Why The Left Cried When Osama Died

Posted By Jamie Glazov On May 12, 2011 

The death of Osama bin Laden has driven a stake into the heart of the Left, 
causing progressives to bleed and moan as their unholy alliance with radical 
Islam absorbs the devastating May 2 blow.

The radical Islamic half of the romance is in agony as it sheds bitter tears 
for the mass murderer. Indeed, Hamas 
<http://frontpagemag.com/2011/05/12/why-the-left-cried-when-osama-died/2011/05/03/hamas-sorrow-over-the-death-of-osama/>
 , Hezbollah 
<http://iloubnan.info/politics/actualite/id/61035/titre/Sobhi-al-Tufayli,-ex-Hezbollah-chief-mourns-death-of-bin-Laden>
 , the armed wing of Fatah 
<http://frontpagemag.com/2011/05/12/why-the-left-cried-when-osama-died/2011/05/04/fatah-mourns-bin-laden/>
 , and tens of thousands of radical Muslims around the world have prominently 
displayed their sorrow and anger for the world to see.

The alliance’s leftist half is, meanwhile, also deeply grieving. The guru of 
the leftist political faith, Noam Chomsky, is responsibly leading the way. 
Having distinguished himself, among other intriguing ways, as a Jew who has 
traveled to Lebanon to embrace personally the leaders of Hezbollah 
<http://www.discoverthenetworks.org/individualProfile.asp?indid=1232> , whose 
stated top priority is to rid the world of Jews, the M.I.T. professor emeritus 
has not disappointed the faithful, progressive flock. Furiously responding to 
the assassination of the Left’s idol, Chomsky fumed in his recent article 
<http://www.guernicamag.com/blog/2652/noam_chomsky_my_reaction_to_os/> : “We 
might ask ourselves how we would be reacting if Iraqi commandos landed at 
George W. Bush’s compound, assassinated him, and dumped his body in the 
Atlantic.”

The al-Qaeda leader’s killing is an outrage, in Chomsky’s mind, because Bush’s 
“crimes vastly exceed bin Laden’s.” Chomsky is outraged not only that the 
operation was clearly “a planned assassination, multiply violating elementary 
norms of international law,” but also that its victim had never been legally 
proven to be the perpetrator of 9/11. Undoubtedly, Chomsky’s Gulag Denial 
mindset continues unabated, for having shamelessly attempted to deny the Khmer 
Rouge’s Holocaust in Cambodia was clearly not enough to satiate Chomsky’s 
totalitarian odyssey.

Following in the leftist guru’s tracks, Glenn Greenwald fumed over at Salon.com 
that Americans were cheering and feeling patriotic 
<http://www.salon.com/news/opinion/glenn_greenwald/2011/05/02/bin_laden/index.html>
  that “someone just got two bullets put in their skull.” This is terrible in 
leftist eyes because that “someone” is not George W. Bush but rather America’s 
most wanted enemy-terrorist. Greenwald is also very upset that a question 
lingers over whether bin Laden really had to be killed 
<http://www.salon.com/news/opinion/glenn_greenwald/2011/05/06/bin_laden>  and 
not taken prisoner instead.

Heaven forbid! A targeted assassination of the leader of al-Qaeda, a jihadist 
terrorist organization that has killed thousands of innocent American citizens. 
Oh, the unjustness of it all! One wonders whether Greenwald will be able to 
soldier on.

Meanwhile, Curtis Doebbler, a leftist “human rights” lawyer who teaches at a 
Palestinian university, grieves that 
<http://english.ahram.org.eg/NewsContentP/4/11269/Opinion/The-illegal-killing-of-Osama-Bin-Laden.aspx>
  the “West is now celebrating the death of someone who, however misled and 
wrong-minded, was a person who was willing to fight for the poorest and the 
most vulnerable people in the world to the very end of his life.” He continues: 
“That the US had to kill him in violation of international law makes all the 
more believable Osama Bin Laden’s claims of Western hypocrisy and the need for 
a better alternative.”

