Angeles.
In frustration, Egypt's President Husni Mubarak publicly denounced the UK for"protecting killers." After the August 10th thwarted Heathrow airline mega-plot, of a few months ago, two American authors argued in The New Republic, that from an American point of view,"it can now be argued that the biggest threat to U.S. security emanates not from Iran or Iraq or Afghanistan—but rather from Great Britain."
And I believe this is the tip of the iceberg. I believe it refutes Mr. Livingstone's opposing view.- that there isn't a problem. This is the problem, the problem is radical Islam, also known as fundamentalist Islam, political Islam, Islamism. It is not, again, Islam the religion, it is radical Islam, the ideology.
Let us focus on three aspects of it. The essence of radical Islam is the complete adherence to the Shari'a, to the law of Islam. And it is extending the Shari‘a into areas that never existed before.
Second, it is based very deeply on a clash of civilizations ideology. It divides the world into two parts, the moral and the immoral, the good and the bad. Here is one quote from a British-based Islamist by the name of Abdullah el-Faisal, who was convicted and is now in jail."There are two religions in the world today - the right one and the wrong one. Islam versus the rest of the world." You don't get a more basic clash-of-civilization orientation than that. There is a hatred of the outside world, of the non-Muslim world, and the West in particular. There is the intent to reject as much as possible of outside influence.
The third feature is that this is totalitarian in nature. It turns Islam from a personal faith into an ideology, into an ism. It is the transformation of a personal faith into a system for ordering power and wealth. Radical Islam derives from Islam but is an anti-modern, millenarian, misanthropic, misogynist, anti-Christian, anti-Semitic, triumphalist, jihadistic, terroristic, and suicidal version of it. It is Islamic-flavored totalitarianism.
Like fascism and communism, radical Islam is a compelling way of seeing the world in a way that can absorb an intelligent person – to show him or her a whole new way of seeing life. It is radically utopian and takes the mundane qualities of everyday life and turns them into something grand and glistening.
There is an attempt to take over states. There is the use of the state for coercive purposes, and an attempt to dominate all of life, every aspect of it. It is an aggression against neighbors, and finally it is a cosmic confrontation with the West. As Tony Blair put it in August of 2006,"We are fighting a war, but not just against terrorism but about how the world should govern itself in the early 21st century, about global values."
Now how does one respond to this?
The mayor is a man of the Left, and I am a classical liberal. We can agree that neither of us personally wishes to be subjected to the Shari‘a. I will assume, you [looking at Ken Livingstone] will correct me if I am wrong [short sporadic applause] that neither of us want this as part of our personal life.
But our views diverge sharply as to how to respond to this phenomenon. Those of my political outlook are alarmed by Islamism's advances in the West. Much of the Left approaches the topic in a far more relaxed fashion.
Why this difference? Why generally is the right alarmed, and the left much more sanguine? There are many differences, there are many reasons, but I'd like to focus on two.
One is a sense of shared opponents between the Islamists and those on the left. George Galloway explained in 2005,"the progressive movement around the world and the Muslims have the same enemies," which he then went on to indicate were Israel, the United States, and Great Britain.
And if you listen to the words that are spoken about, say the United States, you can see that this is in fact the case. Howard Pinter has described America as"a country run by a bunch of criminal lunatics." [big applause and shouts] And Osama Bin Laden [stops … ] I'll do what I can to get an applause line. [laughter] And, get ready for this one: Osama Bin Laden called the United States,"unjust, criminal, and tyrannical." [applause]
Noam Chomsky termed America"a leading terrorist state". And Hafiz Hussain Ahmed, a leading Pakistani political leader, called it the"biggest terrorist state." [scattered applause]
Such common ground makes it tempting for those on the Left to make common cause with Islamists, and the symbol of this would be the [huge, anti-war in Iraq] demonstrations in Hyde Park, on the 16th of February 2003, called by a coalition of leftist and Islamist organizations.
At other times, the Left feels a kinship with Islamist attacks on the West, forgiving, understanding why these would happen. A couple of notorious quotes make this point. The German composer, Karlheinz Stockhausen termed the 9/11 attacks"the greatest work of art for the whole cosmos," while American novelist Norman Mailer, commented that"the people who did this were brilliant."
Such attitudes tempt the Left not to take seriously the Islamist threat to the West. With John Kerry, a former aspirant to the [U.S.] presidency, they dismiss terrorism as a mere"nuisance."
That is one reason; the bonds between the two camps. The second is that on the Left one finds a tendency to focus on terrorism – not on Islamism, not on radical Islam. Terrorism is blamed on such problems as Western colonialism of the past century, Western"neo-imperialism" of the present day, Western policies—particularly in places like Iraq and the Palestinian Authority. Or from unemployment, poverty, desperation.
I would contend that it actually results in an aggressive ideology. I respect the role of ideas, and I believe that not to respect, to dismiss them, to pay them no attention, is to patronize, and to possibly even to be racist. There is no way to appease this ideology. It is serious, there is no amount of money that can solve it, there is no change of foreign policy that make it can go away.
I would argue to you, ladies and gentlemen, it must be fought and must be defeated as in 1945 and 1991, [applause] as the German and the Soviet threats were defeated. Our goal must be, in this case, the emergence of Islam that is modern, moderate, democratic, humane, liberal, and good neighborly. And that it is respectful of women, homosexuals, atheists, whoever else. One that grants non-Muslims equal rights with Muslims.
In conclusion, Mr. Mayor, whether Muslim or non-Muslim, on the Left or on the Right, I think you will agree with me on the importance of working together to attain such an Islam. I suggest that this can be achieved not via the get-along multiculturalism that you propose, but by standing firm with our civilized allies around the globe. Especially with liberal voices in the kingdom of Saudi Arabia, with Iranian dissidents, and with reformers in Afghanistan.
I also propose standing with their counterparts in the west, with such individuals as Ayaan Hirsi Ali [applause], … formerly a Dutch legislator and now in exile in the United States; with Irshad Manji, the Canadian author; [applause] with Wafa Sultan, the Syrian in exile in the United States who made her phenomenal appearance on Al-Jazeera. Individuals like Magdi Allam, an Egyptian who is now a leading Italian journalist; Naser Khader, a parliamentarian in Denmark; Salim Mansur, a professor and author in Canada, and Irfan Al-Alawi, here in Britain. [applause]
Conversely, if we do not stand with these individuals, but instead if we stand with those who would torment them, with the Islamists, with, I might say, someone like Yusuf al- Qaradawi [applause] we are then standing with those who justify suicide bombings, who defend the most oppressive forms of Islamic practice, who espouse the clash of civilizations [notion that] we ourselves reject.
To the extent that we all work together, against the barbarism of radical Islam, a world civilization does indeed exist – one that transcends skin colour, poverty, geography, politics, and religion.
I hope that you and I, Mr. Mayor, can agree here and now to cooperate on such a program.


MISERY as a measure of BARBARISIM!
He is too happy, truly jubilant, to proclaim, triumphantly , that:
" It is an extremist utopian version of Islam. I am not speaking of Islam the religion, I am speaking of a very unusual and modern reading of Islam. It has inflicted misery (as I mentioned Algeria and Darfur, before), there is suicide terrorism, tyrannical and brutal governments, there is the oppression of women, and non-Muslims."
Pipes' criterion, determining factor, for the "barbarism " of Islam is that :"It has inflicted misery "!
I welcome this criterion of "inflicting misery" to measure , to determine, barbarisim .
