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Religion See other Religion Articles Title: Dinesh the Dhimmi: Jihad’s Fellow-Traveller’s Agenda Wednesday, January 24, 2007 Dinesh the Dhimmi Jihads Fellow-Travellers Agenda Nearly two years ago the Jihadist lobby in the United States made a concerted affort to have my book The Sword of the Prophet banned from National Review Online. Jihadi activists gathered around CAIR claimed the book defamed Islam and its prophet. When it did not get immediate satisfaction from National Review, CAIR instructed its partisans to pressure the Boeing Corporation to withdraw its advertisements from the magazine. Faced with the loss of revenue National Review briefly took down The Sword, but then quickly reposted it, under pressure from mainly conservative quarters. It is now, perhaps inevitably, the turn of a phony conservative to join CAIRs ranks. In his latest book, The Enemy At Home, Dinesh DSouza writes that, Two of the titles DSouza finds so offensive that condemning them tops his list of critical steps are by my friend Robert Spencer, and The Sword is mine. DSouza wants us, and presumably other similarly minded authors (Bat Yeor, Ibn Warraq, Andrew Bostom, Walid Shoebat, et al.), to shut up. As my fellow offender Spencer has noted, DSouza assumes that peaceful Muslims will have a greater sense of solidarity with jihadists than with non-Muslims, which is indeed the case, but it makes hash of his entire thesisthat social conservatives should ally themselves with these traditional Muslims: It is noteworthy that DSouza is condemning our writings as Islamophobic without further elaboration. Like the term Islamophobia itselfa classic product of the Hate Crime Industryhis technique is characteristic of the totalitarian Left. I remember reading, as a teenager in Titos Yugoslavia, similarly worded condemnations of dissident writers and their tracts in the communist-controlled press. Once they were defined as anti-socialist, reactionary, or nationalist, no further elaboration was needed and no debate allowed. Furthermore, DSouza uses Islamophobia with the implicit assumption that the terms meaning is well familiar to his readers. For the uninitiated it is nevertheless necessary to spell out its formal, legally tested definition, however. It is provided by the European Monitoring Centre on Racism and Xenophobia (EUMC), a lavishly-funded organ of the European Union. Based in Vienna, this body diligently tracks the instances of Islamophobia all over the Old Continent and summarizes them in its reports. The Monitoring Centers definition of Islamophobia includes eight salient features: 1. Islam is seen as a monolithic bloc, static and unresponsive to change. 2. Islam is seen as separate and other. 3. Islam is seen as inferior to the West, barbaric, irrational, primitive and sexist. 4. Islam is seen as violent, aggressive, supportive of terrorism and engaged in a clash of civilizations. 5. Islam is seen as a political ideology. 6. Criticisms made of the West by Islam are rejected out of hand. 7. Hostility towards Islam is used to justify discriminatory practices towards Muslims and exclusion of Muslims from mainstream society. 8. Anti-Muslim hostility is seen as natural or normal. This definition is obviously intended to preclude any possibility of meaningful discussion of Islam. The implication that Islamophobia thus defined demands legal sanction is a regular feature of the Race Relations Industry output. It also routinely refers to institutional Islamophobia as an inherent social and cultural sickness of most Western societies that needs to be rooted out by education, re-education, and legislation. In reality, of course, all eight proscribed statements are to some extent true. As I have argued in these pages and elsewhere, 1. That Islam is fundamentally static and unresponsive to change is evident from the absence of an orthodox school of thought capable of reflecting critically upon jihad, Sharia, jizya, etc. and developing new Islamic interpretations that Western liberals (and notably the 9-11 Commissions Final Report) keep hoping for. Attempts to reformulate the doctrine are not new, but they have failed because they opposed centuries of orthodoxy. As Clement Huart pointed out back in 1907, Until the newer conceptions, as to what the Koran teaches as to the duty of the believer towards non-believers, have spread further and have more generally leavened the mass of Moslem belief and opinion, it is the older and orthodox standpoint on this question which must be regarded by non-Moslems as representing Mohammedan teaching and as guiding Mohammedan action. Huarts near-contemporary Sir William Muir, noted that «a reformed faith that should question the divine authority on which the institutions of Islam rest, or attempt by rationalistic selection or abatement to effect a change, would be Islam no longer. A century later the diagnosis still stands: it is not the jihadists who are distorting Islam; the would-be reformers are. 2. That Islam is separate from our (Western, Christian, European) culture and civilization, and other than our culture and civilization, is a fact that will not change even if the West (Christendom, Europe) eventually succumb to the ongoing jihadist demographic onslaught. 3. Whether Islam is inferior to the West is a matter of opinion. That it cannot create a prosperous, harmonious, stable, creative and attractive polity is not. Whether Islam is barbaric, irrational, primitive and sexist is at least debatable; but that its fruits are such is beyond reasonable doubt. 4. Islam is seen as violent, aggressive, supportive of terrorism and engaged in a clash of civilizations not because of an irrational phobia in the feverish mind of the beholder, but because of the clear mandate of its scripture, because of the record of almost 14 centuries of historical practice, and above all because of the timeless example of its founder. 5. Islam is seen as a political ideology because its defining characteristic is a highly developed program to improve man and create a new society; to impose complete control over that society; and to train cadres ready, even eager, to spill blood. The doctrine of Jihad makes Islam closer to Bolshevism or National Socialism than to any religion known to man. It breeds a gnostic paradigm within which the standard response to the challenge presented by non-Muslim cultural, technological and economic achievements is hostility and hatred. DSouzas alleged distinction between Islamic extremists and moderates is a Western liberal construct, of course. The difference between them may concern the methods to be applied but not the final objective: to turn every last square mile of Dar al-Harb into Dar al-Islam. 6. Criticisms made of the West by Islam should not be rejected out of hand, they should be understood. Islams chief criticism of the Westand each and every other non-Islamic culture, civilization, or traditionis that it is infidel, and therefore undeserving of existence. 7. A priori hostility towards Islam should not be used to justify discriminatory practices towards Muslims. Quite the contrary, a comprehensive education campaign about the teaching and practice of Islam should result in legislative action that would exclude Islam from the societies it is targeting, not because it is an offensive religion but because it is an inherently seditious totalitarian ideology incompatible with the fundamental values of the Westand all other civilized societies, India, China and Japan included. 8. Anti-Muslim hostility is not natural or normal. The infidels determination to defend their lands, families, cultures and faith against Islamic aggression is both natural and normal, however, and must not be neutralized by the Eurocrats from the left of by DSouza and his likes on the right. They will deny that Islam, in Muhammads revelations, traditions and their codification, threatens the rest of us, that it is the cult of war and intolerance, but the truth will out. Until the petrodollars support a comprehensive and explicit Kuranic revisionism capable of growing popular roots, we should seek ways to defend ourselves by disengaging from the world of Islam, physically and figuratively, by learning to keep our distance from the affairs of the Muslim world and by keeping the Muslim world away from the world of war that it seeks to conquer or destroy. It is entirely possible that Dinesh DSouza subscribes to some other definition of Islamophobia than the one provided above. If he does, he should spell it out so that those he singles out for criticism can defend themselves. Until and unless he does so, well have to agree with a recent commentator who concludes that DSouza wants me and others to lie about Islam, like himself, or to be silent: Dixit. A man is defined, to some extent, by his enemies. Counting DSouza and his ilk among mine casts an eminently pleasing glow on this drab January morning.
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#1. To: gargantuton (#0)
Absolutely.
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