The “alternative” that Doebbler is dreaming of and that Osama had in mind? 
Well, it’s not that complicated: it’s what Islamists are offering leftists – 
and that which leftists are salivating over – in their unholy alliance: Sharia 
law.

Let’s also not be too confused over why “progressive” feminist Naomi Klein 
called out for bringing “Najaf to New York” in her infamous 2004 column in 
<http://www.slate.com/id/2106324/>  The Nation, in which she reached her hand 
out in solidarity to Muqtada al-Sadr and his Islamo-fascist Mahdi Army in the 
Iraqi Shi’ite stronghold of Najaf. Klein understands very well what bringing 
Najaf to New York means: the Shi’ite stronghold, where Muqtada al-Sadr and his 
Mahdi Army at one time ran their torture chambers and sowed their terror, 
replicated on America’s shores.

The list of leftists weeping over the death of Osama is endless: Dan Rodricks 
at the  
<http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/oped/bs-ed-rodricks-justice-20110504,0,3099851.column>
 Baltimore Sun complaining that killing Osama is “not justice”; Laura Flanders 
at <http://www.thenation.com/blog/160348/searching-closure-ground-zero>  The 
Nation condemning the raid as “Americans seeking sense and getting vengeance”; 
former West German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt denouncing Osama’s death 
<http://www.thefinancialexpress-bd.com/more.php?news_id=134608&date=2011-05-05> 
 as “clearly a violation of international law”; and the terrorist-loving Code 
Pink’s Medea Benjamin unable to disguise her agony over at the  
<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/medea-benjamin/osama-bin-laden-is-dead-l_b_856408.html>
 Huffington Post, counseling us not to sink “into a false sense of triumphalism 
in the wake of Bin Laden’s passing.”

It is no surprise that members of the political faith are mourning over the 
death of Osama. The context for their grief is perfectly explained, as I have 
documented in United in Hate 
<http://www.amazon.com/United-Hate-Romance-Tyranny-Terror/dp/1935071602> , by 
how much they celebrated 9/11. Let’s take a trip down memory lane to regain the 
picture. It is important to understand the Left’s sadness right now by briefly 
recreating the chilling scene of a decade ago.

September 11, 2011, clearly represented a personal vindication for leftists 
everywhere. The images of the innocent people jumping to their deaths from the 
Twin Towers evoked glee from them – as they clearly saw only poetic justice in 
American commercial airplanes plunging into American buildings packed with 
American citizens. For leftist believers, the jihadist terror war now promised 
to succeed where Communism had failed: to obliterate the capitalist system 
itself.

In the blink of an eye after the Twin Towers went down, leftists were beating 
their breasts with repentance for their own government’s supposed crimes and 
characterizing the tragedy that their nation had just suffered to be some form 
of karmic justice.

Immediately following the 9/11 attack, leftist academics led with a drum roll. 
The very next day after the terrorist strike, Chomsky exonerated the 
terrorists, stating that the Clinton administration’s bombing of the 
pharmaceutical plant in Sudan constituted a far more serious terrorist act and 
warning that 9/11 would be exploited by the United States as an excuse to 
destroy Afghanistan.

Leftist academics across the country echoed Chomsky’s themes, cheering the 9/11 
terrorist acts, which they deemed a just retribution for America’s 
transgressions. History professor Robin Kelley of New York University stated: 
“We need a civil war, class war, whatever to put an end to U.S. policies that 
endanger all of us.” History professor Gerald Horne of the University of North 
Carolina asserted that “the bill has come due, the time of easy credit is up. 
It is time to pay.” Professor Eric Foner of Columbia University, the renowned 
Marxist historian, expressed his personal confusion about “which is more 
frightening: the horror that engulfed New York City or the apocalyptic rhetoric 
emanating daily from the White House.” Barbara Foley, a professor of English at 
Rutgers University, felt 9/11 was a justified response to the “fascism” of U.S. 
foreign policy. Mark Lewis Taylor, a professor of theology and culture at 
Princeton Seminary, thought the WTC buildings were justifiable targets because 
they were a “symbol of today’s wealth and trade.” Robert Paul Churchill, a 
professor of philosophy at George Washington University, rationalized that the 
terrorist attack was justified. “What the terrorists despised and sought to 
defeat was our arrogance, our gluttonous way of life, our miserliness toward 
the poor and its starving; the expression of a soulless pop culture . . . and a 
domineering attitude that insists on having our own way no matter what the cost 
to others.”

