083_05_04
The dots some don't want to connect
By Mark
Steyn
What with the Fort Hood
mass murderer, the Christmas Pantybomber and now the Times Square Bomber, you
may have noticed a little uptick in attempted terrorist attacks on the U.S.
mainland in the last few months.
Rep. Lamar Smith did,
and, at the House Judiciary Committee, he was interested to see if the attorney
general of the United States
thought there might be any factor in common between these perplexingly diverse
incidents.
"In the case of
all three attempts in the last year, the terrorist attempts, one of which was
successful, those individuals have had ties to radical Islam," said
Congressman Smith. "Do you feel that these individuals might have been
incited to take the actions that they did because of radical Islam?"
"Because of
...?"
"Radical
Islam," repeated Smith.
"There are a
variety of reasons why I think people have taken these actions," replied
Eric Holder noncommittally. "I think you have to look at each individual
case."
The congressman tried
again. "Yes, but radical Islam could have been one of the reasons?"
"There are a
variety of reasons why people...."
"But was radical
Islam one of them?"
"There are a
variety of reasons why people do things," the attorney general said again.
"Some of them are potentially religious...."
Stuff happens. Hard
to say why.
"Okay,"
said Smith. "But all I'm asking is if you think among those variety of
reasons radical Islam might have been one of the reasons that the individuals
took the steps that they did."
"You see, you
say 'radical Islam,'" objected Holder. "I mean, I think those people
who espouse a – a version of Islam that is not...."
"Are you
uncomfortable attributing any actions to radical Islam?" asked Smith.
"It sounds like it."
And so on, and so
forth. At Fort Hood, Maj. Hasan jumped on a table and
gunned down his comrades while screaming, "Allahu Akbar!", which is
Arabic for "Nothing to see here" and an early indicator of
pre-Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. The Times Square Bomber, we are assured by
The Washington Post, CNN and Newsweek, was upset by foreclosure proceedings on
his house. Mortgage-related issues. Nothing to do with months of training at a
Taliban camp in Waziristan.
Listening to Attorney
General Holder, one is tempted to modify Trotsky:
You may not be
interested in Islam but Islam is interested in you. Islam smells weakness at
the heart of the West. The post-World War II order is dying: The European
Union's decision to toss a trillion dollars to prop up a Greek economic model
that guarantees terminal insolvency is merely the latest manifestation of the
chronic combination of fiscal profligacy and demographic decline in the West at
twilight. Islam is already the biggest supplier of new Europeans and new
Canadians, and the fastest-growing demographic in the Western world.
Therefore, it thinks
it not unreasonable to shape the character of those societies – not by blowing
up buildings and airplanes, but by determining the nature of their relationship
to Islam.
For example, the very
same day that Eric Holder was doing his "Islam? What Islam?" routine
at the Capitol, the Organization of the Islamic Conference was tightening its
hold on the U.N. Human Rights Council – actually, make that the U.N.
"Human Rights" Council. The OIC is the biggest voting bloc at the
U.N., and it succeeded in getting its slate of candidates elected to the
so-called "human rights" body – among them the Maldives, Qatar,
Malaysia, Mauritania and Libya. The last, elected to the HRC
by 80 percent of the U.N. membership, is, of course, a famous paragon of human
rights, but the other, "moderate" Muslim nations share the view that
Islam, in both its theological and political components, should be beyond
discussion. And they will support the U.N.'s rapid progress toward, in effect,
the imposition of a global apostasy law that removes Islam from public
discourse.
Attorney General
Holder seems to be operating an advance pilot program of his own, but he's not
alone. Also last week, the head of Canada's intelligence service testified to
the House of Commons about hundreds of "second-or third-generation
Canadians" who are "relatively well integrated"
"economically and socially" but who have become so "very very
disenchanted" with "the way we want to structure our society"
that they have developed "strong links to homelands" that are
"in distress."
Homelands such as Afghanistan, Pakistan,
Yemen and Somalia.
Hmm. If you're
wondering what those countries might have in common, keep wondering. No words
beginning with "I-" and ending with "-slam" passed the
director's lips. If the head of the Crown's intelligence service has narrowed
his concerns about "disenchanted" "second- and third-generations
Canadians" to any demographic group in particular, evidently it's
classified information and can't be disclosed in public.
The U.N. elections
are a big victory for the Organization of the Islamic Conference. By the way,
to my liberal friends who say, "Hey, what's the big deal about the
Organization of the Islamic Conference? Lighten up, man," try rolling around
your tongue the words "Organization of the Christian Conference."
Would you be quite so cool with that? Fifty-seven Prime Ministers and
Presidents who get together and vote as a bloc in international affairs? Or
would that be a theocratic affront to secular sensibilities? The casual
acceptance of the phrase "the Muslim world" – ("Mr. Obama's
now-famous speech to the Muslim world" – The New York Times) – implicitly
defers to the political ambitions of Islam. And, if there is a "Muslim
world," what are its boundaries? Forty years ago, the OIC began with
mainly Middle Eastern members plus Indonesia and a couple more. By the
Nineties, former Soviet Central Asia had signed on, plus Albania, Mozambique,
Guyana
and various others. In 2005, Russia
was admitted to "observer" membership.
But along with the
big headline victories go smaller ones. These days, Islam doesn't even have to
show up. The Metropolitan Museum of Art has quietly pulled representations of
Mohammed from its Islamic collection.
With the Danish cartoons,
violent mobs actually had to kill large numbers of people before Kurt
Westegaard was sent into involuntary "retirement." Even with "South Park,"
the thugs still had to threaten murder. But the Metropolitan Museum
caved pre-emptively – no murders, no threats but best to crawl into a fetal
position, anyway.
Last week, the
American Association of Pediatricians noted that certain, ahem, "immigrant
communities" were shipping their daughters overseas to undergo
"female genital mutilation." So, in a spirit of multicultural
compromise, they decided to amend their previous opposition to the practice:
They're not (for the moment) advocating full-scale clitoridectomies, but they
are suggesting federal and state laws be changed to permit them to give a
"ritual nick" to young girls.
A few years back, I
thought even fainthearted Western liberals might draw the line at
"FGM." After all, it's a key pillar of institutional misogyny in
Islam: Its entire purpose is to deny women sexual pleasure.
True, many of us
hapless Western men find we deny women sexual pleasure without even trying, but
we don't demand genital mutilation to guarantee it. On such slender
distinctions does civilization rest.
Der Spiegel, an
impeccably liberal magazine, summed up the remorseless Islamization of Europe
in a recent headline: "How Much Allah Can The Old Continent Bear?"
Well, what's wrong with a little Allah-lite? The AAP thinks you can hop on the
Sharia express and only ride a couple of stops. In such ostensibly minor
concessions, the "ritual nick" we're performing is on ourselves.
Further cuts will follow.