President Compares Islam to Christianity
By _Dennis Prager_ 
(http://www.realclearpolitics.com/authors/dennis_prager/)  - February 10,  2015
 
In his National Prayer Breakfast speech last week, President Barack Obama  
said: 
"And lest we get on our high horse and think that this is unique to some  
other place, remember that during the Crusades and the Inquisition, people  
committed terrible deeds in the name of Christ. In our home country, slavery 
and  Jim Crow all too often was justified in the name of Christ. ... So this 
is not  unique to one group or one religion."
 
 
It is important to analyze these words -- because the president of the 
United  States spoke them in a major forum, and because what he said is said by 
all  those who defend Islam against any criticism. 
Referring to Islamic violence, the president accuses anyone who implies 
that  such religious violence "is unique to some other place" -- meaning 
outside the  Christian West -- as getting on a "high horse." 
Is this true? Of course, not. In our time, major religious violence is in  
fact "unique to some other place," namely the Islamic world. What other  
religious group is engaged in mass murder, systematic rape, slavery, beheading  
innocents, bombing public events, shooting up school children, wiping out 
whole  religious communities and other such atrocities? 
The answer is, of course, no other religious group. Therefore massive  
violence in the name of one's religion today is indeed "unique to some other  
place." To state this is not to "get on a high horse." It is to tell the most  
important truth about the world in our time. 
Would the president have used the "high horse" argument 30 years ago  
regarding Western condemnation of South African apartheid? 
Of course not. Because contempt for Western evils is noble, while contempt  
for non-Western, especially Islamic, evils is "to get on a high horse." 
The president then defends his statement that religious violence is not  
"unique to some other place" by providing Christian examples: first the 
Crusades  and the Inquisition and then slavery and Jim Crow. 
Before addressing the specific examples, a word about the timing. The  
Crusades took place a thousand years ago and the Inquisition five hundred years 
 
ago. Is it not telling that -- even if the examples are valid (which they  
aren't) -- the president had to go back 500 and 1,000 years to find his 
primary  Christian examples? 
Doesn't going back so far in the past render the argument a bit absurd?  
Imagine if the president had said, "When the Jews conquered Canaan in 1,000  
B.C., they committed terrible deeds in the name of Judaism." Anyone hearing 
that  argument would have thought that the president had lost his mind. Yet 
he and  almost everyone else who wishes to defend Islam raise the Crusades 
and the  Inquisition. The president also mentioned slavery and Jim Crow, but 
it's the  Crusades and the Inquisition that are almost always used to equate 
Muslim and  Christian evildoing. 
Furthermore, it is difficult to see why comparing Muslim behavior today to  
Christian behavior a thousand or five hundred years ago provides a defense 
of  Islam. On the contrary, isn't the allegation that Islamic evil at the 
present  time is morally equivalent to Christian evil a thousand years ago a 
damning  indictment of the present state of much of Islam? 
And as regards the substance of the charge, this widespread use of the  
Crusades and the Inquisition is ignorant of the realities of both. The Crusades 
 were Christian wars to retake territories in the Holy Land that Muslims 
had  forcefully taken from Christians. Unless the question of "who started 
it?" is  morally irrelevant, and therefore all wars are immoral, the Crusaders' 
war on  Muslims in the Holy Land is a poor example of evil in the name of 
Christ. 
Now, as it happens, there was terrible evil in the name of Christ during 
the  Crusades -- the wholesale massacre of Jews in Germany by various 
Crusaders on  their way to the Holy Land. For the record, however, in no 
instance 
did the  Church order these killings and in almost every case Jews sought and 
received  aid and support from local bishops. 
In any event, other than Jews, few people know of these massacres. Almost  
everyone who cites the Crusades as an example of Christian evil is referring 
to  the Crusaders' wars against Muslims. 
As for the Inquisition, suffice it to say that it is now acknowledged among 
 scholars that in its worst years -- 1480 to 1530 -- the Inquisition killed 
an  average of 40 people a year. Each was unspeakably tragic and evil, but 
the  Inquisition was benign compared to Boko Haram, al-Qaida, Islamic State, 
the  Taliban, Hamas and the other Islamic terror organizations. 
We live in an age of moral idiocy. Moral equivalence is the left's way of  
resisting fighting evil. It did it during the Cold War when the U.S. and the 
 Soviet Union were morally equated, and it is doing it now when it morally  
equates all religions and societies. Take, for example, this imbecilic 
equation  by writer Ta-Nehisi Coates in The Atlantic, defending the president's 
comments  on Islam and Christianity by invoking slavery: "Americans have 
done, on their  own soil, in the name of their own God, something similar to 
what ISIS is doing  now." 
There is a major moral crisis in one religion on earth today -- Islam. To 
say  so is not to get on a high horse. It is to identify violent Islam as the 
 greatest evil in the world since Nazism and  Communism

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