June 9, 2006

Democrats and Islamo-fascists.

Thomas Friedman -- behind the TimesSelect wall -- uses the occasion of the Zarqawi obliteration to lecture Democrats about their political prospects. Don't get too smug reading Bush's poll numbers, he says:
What the polls show is largely the result of President Bush's incompetent performance in Iraq, rather than the emergence of a convincing Democratic national security message or group of candidates respected on defense....

What Zarqawi and the recently arrested group of terrorists in Canada remind us of is that, whatever you think about the Iraq war, open societies today are threatened by these utterly ruthless jihadists. Many Americans feel that. If Democrats want to really seize control of the national security issue, they must persuade the country — in its gut — that they have a convincing post-Iraq strategy to rally the world against these Islamo-totalitarians.
Do Democrats even use the expression "Islamo-totalitarians" (or "Islamo-fascist")?

ADDED: And I must say that I'm enough of a Democrat that it bothers me to use the term "Islamo-fascist." I just looked at my blog after publishing this and felt a twinge seeing the word in the title to the post. Frankly, I think it's repulsive to see the word "fascist" next to the name of a religion.

60 comments:

Anonymous said...

Ask anyone who has lived in Saudi Arabia (as I have) whether one should feel any guilt over the use a term such as "Islamofascist." Odds are they will tell you the only thing wrong with the word is that is is too hard to say easily. The prime source of the world's terrorist idelogy, Saudi Arabia (literally "Arabia of the Saud Family") is a terrifying place: If you're an African or Asian Christian and try to practice your religion, you'll fear arrest, even torture and death. If you're a Shi'ite, you'll live in fear, too. Political freedoms? Hah! Do what the
Royal Family says. Imagine if the United States were called "American of the Washington Family" and Washington's descendants were in leage with snake-handlers who banned all other religious practices and you begin to get an idea what evil looks like.

KCFleming said...

Re: "Frankly, I think it's repulsive to see the word "fascist" next to the name of a religion."

I'm hoping there are Muslims who feel the same way, but so far the fascists are winning that 'debate'.

Lonesome Payne said...

"Frankly, I think it's repulsive to see the word "fascist" next to the name of a religion."

Bummer.

PatHMV said...

But it is accurate, and far better than using the name of the religion alone as a descriptor of the terror. Which sounds "better": "Islamic terrorism" or "Islamo-fascist terrorism"?

The terrorists themselves claim to be inspired by the religion. They claim to be following its dictates. It cannot be adequately described or labelled without a reference to the religion.

Anonymous said...

Until there is a significant movement within Islam to oppose the terrorists, my opinion is that it is proper to use the term Islamo-fascists.

KCFleming said...

Friedman's barking up the wrong tree. pro-defense Democrats like Lieberman are far out of their mainstream, and become marginalized or (in his case) directly opposed for elections from within their own party.

The New Left, whether you date their origin to the 1930s, 40, or 50s, is not anti-war (as if anyone were really pro-war), but actively anti-West. The US can do no right, and is always on the evil side of the equation. What they want is less than clear, but dislike of the status quo is fierce enough to preclude self-defense.

The Democrats are not Quakers; that is, they do not rule out violence per se. Just defense of the US through violent means. What they suffer from, as Robert Conquest opined, "a lack of imagination". They are ideologically unable to imagine that revolutionaries can mean them harm.

So Friedman is asking Democrats to wake up. It's simply not possible.

james said...

Recall that Islam is not just a religion in the Western sense, but also a system of government. There are a number of flavors of this system of religious government, one set of which we can reasonably describe as fascist.

John said...

That's the thing with words - they mean something. And sometimes words mean things that make us uncomfortable. Our problem is we are always looking for words that make us feel better when describing bad things rather than come to grips with the fact that bad things exist. Some words, like fascist, have become so extreme because of overuse, that the person using it is viewed as extreme, but it doesn't change the condition they are trying to describe.

JohnF said...

I suppose you are entitled to find whatever you want repulsive. Can you come up with a better term to describe people who

(a) practice a certain religion,

(b) seek to impose a fascistic governmental structure, based on the teachings of that religion, on the rest of the world,

(c) state that that religion requires various atrocities (by our corrupt Western standards) to be committed in order to bring about that result, and

(d) commit those atrocities.

What term should we use for these people? Some kind of combination of "Islam" "Muslim" and "fascist" does not strike me as odd or repulsive--at least no less odd or repulsive that the people described.