Applying this same criterion on some relevant situations what is it that comes out?
1- The huge amount of misery to which Iraq has been subjected to for the last three years, the "barbarism" by excellence by any standard, is the direct out put, and the aimed at objective , of American willful and conscious break down of Iraqi instruments of law and order .
It is the desired fruit of the Bush/Perle/Wolfowitz doctrine; their current neocon/Zionist, "civilizing mission" to Iraq .
2-The untold miseries inflicted on the Arab Palestinian people, in their homeland and in their diaspora, for the last 50+ years, through their dislocation,
dispossession,disfranchisement and subjugation from and in their homeland is the fruit of the imperialist(GB then USA)/Zionist "civilizing mission" to Palestine.
3- The huge amount of misery inflicted on the Middle East through its radical dismemberement (Sykes/Picot) and utter destabilzation by implanting the alien, expansionist and hostlie hostile "nation/state", Zionist Israel, was the major "civilizing mission", of Western civlization to the hearland of the Arab/Moslem world.
Relative to the above
"achievements", in only one part of the World ,of Western (Judeo-Christian) culture "radical Islamists", for all their misdeeds, crimes (9/11) and lunacies, seem to be no more than naughty, over zealous boy scouts!
So much for Pipes triumphalisim who, however, fails to note that the hyper Barbarisim of the Holocaust begot an equally barbaric idelogical/political monster: nationalistic Zionism.
Re: MISERY as a measure of BARBARISIM!
The Wahabis and Shiites started out murdering Jewish innocents in cafes and supermarkets, and justified the murder of women, teenagers, children and babies on various sleazy or fanatical intellectual grounds. Now they have turned this weapon on themselves. But THEY invented the weapon, Omar, and it comes out of a society sick with "honor" and violence and religious fanaticism.
By the way, that number of civilians is equal to more than 1/10 the total number of civilians (many used as human shields by Hezbollah) that were killed by the israelis in a MONTH of fighting in Lebanon. The latter caused huge uproar in the Muslim world. The former massacres--much more intense (the total number of Muslim civilians killed by Muslims in Iraq last year was 34,000!!!) are passed by in silence. Conclusion: the Muslim masses are NOT upset about such intentional atrocities per se, as long as they are carried out by Muslims. They are only upset if Israelis ( = Jews) or the U.S. (= Christians) happen to kill civilians accidentally. In other words, the entire Muslim response is hypocritical in terms of human rights. And, insofar as any action in self-defense by Jews creates outrage, whereas the murder of 34,000 Muslims by Muslims creates none, it is RACIST.
(I note in passing that Hafez al-Assad's murder of 20,000 Muslims at Homs in ONE WEEK in 1982 passed by without a squeak from the Muslim masses or governments. And Omar, much as you might like to, you can't blame that atrocity on Israel or the West.)
As you've also made clear when you wished to, this violence is NOT a "natural reaction" to imperialism, repression, etc., but a CULTURAL CHOICE. Hence when I pointed out how many OTHER groups were displaced in 1945-1956, the post war and decolonialism (INCLUDING 200,000 MORE JEWS FROM THE MIDDLE EAST THAN PALESTINIANS FROM WHAT BECAME ISRAEL), and yet NONE of those groups engage in violence, let along suicide-bombing of civilians, your answer was that those other groups were not as noble as the Arabs.
Think about that one, folks.
Re: MISERY as a measure of BARBARISIM!
that is a cultural CHOICE as well. It has nothing to do with Israel. It is coming from within Islam. Such atrocities may be a perversion of Islam (as some people think), but it is coming from WITHIN Islam. Nowhere else. And no one else does things like this even to foreigners--let alone to each other.
Similarly, the Sunni-Shiite "civil war" was provoked by al-Zarkawi and al-Qaeda in Iraq: al-Qaeda, a group whose goals YOU explicitly support, though you are a bit unhappy about their methods because they are sometimes "counter-productive". Look in the mirror to find the source of violence, Omar.
Similar, here in the U.S., we know have vandalism of Muslim enterprises, yes we do! But it is Shiite enterprises being vandalized BY OTHER MUSLIMS (Wahabist Sunnis). It is a big problem in Detroit and Dearborn. The violence is coming FROM WITHIN, Omar. This has nothing to do with israel or the U.S. It has everything to do with Wahabism. And Shiite Muslim university students are increasingly excluded from the Wahabi dominated Muslim Student Unions on U.S. university campuses. "American Imperialism" or Israel isn't causing THAT, either.
I know it is extremely difficult for honor cultures such as yours to accept responsibility for their actions--to accept responsibility = shame. But every such action such as the ones I describe above, and the market-bombing on Saturday, brings shame and humiliation on Islam before the entire world. And if you want the source of this shame and humiliation, Omar, I say again--Look in the mirror.
Re: MISERY as a measure of BARBARISIM!
Well said, by the way.
I would, however, call such societies coercion consensus societies. I think that captures the societal aspect of the matter while honor captures more of a psychological portion of what is involved.
I think there is also an important ideological component that drives what occurs. It is in large measure religious in response to a modern world which basically post religious - at least so far as public life is concerned. But, none of what we are seeing would be occurring were it not for the religious ideological element.
Re: MISERY as a measure of BARBARISIM!
If you fail to see that you need some...examination.
"Lunatic Jihadists", Mossad, Irani and CIA operatives were severely checked prior to the US invasion and were totally incapable, though always willing, to create the kind of hell currently inflicted on Iraq by the Bush/Wolfowitz adminisration.
Now, having been let in, some (CIA &Mossad) invited ,they have a free hand .
Your apologetic crocodile tears that:"The Americans can be gravely faulted for not having enough of them, once they decided to go in."
is so much hot air in as much as it shows that you fail to understand that it was meant to be so from conception stage.
Only the innocnt few, in the BW administration, who failed to see the real objective of the invasion, as you do, advised more troops and against the disbandment of the Iraqi army and of ALL security forces including the first US "viceroy" to Iraq whose name I , and few others, recall.
Get real or spare us your erudition; we are fortunate enough NOT to be among your luckless students!
Ask the least knowledgable of your students what happens when you disband the army and ALL security services in a country with all the external enemies and internal tensions that Iraq had prior to US invasion .It will be very interesting to see what you teach them and how much they know!
(More later)
Re: MISERY as a measure of BARBARISIM!
But no one FORCES Muslim suicide bombers to kill hundreds of innocent people (Muslims, as it happens) at the time. This is not a "natural" response to the breakdown of law and order. No one FORCES,nor is it a "natural" response to "oppression" for suicide-bombers to blow up markets and universities. That savagery is coming from within ideological and religious fanaticism. These barbarous, appalling acts are, the 34,000 intentional civilian dead last year, the 500 intentional civilian dead last week--actions perpetrated NOT by Mossad, NOT by the CIA, NOT by the US at all or the West but by MUSLIM fanataics upon Muslims--all this is a shame and humilation upon Islam, especially because it is perpetrated by those who claim to be the purest practitioners of Islam.
In fact what you are arguing for is Saddam's regime--which DID maintain order, with its 17 separate secrete police organizations, its 300,000 dead, its torture chambers where people were fed into wood-chippers and dipped in acid, wives in front of husbands, children in front of parents....