Of course, the infamous Ward Churchill, as we know, outdid all the others, 
blaming not only Bush and America but the “little Eichmanns” themselves for the 
attacks.

Churchill, Chomsky, and their kin on the academic Left were joined by prominent 
figures in the progressive culture at large. Norman Mailer stepped forward to 
opine that the suicide hijackers were “brilliant.” In his view, the attack was 
completely understandable, since “Everything wrong with America led to the 
point where the country built that tower of Babel which consequently had to be 
destroyed.”

Oliver Stone affirmed that he saw 9/11 as a “revolt” and compared the ensuing 
Palestinian celebrations with those that had attended the French and Russian 
Revolutions, while Susan Sontag held that the terrorist attack was the result 
of “specific American alliances and actions.” From the religious camp, Tony 
Campolo, a leading Christian evangelist who served as one of former President 
Clinton’s “spiritual advisers,” believed that 9/11 was a legitimate response to 
the Crusades.

The American flag, a hated symbol to the Left, also became a target. Novelist 
Barbara Kingsolver was incredulous that her daughter’s kindergarten teacher 
instructed the students to come to school the next day dressed in red, white, 
and blue. Nation columnist Katha Pollitt had the same reaction regarding her 
teenage daughter’s impulse to fly an American flag outside the family home. 
Pollitt told her that she could “buy a flag with her own money and fly it out 
her bedroom window, because that’s hers, but the living room is off-limits.” 
This was, Pollitt explained, because the American flag stands for “jingoism and 
vengeance and war.”

Similar sentiments were heard throughout Europe as well. The German composer 
Karlheinz Stockhausen described 9/11 as “the greatest work of art for the whole 
cosmos.” Dario Fo, the Italian Marxist who won the 1997 Nobel Prize for 
literature, observed: “The great [Wall Street] speculators wallow in an economy 
that every year kills tens of millions of people with poverty, so what is 
20,000 dead in New York?” [1]

Thus, leftists joined in solidarity with the Muslims who danced in the streets 
after 9/11 — a Kodak moment for the Left everywhere.

So now we gain a telling context to help us grasp why leftists cried when Osama 
died. They cheered on 9/11 – and they did so because to be a member of the 
political faith, you must revile your own host society and lust for its 
destruction. Thus, leftists venerate the enemy tyrants of their own society. 
And beneath this veneration lies one of the leftist’s most powerful yearnings: 
to submit his whole being to a totalist entity. This psychological dynamic 
involves negative identification, whereby a person who has failed to identify 
positively with his own environment subjugates his individuality to a powerful, 
authoritarian entity, through which he vicariously experiences a feeling of 
power and purpose. The historian David Potter has succinctly crystallized this 
phenomenon: 

. . . most of us, if not all of us, fulfill ourselves and realize our own 
identities as persons through our relations with others; we are, in a sense, 
what our community, or as some sociologists would say, more precisely, what our 
reference group, recognizes us as being. If it does not recognize us, or if we 
do not feel that it does, or if we are confused as to what the recognition is, 
then we become not only lonely, but even lost, and profoundly unsure of our 
identity. We are driven by this uncertainty into a somewhat obsessive effort to 
discover our identity and to make certain of it. If this quest proves too long 
or too difficult, the need for identity becomes psychically very burdensome and 
the individual may be driven to escape this need by renouncing his own identity 
and surrendering himself to some seemingly greater cause outside himself. [2]

