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Wednesday, September 08, 2010

The War With Islam, “Moderate Muslims,” And The Florida Koran Roast

By The Curmudgeon Emeritus

The planned Florida Koran bonfire has elicited statements of concern from numerous public figures in America, and (of course) shrill messages of condemnation from Muslims everywhere. The overall thrust of the adverse American reactions has been that this sort of act will "alienate moderate Muslims," supposedly "the very allies we need to defeat the Islamists and Wahhabi extremists."

There's no need for your Curmudgeon to elucidate the adverse reactions of Muslims, is there?

A few subliterates -- at least, that's one explanation for their inadequate knowledge of history -- have commented to the effect that we would be outraged by a Muslim bonfire of Bibles, and that the two cases are exactly parallel. Therefore, they say, the planned bonfire would be a betrayal of the values we claim to hold.

Don't ask them about what values those might be. Freedom, justice, and manly defiance of those who seek to intimidate us won't be among them. And don't ask them whether they're aware that Bible bonfires have occurred many times in Islamic nations, particularly Iran and Saudi Arabia. If they are, they'll wave it aside; if not, they'll claim you must be lying.

Clearly, it's time for some light on the subject, rather than more heat.

***

First, the self-delusion about "moderate Muslims" simply has to stop. There's no such thing as a moderate Muslim, because there's no such thing as moderate Islam. Islam proclaims certain premises:

Those premises are absolute. For a Muslim to question any one of them is called Zandaka -- heresy -- and is punishable by death.

There's nothing moderate about the ethos that flows from those premises. It sanctions all manner of vileness, including deceit and stealthy violence against "the unbeliever;" the subjugation of all non-Muslims; polygamy and pedophilia; the chattelization of women; and a criminal code so barbaric that a Westerner can scarcely credit it, even though it's put into practice every day.

Yet no one who disputes any aspect of that evil code can call himself a Muslim. That would undermine the creed in toto, and put him in jeopardy of death at the hands of other Muslims. Ergo, the "moderate Muslim" is a fiction concocted for public-relations purposes among persons not yet subjugated to "the religion of peace."

What we have here in the United States are not "moderate Muslims" but temperate Muslims: persons who, whatever they might believe or advocate among themselves, are indisposed to act on the commands of their creed at this time. If polls conducted among Middle Eastern Muslims of every station can be taken to measure the attitudes and preferences of Muslims in America, they support the "extremists" in principle, approve of their overall aims, and will neither speak nor act against them.

To seek to conciliate such persons is fatuous. To trust them is insane.

***

Just in case you've napped away the past thirty years, there's a war on. No, not in Afghanistan, and certainly not in Iraq. The war of which your Curmudgeon speaks is the stealth jihad of which Robert Spencer and others have so eloquently warned us: the ongoing, loosely organized Islamic campaign to demoralize the nations of the West so that shari'a, Islam's law code, can penetrate our lands and eventually displace our native arrangements. That campaign uses Western "tolerance" toward religious differences to disarm our resistance to Islam's advance.

But Islam is not a religion. It's a totalitarian ideology with a few theological trimmings. If you're aware of its prescriptions, its proscriptions, and its record when in the saddle, you cannot sincerely disagree. If not, you need to complete your education before allowing yourself an opinion on the subject.

Persons throughout recorded history have done terrible things in the name of a religion, but only Islam, "the religion of peace," literally commands its adherents to do such things, and to support those who advance Islam in that manner, unconditionally. In that sense, the war between Islam and the Christian-Enlightenment West goes back a lot further than thirty years.

One does not fight a war by conciliating the enemy. No, not even a war of ideas, insofar as Islam can be considered an idea to be assessed objectively and rationally. In a war successfully concluded, there can only be victory and defeat. Inasmuch as Islam has defined itself as a war creed unalterably opposed to all others -- read the Koran if you don't believe your Curmudgeon on that score -- our choice is to prosecute the war to victory, or to meekly accept defeat.