Tibore said...

"Frankly, I think it's repulsive to see the word "fascist" next to the name of a religion."

Out of curiosity, professor, why? Is it because it seems to be an impingment on the religion as a whole? If so, I see what you mean, but in my case, I have been using it to distinguish between the sane, rational segments and the murderous, nihilist parts. So in short, I use the term specifically so I don't end up tarring the entire religion. When I read other blogs from Muslims in the M.E. who unreservedly express disgust and horror at the type of things Zarqawi has done, I realize that there are many, many sane non-violent Muslims who don't deserve to get put in the same category with the radical, murderous elements. Due to that, I try to watch my language to make sure any condemnations -- and due to my disgust and horror at the radical segments' actions, those condemnations can get pretty harsh -- don't end up impugning the rest of the followers. There's a segment that deserves our support, and a segment that deserves our harshest vitriol, and that's why I use the term: To distinguish between the two.

Troy said...

Kos-sacks however have no problem tying Christians with fascists on an hourly basis.

Islamo-fascist -- unwieldy as it is... is an actual case where the rhetoric perfectly describes the enemy. They are Islamic and they are fascists.

Richard Dolan said...

Ann asks: "Do Democrats even use the expression 'Islamo-totalitarians' (or 'Islamo-fascist')?"

Yes, of course. Hillary, for example. But not convincingly, not as if they (she) really think(s) the idea captured by the phrase should be a guide to American policy or action. But they use it. Most often, they use it to suggest that there is just one Islamo-fascist, Osama by name, and he would have been eliminated LONG AGO but for the incompetence of the Bushies.

Islamo-fascist: in the Dem lexicon, it's just a phrase useful to segue into the real theme of interest -- Bush the Incompetent. Ther is even a whiff of that in Friedman's piece (in truth, there's usually a whiff of it in most of the stuff published by the NYTimes). Never forget that IT'S ALL ABOUT BUSH and HE IS TO BLAME FOR EVERYTHING (including the weather).

The odd note in this post is that Ann still thinks of herself as a Democrat. It's odd because the Dems (and especially the Dem bloggers) definitely do not (just as they have the same trouble with Lieberman).

Ann Althouse said...

Well, it's not odd. I've been registered as a Democrat since 1972. My problem with them is national security, which is exactly what Friedman is writing about. I dislike a lot of lefty things, however, so I don't like the left wing of the party. But I'm not attracted to the Republicans because of all the ridiculous social conservative things. Actually, I don't think Republicans politicians go around saying "Islamo-fascist" either. Bush has always been careful to show respect for Islam generally and to reach out to Muslims. So I really shouldn't associate this compunction about religion to Democrats.

goesh said...

Jihadi works fine for me

I'm Full of Soup said...

Speaking of Islamo-facsists, I saw General Barry McCaffrey on TV last night and he said the American special forces have become the deadliest force in the world. Here is a quote from the former general ... "They are taking all the fun out of Jihad".

LoafingOaf said...

I like the label "islamo-fascist." They have a lot in common with the varieties of fascism that plagued Europe in the 20th century, and this variety happens to have sprung out of Islam. Seems accurate to me.

It distinguishes the terror-loving savage barbarian jihadists from the millions of normal, good Muslims without pretending that the religion isn't nevertheless currently sick and part of the problem or that the Islamo-fascists don't represent a significant portion of Muslims, Muslim mosques, Muslim "charities", Muslim governments, and Muslim relgious leaders. Still wondering when they'll clean their religion up.....

The Drill SGT said...

The mathematics of it are simple. In the context of the War on Terror:

99.9% of Muslims are not the terrorists, but

99.9% of the terrorists are Muslims.


We need terms that recognize those truths and don't try to obfuscate around the issue. Islamofascist works for me to describe the general class of Islamic terrorist.

BTW: that .1% of Muslims is still 1.5 million, so the math representation is probably right withing an order of magnitude.

Ann Althouse said...

