Note:  Perhaps what Juan Cole says in the essay below is so obvious to Muslims 
and enlightened Jews and Christians that nobody has said it so far, but this 
really is the first time I have read the comment that I have highlighted, below.


I have wondered in the past few days about Americans would react if some really 
significant and revered person in our culture--perhaps George Washington, 
Martin Luther King, or FDR--were mocked in other parts of the world as a 
pedophile and a vicious murderer.  You may shrug and say that's okay because we 
believe in free speech, but what if the people doing the mocking were invading 
Atlanta, St. Louis,  and Seattle, bombing the hell out of neighborhoods  in Los 
Angeles, Detroit and Washington DC, with hundreds of thousands of casualties, 
raping our women, torturing our young men and sewing radioactive poisons on the 
wheat fields of Kansas and Iowa.  It really is not free speech alone that is 
the problem, it is the injury followed by the insults.


Juan Cole leads us in the direction of considering how a fifth of humanity 
feels about our arrogant and bigoted ways.

Hajja Romi/"Blue"


Muslims are no Different, or why Bill Maher’s blood libel is Bigotry

Comedian Bill Maher puts himself in the company of “9/11 liberals” 
who believe that Islam as a religion is different and decidedly worse 
than all other religions.  He said Friday that ‘at least half of all Muslims 
believe it is all right to kill someone who insults ‘the Prophet.’ His bad 
faith is immediately apparent in the reference to 9/11, not the work of 
mainstream Muslims but of a political cult whose members often spent their time 
in strip clubs.
Now, it may be objected that Maher has made a career of attacking all 
religions, and promoting irreverence toward them.  So Islam is just one more 
target for him.  But that tack wouldn’t entirely be true.  He 
explicitly singles Islam out as more, much more homocidal than the other 
religions.  He is personally unpleasant to his Muslim guests, such as 
Keith Ellison.  His reaction to the youth of the Arab Spring gathering 
to try to overthrow their American-backed dictators was “the Arabs are 
revolting.”  Try substituting “Jews” to see how objectionable that is.
Maher ironically has de facto joined an Islamophobic network that is funded by 
the Mellon Scaife Foundation and other philanthropies tied to the American 
Enterprise Institute, etc. which is mainly made up of evangelical Christians, 
bigoted American Jews who would vote for the Likud Party if they could, and 
cynical Republican businessmen and 
politicians casting about for something with which to frighten working 
class Americans into voting for them.
Maher is a consistent liberal and donated $1 million to the Obama 
campaign, so he is in odd company in targeting Muslims this way. So what 
explains this animus against Muslims in particular?  The only thing he 
has in common with the Islamophobic Right is his somewhat bloodthirsty 
form of militant Zionism.  He strongly supported the Israeli attack on 
helpless little Lebanon in 2006, in which the Israelis dropped a million 
cluster bombs on the farms of the south of that country.  He talks 
about how the besieged Palestinians of Gaza deserve to be “nuked.”  His 
interviews with Likudnik Israeli officials are typically fawning, unlike his 
combative style with other right wing guests.
In short, Maher is in part reacting as a nationalist to Muslims as a 
rival national group, and his palpable hatred for them is rooted not in 
religion but in national self-conception.  It is a key tactic of 
militant Zionism to attempt to demonize and delegitimize Muslims; you 
don’t have to apologize for colonizing or imposing Apartheid on 
Palestinians, after all, if they aren’t really human beings.  In 
addition, like many Americans, Maher sees the United States, Europe and Israel 
as ‘the West’ locked in a rivalry with an alien, Islamic civilization that is 
intrinsically fanatical and backward (his fellow-traveller on this issue, 
Pamela Geller, uses the 
word ‘savage.’)  Maher is aware of the history of Christian 
bloodthirstiness, of course, but he often speaks of it as being in the 
past.  He seems to see contemporary Muslims as having the same sorts of 
flaws (Inquisition, Crusades) as medieval Christianity.
Maher is not important, but his thesis is widely put forward, and it matters in 
real people’s lives.  There is a nation-wide campaign by religious bigots (most 
of them sadly evangelical Christians) to prevent American Muslims from building 
mosques in their communities, and one of the reasons 
often given is ‘fear’ that the Muslims are homicidal and so the mosque 
is a conspiracy to commit murder waiting to happen.  Maher’s singling 
out of Muslim as different willy-nilly encourages people to treat them 
as different, i.e., to discriminate against them.
It is significant that Maher tries to pin the label ‘murderer’ on the Muslims 
(or half of them?)  Because one of the centerpieces of 
classical Western hatred of Jews was the blood libel, the allegation 
that they stole the babies of Christians and sacrificed them in secret 
rituals.  It is hard to see what the difference is between that and 
arguing that some 3 million American Muslims are walking around like a 
grenade with the pin pulled out.  Both blood libels configure a 
non-Christian group as homicidal, and locate the impulse for their 
alleged killing sprees in secret religious beliefs opaque to the normal 
Christian.
Refuting Maher would be tedious and, as others have noted, like 
nailing jello to the wall, since he doesn’t have a cogent set of 
testable theses about Muslims, he just despises them.  For what it is 
worth, It is fairly easy to show that Maher’s specific assertions about 
Muslims, and more especially about American Muslims, are simply not true.  Most 
