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Steyn: 'Stewardship of the earth' will belong to Islam
Insight ^ | 11/27/2006 | Mark Steyn

Posted on 11/28/2006 2:21:24 PM PST by El Gato

Commentary by Mark Steyn

Have you seen a movie called Four Jills In A Jeep? Don’t worry, it’s not at the multiplex. It came out in 1944. It was a wartime movie, about the contribution of the gals to the big existential struggle. Great title, and downhill after that. This column is, metaphorically speaking, four Jills in a jeep: it’s about a quartet of ladies who provide useful glimpses of where we’re heading.

The first is Fatima Omar Mahmud al-Najar, a 57-year old grandmother who had a livelier Thanksgiving than most gran’mas. She marked the occasion by self-detonating in the town of Jabaliya, and, although all she had to show for splattering her body parts over the neighborhood were three “lightly wounded” Israeli soldiers, she will have an honored place in the pantheon of Palestinian heroes: She was, according to the official statistician from The Hamas Book Of Records, the oldest Palestinian suicide bomber ever. And, naturally, her family’s pleased as punch.

“We are really happy,” her son Zuheir told Agence France-Presse. “She told us last night that she would do a suicide operation. She prepared her clothes for that operation and we are proud. ‘I don’t want anything, only to die a martyr.’ That’s what she said.”

Awww, bless the sweet l’il ol’ biddy. She wouldn’t have wanted to die a long lingering death in some old folks’ home. This is the way she wanted to go: quick and painless, except for any Zionists in the immediate vicinity.

Fatima Omar Mahmud al-Najar gave birth to her first child at the age of 12. She had eight others. She had 41 grandchildren. Keep that family tree in mind. By contrast, in Spain, a 57-year old woman will have maybe one grandchild. That’s four grandparents, one grandchild: a family tree with no branches.

Which brings me to our second Jill: the new Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church, Katharine Jefferts Schori, the first woman to run a national division of the Anglican Communion. Bishop Kate gave an interview to The New York Times revealing what passes for orthodoxy in this most flexible of faiths. She was asked a simple enough question: “How many members of the Episcopal Church are there?”

“About 2.2 million,” replied the Presiding Bishop. “It used to be larger percentage-wise, but Episcopalians tend to be better educated and tend to reproduce at lower rates than other denominations.”

This was a bit of a jaw-dropper even for a New York Times hackette, so, with vague memories of God saying something about going forth and multiplying floating around the back of her head, a bewildered Deborah Solomon said: “Episcopalians aren’t interested in replenishing their ranks by having children?”

“No,” agreed Bishop Kate. “It’s probably the opposite. We encourage people to pay attention to the stewardship of the earth and not use more than their portion.”

Now that may or may not be a great idea but it’s nothing to do with Christianity, only for eco-cultists like Al Gore. If Bishop Kate were an Episcogorian, a member of the Alglican Communion, an elder of the Church of Latter-Day Chads, this would be an unremarkable statement. But, even in their vigorous embrace of gay bishoprics and all the rest, I don’t recall the Episcopalians formally embracing the strategy that worked out so swell for the Shakers and enshrining a disapproval of reproduction at the heart of their doctrine.

Which brings me to our third Jill in the jeep: Scarlett Johansson. Like every other sad middle-aged loser guy, I fell in love with Scarlett’s fetchingly pert bottom in the opening of Lost In Translation, and it pains me to discover she’s no different from Bishop Kate’s generation when it comes to being in thrall to the cobwebbed pieties of the 1960s. In a bit of light Bush-bashing the other day, she attacked the president for his opposition to “sex education.” If he had his way, she said, “every woman would have six children and we wouldn’t be able to have abortions.” Whereas Scarlett is so “socially aware” (as she puts it) she gets tested for HIV twice a year.

Well, yes. If “sex education” is about knowing which concrete condom is less likely to disintegrate during the livelier forms of penetrative intercourse, then getting an Aids test every few months may well be a sign that you’re a PhD (Doctor of Phenomenal horniness). But, if “sex education” means an understanding of sexuality as anything other than an act of transient self-expression, then Scarlett is talking through that famously cute butt.

