Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Mark Steyn: Lights out on Liberty -
Imprimis - Hillsdale College ^ | March 13, 2008 | Mark Steyn

Posted on 08/24/2008 3:25:26 PM PDT by UnklGene

Mark Steyn: Lights Out on Liberty -

Mark Steyn’s column appears in the New York Sun, the Washington Times, Philadelphia’s Evening Bulletin, and the Orange County Register. In addition, he writes for The New Criterion, Maclean’s in Canada, the Jerusalem Post, The Australian, and Hawke’s Bay Today in New Zealand. The author of National Review’s Happy Warrior column, he also blogs on National Review Online and appears weekly on the Hugh Hewitt Radio Show. He is the author of several books, most recently America Alone: The End of The World as We Know It. Born in Toronto, Mr. Steyn lives with his family in New Hampshire.

The following is adapted from a lecture delivered at Hillsdale College on March 13, 2008, while Mr. Steyn was in residence as a Eugene C. Pulliam Visiting Fellow in Journalism.

On August 3, 1914, on the eve of the First World War, British Foreign Secretary Sir Edward Grey stood at the window of his office in the summer dusk and observed, "The lamps are going out all over Europe." Today, the lights are going out on liberty all over the Western world, but in a more subtle and profound way.

Much of the West is far too comfortable with state regulation of speech and expression, which puts freedom itself at risk. Let me cite some examples: The response of the European Union Commissioner for Justice, Freedom, and Security to the crisis over the Danish cartoons that sparked Muslim violence was to propose that newspapers exercise "prudence" on certain controversial subjects involving religions beginning with the letter "I." At the end of her life, the Italian writer Oriana Fallaci—after writing of the contradiction between Islam and the Western tradition of liberty—was being sued in France, Italy, Switzerland, and most other European jurisdictions by groups who believed her opinions were not merely offensive, but criminal. In France, author Michel Houellebecq was sued by Muslim and other "anti-racist groups" who believed the opinions of a fictional character in one of his novels were likewise criminal.

In Canada, the official complaint about my own so-called "flagrant Islamophobia"—filed by the Canadian Islamic Congress—attributes to me the following "assertions":

America will be an Islamic Republic by 2040. There will be a break for Muslim prayers during the Super Bowl. There will be a religious police enforcing Islamic norms. The USS Ronald Reagan will be renamed after Osama bin Laden. Females will not be allowed to be cheerleaders. Popular American radio and TV hosts will be replaced by Imams.

In fact, I didn’t "assert" any of these things. They are plot twists I cited in my review of Robert Ferrigno’s novel, Prayers for the Assassin. It’s customary in reviewing novels to cite aspects of the plot. For example, a review of Moby Dick will usually mention the whale. These days, apparently, the Canadian Islamic Congress and the government’s human rights investigators (who have taken up the case) believe that describing the plot of a novel should be illegal.

You may recall that Margaret Atwood, some years back, wrote a novel about her own dystopian theocratic fantasy, in which America was a Christian tyranny named the Republic of Gilead. What’s to stop a Christian group from dragging a doting reviewer of Margaret Atwood’s book in front of a Canadian human rights court? As it happens, Christian groups tend not to do that, which is just as well, because otherwise there wouldn’t be a lot to write about.

These are small parts of a very big picture. After the London Tube bombings and the French riots a few years back, commentators lined up behind the idea that Western Muslims are insufficiently assimilated. But in their mastery of legalisms and the language of victimology, they’re superbly assimilated. Since these are the principal means of discourse in multicultural societies, they’ve mastered all they need to know. Every day of the week, somewhere in the West, a Muslim lobbying group is engaging in an action similar to what I’m facing in Canada. Meanwhile, in London, masked men marched through the streets with signs reading "Behead the Enemies of Islam" and promising another 9/11 and another Holocaust, all while being protected by a phalanx of London policemen.

