More Noted Things
War Watch: Following the lead of Mary Habeck, a military historian at the Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies, Jonathan Rauch,"A War on Jihadism, Not ‘Terror'," ReasononLine, 17 April argues that declaring the current struggle a ‘war on jihadism' clarifies what it is about. But Habeck, Rauch and others like them only demonstrate their tin ear for religious language of any kind. They know -- even acknowledge -- but ignore, the fact that jihad has a range of meaning and that, in its more inoffensive forms, it is obligatory on all faithful Muslims. It is the equivalent of declaring a ‘war on obedience' in Judaism or a ‘war on discipleship' or a ‘war on evangelism' in Christianity. To speak of a ‘war on terror' acknowledges, at least, that there is an ‘enemy within' in domestic terrorism. It would be strange, indeed, if a secular mentality pushed us increasingly us in the direction of Crusader-language. Thanks to Kevin Drum at Political Animal for the tip.
As Doug Lederman points out at Inside Higher Ed, the MLA's new interactive language map of the United States is quite extraordinary. Try it out! And, now, as promised, I'm outta here until Sunday.