Here’s the question for Bishop Kate: if Fatima Omar has 41 grandchildren and a responsible “better educated” Episcopalian has one or two, into whose hands are we delivering “the stewardship of the earth”? If your crowd isn’t around in any numbers, how much influence can they have in shaping the future?

Well, the Episcopal head honcho and even Scarlett Johansson are not the most powerful figures in the world, so let’s usher on our fourth Jill: Condoleezza Rice. “The great majority of Palestinian people,” said the Secretary of State to Cal Thomas the other day, “they just want a better life. This is an educated population. I mean, they have a kind of culture of education and a culture of civil society. I just don’t believe mothers want their children to grow up to be suicide bombers. I think the mothers want their children to grow up to go to university. And if you can create the right conditions, that’s what people are going to do.”

Cal Thomas asked a sharp follow-up: “Do you think this or do you know this?”

“Well, I think I know it,” said Dr. Rice.

“You think you know it?”

“I think I know it.”

So many of our present woes are due to thinking we know things. To our four Jills in the jeep, let’s add one Jim, apparently back at the steering wheel in the current war: James Baker, renowned foreign policy “realist” and the man Beltway wags are currently referring to as “the acting Secretary of State.” The “realists” think that “containment” and “stability” are wise strategies. In fact, they’re the absence of strategy. The fertility rate in the Gaza Strip is one of the highest on earth. If you measure the births of the Muslim world against the dearth of Bishop Kate’s Episcopalians, you have the perfect snapshot of why there is no “stability”: with every passing month, there are more Muslims and fewer Episcopalians, and the Muslims export their manpower to Europe and other depopulating outposts of the West. It’s the intersection of demography and Islamism that makes time a luxury we can’t afford.

We can argue about exactly what this trend means, but not that it means nothing. At the very minimum, I’d suggest, it means the Episcopal Church is irrelevant to “the stewardship of the earth” and that Scarlett Johansson will end her days on an earth whose stewards regard being tested for HIV twice as a sign of many things, but not, on the whole, “social awareness.”

- Mark Steyn is a nationally syndicated columnist


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: culture; islam; jihad; steyn
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Having our lower birthrate compensated for by illegal, but mostly Catholic, Baptist and other evangelical, aliens from Mexico, Central and South America, is beginning to look not so bad, as compared to the Muzzies fulfilling the same function in Europe.

FWIW, I have only one grandchild, but current plans by my two daughters indicate I should have 3 and probably 4 before I shuffle off. Same number as my parents. My wife's parents OTOH, have 13. That's counting one step-granddaughter they stole from Kyrgyzstan (who probably would have ended up in Russia otherwise as did her other grandparents and uncle) and her two American born half sisters. The Clan from Vik (as in Vikings) in Denmark, are still holding their end of the deal. They'd have more, but one of their sons married late, and never had any kids.

1 posted on 11/28/2006 2:21:29 PM PST by El Gato
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To: El Gato

I like Stein. He may go to extremes sometimes however.


2 posted on 11/28/2006 2:23:37 PM PST by kinoxi
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To: kinoxi

Steyn


3 posted on 11/28/2006 2:24:07 PM PST by kinoxi
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To: El Gato

I am the 44th of 64 grandchildren on my father's side. I have twin boys. I don't think I'll have quite so many grandchildren.


4 posted on 11/28/2006 2:26:47 PM PST by Lando Lincoln (For what cause would a liberal go to war?)
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Comment #5 Removed by Moderator

To: El Gato; Pokey78

Steyn ping to our good FRiend.


6 posted on 11/28/2006 2:28:27 PM PST by Lando Lincoln (For what cause would a liberal go to war?)
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To: El Gato

And the Lambeth Conference of 1930 is revealed for what it was: a suicide pact.


7 posted on 11/28/2006 2:31:21 PM PST by wideawake ("The nation which forgets its defenders will itself be forgotten." - Calvin Coolidge)
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To: El Gato

As boiling hot as Scarlet is, I can't think of anything more off-putting than the fact that she spreads her legs for so many less-than kempt individuals that she has to get HIV tested twice a year. That's enough to put me off my food. I'm picturing flies buzzing around her...um....you know....or a dark cloud following her around, like Pigpen from Peanuts.


8 posted on 11/28/2006 2:32:57 PM PST by domenad (In all things, in all ways, at all times, let honor guide me.)
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To: domenad

Islam will rule, unless we wake up fast.

