http://www.jewishworldreview.com/0411/ahlert.php3?printer_friendly

 

April 6, 2011 

It Takes a Bigot to Expose a Death Cult 

By Arnold Ahlert 

 

According to Britain's Daily Mail, Florida Pastor Terry Jones, who burned a
copy of the Koran after a six-hour mock trial, "has been directly
responsible for a wave of violence that began last night (April 2) and has
left 30 people dead and more than 150 injured. The defiant stance has led
General Petraeus, the head of NATO forces in Afghanistan, to join
international condemnation of pastor Jones." Let me begin by stipulating
that what Mr. Jones did was both stupid and provocative. At the same time,
the reaction to his stunt is quite fascinating on a number of levels, most
of which center around the reality that Western culture is besieged by weak
thinkers, apologists and appeasers. What Mr. Jones did was personally
self-destructive. The reaction to it may be culturally suicidal. 

First, weak thinking. The contention that Mr. Jones is "directly
responsible" for the deaths and injuries perpetrated by Islamic thugs
half-way around the world is preposterous. It wasn't Mr. Jones who
participated in three days (so far) of violence that has left 20 dead and 83
wounded in Afghanistan, including the beheading two UN guards in the
northern city of Mazar-i-Sharif. Nor has he participated in the scores of
violent demonstrations taking place across the Middle East, many of which
were ginned up by local imams broadcasting Jones's comments from
loudspeakers mounted on moving vehicles, in response to the book burning. 

So why characterize Jones as directly responsible? Because to do so allows
those who refuse to view the "religion of peace" through anything other than
rose-colored glasses to continue their vacation from reality. It is a
vacation which began almost immediately following 9/11--for which many of
the same weak thinkers blamed "imperialist" American foreign policy instead
of the attackers themselves--when George W. Bush insisted, with no
supporting evidence whatsoever, that the "majority of Muslims are on our
side." 

Really? That would mean out of the approximately 1.5 billion Muslims who
inhabit the planet, at least 750 million of them are in favor of...what,
exactly? Our three interventions in Iraq, Afghanistan and now Libya? How
about our Constitutional determination not to endorse a state religion?
Equal rights for women and non-believers? Certainly not freedom of speech,
as this latest incident reveals. 


Perhaps the Obama administration could do the country a big favor and tell
of us what the parameters are for one to be considered a "pro-Western
Muslim." And perhaps some of the weak thinkers might explain why a person
who puts a Christian crucifix in a jar of urine, or covers a portrait of the
Virgin Mary with elephant dung is considered an artist, even as Jones is
considered a provocateur. 

Thus, the double-standard of the apologists is revealed. It is the typical
double-standard which posits that one particular group of people--in this
case Muslims--can not possibly be expected to conform to standards which
apply to everyone else. This "plantation mentality," which has been applied
at various times to other sub-groups, wraps bigotry in a patina of
compassion. Thus, Muslims reacting to Mr. Jones by perpetrating violence and
murder become, not only perfectly understandable, but apparently absolvable
as well, as the focus of "international condemnation" directed at Jones, far
more than the perpetrators of violence themselves, indicates. The unspoken
assumption? The essence of apologism: Muslims are less "evolved." 

Two thoughts arise. First, how does one square such apologism with
multiculturalism, which posits that all cultures are equally viable? The
West and Islam are equal, but Islam gets a special pass regarding censorship
and violence? Good luck with that. Perhaps the three European leaders,
Britain's David Cameron, France's Nicolas Sarkozy, and Germany's Angela
Merkel, who have contended that multiculturalism is a "failure," might be
asked whom they hold "directly responsible" for the current violence.
Second, will the media sources which made Jones's provocation international
news be willing to accept equal shares of the "direct responsibility" they
so easily ascribe to the Florida preacher? Without their "help," Jones is
little more than an obscure Gainesville, FL hot head firing up some locals.
Now he's a man with a $2.4 million fatwa on his head, courtesy of some
"less-evolved" Pakistanis who are "understandably" upset. If Jones gets
killed, will the media be internationally condemned for provoking his
murder? 

Which brings us to appeasement. While it is entirely understandable that
General Petraeus, as well as the families with loved ones in harm's way in
the Middle East and elsewhere, are upset with Jones, it might be pointed out
that such feelings can be selective. When Senator Harry Reid concluded that
the "war was lost" in Iraq, one is hard-pressed to recall the General, or
anyone else, joining a chorus of "international condemnation" against the
Arizona Senator. Apparently Jones's incitement of the enemy is a greater sin
than Reid giving them aid and comfort, but this writer is at a loss to
understand why. 

Perhaps what the General is inadvertently revealing is that American
soldiers are at greater risk when one provokes one's adversary than when one
gives them reason to hope. Perhaps that is what happens when the initial
reasons for prosecuting the war on terror have been obscured by politically
correct jargon. Ten years ago, Americans signed on for "war" in order to
achieve "victory" against "Islamic terrorists." What they did not sign on
for was an "overseas contingency" or "kinetic" military operation against
"undefined insurgents" in which "nation-building and "winning hearts and
minds" has replaced victory--especially when, after ten years, seemingly all
of it can be undone by the actions of a single ranter in Florida. 

As for Mr. Reid himself, his shamelessness along with Senator Lindsey
Graham's fecklessness, was on display Sunday on CBS' Face the Nation. Both
men were looking for ways, not to condemn Islamic violence, but to censor
Terry Jones. "Ten to 20 people have been killed," said Harry Reid (D-NV)
"We'll take a look at this of course. As to whether we need hearings or not,
I don't know." Perhaps we could also hold hearings on how many Americans
were killed as a result of Senator Reid's words. "I wish we could find a way
to hold people accountable. Free speech is a great idea, but we're in a
war," said Linsey Graham (R-SC), oblivious to the idea that one of the
reasons we're in a war is to protect free speech. 

There is no question that Terry Jones is an opportunist. Yet what would one
call those Muslims who both incite and commit violence at the slightest
provocation? It is worth remembering that when Newsweek falsely reported a
Koran being flushed down a toilet at Guantanamo Bay in 2005, 15 people were
killed in rioting. Former Seattle Weekly cartoonist Molly Norris has been
forced into hiding--in the United States--after she became the target of a
death threat following her "Everybody Draw Mohammed Day" satire for that
newspaper. 

The most compelling argument against what Jones did can be reduced to the
idea that you don't swat a hornet's nest. Yet it is precisely that kind of
self-censorship which allows the hornets to continue stinging whenever they
choose to do so. This is one American who prefers to know exactly who can be
moved to beheading someone by the burning of a book, rather than having that
person remain in the shadows--even as I'm told there's a better than even
chance he's on our side. 

This is where the West's infatuation with political correctness has taken
us. It is an ideological bankruptcy so profound, that we are reduced to a
disturbing reality brought on by equal amounts of weak thinking, apologist
inanity and reflexive appeasement: 

It takes a bigot to expose a death cult. 

 



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