Daryl: I too wondered if Friedman couldn't bring himself to say "Islamo-fascists" and was toning it down to "Islamo-totalitarians," which is more unwieldy. But I checked the NYT site and saw that he used "Islamo-fascism" three times last year. On October 7, 2005, he wrote: "The president's speech on terrorism yesterday was excellent. He made clear, better than ever, why winning in Iraq is so important to the wider struggle against Islamo-fascism." On October 5, he wrote: "Succeeding in this venture, to stem the drift of the Arab world toward Islamo-fascism and autocracy, is so much more important than the war critics have ever allowed." And on April 22, he wrote: "Mr. Blair took a principled position to depose Saddam and keep Britain tightly aligned with America... because he believed that the advance of freedom and the defeat of fascism -- whether Islamo-fascism or Nazi fascism -- were quintessential and indispensable ''liberal'' foreign policy goals."

ModNewt said...


99.9% of Muslims are not the terrorists

99.9% of the terrorists are Muslims.


Which terrorists?

I disagree with the whole association of the Islam religion to terrorists. I consider ETA, the IRA (before they disarmed) and the likes of Paul Hill ( the abortion doctor killer) and Eric Rudolph (Olympic Park bomber) to be terrorists in the same vein as Al Qaeda.

I doubt many of people who practice Christianity would associate themselves with the above groups. However, you'd have many people who would agree with the perspective of these groups. Many people oppose abortion, and many others think the British treatment of catholics in Northern Ireland was atrocious and that it should join the Republic of Ireland.

There is a religious element to the above groups I mention, but I would first and foremost describe them as terrorists... whatever the cause. If I described Paul Hill as a Baptist-Terrorist I suspect many Baptists would be outraged.

Unknown said...

I know what you mean, Ann. To me using Islamo-fascist is sort of like the left calling Bush Hitler. "Islamist" makes more sense to me. It's a unique word for a unique phenomenon. It's an evil enough ideology on its own and does not need the added frisson of "fascist" to make the point.

I registered Independent tho--I could not remain in that party.

Bruce Hayden said...

The problem I see with using "fascist" is that it has two somewhat different meanings. The historical meaning was that of an Italian brand of secular national socialism.

The second, more current meaning, is almost indistinguishable from totalitarianism. But that meaning is at odds with the historical meaning. Fascism was never really about totalitarianism, except, as with Naziism and Communism, that such was a temporary step in implementing the socialist system.

So, instead of a secular national socialist state, which is what Fascism and Naziism were historically mostly about, Islamo-Fascism espouses a pan-national, somewhat capitalistic, religious theocracy.

LoafingOaf said...

99.9% of Muslims are not the terrorists

What if you included those Muslims sympathetic with the terrorism? Can the percentage be so low? As you point out even small percentages of over a billion people is an awful lot of people. Put that with the fear of speaking out many Muslims probably feel and it makes it hard to get a grip on. I just don't know.

An eye-opener to me was when the largest mosque in my state (the Islamic Center of Cleveland) turned out to be run by and infested with terror-lovers. Muslims I come across in Ohio rarely seem like extremists. It's more often non-Muslim leftists who tend to sound like they have sympathies for Islamo-fassism. But I was shocked that such a seemingly respectable mosque had been taken over by a nutter (Damra is his name) and dragged it down into the sickness.

stoqboy said...

LoafingOaf check this out, you won't be so surprised.http://www.tcsdaily.com/article.aspx?id=122105F

Meade said...

ModNewt said...

If I described Paul Hill as a Baptist-Terrorist I suspect many Baptists would be outraged.

But not nearly as many as would be outraged by "Terrorist-Baptist."

michael farris said...

I dislike the term Islamo-fascist (and its derivatives) because it's based on the idea of dehumanization (arguably a [necessary] part of any war) as long as you can convince people that a billion or so people are Islamo-fascists (as opposed to the vast majority of them being regular people doing the best they can under the circumstances) no one will much care what happens to them.

It's also inaccurate in that the governments closest to the classical meaning of fascist in the Arab/Muslim world tend toward the more secular.

I prefer terms like (depending on the context) theocratic Islam, political Islam, armed Islamic fundamentalism that (I think) are closer to what's the movement(s) are all about.

Political and military Islamic fundamentalism is a very real danger that I take seriously. But it needs to be discussed with clarity and not sound-bite slogans and labels.

Anonymous said...

I find Islamofascists hard to say easily, and I worry that behind it is nothing more than propaganda, metonymy, taking one group of people and making them the whole.