  _____  

  _____  

This surrender to the totality involves the believer’s craving to relinquish 
his individuality to a greater whole. He lusts for his own self-extinction and 
thereby launches himself on a totalitarian odyssey to shed himself of his own 
unwanted self. To add to this, the leftist is desperately searching for the 
feeling of power to help him counteract the powerlessness he feels in his own 
life. This explains, as Potter notes, the progressives’ cult around tyrants 
like Mao Tse-tung and “the compulsive expressions of adoration for a Hitler or 
a Stalin.” He writes,

Negative identification is itself a highly motivated, compensation-seeking form 
of societal estrangement. Sometimes when identification with a person fails, a 
great psychological void remains, and to fill this void people incapable of 
genuine interpersonal relationships will identify with an abstraction. An 
important historical instance of identification with abstract power has been 
the zealous support of totalitarian regimes by faceless multitudes of people. 
The totalitarian display of power for its own sake satisfies the impulse to 
identify with strength. [3]

Osama, therefore, represents the totalitarian display of power within which 
leftists can vicariously express their sadistic urges and lose themselves. His 
death, therefore, represents the annihilation of all that is so sacredly dear 
to the leftist partner in this toxic and codependent marriage.

Thus, even if it’s proven beyond reasonable doubt that Osama and his terror 
organization represent something evil, leftists cannot accept it. To recognize 
the evil of Osama and the wonderful aspects of his death is, for the leftist, 
to concede that there are societies, cultures, and systems that are much more 
unjust than ours.

This is an untenable step for leftists to take, because it means acknowledging 
that there is something superior about our civilization that’s worth saving and 
defending. Such a move is also anathema for the leftist because he has 
intoxicated himself with the delusion that his own society is evil and unjust. 
Diabolical capitalists trample on the poor, the oppressed, and the downtrodden 
– and the leftist has appointed himself to rescue these victims.

The progressive, therefore, is a self-appointed social redeemer, leading a 
movement to destroy his own society and liberate the masses. This political 
mission provides him with immense moral indignation and, therefore, moral 
superiority, dispositions from which, in turn, he derives tremendous emotional 
gratification. His whole belief system provides him with a sense of belonging, 
since he has joined other social redeemers, as well as victims, real or 
imagined, who wait for him to break their chains.

Thus, the leftist’s political disposition is a faith that reinforces his 
personal identity and sense of belonging. Admitting that Osama bin Laden is 
evil and deserved his death would completely undermine the leftist’s faith and 
result in his excommunication from his social community and the death of his 
self-image. Seeing Osama as a secular deity, meanwhile, reinforces the 
leftist’s faith, identity and social life. This is why we see leftists weeping 
for Osama and why they will continue to weep for the mass murderer.

In a previous generation we beheld the same phenomenon: leftists crying at the 
death of communist monsters – or from their physical separation with them. 
Shirley MacLaine powerfully exhibited this pathetic pathology, when she had to 
leave communist China after her political pilgrimage there in 1972.

Visiting one of the most evil tyrannies in history, which exterminated at least 
70 million of its own people, and knowing full well that she was inside a death 
camp, MacLaine was in ecstasy in the presence of communist mass murder Mao 
Tse-tung. But then, alas, she had to return to the free society that she 
despised. And so she stoically held back her tears until she had left China, 
only beginning to sob the moment she arrived in Hong Kong. As she proudly 
recited her own agony upon leaving the Chinese death camp, it was during her 
first capitalist meal at the Hilton, when she had cut into a piece of meat, 
that tears began to splash on her butter and she excused herself to go to the 
ladies’ room:

