Thursday, June 3, 2010

Andrew McCarthy:  The Grand Jihad

I have just started reading Andrew McCarthy's The Grand Jihad.  I was almost immediately disappointed:
So is it wrong, then, to shrink from the conclusion that the real problem is Islam?...Hair-splitting between "Islamism" and "Islam" runs the risk of doing exactly what we must avoid doing:  minimizing the challenge confronting us and suggesting that there is a vibrant, preponderant "Islam," markedly different from purportedly aberrant "Islamism," that somehow does not see sharia-imposition as obligatory.  In my heart of hearts, I don't believe this is true.
Yet, that is exactly what McCarthy immediately goes on to do:
The stubborn fact remains that there are hundreds of millions of Muslims who either do not wish to live under the tyranny of sharia or are so indifferent that, even if they would abide by sharia in a Muslim country where it applies, they do not support converting non-Muslim societies into sharia enclaves.  What are we to do about them?  Are we to tell them they are wrong, that their only alternative is to renounce Islam--even those who live in fundamentalist societies where the penalty for apostasy is death?  Are we to give those people no place to go?
McCarthy acknowledges that what he labels Islamists, "may substantially outnumber our potential allies in the umma."  And he goes on:
We should reserve the designation "Islam" in the hope that tolerant voices can redeem it, but our defense must never be hostage to that hope, which may, after all, be futile.
As he seems to acknowledge, this is purely wishful thinking.  So why does he insist on making the distinction?  Well, I think to incentivize or encourage or allow for some type of Islamic reformation.  Which perhaps, he views as more likely if the adherents can continue to think of themselves as Muslims.

While I think I understand his rational, I find it unrealistically optimistic and even counterproductive.  We will never defeat that which we are afraid to name.  Let's be clear, while there may well be moderate Muslims, there is certainly no moderate Islam.  We cannot wish it into existence.  So to answer McCarthy's question:  Are we to give those people no place to go?

Well, word games will not suffice.  The problem is not Islamism.  The problem is Islam.  Of course those people should renounce Islam.

By not rejecting Islam, so-called moderate Muslims give tacit approval to Islamic doctrine and to their co-religionists who are less reticent to follow it.  With his semantic construct, McCarthy lets them off the hook for this.  It is a mistake.  If we do not imbue Islam with the negative connotation it so richly deserves, Muslims will have no incentive to decamp.  The problem, of course, is that there are 1.4 billion Muslims of varying stripes and the overwhelming majority of them will never abandon their ideology.  It is a problem without a recognized solution.  (I advocate containment a la George Kennan)  But in any case, it does us no good whatsoever to sweep it under Orwell's rug.

For much more sober views on moderate Islam, see Bruce Bawer, Hugh Fitzgerald, and Sam Harris.

I'm eleven chapters into The Grand Jihad, and other than the semantic confusion, I have found it quite illuminating.  But I would be far more sympathetic to his above premise if McCarthy drew distinctions between his two degrees of Islam.  So far, he does not.  He talks exclusively about Islamism and Islamists.  But to my ear, it sure sounds like just plain Islam.  So every time McCarthy uses the terms Islamism or Islamist, I have to replace them with Islam or Muslim.  It's annoying.

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Finally, at the end of chapter twelve, on page 212, McCarthy, for the first time, does make a distinction between the views of (moderate) Muslims and Islamists.  He contrasts their attitudes on Obama's Muslim heritage:  Moderates "figure being born a Muslim should be irrelevant if one never makes an adult choice to embrace the religion."  As opposed to Islamists who "believe that all humans, regardless of parentage, are called to Islam at birth."  While statistics or polling on the prevailing Muslim attitude on this question would be appreciated, I will welcome more such distinctions reading forward.

At the end of chapter fifteen, McCarthy finally addresses what is to my mind the real problem, mainstream Islam:
First, while Obama is living proof that it is possible to ignore Islamic doctrine's causative connection to terrorism, it is not possible credibly to deny that connection.  Therefore, the need to deal with Islam is unavoidable--not because it is an asset, but because it's a liability that can't be written off.

Second, there can be no peace unless Islam reforms.  For there to be peace, Islam must purge its savage elements...and it must compellingly condemn the violence committed in its name.  This cannot be done, as Obama and others would like to do it, by telling Muslims everything is fine, that their religion is just peachy as is....This approach does nothing to discredit Islamists and Islamist terrorists in the eyes of other Muslims.  In fact, it enhances their credibility because it ignores their doctrinal justifications of terror rather than offering a credible counter-construction.

Worse, as we've observed, it may well be that there is no credible counter-construction of Islam.  In that case, there is a gargantuan amount of reform to be done by Muslims.  They are the ones who believe that there is something in Islam so worth preserving that it's better to fight than switch.  We cannot rouse them to the task by telling them, as American presidents have been wont to tell them, that we think Islam, as it currently exists, is promoting peace.
But the question is:  Do vast majorities of Muslims have the will, or even the inclination, to accept such "counter-constructions" or reform?  Again, this is ignoring reality.  This is holding ourselves hostage to hope.
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Monday, April 19, 2010

Videoconferencing

It's time to get serious about videoconferencing

Let's see,

Parking
Surly, incompetent, or un-empowered airline staff
Ridiculous, inept, and totally ineffective airport security
The airlines' inability to maintain a schedule
Fellow passengers
Those seats
That food
Lost baggage
The overall time and expense and hassle
A whole day of travel for a two-hour meeting
Government bureaucrats lurking behind every facet of the biz
And now, a volcano
It is finally time to get serious about videoconferencing.  Unless you have highly confidential material, Skype works just fine.  It includes messaging, audio, and/or video.  And, it's free!

Can videoconferencing replace a face-to-face?  No.  Is it often good enough?  Yes.
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Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Friday, January 15, 2010

Tim Hawkins

On Chick-fil-A



The Government Can



Update, January 2024

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Saturday, January 2, 2010

Wafa Sultan:  A God Who Hates

Wafa Sultan writing in her new book, A God Who Hates:

For me, understanding the truth about the thought and behavior of Muslims can only be achieved though an in-depth understanding of [the] philosophy of raiding that has rooted itself firmly in the Muslim mind.  Bedouins feared raiding on the one hand, and relied on it as a means of livelihood on the other.  Then Islam came along and canonized it.  Muslims in the twenty-first century still fear they may be raided by others and live every second of their lives preparing to raid someone else.  The philosophy of raiding rules their lives, the way they behave, their relationships, and their decisions.
Page 66

The status of women in Muslim countries is a human catastrophe that the world has ignored for centuries and for which it is now paying a high price for ignoring.  An oppressed and subjugated woman cannot give birth to an emotionally and mentally well-balanced man.  The invisible Muslim woman has been and continues to be the hen who incubates the eggs of terrorism and provides them with the necessary warmth to hatch the terrorists.
Page 135

Whatever has been said in the past and will be said in the future about the role of television in shaping a person's convictions, I do not believe that it has played or ever will play as important a role as books do.  And this is even truer when the book in question is a religious one, and when it is the sole source of knowledge for people who are bedazzled by reading it.
Page 165

It is difficult, if not impossible, to have a healthy relationship with another person if you are suspicious of his or her intentions.  No Muslim, no matter how well educated, no matter how outwardly accepting of others he may be, can free himself completely of his suspicions when circumstances bring him into contact with [Christians and Jews].  He is quite convinced that he cannot have a real friendship with anyone who does not accept Muhammad as a divinely inspried prophet.
Page 194
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