Omar, grave U.S. mistakes have indeed contributed to the chaos in Iraq. But this savagery is coming from within Iraqi society and from within religions and ideological fanaticisms which you yourself support. As for your instinctive blaming of the other, I am going to conclude with a long quote from Nonie Darwish. Her father was the Egyptian colonel who created the Fedayeen, the first anti-Israeli guerrillas in Gaza in the 1950s. Here is what SHE says now about the Muslim deep instinct always to blame the other and never to look in the mirror:
Question: You describe how Arabs see a virtue in never admitting a mistake. To say the least, this kind of psychology necessitates pathology and the failure of a culture. No? Tell us about this mindset and its effects.
Darwish: The Arab culture is famous for its concept of pride. Image is very important and pride and shame are great motivators. Protecting the image of Muslims in front of the non-Muslim West is vital. Thus elaborate behavior is done to saving face. Admitting to a mistake can bring terrible shame and is not regarded as a virtue; those who admit to mistakes are not rewarded for their honesty but ridiculed and shamed or even severely punished. Until today most Muslims blame 9/11 on a Jewish conspiracy. The father of Muhammad Attah in Egypt, for 4 years denied that his son headed the 9/11 terror attack even when the whole world saw him checking into the airplane that slammed into the twin towers. Only recently Atta's father come out and admitted he is proud of what his son “the Shahid” and not the terrorist has done.
There are people in Arab jails right now who are accused of defaming Islam or their country in front of non-Muslims. This defamation can be a simple praise of Christians or Jews and of being critical of radical Islam. Fear of being accused of defaming one’s tribe, nation or religion leads to a culture that tends to blame others rather than look within. The Judeo Christian culture concentrates heavily on the concept of “we are all sinners and only through the grace of God we can be saved.” That is a big relief to the Western psyche. Muslim education views members of other religions as sinners; the infidel non-Muslim sinners can only be saved by announcing they are Muslims. It is a prominent part of the Jewish faith to talk about God’s punishment when they are disobedient to God’s laws.
That honest admission by Jews is not viewed by Muslims as a virtue and a step towards self-improvement, but as an admission of wrong doing and that Jews are bad and deserve God’s wrath; that is why to many Muslims Jews do not deserve land or a nation. “They themselves even admit that they are sinners,” I once heard a Muslim say. There is also a concept in Islam called “taqueya” which allows lying to non-Muslims if it is in the best interest of Islam. That concept is very deep in Muslim culture that we don't even think of the term “taqueya” any more; it has simply penetrated every aspect of Muslim life. Because of it there is very little self-criticism.
Thus, saying sorry, admitting guilt or looking within for solutions is not a strong value; it will surely get a person in deep trouble instead. Such a person will bear the blunt of the blame for everything -- even for what he did not do; thus you have Muslim denials and defensiveness over matters that many in the West cannot comprehend. Muslims are in denial when they say that Muslim women have more rights than Western women; even many Muslim women convinced themselves with that and defend Sharia Law rather than say the truth in front of the non-Muslim West.
Muslims are in denial when they say Israel is behind all Muslim terrorism across the globe, even 9/11; they are in denial when they say that Arab tyrants are the product of American foreign policy, but when America takes out Saddam, they say “you are interfering in our internal affairs.”
Re: MISERY as a measure of BARBARISIM!
Omar, the invasion of Iraq was a terrible U.S. error, and the disbanding of the army was another terrible error.
BUT... no one FORCES Muslim suicide bombers to intentionally kill hundreds of innocent people (Muslims, as it happens) at the time. This is not a "natural" response to the breakdown of law and order. No one FORCES,nor is it a "natural" response to "oppression" for suicide-bombers to blow up markets and universities. That savagery is coming from within ideological and religious fanaticism. These barbarous, appalling acts are, the 34,000 intentional civilian dead last year, the 500 intentional civilian dead last week--actions perpetrated NOT by Mossad, NOT by the CIA, NOT by the US at all or the West but by MUSLIM fanataics upon Muslims--all this is a shame and humilation upon Islam, especially because it is perpetrated by those who claim to be the purest practitioners of Islam.
In fact what you are arguing for is Saddam's regime--which DID maintain order, with its 17 separate secrete police organizations, its 300,000 dead, its torture chambers where people were fed into wood-chippers and dipped in acid, wives in front of husbands, children in front of parents....
Omar, grave U.S. mistakes have indeed contributed to the chaos in Iraq. But this savagery is coming from within Iraqi society and from within religions and ideological fanaticisms which you yourself support. As for your instinctive blaming of the other, I am going to conclude with a long quote from Nonie Darwish. Her father was the Egyptian colonel who created the Fedayeen, the first anti-Israeli guerrillas in Gaza in the 1950s. Here is what SHE says now about the Muslim deep instinct always to blame the other and never to look in the mirror:
Question: You describe how Arabs see a virtue in never admitting a mistake. To say the least, this kind of psychology necessitates pathology and the failure of a culture. No? Tell us about this mindset and its effects.
Darwish: The Arab culture is famous for its concept of pride. Image is very important and pride and shame are great motivators. Protecting the image of Muslims in front of the non-Muslim West is vital. Thus elaborate behavior is done to saving face. Admitting to a mistake can bring terrible shame and is not regarded as a virtue; those who admit to mistakes are not rewarded for their honesty but ridiculed and shamed or even severely punished. Until today most Muslims blame 9/11 on a Jewish conspiracy. The father of Muhammad Attah in Egypt, for 4 years denied that his son headed the 9/11 terror attack even when the whole world saw him checking into the airplane that slammed into the twin towers. Only recently Atta's father come out and admitted he is proud of what his son “the Shahid” and not the terrorist has done.
There are people in Arab jails right now who are accused of defaming Islam or their country in front of non-Muslims. This defamation can be a simple praise of Christians or Jews and of being critical of radical Islam. Fear of being accused of defaming one’s tribe, nation or religion leads to a culture that tends to blame others rather than look within. The Judeo Christian culture concentrates heavily on the concept of “we are all sinners and only through the grace of God we can be saved.” That is a big relief to the Western psyche. Muslim education views members of other religions as sinners; the infidel non-Muslim sinners can only be saved by announcing they are Muslims. It is a prominent part of the Jewish faith to talk about God’s punishment when they are disobedient to God’s laws.
That honest admission by Jews is not viewed by Muslims as a virtue and a step towards self-improvement, but as an admission of wrong doing and that Jews are bad and deserve God’s wrath; that is why to many Muslims Jews do not deserve land or a nation. “They themselves even admit that they are sinners,” I once heard a Muslim say. There is also a concept in Islam called “taqueya” which allows lying to non-Muslims if it is in the best interest of Islam. That concept is very deep in Muslim culture that we don't even think of the term “taqueya” any more; it has simply penetrated every aspect of Muslim life. Because of it there is very little self-criticism.
Thus, saying sorry, admitting guilt or looking within for solutions is not a strong value; it will surely get a person in deep trouble instead. Such a person will bear the blunt of the blame for everything -- even for what he did not do; thus you have Muslim denials and defensiveness over matters that many in the West cannot comprehend. Muslims are in denial when they say that Muslim women have more rights than Western women; even many Muslim women convinced themselves with that and defend Sharia Law rather than say the truth in front of the non-Muslim West.
Muslims are in denial when they say Israel is behind all Muslim terrorism across the globe, even 9/11; they are in denial when they say that Arab tyrants are the product of American foreign policy, but when America takes out Saddam, they say “you are interfering in our internal affairs.
Re: MISERY as a measure of BARBARISIM!
best,
AE
Re: MISERY as a measure of BARBARISIM!