On the other hand, I do think that Christofascist comes off the tongue too easily and we all know exactly who that refers to: the group of Christians (Republicans) aiming to reverse Roe V. Wade, aiming to scourge the country of gays, and aiming to bring christian theology as the major force in our laws and remove science from our lives and laws.

the Reverend Rich Lang of the Trinity United Methodist Church of Seattle, gave a sermon titled George Bush and the Rise of Christian Fascism in which he said "I want to flesh out the ideology of the Christian Fascism that Mr. Bush articulates. It is a form of Christianity that is the mirror opposite of what Jesus embodied. It is, indeed, the materialization of the spirit of antichrist: a perversion of Christian faith and practice...".

I think that Christofascism, the exploitation of Christists by our Republican leaders is a far bigger danger to our way of life than any so called Islamofascism. And I think that is apparent in the bigotry expressed in the above comments.

Tibore said...

PatCA, Bruce:

That does help shed some light on the objections to associating "Fascism" with the radical militant Islamicism the world is facing today. I'm not sure I 100% agree; I think Radical Militant Islamicism (anyone mind if I abbreviate it "RMI" from here on out?) comes awfully close to meeting historian Robert O. Paxton's definition of fascism:

"A form of political behavior marked by obsessive preoccupation with community decline, humiliation or victimhood and by compensatory cults of unity, energy and purity, in which a mass-based party of committed nationalist militants, working in uneasy but effective collaboration with traditional elites, abandons democratic liberties and pursues with redemptive violence and without ethical or legal restraints goals of internal cleansing and external expansion."

Strike "nationalist" and substitute with whatever term seems appropriate - committed "religious" militants, committed "radical Islamic" militants, etc. - and that pretty much describes RMI as we see it today.

But that's one definition. To properly acknowledge other arguments, I must admit that there are deep differences. For example there's no real sense of "Corporativismo", like in Mussolini's brand of fascism; you'd have to stretch to equate individial terrorist groups with governmentally designated Corporate bodies, like the type of national labor union envisioned in the Italian brand of Fascism, although you can draw slight, imperfect parallels out of Iran's support of groups like Hezbollah. Plus, save for the Palestinian groups, there's nothing nationalistic about many of the RMI movements out there; in fact, they're sort of the opposite in that they emphasize a unity transcending nation and governments. Above all that, there's no economic component, although many argue that the hallmark of Fascism wasn't the National Socialism embodied by Hitler and Mussolini, that it was in fact the harkening to the national mythic character that defined it.

So, I guess in the end, we just have to use what fits our opinions of them. I agree that the RMI groups out there are not Fascist in many respects, but in some gross characteristics, I feel there are undeniable similarities. Eh... you use what works, I guess.

Richard Dolan said...

In today's Bleat, Lileks nails a form of rhetorical jabbing that shows up in this thread.

Lileks took a look as some of the blog commentary about Zarqawi, and wrote: "My favorite post: 'Last time I checked, he never killed anyone directly. He's not exactly a murderer, although he's responsible for a boatload of death but not as much as, say, the owner of a tobacco company.' Ignorance, qualified frown, fatuous elevation of an unrelated matter to indicate superior moral sensibilities – that boy hit ‘em all in record time."

In this thread, ModNewt says: "I disagree with the whole association of the Islam religion to terrorists. I consider ETA, the IRA (before they disarmed) and the likes of Paul Hill ( the abortion doctor killer) and Eric Rudolph (Olympic Park bomber) to be terrorists in the same vein as Al Qaeda."

It's amazing to me how many people have difficulty accepting the reality staring them in the face. Surely the first imperative is to deal with the truth, not some fairy tale of how we would like the world to be. How can anyone not notice that terrorism today is associated with radical Islam, funded by radical Islamist organizations, taught and fostered in radical mosques and madrassas, and celebrates mass murder by (among other techniques) suicidal bomb attacks in the name of holy jihad? That these features of radical Islam lead to terrorist activity by only the tinest fraction of Muslims hardly detracts from the fact that terrorism of that sort is an aspect of radical Islam -- not Roman Catholicism, the Southern Baptists, "Republicans fascists" (you just knew that would show up in this thread), or any other group. Nor should one lose sight of the fact that a somewhat larger proportion of fundamentalist Muslims sympathize with the actual terrorists, even if they themselves do not engage in terrorism.

VS Naipual, in his prescient book Among the Believers, and Bernard Lewis, in any one of a number of books, have been writing about this reality for a long time. Yet many prefer to deny what is obvious for all to see. Very, very strange. I'm not sure whether the usual explanations for such wilfull blindness -- political correctness of some sort, another ideological set of blinders, the leftovers of anti-colonialism, God knows what -- explain that phenomenon.

reader_iam said...