Thus we see that today’s multicultural societies tolerate the explicitly intolerant and avowedly unicultural, while refusing to tolerate anyone pointing out that intolerance. It’s been that way for 20 years now, ever since Valentine’s Day 1989, when the Ayatollah Khomeini issued his fatwa against the novelist Salman Rushdie, a British subject, and shortly thereafter large numbers of British Muslims marched through English cities openly calling for Rushdie to be killed. A reader in Bradford wrote to me recalling asking a West Yorkshire policeman on the street that day why the various "Muslim community leaders" weren’t being arrested for incitement to murder. The officer said they’d been told to "play it cool." The calls for blood got more raucous. My correspondent asked his question again. The policeman told him to "Push off" (he expressed the sentiment rather more Anglo-Saxonly, but let that pass) "or I’ll arrest you." Mr. Rushdie was infuriated when the then Archbishop of Canterbury lapsed into root-cause mode. "I well understand the devout Muslims’ reaction, wounded by what they hold most dear and would themselves die for," said His Grace. Rushdie replied tersely: "There is only one person around here who is in any danger of dying."

And that’s the way it’s gone ever since. For all the talk about rampant "Islamophobia," it’s usually only the other party who is "in any danger of dying." War on the Homefront

I wrote my book America Alone because I wanted to reframe how we thought about the War on Terror—an insufficient and evasive designation that has long since outlasted whatever usefulness it may once have had. It remains true that we are good at military campaigns, such as those in Iraq and Afghanistan. Our tanks and ships are better, and our bombs and soldiers are smarter. But these are not ultimately the most important battlefronts. We do indeed face what the strategists call asymmetric warfare, but it is not in the Sunni triangle or the Hindu Kush. We face it right here in the Western world.

Norman Podhoretz, among others, has argued that we are engaged in a second Cold War. But it might be truer to call it a Cold Civil War, by which I mean a war within the West, a war waged in our major cities. We now have Muslim "honor killings," for instance, not just in tribal Pakistan and Yemen, but in Germany and the Netherlands, in Toronto and Dallas. And even if there were no battles in Iraq and Afghanistan, and if no one was flying planes into tall buildings in New York City or blowing up trains, buses, and nightclubs in Madrid, London, and Bali, we would still be in danger of losing this war without a shot being fired.

The British government recently announced that it would be issuing Sharia-compliant Islamic bonds—that is, bonds compliant with Islamic law and practice as prescribed in the Koran. This is another reason to be in favor of small government: The bigger government gets, the more it must look for funding in some pretty unusual places—in this case wealthy Saudis. As The Mail on Sunday put it, this innovation marks "one of the most significant economic advances of Sharia law in the non-Muslim world."

At about the same time, The Times of London reported that "Knorbert the piglet has been dropped as the mascot of Fortis Bank, after it decided to stop giving piggy banks to children for fear of offending Muslims." Now, I’m no Islamic scholar, but Mohammed expressed no view regarding Knorbert the piglet. There’s not a single sura about it. The Koran, an otherwise exhaustive text, is silent on the matter of anthropomorphic porcine representation.

I started keeping a file on pig controversies a couple of years ago, and you would be surprised at how routine they have become. Recently, for instance, a local government council prohibited its workers from having knickknacks on their desks representing Winnie the Pooh’s sidekick Piglet. As Pastor Martin Niemoller might have said, "First they came for Piglet and I did not speak out because I was not a Disney character, and if I was, I’d be more of an Eeyore. Then they came for the Three Little Pigs and Babe, and by the time I realized the Western world had turned into a 24/7 Looney Tunes, it was too late, because there was no Porky Pig to stammer, ‘Th-th-th-that’s all folks!’, and bring the nightmare to an end."