Regarding failing to see others as they are, you might read Bernard Lewis' book The Muslim Discovery of Europe. The failure to think that anything coming from infidels is worthwhile - and the contempt for infidels and, most especially, those from Europe - had, on Lewis' account, far more to do with the decline of Islamic power and society than anything the West did. I might add, the book is the probably the best Lewis book I have ever read.
Re: MISERY as a measure of BARBARISIM!
Have you seen these three articles by eminent historians Bernard Lewis, Benny Morris and Daniel Jonah Goldhagen - who indicate that Iran, if it obtains the bomb, will not likely be deterred from using it?
Morris: http://www.nysun.com/article/47111
Lewis: http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1167467834546&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull
Goldhagen: http://www.wadinet.de/news/iraq/newsarticle.php?id=1903
Do you think they are correct? I note that I have attempted to discuss these articles with a number of our favorite interlocutors (e.g. Peter C. and John C.), asking them to post evidence and arguments that suggest that the scenarios inherent in the articles are wrong. I am told, with bald assurance, that the noted historians are wrong but no one has any evidence or arguments to justify disagreement. I kind of wish that there were such evidence or arguments.
My gut reaction is that the noted historians are, in the broad detail, that Iran would not be deterred from use the bomb if it gets it, correct although Morris may be mistaken that the Israelis will behave like a deer caught in a headlight and that the rest of the world will sit by and let that nightmare occur without retaliation.
What do you think? I might add that this ought concern Omar since, if Morris is correct, the Palestinian Arabs at least in Israel proper would also be wiped out. And Morris does not even account for the possibility that Iran would not have such good aim and land the A-bombs only in Palestinian Arab areas. Or, would it be a mistake since, as Morris notes, the Persians hold Arabs and, most especially Palestinian Arabs, in lowly contempt.
Re: MISERY as a measure of BARBARISIM!
Lewis Article
Re: MISERY as a measure of BARBARISIM!
There are two questions relevant:
One is the balance of power between Ahmadinejad. and the ayatollahs, who (as far as I can see) are the real power in the Iranian government. How will these theocrats react if they get the bomb? Will they restrain this new Hitler, or not?
The other is the race against time between the development of the bomb and the growing unpopularity of Ahmedinejad himself among the middle classes. The Iranian parliament passed a resolution very critical of Ahmedinejad's irresponsible words and actions a couple of weeks ago. Quite extraordinary. Inflation and unemployment is skyrocketing.
I believe the Iranian economic disaster is because the Saudis don't want a Shiite power or an Iranian power and are intentionally lowering the price of oil in order to put pressure on the Iranian economy (i.e., less and less income). In any case, it puts Ahmedinejad in the position of not being able to keep his economic promises.
But will this work? My instinct says no. Ahmedinejad, like Hitler, has the willpower to resist minor problems such as the ones I have described above.
best,
AE
Re: MISERY as a measure of BARBARISIM!/The Prof is Back to his l
Prof?
You state:
"Question: You (Omar)describe how Arabs see a virtue in never admitting a mistake"
Where ever did I state or claim that?
It seems You are back to your lying habit or is that your first nature?
"Lying, fabrication and putting words in other people's mouths"..is that the course you teach your hapless students?
You seem to be eminently qualified for that!
You state:
"The Judeo Christian culture concentrates heavily on the concept of “we are all sinners and only through the grace of God we can be saved". That is a big relief to the Western psyche. "
Admit your "sin" that you lie as a matter of habit and daily practice; to your and our relief.
Re: MISERY as a measure of BARBARISIM!
Are you sure that the Mullahs really disagree so much with Ahmadinejad? They have also been belligerent, as noted by Benny Morris, right from the beginning of the regime. The underlying belligerency is also Goldhagen's position, if I understand his reference to the supposed moderate Rafsanjani.
So, is it that Ahamadinejad is merely the front person who provides plausible deniability for the Mullah class - i.e., they can disown him or embrace him while, either way, quietly supporting him - or are there real ideological differences involved?
Re: MISERY as a measure of BARBARISIM!
It is worth remark that if any Israeli politicians made remarks such as these Iranian primitives get away with,--e.g., "we are going to wipe the Palestinians off the map"-- the world press would crucify them, and the UN would rush to pass resolutions and sanctions. As it is, however, we're living in the 1930s. where barbarians are invited to tea by diplomats and treated with kid gloves.
To cite two examples:
Khatami is invited to speak at the National Cathedral in Washington, whose Dean is a noted and very energetic supporter of gay rights. The Dean forebears to remonstrate with Khatami over the fact that the government he used to head has hung 4,000 gays, including teenagers as young as 16. The issue just doesn't come up.
Again, Khatami is invited to speak at Harvard--a week after the Iranian government begins a purge of all "liberal" professors at the University of Tehran. No Harvard professors mentions the purge.
Re: MISERY as a measure of BARBARISIM!/The Prof is Back to his l
That's why it says "QUESTION." IT IS A QUESTION TO HER, TO NONIE DARWISH, IT IS WHAT SHE HAS SAID, followed by her ANSWER.
It has nothing to do with YOU.
Omar, you humiliate yourself when you make paranoid mistakes such as this.
Re: MISERY as a measure of BARBARISIM!/The Prof is Back to his l
Let's see if you do it.
Re: MISERY as a measure of BARBARISIM!
This is very helpful.
As for your other point about this being 1938, I largely agree to the extent that I understand that period. I note, however, Bat Ye'or view that we are already well past that point.
I also gather that since you do not mention Goldhagen by name that he is not among your favorite historians.
Re: MISERY as a measure of BARBARISIM!
best,
Art
Re: MISERY as a measure of BARBARISIM!/The Prof is Back to his l
There is nothing to indicate that the (Question:) was addressed to Darwish; no quotation marks and/or clear attribution to a specific source.
It came in after four paras two of which started with the exclamation "Omar" including the one immediately preceding the(Question:).
With your record of putting words in my mouth I had ample reason to believe it was addressed to me.
I had no way to tell that it was your lousy mode of sentence construction...Prof!!!
However you, Prof, of all people is the last one, the least capable, to inspire fear or cause me to feel paranoic.
I do apologize to the readers if they deem my response as aggressive and /or unwarranted
Re: MISERY as a measure of BARBARISIM!
Re: MISERY as a measure of BARBARISIM!/The Prof is Back to his l
It came in after four paras two of which started with the exclamation "Omar" including the one immediately preceding the(Question:).
There follows more insults to me.
Well, folks, HERE IS THE EXACT QUOTE FROM MY #105055, FEB. 5 AT 4:33 P.M.:
Omar, grave U.S. mistakes have indeed contributed to the chaos in Iraq. But this savagery is coming from within Iraqi society and from within religions and ideological fanaticisms which you yourself support. As for your instinctive blaming of the other, I am going to conclude with a long quote from Nonie Darwish. Her father was the Egyptian colonel who created the Fedayeen, the first anti-Israeli guerrillas in Gaza in the 1950s. Here is what SHE says now about the Muslim deep instinct always to blame the other and never to look in the mirror:
Question: You describe how Arabs see a virtue in never admitting a mistake. To say the least, this kind of psychology necessitates pathology and the failure of a culture. No? Tell us about this mindset and its effects.
IT IS PERFECTLY CLEAR TO ANYONE WHO CAN READ TO WHOM THIS QUESTION IS ADDRESSED; I INTRODUCE THE WHOLE QUOTATION BY SAYING I AM NOW GOING TO CONDLUE WITH A LONG QUOTE FROM NONIE DARWISH. THEN, JUST BEFORE THE QUESTION IS POSED TO HER, I WRITE, 'AND THIS IS WHAT SHE SAYS" (AND SHE IS EMPHASIZED, Omar--'SHE' IS EMPHASIZED).