***

Estimates of the world population of Muslims hover around 1.3 billion. That's a formidable number. If it were necessary to slaughter them all to prevail in the war between us, we would probably be unable to do it -- not for lack of military capacity, but for lack of will. Fortunately, we can prevail without such wholesale slaughter if we can contrive to sever the bonds between the temperate fraction and their activist brethren.

How does one persuade persons disinclined to violence to separate themselves from persons of the opposed inclination? In one of two ways only:

  1. By appealing to their better natures;
  2. By appealing to their self-interest.

No mortal conflict in all of history has been settled by appealing to the enemy's better nature. If he truly desires to subjugate you, any gestures of conciliation toward him will indicate weakness, unreadiness or unwillingness to fight; they will merely strengthen his resolve. The sole positive course is to put the enemy in a position in which his self-interest plainly requires that he surrender: that he accept the cessation of hostilities on terms you dictate.

Sun Tzu and other writers on warfare have emphasized the importance of breaking the enemy's will to fight. How this is to be done depends on the nature of the enemy and the contest. In a war such as ours with Islam, the available strokes in that direction must emphasize:

  1. That we recognize that a state of war exists between us;
  2. That we're ready, willing, and able to fight it all the way to a conclusion;
  3. That we regard victory as the only acceptable outcome;
  4. That the alternatives available to them are:
    • Utter extinction;
    • Unconditional surrender and complete withdrawal from the field of battle.

The first step is the one we've been most reluctant to take. A Koran bonfire is one way of announcing that we've taken it.

***

We are not the Americans who fought World Wars I or II. We have far greater material resources than they, but we haven't demonstrated the same moral courage or resolve. Unless and until we marshal our spirits to the imperative task of our age, our bodies will remain flaccid.

We can begin by burning a Koran on September 11. Your Curmudgeon plans to do so himself. Are you willing to join him?

UPDATE: Welcome, James Wolcott admirers! When you're finished here, please be sure to enjoy this other piece, and perhaps this entire series, and draw the appropriate inferences.

Posted by The Curmudgeon Emeritus on 09/08/2010 at 08:13 AM

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  1. Join you? Yes indeed!

    Posted by KG  on  09/08/2010  at  11:12 AM
  2. I’ll have to buy one first.  Or can I print out the first 50 pages from some web site and burn that?

    Posted by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)  on  09/08/2010  at  11:49 AM
  3. This video is several years old, but it is definitely in the spirit of the day:

    http://tinyurl.com/238jz2q

    It might be useful for those who lack an appropriate place to personally burn a koran; they can just view the video and hum along.

    Posted by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)  on  09/08/2010  at  12:10 PM
  4. burn at least one, works for me
    VETTOM III
    we are everywhere

    Posted by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)  on  09/08/2010  at  12:15 PM
  5. I am all for burning the koran. We need to show disrespect for it.

    Posted by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)  on  09/08/2010  at  01:59 PM
  6. And when I do, I’ll be thinking of you. Plural.

    Posted by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)  on  09/08/2010  at  02:36 PM
  7. What we have here in the United States are not “moderate Muslims” but temperate  Muslims: persons who, whatever they might believe or advocate among themselves, are indisposed to act on the commands of their creed at this time.  If polls conducted among Middle Eastern Muslims of every station can be taken to measure the attitudes and preferences of Muslims in America, they support the “extremists” in principle, approve of their overall aims, and will neither speak nor act against them.

    To seek to conciliate such persons is fatuous. To trust them is insane.

    To me, the above is what I have been saying all along.  The only difference being substituting “active” and “passive”, or “covert” and “overt”. as needed.  But the bottom line is the same, if “they” follow the Koran and associated “approved” teachings/writings, they can only be temperate or various stages of “overt”, there is no other accepted or approved sect which honestly allows any other course of action by its “flock”.

    To be sure there are a few professed Muslims who openly have challanged at least the political and societal practices of Islam (And they are, to a woman and man on at least one Jhadist’s “to do” list).  But they are not a recognized sect or faction, and so unfortunately count for little.

    I would love to join you in some “Islamic pyrotechnics”, but I handle food in at least part of my daily work, and the amount of detoxification/decontamination I would have to suffer through, in order to be able to properly handle fresh vegetables, and other foodstuff, would be daunting at best.  Then again, we all must suffer for the cause ah.