What all these stories have in common is excessive deference to—and in fact fear of—Islam. If the story of the Three Little Pigs is forbidden when Muslims still comprise less than ten percent of Europe’s population, what else will be on the black list when they comprise 20 percent? In small but telling ways, non-Muslim communities are being persuaded that a kind of uber-Islamic law now applies to all. And if you don’t remember the Three Little Pigs, by the way, one builds a house of straw, another of sticks, and both get blown down by the Big Bad Wolf. Western Civilization is a mighty house of bricks, but you don’t need a Big Bad Wolf when the pig is so eager to demolish the house himself.

I would argue that these incremental concessions to Islam are ultimately a bigger threat than terrorism. What matters is not what the lads in the Afghan cave—the "extremists"—believe, but what the non-extremists believe, what people who are for the most part law-abiding taxpayers of functioning democracies believe. For example, a recent poll found that 36 percent of Muslims between the ages of 16 and 24 believe that those who convert to another religion should be punished by death. That’s not 36 percent of young Muslims in Waziristan or Yemen or Sudan, but 36 percent of young Muslims in the United Kingdom. Forty percent of British Muslims would like to live under Sharia—in Britain. Twenty percent have sympathy for the July 7 Tube bombers. And, given that Islam is the principal source of population growth in every city down the spine of England from Manchester to Sheffield to Birmingham to London, and in every major Western European city, these statistics are not without significance for the future.

Because I discussed these facts in print, my publisher is now being sued before three Canadian human rights commissions. The plaintiff in my case is Dr. Mohamed Elmasry, a man who announced on Canadian TV that he approves of the murder of all Israeli civilians over the age of 18. He is thus an objective supporter of terrorism. I don’t begrudge him the right to his opinions, but I wish he felt the same about mine. Far from that, posing as a leader of the "anti-hate" movement in Canada, he is using the squeamishness of a politically correct society to squash freedom.

As the famous saying goes, the price of liberty is eternal vigilance. What the Canadian Islamic Congress and similar groups in the West are trying to do is criminalize vigilance. They want to use the legal system to circumscribe debate on one of the great questions of the age: the relationship between Islam and the West and the increasing Islamization of much of the Western world, in what the United Nations itself calls the fastest population transformation in history. Slippery Slope

Our democratic governments today preside over multicultural societies that have less and less glue holding them together. They’ve grown comfortable with the idea of the state as the mediator between interest groups. And confronted by growing and restive Muslim populations, they’re increasingly at ease with the idea of regulating freedom in the interests of social harmony.

It’s a different situation in America, which has the First Amendment and a social consensus that increasingly does not exist in Europe. Europe’s consensus seems to be that Danish cartoonists should be able to draw what they like, but not if it sparks Islamic violence. It is certainly odd that the requirement of self-restraint should only apply to one party.

Last month, in a characteristically clotted speech followed by a rather more careless BBC interview, the Archbishop of Canterbury said that it was dangerous to have one law for everyone and that the introduction of Sharia to the United Kingdom was "inevitable." Within days of His Grace’s remarks, the British and Ontario governments both confirmed that thousands of polygamous men in their jurisdictions are receiving welfare payments for each of their wives. Kipling wrote that East is East and West is West, and ne’er the twain shall meet. But when the twain do meet, you often wind up with the worst of both worlds. Say what you like about a polygamist in Waziristan or Somalia, but he has to do it on his own dime. To collect a welfare check for each spouse, he has to move to London or Toronto. Government-subsidized polygamy is an innovation of the Western world.

If you need another reason to be opposed to socialized health care, one reason is because it fosters the insouciant attitude to basic hygiene procedures that has led to the rise of deadly "superbugs." I see British Muslim nurses in public hospitals riddled with C. difficile are refusing to comply with hygiene procedures on the grounds that scrubbing requires them to bare their arms, which is un-Islamic. Which is a thought to ponder just before you go under the anaesthetic. I mentioned to some of Hillsdale’s students in class that gay-bashing is on the rise in the most famously "tolerant" cities in Europe. As Der Spiegel reported, "With the number of homophobic attacks rising in the Dutch metropolis, Amsterdam officials are commissioning a study to determine why Moroccan men are targeting the city’s gays."