AND YET YOU SAY THERE WAS 'NO WAY TO KNOW IT WAS HER'? ONLY IF YOU CAN'T READ--OR DON'T WANT TO.
OMAR I demand an APOLOGY--AND a promise that you learn how to rad
As it is, you PROVE Darwish's POINT--ALWAYS BLAME THE OTHER, EVEN IF YOU ARE THE ONE WHO IS AT FAULT.
Re: MISERY as a measure of BARBARISIM!/The Prof is Back to his l
Re: MISERY as a measure of BARBARISIM!/The Prof is Back to his l
Think.
Why would an apology to a reader (such as myself) who has deemed your response as "aggressive and /or unwarranted", mean anything when you can't even apologize to the person to whom you behaved - in the eyes of these readers - in an "aggressive and /or unwarranted" way?
If you can't apologize to the person whom you have wronged, then only a weak-willed person will care if you apologize to them for doing it to a third party; it just shows that you're not worth being trusted, at least not willingly, or without fear. Are such weak-willed friends the only kind you can bear to have...?
You are just trying to get out of something without first putting it behind you and moving on.
What are you afraid will happen if you apologize to Eckstein?
barbarous violence
These were people born in Britain.
THIS kind of barbarous, violent attitude has NOTHING to do with israel or colonialism or the West, folks.
It may not be the only Islam there is, but it is an attitude coming from DEEP within Islam, and it is powerful. It's the same violent attitude to be seen in blowing up universities in Baghdad (and Jerusalem), or using suicide truck-bombs to kill hundreds of civilians at a market in Baghdad. And NO amount of blaming the other-than-Muslim can escape this empirical fact.
Re: MISERY as a measure of BARBARISIM!/The Prof is Back to his l
It's simply beyond his culture and his personality, even when caught red handed in an offense (in this case an intellectual offense). He will still blame someone else--ANYONE else. To accept blame, to admit error, is shameful and humiliating and "weak" in his culture, even if the result is to stick him with advocating a lie in the face of overwhelming empirical evidence.
Read closely what Nonie Darwish says here about honor and shame and the non-value of truth in Muslim societies in the posting I posted on Feb. 5 at 4:33 p.m. (#105055). As the daughter of the Egyptian colonel who created the Fedayeen in Gaza in the 1950s she was speaking from the inside, of course--and Omar's disgraceful behavior proves just how right Darwish was in what she said.
Re: MISERY as a measure of BARBARISIM!/The Prof is Back to his l
With your past record of putting words in my mouth, your lousy sentence construction and ignorance or inability to use quotation marks and /or identifying the questioner, I had reasons to believe that the question was addressed to me.
Had it been with somebody else, say the gentlemanly Friedman, I would have apologized readily, but certainly NOT to YOU Prof ???
Islam,Pipes, Furnish and Eckstein
For reasons of their own, though not hard to fathom, Pipes, a self declared propagandist for the Zionist/Israeli cause, and pseudo Pipes i.e. Profs Furnish and Eckstein have waged an unrelenting campaign against Islam; which is their undeniable right!
Patently they hope they will be among those many others that work in the West for an allover West anti Islam tsunami.
Should they ever succeed in their efforts what would the, their, next phase be?
-World wide it would certainly poison, further more, the relations between the West and the Arab/Moslem World.
I see no interest for either party in that.
-Pipes &Co wide their next phase would, almost certainly, include a direct call for an all out military war, starting immediately with Iran, against Islam , a la Afghanistan and Iraq ie to include, as a final objective, the total destruction of all sizable Moslem nations: Indonesia, Pakistan, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Morocco, Malaysia, Nigeria etc etc ;
Some 1.5-2 billion Moslems.
Except for their Alma matter, Zionism, I see no interest for any other party in that
Re: MISERY as a measure of BARBARISIM!/The Prof is Back to his l
FOLKS, IN HIS POSTING ABOVE, OMAR PROVIDES A PERFECT EXAMPLE OF NONIE DARWISH'S COMMENTS ABOUT MUSLIM CULTURAL INDIFFERENCE TO TRUTH AND INABILITY TO APOLOGIZE WHEN CAUGHT IN AN ATROCITY, AN ERROR, A MISTAKE OR AN OUTRIGHT LIE--BECAUSE THAT WOULD BE A SIGN OF "WEAKNESS." As I predicted, Omar's behavior shows only too tragically how correct Darwish is.. After this, no one can take him seriously.
Disgusting. Even though I had made it perfectly clear to anyone who could read--INTRODUCING the who passage with "This is Nonie Darwish's testimony" and DIRECTLY PRECEDING the question with "This is what SHE says, " with SHE in capital letters, Omar blames me for his inability to read.
Omar, no one else made your mistake. Look at the statement by E. Simon. The fault lies with YOU, and no one else--and you humiliate and shame yourself when your response to being caught is to heap more abuse on the person you have victimized via your lack of reading skills.
Grotesque.
Re: Islam,Pipes, Furnish and Eckstein
How does THIS get turned into a war on Islam? You know, in the thread up above Omar showed himself incapable of reading a simple sentence in English from me, and then slandered me, and then, when caught at it, and urged to apologize, he refused, and just responded with more insults. Here he shows that I'm not the only victim of his poor reading skills. He can't read Pipes either,
2.. The inaccuracy and slander is then followed by a grotesque paranoid fantasy. Paranoia is the projection onto others of feelings of aggression you cannot acknowledge in yourself.
Another performance from Omar which humiliates himself and anyone who claims to be a Muslim intellectual.
Re: MISERY as a measure of BARBARISIM!/The Prof is Back to his l
As I said, only the weak-willed would accept a friend who only wishes to shield them from witnessing what he knows they consider to be wrong to do to anyone else.
Re: MISERY as a measure of BARBARISIM!/The Prof is Back to his l
Radical Islam vs. Civilization
He gives some examples and but assumes this is all the scholarship he needs to nail his black and white evidence on the entire Left American population. This is like saying that ALL fundamentalist Christians in America are the dumbest sobs on the planet without producing enough convincing evidence.
Are we supposed to read Pipe’s mind and figure he means something else, or is this just another instance of him wanting to increase the tension between the “barbarians” and the West and between the liberals and conservatives in America? There is no doubt that fundamentalist Muslims can be “anti-modern, millenarian, misanthropic, misogynist, anti-Christian, anti-Semitic, triumphalist, jihadistic, terroristic, and suicidal. “
Pipes is “alarmed by Islamism's advances in the West. Much of the Left approaches the topic in a far more relaxed fashion.” Then he equates all the those on the Left as having the same “opponents” and as having the same “enemies” as the radical Islamists. That this is a “temptation” for lefties to join ranks with the Islamic radicals in their attacks on the West. This is one hell of an idiotic assumption to expect anyone to seriously believe.
I’ve personally seen the growing Muslim population in Europe and it makes me very uneasy as I watch the minarets rise one by one each year– and these are the peaceful Muslims. So, in a way, I understand, Pipe’s alarmism but this doesn’t give him the right to point fingers exclusively at the Left or to imply that the Muslim world has an ideology that cannot be appeased – can Pipe’s ideology be appeased? If he admits he has one that is.