I think that Christofascism, the exploitation of Christists by our Republican leaders is a far bigger danger to our way of life than any so called Islamofascism.

"Quxxothink," in a nutshell.

Palladian said...

quxxofascism

The Drill SGT said...

In defense of my 99.9% analogy, note I said: In the context of the War on Terror:

99.9% of Muslims are not the terrorists, but

99.9% of the terrorists are Muslims

Should I have said GWOT instead?

Yes the IRA, the Weathermen, and ELF and the Red Brigades, and Abortion Clinic bombers and the Unibomber and McVey were evil or crazy or both, but they don't start with whole countries, a pool of 1.5 billion possible recruits and lots of cash.

I was referring to our post 9/11 efforts WRT Islamic Terror.

Meade said...

Where the zarqawi IS that little quxxofascist?

ModNewt said...

Richard Dolan said...

How can anyone not notice that terrorism today is associated with radical Islam, funded by radical Islamist organizations, taught and fostered in radical mosques and madrassas, and celebrates mass murder by (among other techniques) suicidal bomb attacks in the name of holy jihad?

What is your point? You're "reality" or "truth" associates all madrassas and mosques with radical terrorists. Mine does not.

Christian Identity "churches" teach that whites are the true chosen people of God, that Jews are the descendants of Satan and that people of color do not possess souls. It reviles homosexuality and opposes abortion as a Jewish plot to reduce the white population.

The KKK is a radical Protestant group.

The fact that terrorists touting islam are more prominent says nothing to me about that religion. Mainstream mosques, madrassas and musliums in general oppose these radicals, their teachings and their tactics, just as mainstream baptists oppose Eric Rudolph. And just because you are unfamiliar with groups such as the Lord's Resistance Army (which uses the Christian Bible to justify its actions which include killing and mutilations of innocent civilians) doesn't mean that terrorism isn't associated with "any other group".

And sympathizing with a group is not the same as being part of it. Many American citizens support the goals of the IRA for some donated money to the IRA. If you listen to talk radio at all, many callers would argue in favor of Eric Rudolph. Signs on the roads in the south wished him god speed.

I'll concede that there may be more terrorists out there using Islam for their reasoning. I'm just saying I don't think they are acting as good muslims and when people in general associate terrorists with Islam, all muslims are tarnished.

pst314 said...

"Fascism is a radical authoritarian political philosophy that combines elements of corporatism, totalitarianism, extreme nationalism, militarism, anti-communism and anti-liberalism."

If you study the Koran and the Sunna, you can make a good case that they prescribe totalitarianism (a tyrannical and draconian enforcement of rules governing every aspect of life), extreme nationalism (hatred of and intolerance for non-Muslims), militarism (conquest and subjugation until all the world is Muslim), and anti-liberalism (democracy, secular government, freedom of speech, and religious tolerance are "blasphemy"). And of course there is the fuehrer-princip, as embodied in the veneration of the bandit thug Mohammed as "the perfect man".

ModNewt said...

Joe said...

The day that Christians fly airplanes into office buildings and behead innocents on videotape, I will worry about them. Until then, let's focus on the real enemy.

Dang... you make the rules. I guess driving trucks into the Murrow Building doesn't count. And, yes, McVeigh used christiantity as part of his defense. Man can people be myopic.

Richard Dolan said...

Modnewt says: "What is your point? You're "reality" or "truth" associates all madrassas and mosques with radical terrorists. Mine does not."

In a sense, the only response is to observe that Modnewt is an excellent exemplar of Lileks' point. Contrary to Modnewt, most people understand instinctively that reality isn't like fashion, nor is it governed by the maxim de gustibus non disputandum est. Instead, it's the same for all of us. Instead, all you have to do is open your eyes and look. And no one claims that "all madrassas and mosques" are associated with "radical terrorists." The claim is that the terrorists we are concerned about -- the 9/11 crowd, the "shoe bomber," the London bombers, the gang that attacked the WTC the first time, the recent gang arrested in Canada, etc., etc. -- found their suicidal mission alog with each other in those places.

But these points are so clear that I don't think modnewt missed them. It's just another aspect of reality that he pretends not to see.

ModNewt said...

Joe said...

Modnewt, is McVeigh the only thing you can come up with to support the idiotic claim that Christians are a bigger threat than al-qaeda? Talk about myopic.

