I like certain Muslims too. Ayaan Hirsi Ali...OK, so she's not religious, but I also like Ahmed Shah Massoud, who was very. But the truly moderate Muslims are too few to make a difference in this fight. The ENTIRE Muslim world overwhelmingly supports Al Qaeda, OBL, Hezbollah...this is what the figures say. The Muslims in the West want to see us live under sharia. Support for "radicalism" is higher among Muslims than it was among Germans for Hitler in 1930. The threat of terrorism and of demographic war will not stop until the Muslims worldwide realize the wages of their allegiance in the same way the Germans and Japanese were made to realize it...several large Muslim cities need to be turned to rubble, the oil fields seized and placed under some group of the great powers (they should not have had the oil in the first place). This is the only way to "change hearts and minds." Our whole conception of how to carry out this war is bizarre by historical standards. Bush made an alliance with the Saudis and Pakis who are precisely the people we should have gone after.
Reforming the ME in the manner I recommend and expelling most Muslims from Western countries would end this war in under a year. There is nothing immoral about all of this, and it would bring us certain other benefits as well.
The ENTIRE Muslim world overwhelmingly supports Al Qaeda, OBL, Hezbollah...this is what the figures say.
Source?
The ENTIRE Muslim world overwhelmingly supports Al Qaeda, OBL, Hezbollah
http://pewglobal.org/reports/display.php?PageID=833
Bin Laden and al Qaeda
Osama bin Laden remains a pariah in the West, and support for the al Qaeda leader has eroded in several Muslim countries in recent years. In Jordan, confidence in bin Laden has plummeted since May 2005. A year ago, 25% of Jordanians said they had a lot of confidence in bin Laden to "do the right thing regarding world affairs," while another 35% said they had some confidence. Today, almost no Jordanians (fewer than 1%) express a lot of confidence in bin Laden, and 24% say they have some confidence in him.
In Pakistan, confidence in bin Laden also has fallen, though not quite as dramatically. In May 2005, a majority of Pakistanis (51%) expressed at least some confidence in bin Laden; that number has declined to 38% in the current survey.
To be sure, bin Laden still has followers in the Muslim world. Fully 61% of Muslims in Nigeria express a lot of confidence (33%) or some confidence (28%) in bin Laden; that represents a significant increase from May 2003 (44%). Bin Laden's standing in Pakistan has eroded, but more Pakistanis still express at least some confidence in bin Laden than say they have little or no confidence in him (by 38% to 30%). And a third of Indonesians continue to express at least some confidence in the al Qaeda leader.
Among European Muslims, only about one-in-twenty Muslims in Germany and France express even some confidence in bin Laden to do the right thing in world affairs. But that figure rises to 14% among Muslims in Great Britain, and 16% of Spanish Muslims.
As for al Qaeda and groups like it, opinion is mixed in the Muslim world about how much support they attract. Large majorities in Jordan, Egypt and Indonesia say they draw just some or very few supporters. But a majority of Muslims in Nigeria (56%) say many or most Muslims there support al Qaeda and similar groups. About a third of Pakistanis (35%) say such extremists groups have the support of most or many of the people in that country.
Among people living in the West, majorities of Muslims and non-Muslims alike say they believe these extremist groups have very limited following among Muslims in their countries. But Spain is very much an exception. Fewer than half of the Spanish (46%) say Islamic extremists draw support from just some or very few Spanish Muslims; nearly as many (41%) say that most or many of Spain's Muslims support such groups. By comparison, just 12% of Spanish Muslims say that many or most of the country's Muslims support al Qaeda and similar groups.
In India and Russia as well, fairly large percentages of the general publics say many or most Muslims there support Islamic extremists (41% and 28%, respectively).