And after he says “There is no way to appease this ideology” and “no change of foreign policy that make it can go away” he talks about the goal to have an ideal relationship with, I assume moderate, Muslims which can only be achieved by “standing firm with our civilized allies around the globe”. Well, I don’t believe the moderate Muslims are going to save you Mr. Pipes. Fundamentalists have the Koran to point to justify violence, moderates will only step aside. They wouldn’t be overjoyed if the jihadis cut off our heads, but they wouldn’t stop it from happening either. Thus your plan in this area seems naïve.
Off the subject here but I must say don’t I trust the Islamic radicals. But then I don’t trust the Religious Right in America either. Both have ideologies that come from their supposedly flawless biblical interpretations. One side has secret terrorist cells with suicidal maniacs, the other has God’s Army or Christian Embassy. One side is violent, the other gentle but just as effective. People in Christian and Islamic nations can find loopholes even in the most carefully crafted modern legal documents, and we're supposed to trust the perfection of holy books written by people who didn't even have flush toilets?
What is Pipes’ bottom line? Same foreign policy? More war if there is no plan B? That there is no clash of civilizations since only the West is considered a viable civilization and the other not?
Re: Radical Islam vs. Civilization
But I don't see how you can deny that dominant voices on the left see that "any enemy of the U.S./capitalism/the West" is fine with me. Noam Chomsky is a fine example. Judith Butler is
another. That much of the left--including, appallingly, many feminists--has chosen to bed down with Islam faute de mieux as the only game in town against the U.S. is obvious to many Islamic radicals themselves. Such as:
Aasim Sajjad Akhtar
December 27, 2006
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In much of the western world, progressive political and social forces have rallied to the defence of Muslim immigrant communities that face systematic discrimination following the launching of the ‘war on terror’. In the anti-war movement in the United States and Great Britain for example, Muslim associations have worked closely with secular groups that broadly associate themselves with the political left. This intriguing alignment of forces would appear to be a logical and measured response to the jingoism of many western governments as well as the attendant suspicions and harassment that have become commonplace within larger society.
It is important to be clear that in most cases the left is allying with social and cultural groups that have been associated with the Muslim community, as opposed to overtly political entities that could be categorized as ‘Islamist’. However the effective result of this policy of alignment of progressive groups in Europe and North America is enhanced interaction and even cooperation with political forces that are currently at the forefront of resistance to imperial invasions in Iraq and Afghanistan, and the ongoing brutal occupation of Palestine.
Re: Radical Islam vs. Civilization
Okay professor. I don’t deny the views some dominant Leftists have, but once again I’m saying, that doesn’t mean the voices of Chomsky or Butler speak for the majority of the Left. This seems an assumption by Pipes and others of which I see no evidence that backs it up.
Part of my earlier point is the generalizations public figures like Pipes and the media use which control the tone of the dialogue in our society and which gives rise to unfair assumptions by the public of what Left means. Does it also mean those aligned with the Enlightenment? I don’t like the political use of the word “enemy” either. What does that suppose to mean? that Chomsky and Butler, if given the opportunity, would blow up the Pentagon to make a political point or because they hate America?
“the left is allying with social and cultural groups that have been associated with the Muslim community” doesn’t mean they are with the Muslims who want to cut our heads off. The groups you speak of within the Left, America and Europe, as I see it, are not “bedding down” but only voicing disagreement with the way the America and Europe has approached its conflicts with the Islamic world.
What I know of the complexities of the conflict between Islam and the West, the origins of Arab nationalism, is far beyond my scope and I hope to learn more. At the moment though there are some ideas put out that are harder to chew than others. What Pipes and others say, sounds logical at first, but when I think about it more it seems there’s a bit of ideology mixed in with their dialogue about the menace of Islam. They are careful of course to exclude the moderate Muslims as the menace but I think they are really talking about all of Islam and the looming Islamic Caliphate. This sort of thinking ramps up the insanity. And also, it is difficult to see how all this is supposed to happen when Arabs exhibit such poor political cohesion.
I am not denying there’s no threat from radical Islam because there’s always a threat from anything radical. Something I think less noticeable in the threat category is that Russia today still has enough of an arsenal to kill most of us, and when I think of Putin, I think of the new James Bond breed, a sort of thug who just might have no compunction at all to dominate Europe if he thought he could get away with it.
Re: barbarous violence
Not exactly sure what you mean by 'other-than-Muslim' but I agree that society in Britain and Europe is becoming more violent because of this religion. But caused ONLY because of Islam? No other factors that are being overlooked? Maybe the violent attitudes in Britain toward the society they live in have more than one origin.
Re: Radical Islam vs. Civilization
Judith Butler declared her solidarity with Hezbollah, at Berkeley last September, with the statement that "It is important to understand that as a movement, Hezbollah is part of the international left." (Hezbollah--with its antisemitsm, fascist salutes, derogation of women! Can you imagine?)
No, Butler and Chomsky don't speak for everyone, but in my own Department it has become "impolite" to mention the vast and violent history of Muslim aggression: the bien-pensants' position is that only the intellectual unsophisticated (or even bigotted) bring up such issues. Similarly, it is now considered by many in my Department intellectually unsophisticated (or even bigotted) to bring up in public the Muslim issue of oppression of women (and this from the supposed "feminists" in my Department--they pressure people not to discuss it, and express disapproval wheni t is brought up-- on grounds that this is insensitivity to multiculturism! The hypocrisy is unbelievable.)
So I know whereof I speak.
No, this isn't the entire left. But it's a large slice of it: they identify with the alleged "victim", they identify with the enemy of the West, and they are (I fear) secretly tickled by the violence unleashed upon the Western society that feeds them, but which they are too comfortable to challenge in that direct sort of way.
But there are people on the left who do not feel or think this way. As I said, the center/left Euston Street Manifesto Group--of which I am a memo in its American branch. Our statements are not hard to find on the net. But, James, I fear we are a minority.
Re: Radical Islam vs. Civilization
I agree. And thank you for your patience.
Re: Radical Islam vs. Civilization
best,
AE
Re: Radical Islam vs. Civilization
On this site you often voice your opinions in a blunt, impolitic manner. As far as the feeling you get from your fellow faculty, if you voice your opinions in a similar manner with them as you often do here, I can see why many would see it as impolite. This is not to say you should be silenced, merely that your style of discourse, at least here, tends toward the combative and as such can draw a similarly combative response.
You claim here to be center/left. The articles you have contributed to FrontPage cast serious doubt on this assertion. This is not to say that it cannot be true, but I have seen no evidence of it in your writing.
As a side note, why do you choose to associate yourself with FrontPage?
Re: Radical Islam vs. Civilization
I'm a member of the American and the British Euston Street people, and if you READ their manifesto you will find my politics expressed exactly there--both in foreign policy and social policy. You don't have to speculate. I agree with the statements in the Euston Street Manifesto--and it is not a document of the Right. So you don't have to speculate about me.
As for my occasional association with Frontpage, Horowitz sometimes publishes pieces that do not come from people who agree with him politically. He knows my politics, and he knows that my politics are not his. And frankly, in my dealings with him I have always found Horowitz to be more honest and more intellectually flexible than many people on the Left.
He is more honest and intellectually flexible than Michael Berube, for instance, with whom I've broken a few spears, and who consistently slanders Horowitz as a liar. But in his new book Berube presents a version of events at the University of Northern Colorado which he KNOWS is untrue--he knows it, because over a period of three days of detailed discussion on his blog I proved to him that Horowitz was telling the truth about this case.