As soon as I closed the door of the cubicle, I knew it would take a while. And 
then I started to cry. I didn’t really know why, but it had something to do 
with all those people in a place called America, all those faces I had seen in 
crowds and in the living rooms, all the betrayed and insulted people I had 
seen. . . . It had something to do with them, and the women on my delegation 
and their confusing hang-ups, and it had something to do with George McGovern 
coming across those two hard years, to see it all go wrong at the end. It was 
about him, and about the cookie jar in my mother’s kitchen, and the white 
pigeons in the yard, and the people who were going to jail because they were 
forced to be criminals, and the families who couldn’t make the payments that 
month on their cars and their mortgages. . . .[4]

MacLaine’s tears had nothing to do with a cookie jar or white pigeons, of 
course, but everything to do with her agony over separating herself from the 
killing machine in which she wanted to lose her own unwanted inner self. And 
the leftist tears pouring out on the pages of leftist presses today are part of 
that dark narrative, as progressives must now deal with the horrifying reality 
of saying goodbye to their own contemporary Mao Tse-tung in jihadist clothing.

And so we come to understand why leftists were so ecstatic at the images of 
Americans leaping to their deaths while holding hands jumping from the Towers 
on 9/11 to avoid the burning flames.

We come to understand why they celebrated when, on that tragic day, more than 
3,000 Americans died.

And we understand why, almost ten years later, they cried at the death of the 
mass murderer who engendered that massacre on American shores.

Notes:

[1] All these statements are now on the public record. Paul Hollander has an 
excellent sampling of them in his  
<http://www.amazon.com/Understanding-Anti-Americanism-Orgins-Impact-Abroad/dp/1566635640/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1305024899&sr=1-1>
 Understanding Anti-Americanism: Its Origins and Impact at Home and Abroad, pp. 
24–27. For a wide selection of academics who verbalized praise of the 9/11 
attacks, see David Horowitz,  
<http://www.amazon.com/Professors-Most-Dangerous-Academics-America/dp/1596985259/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1305024939&sr=1-1>
 The Professors: The 101 Most Dangerous Academics in America . Horowitz’s  
<http://www.amazon.com/Unholy-Alliance-Radical-Islam-American/dp/0895260263/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1305024980&sr=1-1>
 Unholy Alliance also contains a large sampling of leftists’ reactions to 9/11 
and remains the best work on this subject.

[2] David Potter, History and American Society, p.307.

[3] Ibid., p.381.

[4] Shirley MacLaine, You Can Get There, p.228.

*

To get the whole story on why leftists cry when Islamo-fascists die, read Jamie 
Glazov’s United in Hate: The Left’s Romance With Tyranny and Terror 
<http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1935071602/ref=pd_lpo_k2_dp_sr_1?pf_rd_p=486539851&pf_rd_s=lpo-top-stripe-1&pf_rd_t=201&pf_rd_i=1935071076&pf_rd_m=ATVPDKIKX0DER&pf_rd_r=03DBX8NSD3Z3TNY5DH7F>
 .

 

  _____  

  _____  

  _____  

Article printed from FrontPage Magazine: http://frontpagemag.com

URL to article: 
http://frontpagemag.com/2011/05/12/why-the-left-cried-when-osama-died/

 



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



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

--------------------------
Want to discuss this topic?  Head on over to our discussion list, 
[email protected].
--------------------------
Brooks Isoldi, editor
[email protected]

http://www.intellnet.org

  Post message: [email protected]
  Subscribe:    [email protected]
  Unsubscribe:  [email protected]


*** FAIR USE NOTICE. This message contains copyrighted material whose use has 
not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. OSINT, as a part of 
The Intelligence Network, is making it available without profit to OSINT 
YahooGroups members who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the 
included information in their efforts to advance the understanding of 
intelligence and law enforcement organizations, their activities, methods, 
techniques, human rights, civil liberties, social justice and other 
intelligence related issues, for non-profit research and educational purposes 
only. We believe that this constitutes a 'fair use' of the copyrighted material 
as provided for in section 107 of the U.S. Copyright Law. If you wish to use 
this copyrighted material for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use,' 
you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.
For more information go to:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtmlYahoo! Groups Links

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

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/osint/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