Straw man. I never said that. I'm all for fighting the terrorist and for fighting the idea that they claim they are muslim. I claim they are not. I claim Tim McVeigh was not Christian. Yes, I think Al Qaeda is a huge threat and we ought to fight them (though I don't think we're doing a good job).

You, Richard Dolan, et al. claim Islam is the problem. I do not.

ModNewt said...

What IS your point, Mod?

My point is that lots and lots of people support violence and are violent using religion to support their reason. They have for thousands of years.

When the victims of this violence say, well then I hate "that" religion, in some ways they concede the point to the terrorist.

I'm also pointing out that they don't concede the point to terrorists who use Judeo-Christian religions as their reasons for terror. I don't hear anyone saying here or in other discussions, "I hate christo-terrorsits" or "christo-facists." I suspect because it doesn't suit them; they are themselves probably christian.

Catholics all the time disassociate themselves from the Crusades. Why shouldn't well intentioned Muslims be allowed to disassociate themselves from Al Qaeda terrorists?

Craig Ranapia said...

Ann wrote:
Frankly, I think it's repulsive to see the word "fascist" next to the name of a religion.

Frankly, I think it's repulsive when fascists casually conflate any religion (and, yes, I sure think there are Christo-fascists out there too) with their own hate and desire for control. Who do you think are the silent majority who suffer and die at the hands of Islamo-fascists, and their all-too willing enablers in the west - Muslims. Muslim women. Gay and lesbian Muslims. Muslim artists, writers, intellectuals and politicians who don't toe the ultra-fundamentalist line.

To be honest, Ann, I think Western academics who get queasy about calling a spade a spade are being remarkably self-indulgent.

Ann Althouse said...

Craig: "Frankly, I think it's repulsive when fascists casually conflate any religion (and, yes, I sure think there are Christo-fascists out there too) with their own hate and desire for control."

People have been using religion for domination and political power since they day they thought it up. It's not so much that they conflate religion and power. The challenge is to disaggregate them:

"My kingdom is not of this world. If My kingdom were of this world, My servants would fight..."

ModNewt said...

Seven Machos said...

Mod -- I don't think there is a lot of substantive disagreement here, just over semantics. None of the above posters hates Muslims. In 1943, do you think the average American hated Werner, the kindly butcher in Munich, and his family?

I can't speak to "Werner" but I think when referencing 1943 you leave out the obvious Japanese internment camps. It's that mentality that I think I'm arguing against; lumping people together.

Few people argue the Crusades were a noble cause. I've studied them... went to catholic school for a decade. The Pope granted indulgence for cryin' out loud so ruthless crusaders could rape and murder civilians.

Palladian said...

"I really do wonder what color the sky is on their planet."

Cloudy.

ModNewt said...

Noumenon said...
Well that's the thing, I'm not worried about Christian terrorism or some clash of internal American cultures.

What a complete dodge and yet another straw man argument. Just to make sure everyone isn't confused: I do not think that there are nearly as many terrorists/despots/etc using christianity as are using islam for their reasoning.

I'm just saying that nobody called McVeigh/Rudolph/Hill "Christo-nutters" or whatever you want to call them. People thought they were nutters first and foremost who twisted religion to their cause. They are no differet from al-qaeda even if poorly organized, less efficient, and less motivated towards suicide.

btw, if the bombing of the Federal Building wasn't on your "radar", the sky in your world must have been rainbow colored due to too many 'shrooms.

Craig Ranapia said...

Ann;

Fair point, but the best way to start 'disaggregate' religion and politics is to look ultra-fundamentalists in the eye and call them out without euphemism or dissembling. People like you and me are never going to be part of an Islamic Reformation - that's not our fight, and it will probably still be raging long after we're dead. But we can aid 'moderate Islam' strugging to take back their faith and their communities, by telling them that we're not looking the other way, or cloaking the people who brutally repress them in polite euphemisms because CAIR might say something mean about us.

ModNewt said...

Seven Machos said...
If we ever end up in a serious war with a country full of Muslims, we will have internment camps once again... The fact that many Muslims have not been beaten and lynched in this country since Sept. 11 is a testament to our respect for law...

I agree with your second statement. I think we, as citizens of the USA, have been very restrained in our treatment of Muslims I and have been generally proud to be an American (our government hasn't always behaved so well - Guantanamo). I'm not sure how that fits with your first statement which basically claims we're not so 'awesome' since you claim we'd start building internment camps again (I don't think we would).