9 posted on 11/28/2006 2:35:18 PM PST by Indy Pendance
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To: kinoxi
He may go to extremes sometimes however.

Yes. Extremely dead-on.

10 posted on 11/28/2006 2:36:06 PM PST by Crush T Velour
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To: kinoxi

Steyn is only pointing out the obvious: DEMOGRAPHICS IS DESTINY.


11 posted on 11/28/2006 2:39:13 PM PST by John Valentine
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To: John Valentine
Things change. Gauging humanity is an inexact science at best. I think the warning signs are there but I don't feel that all is lost. I would have to pretend to know the future to assume that.
12 posted on 11/28/2006 2:44:33 PM PST by kinoxi
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To: Lando Lincoln

My grandfathers name was a number! He was #5 of 15.


13 posted on 11/28/2006 2:53:31 PM PST by SFC Chromey (We are at war with Islamofascists, now ACT LIKE IT!)
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To: El Gato

Congratulations and may you receive many more blessings before you "shuffle off".

My husband comes from a small family: paternal grandfather was an only child, he had two children and those two had only two between them. The next generation, mine, though, had seven between them and that generation is just getting started with only one of the seven married so far and he has two children (twins). Maternal grandparents on hubby's side had seven kids and each of them has had anywhere from two to six kids. We don't know all of my husband's cousins, mainly because the family is only loosely in touch these days. No feuds or divorces or anything, just the pace of life.

I come from a prolific family also: one grandfather had thirteen natural siblings, another had nine; my grandmother was one of six. My two sets of grandparents had six and four, and those sets of aunts and uncles had, let's see, 3-3-3-4-4 and 5-5. That's 27 cousins on my side of the family, plus me and my two siblings, or 30 grandkids for my maternal grandparents, which they lived to see and usher in some great-grandkids. Most of those cousins now have kids of their own and two kids is rather unusual in my family. Of all these people mentioned, the grandparents have now gone on, as has one aunt, one cousin and a son. All the rest are alive, healthy, productive, not in jail, and happily married. We lucked out.

I'm looking forward to grandparenthood someday but not too soon as my kids are still in school and barely 20 and 19. But grandkids and other family members are what makes life worthwhile in the final analysis. By the way, a lot of my family and that of my husband come from Viking stock also. In fact the whole family on both sides come from Northern European stock, so now I can say we're just trying to stave off European extinction instead of over-populating the earth. ;o)


14 posted on 11/28/2006 2:53:37 PM PST by caseinpoint (Don't get thickly involved in thin things.)
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To: SFC Chromey

Simpler that way!


15 posted on 11/28/2006 2:55:11 PM PST by Lando Lincoln (For what cause would a liberal go to war?)
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To: El Gato
The scariest thing about vacuous bubble-heads like Scarlett Johansson is that some people actually think that such dimwitted flavors-of-the-month are worth listening to.

And, frankly, I don't see what all the fuss is about-- she ain't all that.

16 posted on 11/28/2006 2:57:06 PM PST by atomicpossum (Replies must follow approved guidelines or you will be kill-filed without appeal.)
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To: El Gato
“We are really happy,” her son Zuheir told Agence France-Presse

Of course they are. They now won't have to support her in her old age.

17 posted on 11/28/2006 2:57:57 PM PST by My2Cents
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To: El Gato

I just love Mark Steyn. I am reading his new book right now, and it as usual, he is sooo on the money.


18 posted on 11/28/2006 2:59:39 PM PST by Shelayne (...And though my heart is torn, I will praise You in this storm... ~~Casting Crowns)
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To: El Gato

Greetings from another descendant Dane. Great grandfather p. henry arrived in North America in 1919. He had two sons. They had three children, who in turn had six children (three of them mine). From one to six in three generations. Steyn is wrong. The Lutherans will inherit the earth. To the longboats!


19 posted on 11/28/2006 3:02:40 PM PST by p. henry
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To: El Gato

My grandmother had 30 grandkids and 20 great-grandkids. The figures are likely higher now, because she died 7 years ago -- and myself have had more nieces and nephews since then.

God bless Creation!


20 posted on 11/28/2006 3:02:50 PM PST by Silly (Still being... Silly)
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