reject militant groups, and nearly 80% want a two-state solution on 
Israel and Palestine, i.e. they accept Israel assuming Palestinian 
statelessness is ended.
Crowd politics is different in various parts of the world and it is 
certainly true that riots can be provoked in each culture by different 
things.  It is a straw man to say Muslims “would” kill people for 
insulting Muhammad.  How many such killings happen each year?  where?  
And it stacks the deck against them to single out their motive from 
other possible impetuses to violence.  Is the complaint that they are 
more violent than other people (not in evidence)?  Or that their motives for 
violence are peculiar (depends on how you classify them)?  In the 
United States, the police beating of Rodney King resulted in 3000 shops 
being burned down in Los Angeles.  Race seems to be the thing that sets 
off riots in the US.  Rioting over race relations is so common that 
major such incidents, as in Cincinnati, often do not even get national 
press.
The touchiness of Muslims about assaults on the Prophet Muhammad is 
in part  rooted in centuries of Western colonialism and neo-colonialism 
during which their religion was routinely denounced as barbaric by the 
people ruling and lording it over them.  That is, defending the Prophet 
and defending the post-colonial nation are for the most part 
indistinguishable, and being touchy over slights to national identity 
(and yes, Muslimness is a kind of national identity in today’s world) is hardly 
confined to Muslims.
In India, dozens of Christians have sometimes been killed by rioting Hindus 
angry over allegations of missionary work.  Killing people because you think 
they tried to convert members of your religion to another religion?  
Isn’t it because such a conversion is an insult to your gods?
In Myanmar, angry Buddhists have attacked the hapless Muslim minority, 
sometimes alleging they were avenging an instance of the rape of a 
Buddhist girl (i.e. these are like lynchings in the Jim Crow South).
Or then there have been Sri Lanka Buddhist attacks on Tamil Christians. In 
fact, Sri Lanka Buddhists have erected a nasty police state and 
shown a propensity for violence against the Tamil minority, some 
elements of which have had revolutionary or separatist aspirations (not 
everybody in the group deserves to be punished for that).
And, militant Israeli Jews have set fire to Muslim mosques in Palestine and 
recently tried to “lynch” three Palestinians in Jerusalem. If Maher thinks only 
Muslims are thin-skinned, he should try publicly 
criticizing Israeli policy in America and see what happens to him.
Since Iraq didn’t have ‘weapons of mass destruction’ and wasn’t 
connected to 9/11, it is hard to avoid the conclusion that 300 million 
Americans brutally attacked and militarily occupied that country for 8 
1/2 years, resulting in the deaths of perhaps hundreds of thousands of 
Iraqis, the wounding of millions, and the displacement of millions more, mainly 
because Iraq’s leader had talked dirty about America.  Now that 
is touchy.
Americans tut-tutting over riots in the Arab world appear to have led sheltered 
lives.  In most of the world, crowd actions are common over 
all kinds of issues, beyond the ones of race, class and college sports 
teams that routinely provoke them here.  When I was living in India 
there were always items in the newspaper about a bus driver accidentally 
running over a pedestrian, and then an angry mob forming that killed 
the bus driver.  Neighborhood nationalism.   The same sort of crowds 
gather when a blaspheming author drives his discourse into the sanctity 
of their neighborhood.  It is appalling, but I’m not sure what exactly 
you would do about that sort of thing.  It certainly isn’t confined to 
Muslims.
In fact, the crowd that attacked the US embassy in Cairo was just 
2000 or so people, tiny by Egyptian standards.  A demonstration that 
only attracted 2000 people would usually be considered a dismal failure 
in Cairo.  Likewise, for all its horror and destructiveness, the crowd 
that assaulted the US consulate in Benghazi was very small, a few 
hundred people.  Many of them have now been chased out of town by 
outraged Libyans disturbed at this affront to their city’s reputation as a 
cradle of a revolution made for the sake of human rights.  A careful comparison 
in percentage terms of the size of the crowds that protested Mubarak’s rule in 
Cairo (hundreds of thousands) with the size of those who protested the 
so-called film attacking the Prophet 
Muhammad, shows that the latter is hardly worth mentioning.
Maher is using his position as a comedic gadfly to promote hatred of 
one-sixth of humankind, and that is wrong, any way you look at it.

http://www.juancole.com/

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



------------------------------------

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
LAAMN: Los Angeles Alternative Media Network
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Unsubscribe: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subscribe: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Digest: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Help: <mailto:[email protected]?subject=laamn>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Post: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive1: <http://www.egroups.com/messages/laamn>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive2: <http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/laamn/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/laamn/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    [email protected] 
    [email protected]

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [email protected]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

Reply via email to