Posted on 02/15/2006 11:27:15 AM PST by Jeremiah2911
Legendary radio commentator and writer, Barry Farber, in a recent editorial called 12th Century Thinking,[*] asks an important question:
We had proven white and black could live together. We had proven Jew and Gentile could live together, British and Irish could live together, French and German could live together. Italian and Yugoslav could live together. Northerner and Southerner could live together ... But now theres a new question we never thought of before: Can the 21st century live with the 12th century?
It is very clear that there are only three answers to our problem of modern Muslims; they are, simply put:
§ Appease them.
§ Reform them.
§ Kill them.
Option 1: Appease Them and They Will Go Away
Liberals have run with this first option, applying a socialist-behavioristic model to the problem, which basically claims that Muslim rage emanates not from within, but from the way they have been treated. Americas Democrats, in league with the worlds Left, have chosen the Blame America first subtext and have stuck with it, even though they can be heard supporting the troops and posturing as determined war-time administrators (they have a terrible track record to overcome if they want people to take them seriously). Liberals cant escape their pacifism, which both denies and perverts reality, always seeking materialistic explanations for the enemys aggression, pining over personal fault and systemic guilt, and refusing to slay the dragon that has long left its cave.
When I was a teenager, I became aware of a bully whose thuggish antics made the public pool seem like shark-infested waters. I remember complaining about him to a girl, who excused his behavior by mentioning that he had problems at home, and then advised me that I should stop bothering him. Having been blessed with a fairly idyllic childhood, I felt bad for this kid, truly I did, but I was doing nothing to bother him, so the next time the little jerk came around in an apparent attempt to drown me, I used an underwater technique that rendered a powerful blow to his groin. He crawled out of the pool and lay on the sideboard long enough to contemplate other means of dealing with his issues.
The point is, and the thing that liberals simply cannot comprehend: Appeasing bullies, thugs, and terrorists never makes them go away. In fact, it has just the opposite effect, encouraging them to power. The mystery of this simple truth is that peoplesupposedly intelligent peoplemiss it completely, in spite of the ample amount of evidence, including historical evidence, to verify it. The massacre on 9/11 didnt cure their delusions, either. Just the other day, Al Gore, who, as you may recall, almost became President, kicked his own country in the teeth (again) at the Jeddah Economic Forum in Saudi Arabia:
Gore said Arabs had been indiscriminately rounded up and held in unforgivable conditions. The former vice president said the Bush administration was playing into al-Qaidas hands by routinely blocking Saudi visa applications.
Try to imagine that mindset in World War II. Would we have stopped Hitler, Mussolini, and Tojo had we worried that our enemies might somewhere be suffering with too little down in their mattresses and not enough exercise, or might not be able to find a legal way into our country? (God help us if Gore ever becomes our Commander-in-Chief.)
Option 2: Reform Them ... But How?
It is obvious to everyone but the Left that savage, war-like peoples need to be changed into civilized, peace-loving peoples. The foundation of Islam was built upon tribalistic warfare and hatred for Jews, whereas most other religions, notably the much maligned Christian one, are built on notions of peace and divine love. Even Old Testament Judaism didnt advocate war for the sake of power, but only as defense and as a way to cleanse Gods land of incorrigible evil.
People in the West have been talking about Islamic reform for years, but President Bush is one of the few world leaders to take the idea seriously. He began in Afghanistan and Pakistanone by war, the other by diplomacyand continued into Iraq by both war and the imposition of democracy. Despite the ridiculous rhetoric of brainless fools, this is nothing new. Iraq is not our Vietnam, but it may be our Japan, albeit on a much smaller scale. Roadside bombs and weak domestic support have made us forget that the Japanese once allowed a very ruthless faction to seize its country. The Japanese proved that their peace-loving philosophies could not stop them from terrorizing the Chinese with unspeakable crimes, and then they turned their attention to world conquest, using sneak attacks and suicide to wage war. Im sure people like Osama bin Laden very much appreciate the Wests ignorance of this bit of world history.
The Japanese were kicked out of medievalism by two monstrous bombs that leveled Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Utterly defeated, they had nowhere to go but up. Iraq, too, has been defeated, and is now rebuilding, but it remains to be seen if something less than total war can have the same effect that worked so well in Japan. What also is questionable is whether democracy, which does seem to be taking hold in Afghanistan and Iraq, can spread throughout the Muslim world without us having to conquer all of its countries. If this approach doesnt work, we are left only with ...
Option 3: Kill Them, If We Dare
This war would seem more fruitful if we could muster up the sense of courage, self-sacrifice, and wrathful indignation prevalent among Americans after the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor. Considering Americas reluctance to jump into that war, it is surprising that such a cowardly attack riled us, but people were not encumbered back then with political correctness and multiculturalism, which has instructed us to call our present conflict War on Terror and not War on Islam, and keeps us from printing provocative posters that remind us to stay on the job until every murdering Muslim is wiped out! Again, it remains to be seen if a war can be fully waged against an enemy that is loosely defined, coddled, and even painted as peace-loving.