I also noticed that you say that I'd be sorry if we started interning Muslims (white ones too?). Would you?

Ann Althouse said...

Craig Ranapia said..."Fair point, but the best way to start 'disaggregate' religion and politics is to look ultra-fundamentalists in the eye and call them out without euphemism or dissembling."

More importantly, moderate Muslims should feel motivated to wrest their religion out of the hands of the people who are making it look ugly. I think the real extremists are immune to hearing us call them fascists. I think they think they are really excellent believers, strong enough to do everything for their religion.

ModNewt said...

But Mod, they are different. McVeigh wasn't religious. Rudolph and Hill are single-issue terrorists.

McVeigh had clear ties to the Christian Identity "church" and had many religious motivations. Read the federal prosecutions documents. Your right that he, Rudolph and Hill, were kooks without a following. That's irrelevent to the point though, so I wont debate it.

And who would I be trying to impress with "cool" lefty points. I guess you're slowly resorting to ad hominim attack since you can't refute my points.

Sorry I can't reply anymore. Gotta go to one of my "cool" lefty hang-outs so I can score some more points and pick up chicks.

knox said...

meade, "jacques" is quxxo. Can't you tell, he pretty much just copies-and-pastes the same comment ad nauseum...

KCFleming said...

Re: "...otherwise intelligent dialogue on this board interrupted by posts like Pogo's and Richard Dolan's. These ridiculous accountings of what "Dems really believe" are completely unsupported by facts... etc., etc.

Sorry, Chris, but it's the truth.
Read Witness (Chambers), Radical Son (Horowitz), Soliah (Hendry), The Secret World of American Communism and Venona : Decoding Soviet Espionage in America (Haynes), The Dragons of Expectation: Reality and Delusion in the Course of History (Conquest), Political Pilgrims: Travels of Western Intellectuals to the Soviet Union, China and Cuba, 1928-1978 (Hollander), The Venona Secrets: Exposing America's Cold War Traitors (Romersteinor), or Useful idiots (Charen), to name a few.

But I have been posting long enough to know that you don't want and won't listen to 'evidence", nor agree what you'd accept as proof. I don't write to try to convince you. That would be futile.

David McDougall said...

a few quick responses:

"I'm not saying that the Crusades were a noble cause. I'm saying they were a defensive manuever against an encroaching entity."
that must be how it feels for the Islamofascists, though our onslaughts are more cultural than military (at least, they used to be).

I would not be sorry for rounding up anyone who threatened our survival. And if it's hard to tell who is threatening and who is not, you simply must generalize.
my problem here is that for the United States, "survival" means much more than victory in battle, but also implies the successful defense of the principles of liberty. so internment camps or the suspension of habeas corpus (Civil War) are small defeats, or at the very least collateral damage to our guiding principles and the special requirements of American "victory."

and, I've seen this statement pop up here once or twice before and it always irks me:
Fascism and socialism are pretty much identical. Mussolini was, after all, first and foremost a socialist.
Not even close.
Fascism:Socialism as Islamofascism:Islam.

David McDougall said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Jay said...

Just a couple of comments from muslim friends and acquaintances.

On 9/11 a muslim friend received many calls from back home inquiring about his safety here. He also received many calls from his Christian and Jewish friends here on the same subject. He then remarked that where he came from, if a Christian group had done what the 9/11 murderers did here, the muslims would hunt down and kill every Christian they could lay their hands on, but the people here are different.

One view of Islam's ideal is that of all the people living in harmony under the law. Apropos of this, the Saudi managerial elite, all educated in the USA have a saying to wit," America has Islam, but no muslims. Arabia has muslims but no Islam."

Anonymous said...

Didn't Christopher Hitchens come up with the word, or is that apocryphal? I think it's a cool word - cool as in stylish - but it's not really accurate. The ideology of the enemy is more akin to bolshevism than fascism. (This is Niall Ferguson's take. I happen to agree with him.) But Islamofascism is the word. It's been settled. If it had not been settled, I would nominate Global Totalitarian Jihadism. It's clunky but precise. Why the Global? Well, really, if it were local, would any of us give a shit?

KCFleming said...

Chris,
The research is far too extensive to cite on a blog in any other fashion. You decline to read the books, and dismiss some authors out of hand as 'propagandists' ( a convenient feint). Much as I would expect.