Frontpage is a convenient place, for instance, for me to express my disdain for the chair of the Department of Political Science at Pitt who dares to write an article claiming that there are few professed Christians in the more elite universities NOT because of bias against them but because Christians are simply incapable of complex thought. [THINK ABOUT THE CONTRADICTION IN THAT STATEMENT.] This is the same article which denies that politics plays a role in the hiring and promotion of untenured faculty--a highly controversial and opinionated article, which the chair WROTE with THREE UNTENURED people on whom HE personally will pass judgment in terms of their careers! [GET IT?]
Sometimes, as Mario Savio says, the working of the machine make you so disgusted that you have to throw your body onto the gears to try to stop it.
As for my bluntness to people such as Omar--they deserve it. He's an ignorant hate-filled barbarian, and he should be told so. Or that British guy a month ago, whose reaction to the murder of the Palestinian by Palestinian terrorists who were looking to kill ANY Jew and happened on this Palestinian who was jogging in an upscale Jewish neighborhood and just blew him away by MISTAKE--the British guy's reaction was to attack the Palestinian mistaken for a Jew! Why, they must have known that he was a collaborator, etc. That was his position when Fateh ITSELF apologized for the "mistake"--they were only after any Jews around. (Sound racist to you? ) THAT guy with his increasingly desperate slanders of the dead didn't deserve to be treated with respect either. You may have noticed that I started OUT talkin' to him nice, though...
The Left I'm talking about aren't elected to office (except for the new ex-Farakhan respresentative from Minneapolis), they just TRAIN them. Chomsky is no marginal figure in academia and neither is Judith Butler. The link between the Left and the Islamists is commonly discussed in Europe nowadays. See the recent article by Fred Halliday, a man who is no friend of the Right, protesting it.
Re: Radical Islam vs. Civilization
I am not sure your characterization of
Ellison is fair. It seems that he had considerable Jewish support in this past election and has renounced his former ties to the Nation of Islam. If the Jewish community of Minneapolis, who no doubt know him better than we, don't find him to be anti-semitic or anti-American why do you?
There are a few loud voices on the Left who look to have taken an enemy of my enemy approach, but these are not the majority voices on the Left.
If the left you are talking about are so pervasive why are they not elected to office? If they train the candidates why are they incapable of enacting their agenda? Which candidates do you feel they have been so trained? Are these politicians supporting the agenda that you were speaking of? If so can you provide any examples? Why are these views rarely ever supported by anyone in the MSM? The most obvious answer to all of these questions is that they are not so pervasive as you think.
I am currently living in Western Europe and the only place I regularly hear talk of a link between Islamism and the Left is on this board and some right wing blogs.
This is an entirely trivial question but I am curious. Why do you refer to the Euston Manifesto as the Euston Street Manifesto? They never seem to self identify as such.
Re: Radical Islam vs. Civilization
Ellison: le'ts wait until you see what Ellison's positions are. He's somewhere over near Cynthia McKinney. Ron Dellums was another person elected by the Left (he represented Berkeley) and if things had broken a different way would have been the chairman of a very powerful committee.
Can't get their agenda enacted? What do you think is going on with Iraq in Congress now, John?
You live in western Europe and didn't notice Ian Buruma and Timothy Garton Ash's attacks on Ayan Hirsi Ali for criticizing Islam? They called her "an Enlightenment Fundamentalist." In Buruma's book on the murder of Theo van Gogh by a savage Muslim fanatic (a book in which Muslims come off as more likeable to Buruma than the indigenous Dutch), he quotes without disapproval a characterization of Hirsi Ali's film protesting Muslim physical abuse of women as a "Nazi-type film." You didn't notice Ken Livingstone, mayor of London, in bed with that vile anti-semite and proponent of suicide bombing al-Qaradawi? Perhaps because you live in Europe you missed Tony Judt of NYU telling Hirsi Ali that criticizing Islam was "something of a luxury" for her and not protected speech. And where was the Left during the Cartoon Jihad? Many, many, sided with the primitives. And who on the Left came to the defense of the French philosopher Robert Redeker who lost his teaching job because of Muslim death-threats because he dared to criticize Islamic violence in "Le Figaro"? Answer: no one on the Left; the Left thought he'd been impolite. The Communist mayor of the town where Redeker lives attacked him for mentioning that he taught in that town. The leading leftist human rights organizations, instead of seeking to protect him, denounced Redeker's "irresponsible declarations" and "putrid ideas".
I could go on. But you wanted facts, and I've now given you some.
Schezerade
Re: Schezerade
your analysis, Carl, if you could spell Sheherizade.
Re: Radical Islam vs. Civilization
What is going on in the Congress right now regarding Iraq is far less than most of the American people want. What do you think they should be doing regarding Iraq?
I am living in the Netherlands. Ian Baruma is largely ignored here. He is writing for an American audience and it seems he hit his mark. Most of the criticism of Hirsi Ali I have heard here revolved around the lies on her immigration forms and the hypocrisy of her position regarding the deportation of Taida Pasic. Regarding her film, the projection of verses of the Koran on nude women was the complaint that received the most attention. Very few suggested that she shouldn't have been allowed to make this deliberately provocative film, but some were upset that their tax money was being spent on round the clock security for her. If a similar film were made in America with Biblical verses being projected on naked people there would be a much larger outcry there than there was over her film here. The makers of this hypothetical film would no doubt receive death threats just as the 'artists' how constructed the Jesus in pee installation.
Regarding Ken Livingstone, by in bed with I guess you mean inviting him to a single conference on the wearing of the hijab by schoolgirls. If this qualifies as being in bed with then I am a terrible slut and you likely are as well.
I did indeed miss the Judt-Ali debate and a quick and lazy google search did not turn up the transcript, so I do not know the context of that remark and cannot reliably judge it or your characterization of it.
Regarding the cartoon. First it was published in a center right Danish paper that is to the Left of the NYT and the Washington Post, the two papers constantly referred to as representing the Left in America. Second the majority of the Left was horrified by the Muslim reaction to the cartoon they just didn't react as aggressively as the right. Can you name any prominent Left wing politicians who supported the Muslim reaction?
Regarding Redeker, did you actually read his comments? How long do you think an American high school teacher would keep his job if he wrote an editorial in a local paper that stated, "Pitiless war leader, pillager, butcher of innocents and polygamous, this is how Moses is revealed by the Bible." Then called the Bible "a book of incredible violence", adding: "Muhammad is a master of love, Jesus a master of hate." If this were published in the American South or rural Mid-West do you seriously think that he would not receive death threats?
Again I ask:
If the left you are talking about are so pervasive why are they not elected to office? If they train the candidates why are they incapable of enacting their agenda? Which candidates do you feel they have been so trained? Are these politicians supporting the agenda that you were speaking of? If so can you provide any examples? Why are these views rarely ever supported by anyone in the MSM?
and answer:
The most obvious answer to all of these questions is that they are not so pervasive as you think.
Re: Schezerade
Re: Schezerade
Re: Radical Islam vs. Civilization
When van Gogh was KILLED after making a film protesting Muslim abuse of women--how many more films critical of Islam have been made by Dutch film-makers, especially on the Left? When someone wrote "Freedom of Speech" where van Gogh was murdered, the local mullahs successfully protested that this was "racist" and it was wiped out by the government. You yourself seem more interested in attacking the film than in comprehending the culture that produced the murderer. That Buruma is Dutch but writes in English and so has little impact in Holland is no argument--you said "I live in Europe" and Buruma in his attack on Hirsi for speaking out too loudly and for being an "Enlightenment Fundamentalist" writes for Europeans (and for Americans too).