By saying kill them, Im talking total war, of course. Americans have lost its stomach for such a thing, and this too is a sign of the timesand may mark the beginning of the end for our country. As Mr. Farber pointed out in his editorial, Weve long been accustomed to questions about fighting for your country. Now theres a new question: Will you fight for your century? The 12th-century enthusiasts did not need time to think. Yes. They will!
Whenever I speak to people who believe we should get out of Iraq, I ask them the obvious question: Okay, what then? Nine times out of ten, I am given no answer. If I am speaking to a liberal, there is little point in persisting, but if I am speaking to a squeamish conservative, or one who believes that Islamic reform is impossible, I then ask, If pacifism wont work, and reform is unlikely, isnt the only answer total war?
But we dont have that in us, do weand thus the protesters silence reveals his weak constitution and shortsightedness. We can no longer stomach the extermination of people, no matter how evil they are. To confront an evil entity, one must devalue the life of that entity, but America has lost its ability to do so, which is why this war is waged virtually in secret, without daily news reels applauding our victories, rallying cries from eager young soldiers, or the spontaneous writing of beer-hall war songs. When Lt. Gen. James Mattis publicly admitted that its a hell of a lot of fun to shoot terrorists, the media tried to vilify him and the military back-pedaled. Too bad! Mattiss Patton-like sentiments are exactly what America needs today; instead we get military leaders who know they must protect Americas interests while working under the radar, constantly gauging what they can reveal according to the mood of the day.
Is There a Solution?
Appeasement is a joke. Reform is dicey. Total war is unthinkable. Any other ideas?
President Bushs foreign policy has many faults, but his two-pronged approach to fighting terrorismkilling the killers and freeing the peopleputs all three options into play, including appeasement, which is what he does every time he calls Islam a religion of peace or insists mosques as military targets are off-limits. His remarks would be wholly reprehensible were he not also pursuing the other options, at least in partencouraging Islamic reform through democracy and eliminating the bad guys.
I learned a long time ago that you cant force people to change unless they want to change themselves. Bush is engaged in a grand experiment that may fail, but even in the area of reform his understanding of human nature is praiseworthy: His plans for both Afghanistan and Iraq have never been to enforce American-style democracy, which is like trying to grow a sugar maple in Najaf. On the other hand, the imminent threat presented by the region demands more than slow cultivationfrom seed, as it were. So, what Afghanistan and Iraq are getting are transplantsbut the gardeners, Bush has always insisted, must be the people. So far, in this regard, he has not failed to live up to his word.
But, in toto, Bushs approach may not be enough. On the home front, more can be done. The recent incidents of cartoon jihad has done nothing to bolster Bushs optimism about Muslims inherent ability to pull themselves out of the Middle Ages. If the Iraqis and other recently freed peoples are getting that taste of freedom that Bush thinks will win their hearts, they havent yet found it wholly agreeable. When a man says, I want everyone to be free, but not you, the concept of liberty hasnt quite sunk in. This may be just a matter of time, but it also may be, as Mr. Farber implied, a matter of centuries of time.
Many moderate Muslims, who dont like the depictions (and why would they?), still believe that the cartoonists should be able to express themselves, but they also live in fear of the radicalsor so we are told. In most countries this is understandable, but hardly true in America. If a Muslim in America speaks out against radical Islam, does that person have something to fear? Well, danger always accompanies the man or woman who bucks the system (go ask Ann Coulter or David Horowitz), but of all places in the world, here and now, moderates have a chance to change their religion for the better, to truly recreate it as a force of peace.
The government, and the people, of the United States should be doing everything in their power to create a protective atmosphere for moderate Muslims to speak their minds in public, encouraging them to censure crazed leaders, both at home and abroad, protest the mistreatment of women in Islamic countries, call for the freedom of Iran and Syria, demand the end of Hamas and al-Qaida, and open up their mosques to scholarly debate over the true meaning of the Quran. (This last point is the most crucial of all of them, and also the toughest, for it calls for the conversion of meaning itself into something more abstract, symbolic and, at the same time, practical.)
Can we conceivably get along with people still living in the 12th Century? The answer is no. If we truly want to reform the Muslim world, making them see that peaceful coexistence is more desirable than reactive violence, the solution is to bring Islam into the 21st Century. To a small degree, this is already happening abroad, but the true revolution should begin here, right in our own backyard, by the mouth of the so-called enemy of the Muslim world, America. Not an easy thing, to be sure, but neither is total war.
I'd suggest going to Yahoo or Google and inputting "dark ages" and reading a bit. Then.....
"He who is without sin please cast the first stone........."
"History often repeats itself......"
Something about a shoe being on the other foot....
Yada, yada and all that jazz...
A remarkable number of people seem to come up with the idea that we must take option 3, kill them all.
I have little objection to killing enough Muslim leaders to induce them to change their minds about continuing this war, and none at all about killing all the Islamists.
But I'm not up for killing "all Muslims." 1. It isn't necessary. 2. It would be wrong.
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