There is no proof you'd accept, so no further will be offered.The books I cited discuss the anti-Western stance and activities of the New Left in the US. Whether you believe it or not is immaterial. Their work has stood scrutiny. You and I are just posting on a blog, aren't we?

reader_iam said...

When deeds speak, words are nothing. ~African Proverb

KCFleming said...

Re: "Obviously no one is going to agree to read seven books that you recommend with no more explanation than a comma."

I put out books that have been around for years, some since the 1950s. But the left hasn't yet read them (well, except the few who slogged through them for book reviews, followed by a stiff drink and handwashing). Instead, it blithely dismisses their research as "propaganda". Certainly Chris was unaware of books that have been around for years (save for Conquest's, but he has covered similar ground going back to the 1980s) [...no link because no one really cares about this fact, so why waste my time?].

These books will go unread by the left forever. That they document repeated attempts by the American left to destroy the US government is simply uninteresting to them, and to you. (For Pete's sake, Sen. Kerry, while still supposedly in the military, himself sat in a meeting that discussed assassinating a US Senator.)

Chris asked for proof, but doesn't really want any. I daresay he wouldn't admit to any item of historical fact as sufficient proof that the left has a history of anti-West and anti-US activity. A history that does not reject violence qua violence, but only when employed by the US government.

So there is little point to offer any more than a book title followed by a comma Chris. He'd scroll through and dismiss whatever was written down. Why bother with invincible ignorance?

KCFleming said...

Witness (and others): Alger Hiss, a U.S. State Department official involved in the Yalta conference and the early United Nations, was a Soviet spy. Hotly contested at the time, this fact was later proven by details released by the Venona Project. There were in fact many US government officials spying for the Soviets.

In the 1960s, the Weathermen, Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), Black Panthers, and SLA, among other leftist radical groups, actively sought the overhtrow of the US government. All three organizations used violent means (bombings, armed robbberies, murder) to this end.

n 1971, Le Duc Tho (an original founder of the Communist Party of Indochina) and Madame Binh joined the North Vietnamese Communist delegation to the Paris Peace talks. John Kerry, still in the US military, has acknowledged that he "talked privately with a leading communist representative" there (likely LDT), that is, while a US soldier, he met with our enemies.

Leftists aren't anti-violence, just anti-US. Friedman is asking the left to become Truman or Kennedy Democrats, when the party now belongs to ideas that arose during the 1960s, which reject such an approach. It's just not possible, I argue.

KCFleming said...

N.B. "Leftist" is NOT synonymous with "Democrat".

KCFleming said...

Re: "...it's a much more efficient method for exchanging ideas than simply presenting reading lists, and then claiming I won't read the books because I don't want to know the truth. Weak."

I see. I suppose it is too much bother to read about anti-US activity by leftists from the 1930s through the 1990s.

Notwithstanding the fact that the whole "McCarthyist" attack is based on a falsehood, the forgotten 1960s radical left attempts at actual (not metaphorical) revolution, and the more recent shift to gradualism towards a social-democratic sort of socialism. It's of no interest to Chris because it lacks a quick link, and a snarky retort isn't possible.

As I said, there's no point posting with facts, because you'll never agree that they suggest what in fact they do. So why bother trying to convince Chris? because he finds arguments without links weak? Becauase he'd have to read books he'll never read? Because he thinks Horowitz and Charen lacks credibility (and fails to prove that, I note)? Meh. That is precisely my argument: the left cannot see the truth at all. It's categorically unable to do so. So friedman is wrong.

"Men occasionally stumble over the truth, but most of them pick themselves up and hurry off as if nothing had happened."
Winston Churchill

KCFleming said...

You knowledge of the SDS is incorrect.

read more here
"Those who no longer believed in the slow-moving, participatory democratic process that SDS advocated chose to branch out to radical and violent protests that bordered on terrorism. Four major events occurred in 1968 that slowly led to the culmination of the massive urban riots at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago."

SDSer Bernadine Dohrn stated, ‘I consider myself a revolutionary communist.’ and "She strongly advocated violence, believing it to be the only possible course of action against such a violent and repressive government. ...The Chicago convention turned into the revolution that SDS advocated, and once all hell broke loose, they organized into guerilla groups as they took the massive police attacks to the streets of Chicago."

The remainder of your post either counsels ignorance or know-nothingism. Both are without serious value, and do not merit review.