    Posted by Guy S.  on  09/08/2010  at  05:04 PM
  8. RULE 1: don’t fly planes into buildings.

    If “moderate” Muslims had dealt to their own extremists ANY time after 9/11 - which, to this day, they haven’t - none of this would be happening. QED.

    Posted by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)  on  09/08/2010  at  05:12 PM
  9. Right on, bro! It’s time for the offense to take the field.

    Posted by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)  on  09/08/2010  at  07:34 PM
  10. Yeehah!  I bought one today especially for burning.  It will be the best $15 I ever spent.  You tube to follow.

    Thank Frank!

    Posted by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)  on  09/08/2010  at  08:16 PM
  11. I think pissing them off is the wrong approach. What we want to do is scare the crap out of them, so rather than burning a stupid book, why don’t we make 9/11 “Kill an Imam” day?

    Posted by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)  on  09/09/2010  at  10:41 AM
  12. Burning a stupid book is a legally protected activity, Hunt. Killing an imam is not. At least, not here in New York. Are the laws looser about such things where you live?

    Posted by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)  on  09/09/2010  at  11:35 AM
  13. Excellent post, as usual.  One thought (slightly o/t, but maybe not):  Whenever I log in here, I hate to press: “Submit”  smile

    Posted by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)  on  09/09/2010  at  01:16 PM
  14. re #12 Picky! Picky! Picky! No, it’s not yet legal here either, but self defense is, and it looks like it may come down to that.

    Posted by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)  on  09/09/2010  at  03:42 PM
  15. Linda P - Hit your return key and log in with 99.99% less submission. (works on comments at least.) 

    As to the preemptive killing killing of Imams, seems like killing someone who is trying to get his followers to kill me is arguably self defense.

    Posted by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)  on  09/09/2010  at  06:01 PM
  16. I just bought the last koran/quron? whatever, here on my Island, and at the same exact time that those chicken turd bastards slammed the first plane into the first tower is when I will strike the match and set fire to their UNHOLY piece of sh** book! At least two of my grandchildren will be in attendance. They are 14 years old and are astute in their reading and comprehension habits! Err, grandpa has been “indoctrinating them for years!  Remember Bunker Hill, The Alamo, Pearl Harbor, the USS Cole, Marine barracks in Beiruit, and all the other attacks etc.

    Posted by Everett Littlefield  on  09/09/2010  at  08:45 PM
  17. Here’s a nice one from an Atlas Shrugs blog commenter:

    “For nine years now, some experts have told us, terrorism has nothing to do with Islam. Today these experts tell us, that Koran burning in Florida will fuel terrorism. Could someone please explain to me how could Koran burning affect terrorism, if there is no connection between terrorism and Islam?”

    Posted by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)  on  09/09/2010  at  11:20 PM
  18. MEMO OBAMA: if you think burning the Koran would be a recruitment call to Jihadists, what do you think 9/11 was?

    Posted by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)  on  09/10/2010  at  04:54 AM
  19. MEMO OBAMA (2) : if you’re such an expert on what causes “Muslim outrage” en masse, explain why 9/11 didn’t.

    —————————————
    ps – here’s Michelle Malkin on the permanent flammability of Muslims:
    http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?id=38938

    Posted by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)  on  09/10/2010  at  05:30 PM
  20. Hello, fellow-crank! I see sir Wolly considers you a crankier crank than I! You may have the upper hand now, curmudgeon, but not for long! Cheers to you, sir…

    Posted by enoch_root  on  09/12/2010  at  08:28 PM
  21. Enoch, Wolcott and I have a little history; that’s all that’s about. I think he’s a venom-filled buffoon; he thinks I eat babies for breakfast. We’re both exaggerating a bit, of course: he’s only half-full of venom; I restrict myself to toddlers, and I wait till lunch. But that’s the nature of contemporary political discourse.

    Perhaps later I’ll post a few links.

    Posted by Francis W. Porretto  on  09/13/2010  at  05:44 AM


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