Gee, whiz. That’s a toughie. Wonder what the reason could be. But don’t worry, the brain trust at the University of Amsterdam is on top of things: "Half of the crimes were committed by men of Moroccan origin and researchers believe they felt stigmatized by society and responded by attacking people they felt were lower on the social ladder. Another working theory is that the attackers may be struggling with their own sexual identity."

Bingo! Telling young Moroccan men they’re closeted homosexuals seems certain to lessen tensions in the city! While you’re at it, a lot of those Turks seem a bit light in their loafers, don’t you think? Our Suicidal Urge

So don’t worry, nothing’s happening. Just a few gay Muslims frustrated at the lack of gay Muslim nightclubs. Sharia in Britain? Taxpayer-subsidized polygamy in Toronto? Yawn. Nothing to see here. True, if you’d suggested such things on September 10, 2001, most Britons and Canadians would have said you were nuts. But a few years on and it doesn’t seem such a big deal, nor will the next concession, or the one after that.

The assumption that you can hop on the Sharia Express and just ride a couple of stops is one almighty leap of faith. More to the point, who are you relying on to "hold the line"? Influential figures like the Archbishop of Canterbury? The politically correct bureaucrats at Canada’s Human Rights Commissions? The geniuses who run Harvard, and who’ve just introduced gender-segregated swimming and gym sessions at the behest of Harvard’s Islamic Society? (Would they have done that for Amish or Mennonite students?) The Western world is not run by fellows noted for their line-holding: Look at what they’re conceding now and then try to figure out what they’ll be conceding in five years’ time. The idea that the West’s multicultural establishment can hold the line would be more plausible if it was clear they had any idea where the line is, or even gave any indication of believing in one.

My book, supposedly Islamaphobic, isn’t even really about Islam. The single most important line in it is the profound observation, by historian Arnold Toynbee, that "Civilizations die from suicide, not murder." One manifestation of that suicidal urge is illiberal notions harnessed in the cause of liberalism. In calling for the introduction of Sharia, the Archbishop of Canterbury joins a long list of Western appeasers, including a Dutch cabinet minister who said if the country were to vote to introduce Islamic law that would be fine by him, and the Swedish cabinet minister who said we should be nice to Muslims now so that Muslims will be nice to us when they’re in the majority.

Ultimately, our crisis is not about Islam. It’s not about fire-breathing Imams or polygamists whooping it up on welfare. It’s not about them. It’s about us. And by us I mean the culture that shaped the modern world, and established the global networks, legal systems, and trading relationships on which the planet depends.

To reprise Sir Edward Grey, the lamps are going out all over the world, and an awful lot of the map will look an awful lot darker by the time many Americans realize the scale of this struggle.


TOPICS: Australia/New Zealand; Canada; Foreign Affairs; United Kingdom
KEYWORDS: humanrights
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-2021-38 next last

1 posted on 08/24/2008 3:25:26 PM PDT by UnklGene
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: UnklGene

Much of the West is far too comfortable with state regulation of speech and expression, which puts freedom itself at risk.
::::::::
We are at a major turning point in our history of our freedoms. Hussein must be kept out of the White House.


2 posted on 08/24/2008 3:27:36 PM PDT by EagleUSA
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: UnklGene

Love you Mark. Missed you. Keep telling the truth.


3 posted on 08/24/2008 3:28:48 PM PDT by shalom aleichem
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: UnklGene
Ultimately, our crisis is not about Islam...It’s about us. And by us I mean the culture that shaped the modern world, and established the global networks, legal systems, and trading relationships on which the planet depends... To reprise Sir Edward Grey, the lamps are going out all over the world, and an awful lot of the map will look an awful lot darker by the time many Americans realize the scale of this struggle.

Bears repeating and engraving in one's memory. This is very frightening. If Obama gets in, we're going to take a quantum leap in this direction.