The business about Hirsi's original application for asylum was well known--who investigated it anew in the Dutch government after her life was threatened and why did that lead to the fall of the government that did it? You just slough the incident off. Her neighbors were afraid of Muslim violence and blamed HER. Exactly my point: Should I now be expecting minions of Omar at my university office, coming to blow me away, followed by Crocker's comment: "Well, he went too far in debating Omar"? You think the multiculturalists WOULDN"T say something like that?
Your answer to Judt's inexcusable remark--inexcusable especially coming from Judt, someone who demands absolute freedom of speech for himself--is "I don't know the context." Essentially, on this you want to deny inconvenient facts on grounds of "scholarly dubitation". How often have we seen that tactic used by the Left (and Omar) on HNN! You will find Judt's remark reported in an important letter to the editor in The New Republic a month ago. by Lee Seigel, a senior editor of The New Republic.
As for Red Ken--google "Livingstone praises al-Qaradawi" and "Livington praises Islamism".
During the Cartoon Jihad, it wasn't a question of the Left condoning the primiitve and barbaric Muslim violence that resulted--that's a false issue--it's all the criticism of the right to publish those cartoons that came from the Left as a violation of multicultural sensitivity. The cartoons were never published in major American newspapers, nor in our own college newspaper, which daily publishes savage cartoons of Bush. Figure it out the mindset which would accept that situation. As for your attempt at American equivalence, and by contrast, Jay Leno on American TV night after night lampooned the Catholic Church during the pederasty scandal: and (1) received no death threats, let alone was he killed, while (2) no one on the Left declared that he should be more polite.
You defend the destruction of Robert Redeker for telling what is, after all, the truth about Mohammed--the truth about any ruler in the 7th century A.D. Note that the Muslim response to calling Mohammed violent was to engage in violence (same with the Pope Incident: call us VIOLENT? We'll KILL NUNS. Who on the left bitterly protested THAT? No, they were busy condemning the Pope.) Or do you think it's right that the publication of an editorial in a MAJOR newspaper (Le Figaro) should lead to death-threats from Muslims from which he was not defended by the Left? In fact, your position is the same as the French Left--He shouldn't have said it, he offended sensitivities, it's his own fault if he got death-threats. What appeasement! Toxic multiculturalism at work. Or is your point just a bien-pensant attack on the U.S., based on a hypothetical? And while Redeker is a high school teacher he is also a well-known philosopher, with at least three books.
Those who organized the huge antiwar demos in the U.S. were members of the communist organization International ANSWR, which believes that North Korea is an ideal society. They stood on platforms with medieval men shouting "Allahu Akbar!" You know I'm not making this up.
In Britain, the big "We are all Hezbollah Now" demos were partly organized by the old Greenham Common Women from the 1980s. This provoked only one appalled protest from a former GCW: "I thought we were for peace? I thought we were for women's liberation?"
Mr. Ellison has already come out in favor of defeat of the U.S. in Iraq, no matter how carefully phrased it is. Some of his major associates, such as Nihad Awad, support Hezbollah. And he's only been in office one month. I don't support the Iraq War, but let's see what else Mr. Ellison has on his plate.
Your argument about not electing people is completely beside the point: the Left in the U.S. has historically rarely able to win elections or to elect socialists (though now they have a senator). The point is not how electorally effective the Left is at this point in U.S. electoral politics. The question is whether the Left is increasingly in bed with and coddlng of the Islamists, whether an instinctive alliance increasingly EXISTS. Electoral ineffectiveness in the U.S. is no argument that it doesn't exist. Of course, in Britain the electoral story is a little different --look at the coalition that elected the vile George Galloway to Parliament.
You wanted evidence, I've presented plenty, including, at the local level, the disgraceful behavior of "feminists" in my own Department when confronted with Muslim abuse of women. But read Fred Halliday's article protesting the Left getting into bed with the Islamists. Read Pascal Bruckner on the same phenomenon (you can find it on Signandsight.com, just scroll down now to the middle of the page or so).
No doubt, Crocker, you will do what you usually do--claim that's not enough examples. But I'm tired of doing your research for you again. I've given you plenty of evidence
Re: Radical Islam vs. Civilization
I did not write that his writing in English was why he had little impact here. Virtually everyone in the Netherlands under the age of fifty speaks and reads English fluently. What I did write was that he writes for an American audience and does not have much of and audience here. This is true however much you might wish it to be otherwise.
Regarding Hirsi Ali your characterization of virtually particular is wrong.
The citizenship issue was brought up by Verdonk of the VVD in response to an expose on "Zembla." The Taida Pasic controversy was largely the motivation for the expose.
The dissolution of the Netherlands parliament was the result of D66 withdrawing from the cabinet over entirely unrelated issues.
Regarding Judt I had only your characterization of his comments. That was/is not enough for me to formulate an opinion, particularly given your wildly inaccurate characterization of the Hirsi Ali affair.
Regarding Livingston the search strings you suggest produce only partisan blogs. I will look further when I have time.
"You defend the destruction of Robert Redeker for telling what is, after all, the truth about Mohammed"
I did not defend his destruction, though I am not sure what you mean by destruction. He has every right to say whatever he wants no matter how hateful it may be and death threats are entirely unacceptable as a response. I did point out that if he had leveled a similar attack at Moses and or Jesus in a major American newspaper he would have lost his job as a high school teacher there as well and he likely he would have also faced death threats. Do you deny this? Would you speak out passionately about the injustice of this hypothetical teacher losing his job? Have you spoken out as passionately against the death threats received by the atheists protesting "under God" in the pledge or is it only threats from Muslims that frighten you.
I am not familiar with ANSWR and can find no mention of it online so cannot answer your characterization. I will note however that just because a group organizes a protest against an unpopular war that does not mean that most or even many of the participants support the other aims of that group. That some there may have shouted God is great is not all that surprising or alarming. Do you characterize these men as medieval for some reason other than shouting this phrase?
Mr Ellison has come out for the withdrawal of US troops from Iraq this is not the same as coming out for US defeat no matter how you may try to spin it. By your logic here over 65% of America has come out for American defeat in Iraq. Is this your position?
You say you don't support the Iraq war, yet you don't support bringing home the troops. What do you support?
"The Left in the U.S. has historically rarely able to win elections"
Here you seem to have defined the Left into a minority within the Democratic party, yet earlier you include yourself and Lieberman on the Left, center/Left but still Left.
What do you mean when you say Left?
Was Carter on the Left? Clinton? any of the Kennedys?
My argument about electing people is far from irrelevant. You want to dismiss it because it doesn't fit within your narrative. The US has largely been gerrymandered. If this anti-American pro-Islamist agenda were so deeply entrenched and widespread in the Left someone would have been elected to the House if nowhere else. There are certainly Left wing politicians. If Kucinich can get elected certainly someone representing such a widespread constituency would have been elected.
"No doubt, Crocker, you will do what you usually do--claim that's not enough examples. But I'm tired of doing your research for you again. I've given you plenty of evidence"
When you make an assertion it is not up to me to research its defense for you.
Can you point to me arguing that you have provided enough examples? What I have argued is that your examples are flawed.
I wanted evidence of what you assert is a widespread phenomenon on the Left and the evidence you have provided is flimsy and at times wildly inaccurate.
You need to do much better if you expect your pretentious dismissal to carry any weight.