Another article touching on some of the same themes, but with respect
to Muslim silence in the face of Muslim extremism:

http://blogcritics.org/archives/2007/05/23/200608.php

"The Myth of Muslim Silence"
Written by Sean Aqui
Published May 23, 2007

That's the title of an interesting piece by Stephen Schwartz, author
of The Two Faces of Islam.

In it he argues that the media ignores moderate Muslims while covering
the radicals in lavish, horrific detail, painting a distorted picture
of the faith. The centerpiece of the article is a deconstruction of
coverage of the plot to attack Fort Dix. He notes that the plotters
weren't, as first assumed, Kosovo Albanian Muslims. They were,
instead, ethnic Albanians from Macedonia who came here as children and
were radicalized in Arab-dominated Wahhabi mosques. His point is that
the media misses distinctions between different kinds of Muslims,
lumping peaceful, moderate Albanians in with violent Wahhabis.

He then cites several examples of Muslim commentary on the case — all
of it condemning the plot — that he says got scant coverage.

I didn't follow the Fort Dix story closely enough to judge whether
he's right on that score, but the piece once again points up the
intellectual bankruptcy of those who demand that Muslims "speak out"
against terror. Continuing to make that argument ignores several
relevant facts:

1. They do. All the time. I've cited multiple examples in the past year.

2. Demands that Muslims take the lead assume that moderate Muslims
have some sort of connection to (or influence over) the extremists.
What are (for example) American Muslims supposed to do: Call up
Al-Qaeda and yell at them? They don't have AQ's number any more than
you or I do, nor will their words be heeded any more than yours or
mine.

3. Few groups spend a lot of time flagellating themselves for the
extremists in their midst.

Let's expand on that last point for a moment because it's an important
one, tied in with assumptions about group identity that simply are not
true.

The underlying logic of the "Muslims must denounce terrorism" goes as
follows: The terrorists are Islamic, and therefore Muslims have a
particular duty to denounce Islamic terror.

This is reasonable to an extent: disavowing the nutjobs operating
under your banner is sometimes necessary. But where it goes off the
rails is when people demand that every Muslim denounce every act of
Islamic terror every time one occurs.

This is ridiculous. Every time a Christian commits murder, are
Christians obligated to go on television and state the obvious — that
murder is wrong and the offender doesn't represent Christian views? Of
course not. They can simply state once (or occasionally) that murder
is wrong and unChristian. Actually, they don't even have to do that;
it's considered obvious that murder is wrong, so they aren't required
to say anything. Silence is not assent in such cases.

So why are Muslims treated differently? Because groups are always good
at pointing out the mote in other groups' eyes, even while giving
their own members the benefit of the doubt. Do conservatives regularly
call out nutjob conservatives? No. Liberals do that, and conservatives
disavow them if necessary. Do liberals regularly call out liberal
nutjobs? No; conservatives do that, and then liberals disavow them if
necessary.

In this country, who spends time identifying atheist/agnostic
misbehavior? Believers. Who are most likely to point out believer
wrongdoing? Atheists/agnostics.

Simply put, groups are horrible at policing their own, because doing
so requires admitting some kinship between your own beliefs and those
of the nutjobs — admitting that your beliefs can be twisted to bad
ends. No one likes doing that.

Beyond that, when you're in the group you know that the extremists are
just that — extremists, a tiny minority that do not represent the
group as a whole. They are shunned, dismissed; psychologically, the
majority separates themselves from the whackjobs to the point they no
longer feel kinship with them — and thus no particular responsibility
to account for their actions. Hence Christians feel no particular need
to respond every time a Christian misbehaves, and Muslims feel no
particular need to respond every time a member of some fundamentalist
sect detonates a car bomb.

This is especially true when the actions cross national and sectarian
boundaries. Demanding that a mainstream American Muslim denounce
fundamentalist terrorism is like demanding that Lutherans denounce the
actions of Baptists — or, more aptly, Christian Identity adherents.
It's actually even sillier than that, because at least in the example
above everyone involved is American. In the case of Islamic terror,
we're demanding that American Muslims feel responsibility not just for
another sect, but for another country and culture. So it's more like
demanding that Lutherans apologize for the atrocities committed by the
Lord's Resistance Army.

Now, political reality is a different matter, and not always fair; in
this day and age, there is more political need for Muslims to speak
out than there is for Christians. But that doesn't make demands that
they do so any less illogical. Nor does it justify the assumptions
made about them when they fail to speak up in any given instance.

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