4 posted on 08/24/2008 3:35:45 PM PDT by livius
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: shalom aleichem

This is an old speech. Where is he now? He hasn’t been in NR or The Bulletin for weeks. Is he imprisoned in Canada?


5 posted on 08/24/2008 3:36:19 PM PDT by Rsgood Dsbad
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 3 | View Replies]

To: UnklGene

If we just follow the Constitution, no preferences will be given to Islam or any other religion. People have freedom of speech, to say what they thin, and there is separation of church and state.

However, the Constitution is being assaulted constantly by prominent politicians, judges, and even by the Supreme Court itself. About the latter, a good book to read is “The Dirty Dozen” which is about Supreme Court decisions which undermine the Constitution.


6 posted on 08/24/2008 3:37:24 PM PDT by pleikumud
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: UnklGene
Canada is a funny place.

35 million people, about 20% of whom recently arrived from the Third World.

And they claim to own and control the land mass to the north or us.

Which is hilarious, considering that they number less than the current population of California.

100 years ago there would have been no thought of a U.S. invasion or takeover, because the English Crown would have retaliated.

But that won't happen now. Those people won't even stop the invasion of their own lands.

We should dump the Canadian government as an illegitimate, terrorist friendly gpvernment, and help the Western Canadians regain control of their land and lives, principally by cutting off control from Ottawa and then expelling the aliens who now constitute a protected Fifth column in their midst.

As for the East Canadians, let them fight it out with the French. May the best gang win.

7 posted on 08/24/2008 3:40:49 PM PDT by Regulator (Obama = Mugabe)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: UnklGene

Steyn hits this one clear outta the park.


8 posted on 08/24/2008 3:47:36 PM PDT by Emperor Palpatine ("There is no civility, only politics.")
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: UnklGene
While Mark Steyn is genetically incapable of writing a bad piece, this has to be one of the best I've read.

STEYN BUMP

9 posted on 08/24/2008 3:48:53 PM PDT by workerbee (Vote for Obama? No thanks, I already have a messiah.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: pleikumud

Islams’ deleterious effects on freedom is not because it is a religion. It is because it is PRIMARILY a competing ideology, a complete inflexible system of GOVERNANCE called SHARIA LAW that regulates the practice of religion ruthtlessly. We are suicidally oriented to giving it equal treatment “as any other religion”...it is not any other religion. It is a governmental system dedicated to obliterating any other governmental system coming from the mind of man....meaning our CONSTITUTIONAL REPUBLIC. THere is NO separation of government and religion in Islam. Sharia law is the state in Saudi Arabia, Iran, etc. Why do we ignorantly ignore the 1400 year history of this fact? Both parties in this country have extensive, interwoven relations with both sides of Islam....it may prove fatal to our existence as a Constitutional Republic. A link to the legitimization of ‘radical’ Islam connections occurring during the first day of the Dem Convention in Denver: http://gatesofvienna.blogspot.com/2008/08/dnc-interfaith-event-reaches-out-to.html#readfurther


10 posted on 08/24/2008 3:50:29 PM PDT by givemELL
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 6 | View Replies]

To: Regulator
"As for the East Canadians, let them fight it out with the French. May the best gang win.



11 posted on 08/24/2008 3:51:48 PM PDT by Emperor Palpatine ("There is no civility, only politics.")
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 7 | View Replies]

To: UnklGene

-bflr-


12 posted on 08/24/2008 3:52:36 PM PDT by rellimpank (--don't believe anything the MSM tells you about firearms or explosives--NRA Benefactor)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Rsgood Dsbad

I think they have him pinned down in Canada with a serial prosoes for hate crimes. This is an Australian arrisl dexcue the Orwellian experience:
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,24108969-17044,00.html

Obama is not only open to this kind of PC attack on “hate speech” but is highly sympathetic to Islam. Corsi’s book demonstrates how Obama interfered in the Kenya elections to make sure the Muslims will have power sharing even though they are small percentage of population and Christians are the huge majority. Of course Obama’s father and step-father were Muslims and he himself received Islamic training (he even admits it in his own books).


