Intimidating critics of Islam – Rick Santorum on Wilders

The Elephant in the Room: Intimidating critics of Islam

Politicians and citizens who raise questions about the religion are targeted.

We lost more than a million jobs in the past few months, the headlines remind us. So last month’s story about a Dutch court’s ruling that Geert Wilders was “inciting hatred and discrimination” – and that “it is in the public interest to prosecute” him – understandably didn’t make the American news.

Did Wilders rip off a minority in a Madoff-style Ponzi scheme? No, he’s a member of the Dutch parliament, and his precise villainy was releasing a 15-minute film. Entitled Fitna, it suggests a direct link between certain verses of the Koran and acts of terrorism.

Not to be outdone, the United Kingdom this week banned Wilders from entering the country. Its reasoning: His “presence in the U.K. would pose a genuine, present, and sufficiently serious threat to one of the fundamental interests of society.” A letter from the home secretary went on to tell Wilders that “your statements about Muslims and their beliefs, as expressed in your film Fitna and elsewhere, would threaten community harmony and therefore public security.”

In 2007, Cambridge University Press destroyed unsold copies of Alms for Jihad after it was sued by Khalid bin Mahfouz, a Saudi-Irish businessman whom the book accused of financing al-Qaeda. So much for academics standing up against book-burning.

In 2005, reporters from the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten were forced into hiding after publishing a series of 12 cartoons about Muhammad. Islamic fundamentalists found the images blasphemous and threatened to bomb the paper’s offices and kill its cartoonists – apparently, in certain quarters, an alternative to a letter to the editor.

Last year, at the urging of the Canadian Islamic Congress, author Mark Steyn was forced to defend himself against charges of racism and “Islamophobia” that were filed with three Canadian human-rights commissions, based on his columns in Maclean’s magazine.

And, following a 2008 U.N. resolution urging nations to outlaw “defamation of religion,” several nations – including Italy, the Netherlands and France – are attempting to ban “hate speech” against religious groups. [Creeping Sharia – actually it’s only speech critical of Islam]

All of these incidents are calculated to intimidate critics of Islam in Europe and across the West. The message in the European Union is clear: Politicians, religious figures, and even private citizens with religiously and politically incorrect opinions will be subject not only to Muslim protest, but to criminal prosecution and violent retribution.

What publisher will print Steyn’s next book if it can be labeled a hate crime and banned in most countries? “Pretty soon, your little book is looking a lot less commercially viable,” Steyn has said. “At the end of the day, there’ll be a lot of . . . American books that will go unpublished here in America.”

In addition, these incidents deflect attention away from real – rather than trumped-up – religious discrimination. In the arena of actual persecution of religious minorities, Arab and Islamic nations are much of the problem.

Look at the U.S. State Department’s 2008 Report on International Religious Freedom. Among the dozens of limitations on religious freedom in the Arab-Islamic world are the crimes of apostasy – converting from Islam to another religion – and blasphemy against the prophet Muhammad, both punishable by death under Muslim Sharia law. Coptic Christians are, at best, second-class citizens in Egypt; Baha’is are savagely persecuted in Iran; and churches and synagogues are banned in Saudi Arabia, as is any non-Muslim religious activity in public.

This is not a front- or even back-page story in the American press today. Why? Because it has nothing to do with the economy.

The gathering storm I have been warning of for years has now formed over the West. Yet instead of fighting the gradual incursion of Sharia and the demands of an intolerant, even militant Islam, Westerners are cowering and fatalistic. Last year, the Archbishop of Canterbury conceded that acceptance of some parts of Sharia in Britain seemed “unavoidable.”

So how did the market do today?

hat tip to Pundit & Pundette

9 Responses

  1. In my book Wilders is a hero. A man of principles and an honest man. Muslims have managed to scare people (and specially politicians) into going along with their sick agenda. If speaking your mind is a crime, then so be it, I’ll speak my mind about Islam every day until the pigs fly. Please try to stop me Muslims.

  2. I’ve often wondered how the the great civilizations of history, the Greeks, the Romans, the Egyptians, among others managed to collapse into the societies they are today. I’m starting to think it was suicide. It would be a shame if America became the victim of its own submissiveness.

  3. The comments posted at the original publication– Philadelphia Inquirer– are worth a look. Increasingly, it seems, the “neutral” on line sources provide responses from the American public that reveal knowledgeable, non-bigoted views on Islam. Most often these expressions overwhelm the input of dhimmis or hostile Moslem apologists.

    Whether this observation is a) true or b) worth getting enthusiastic about I cannot say. It is difficult to say because the majority of liberals who say “What threat? Why are you so afraid?” are much less likely to chime on these forums than those of us who recognize the threat and feel compelled to counter it, at least with words.

    But it does seem as if the “Islam deniers” are retreating deeper into their complacent ignorance at the same time that others are waking up and increasing their knowledge and resolve to reverse the situation. Denial is tenacious and it is difficult to see a meeting of the minds in the future. Either we will submit or we will resist, together as one.

  4. Hannon, tough call and one that crossed my mind earlier as well…the majority of comments here are supportive, but then again we don’t get thousands of comments and it is most likely that only those with some knowledge of the threat and interest in it come here regularly…we can’t even get radio show hosts to give us a shout out even though they spend weeks on end clamoring about Islam this and Islam that…you rarely see Robbert Spencer on the news, did Geert Wilders make any US news reel? Even 9/11 didn’t galvanize the left very long – just look at how many liberal money hungry lawyers are ready and willing to pocket Saudi cash to defend Islamic terrorists? Not to mention how much cash the Clinton’s raked in from the Saudi’s…and then there is Obama who had call centers in Gaza…it’s almost futile…but it is a fight that has to be fought…

    That being said today was our best day ever!!! So maybe people are waking up as people like you spread the word!

  5. Thanks, creeping, and your points are well taken.

    Gauging these things is tough. How easy would it have been to figure American feelings about Germany before they invaded Poland? My sense is that even if we bore the brunt of a 9/11 equivalent every month for several years, the fence would scarcely move. People convinced in their liberal piety that Moslems are only reacting to our poor treatment of them won’t change their minds. You know what I mean? Those folks will never have any feeling of defending Western Civilization. That is a corrupt notion to them (!). As someone said recently, when was the last time you heard any US president even say the word “civilization”?

    If it remains a minority of us all along that is OK, so long as we can help awaken some of the willing and increase our (disproportionate!) political strength.

  6. PS Veering off a little, you may have read about a recent study that suggests that liberalism and conservatism are genetically determined, at least partially. (I can find the reference if you need it). The more I think about it and about how incredibly stubborn people can be in their political beliefs, there may well be truth in this. And since so many have left this faith or that faith behind, they may be especially defensive of their political beliefs because that now comprises most of their philosophy. Whatever one thinks of organized religion, it is a better bulwark against Islam (and other threats) than a strictly secular arrangement; we are living the truth of this now.

    Related to this idea is another you’ve probably heard of, the allegorical society of sheep, wolves and sheepdogs.

    The combination of these two ideas leads to a very non-liberal view of human behavior. That we run more on instinct than the rationalists and intellectual elite would have us believe. Understanding this is vital to repelling Islam.

  7. I do feel that you are making a difference, and that America is finally waking up so keep on doing your work. Liberals can wake up too, just give them facts and articles.

    • Thanks for the comment – if you have any ideas how to get those facts across please let us know.

If sharia law continues spreading, you'll have less and less freedom of speech - so speak while you can!

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