13 posted on 08/24/2008 3:59:24 PM PDT by shalom aleichem
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 5 | View Replies]

To: livius

http://www.laotze.blogspot.com/


14 posted on 08/24/2008 4:23:57 PM PDT by expatguy (Support "An American Expat in Southeast Asia" - DONATE and Help Beat Obama)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies]

To: Regulator

Not just in Canada, I fear. Look at how the Somali muslims in Tenn. got the Tyson plant to include a muslim holiday on the company calendar. It’s happening hear and now.


15 posted on 08/24/2008 4:25:03 PM PDT by austinaero
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 7 | View Replies]

To: austinaero

hear should be “here” - here and now.


16 posted on 08/24/2008 4:26:03 PM PDT by austinaero
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 15 | View Replies]

To: shalom aleichem
Love you Mark. Missed you. Keep telling the truth.

You missed him? Where has he been?

17 posted on 08/24/2008 4:31:06 PM PDT by stripes1776 ("That if gold rust, what shall iron do?" --Chaucer)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 3 | View Replies]

To: UnklGene
The idea that the West’s multicultural establishment can hold the line would be more plausible if it was clear they had any idea where the line is, or even gave any indication of believing in one.

This is not just a liberal problem, it is a Western problem. The "Big Tent" Republicans want to think you can hold a culture together without unalienable norms of right and wrong, often referred to as morality.

If we can't say, "That's wrong," without fearing the destruction of some hypothetical wall of separation, we're lost. Ultimately, the notions of right and wrong become based on societal choices, and those choices are informed by those who control the media and education. It's only a matter of time before the elite run the country and, eventually, ruin it.

18 posted on 08/24/2008 4:34:40 PM PDT by ArGee (Reality - what a concept.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: ArGee
This is not just a liberal problem, it is a Western problem. The "Big Tent" Republicans want to think you can hold a culture together without unalienable norms of right and wrong, often referred to as morality.

Sure, I agree. But who's morality? Christian? Muslim? Agnosticism?

I think society has collectively agreed that morality is a fluid concept, which means that is constantly changing to suit the realities of the times that we live in. For example, you might get some pure/hardcore Catholics to say that all contraception is immoral, but if you look at the habits of most Catholics you'll see that there is plenty of contracepting going on. Not that I have a problem with Catholics or that I'm singling them out, I'm just pointing out an example.

19 posted on 08/24/2008 4:51:03 PM PDT by Sirloin (snickering at hyperbole since 1998!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 18 | View Replies]

To: Sirloin
Sure, I agree. But who's morality? Christian? Muslim? Agnosticism?

Just by asking the question you show you don't really agree. On the one hand, it doesn't matter as long as we agree. On the other hand, it would be best if it were based on truth. Since getting at the truth is very difficult, we're stuck with the first hand.

The American Revolution in 1776 was based on primarily Reformation thinking. The French Revolution in 1789 was based on primarily Enlightenment thinking. I'd say the results speak for themselves.

I think society has collectively agreed that morality is a fluid concept, which means that is constantly changing to suit the realities of the times that we live in. For example, you might get some pure/hardcore Catholics to say that all contraception is immoral, but if you look at the habits of most Catholics you'll see that there is plenty of contracepting going on. Not that I have a problem with Catholics or that I'm singling them out, I'm just pointing out an example.

Saying there is a standard and then not measuring up to it is not the same thing as saying there is no standard. Many people have pointed out that this supposedly Christian nation had its share of adulteries and other sins.

That doesn't really matter. The fact that those who engaged in them knew they were sins is far more important than whether or not they engaged in them at all. If all Americans were monogamous, but none espoused monogamy as a good thing, that would be far worse than all agreeing that monogamy is the norm and none actually practicing it.

20 posted on 08/24/2008 4:58:40 PM PDT by ArGee (Reality - what a concept.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 19 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-2021-38 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson