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Terror
in One Nation or Islam and Marxism:
Part II
By David Yerushalmi
In the
first of this two-part essay, two myths were singled
out. The first myth is
"Islam is peaceful but has
been captured and held hostage by the bin Ladens of
the world." We
should know this
is false (see
Part I). The second myth is
that the contrary evidence before us daily
-- that average
Moslems identify passionately with bin Laden and the
murder and mayhem he inflicts on America --
are not really the products of Islam
at all.
If
not Islam, what then? It's the
corrupt,
despotic Islamic regimes that
drive Arabs and Islamists to murder Jews,
Christians and Americans. The poor Muslims are
mad and international terrorism is their legitimate
"protest vote." This
is myth 2. But it is not promulgated by Arabs,
but by American liberal
(often Jewish)
multiculturalists.
Consider The
New York Times'
foreign affairs commentator and Pulitzer
prize winner
Thomas Friedman.
Friedman starts with an agenda and a problem. The
problem is Arab/Islamic terror and how to explain it.
So if
the explanation of Arab/Islamic
terror is Friedman's problem, what is his agenda?
Friedman's
agenda is liberalism. He is using the Islamic
terrorist phenomenon to pump for multiculturalism, in
America and in the West. And the aim? It's the
old liberal view that nation-states are at odds with
man's nature and that if we could but get beyond this
primitivism we would join hands across the globe,
share resources with the less fortunate, cease
industrialization and pollution, eliminate
nationalistic and religious wars, and embrace the
universal "globalized"
state: "The End of History," would
be at hand. Just Imagine.
In Friedman's
world, one need not necessarily eliminate national
borders, at least not right away. In his mind,
there is a process at work
that is "globalizing" the planet.
Modernity. Science. Instant communications. The
Internet. The mobile phone. Satellite dishes
beaming C.N.N. to every corner of the desert sands.
The hand-held computer. As these tools make
their way into a society, the grass roots will demand
even greater access to these fruits of modern western
liberal democracy and before you know it,
nationalistic, chauvanistic, and religous impetuses
for militarism, imperialism, and colonialism will disappear.
In his language, Friedman sees the third world, mainly
the Islamic one, moving from "olive trees"
to the "Lexus" almost as if it were destiny.
If
this is his agenda, what's the
connection to his problem? His problem is
explaining terrorism along cyrpto-Marxist lines
-- Arabs
and Moslems
are poor and despotically ruled and
therefore they kill people --
fitting the Marxist aim of an end of
nations quite
remarkably.
But
the problem is that
Friedman's explanation of Arab/Islamic
terrorism is false.
Poor, uneducated Arabs and the
more affluent,
educated ones overwhelmingly
reject the "tools" of modernity
and its politics the
world over and cling to
religious fundamentalism, hatred of all things western,
most notably America, Israel and the Jews .
The Arabs and Moslems
supposed to be suffering under Islamic
despots hate Americans, the West, Jews,
Christians. Maybe this is a
psychological problem? Projection?
Friedman,
undaunted, plows ahead. There are Arab despots
out there causing Arabs to become terrorists and
kill 5,000 innocent people in the
WTC. He
can point to things like
Arafat's refusal to take the Clinton-Barak
give-away at Camp David 2000 .
What really motivated Arafat's refusal was
his effort to generate a diversion for
the Arab masses he oppresses. He would have done
the deal at Camp David but it was more important
to keep the disgruntled masses at war
with Israel, the Jews, and even America, so
as to distract them from the misery and anomie
they experience at home. And
there's always Arafat's reliance upon the stiff-necked
Jews greedy for Arab land. Thus,
Friedman frequently
attacks Israel for
deepening Arafat's tyranny over the Arab masses.
The Jews' settlement policy is
part and
parcel of Arafat's oppression,
he opines. (For
a rebuttal to this historically and factually
mangled argument, see the
NBN "Anthony Lewis, Thomas Friedman and the
New York Times: Jews in Need of a
Panacea.")
But, Friedman and the others who
share his analytic bent go further.
They want to argue that the ugly, viscious
violence the world experiences almost daily at
the hands of Arab/Islamic
terrorists in one locale or another, is really
a sociological cry for help from the poor,
downtrodden victims of too many olive trees and
one too few Lexus luxury sedans. This
argument would
explain everything in the world once it
explained why terror flows equally
from varying regimes including Egypt,
Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Lebanon, the
PA, the Phillipines, Nigeria, the Sudan,
Afghanistan, Kuwait, Algeria, and Libya .
The only covering generalization that fits these
widely different places is terrorism by
Arabs and Moslems. To
Friedman's retort that these are all despotic
regimes (save possibly the Phillipines), one
might ask Friedman to explain why terror isn't
bred by the other despotic regimes around the
world.
Even the pro-capitalist free
trade types, who see in the
"globalization" of markets a ready
answer to poverty, despair and terror (see,
e.g., a recent op-ed in the Wall Street
Journal, "Globalization under seige,"
by John Micklethwait and Adrian Wooldridge [Nov.
9]), would like to suggest that there is nothing
inherent about Islam that breeds despotism,
"illiberal economic policies" (i.e.,
statism), and terror. Indeed, if these Arab
regimes would liberalize, it is suggested,
potential despots and terrorists would be so
busy enjoying the fruits of modernity that
they'd have no time for murder and mayhem.
Whether espoused by capitalists,
communists, global villagers, or Islamic
apologists, the theory that despotism, tyranny
and statism breeds world-wide anti-Western terror
is so patently false as to be laughable. If
this theory were even partially true, wouldn't one
expect the more than 1.2 billion Chinese to
have unleashed a terror network at least as
horrific as the Islamic version? Instead,
the Chinese that escape China merge quietly and
successfully into Western democracies and those
that remain behind the Great Barrier Wall attempt
to bring democracy by lying down in front of
communist tanks.
Moreover, are all of these Islamic
malcontents so stupid as not to see the writing on
the wall? Are they all so easily fooled,
both the illiterate and the college educated, that
all of their domestic troubles would disappear if
only they could wipe out a few thousand more Americans
in the landmark of choice? Or, is there
something specific about Islam, as there was about
Marxism, that justifies the purposeful murder of
innocent civilians?
Or, viewed from the other angle,
why do so many of the Moslems living in the lap of
luxury and freedom in the West voice support for
bin Laden? Indeed, we learn from recent surveys
that 61 percent of Moslems
in Great Britain say U.S. efforts to capture or
kill Osama bin Laden are not justified, and that
fully 40 percent believe his war against the
United States is justifiable. These Moslems
have plenty of luxury car sedans. And, as we
know, most of those involved in the September 11th
operation were also fully articulated members of
the middle- and upper-classes in their respective
countries and had the option and privelege to
study in the best schools in Europe and the U.S.
Something is clearly driving Moslem
hatred of America and the West, even as a
substantial number of Moslems live and enjoy the
benefits of the free world. How does a
Moslem wake up early in London, sipping his tea,
reading the London Times and checking his
stock portfolio while justifying the murder of
thousands of American men, women and children in
cold blood? This question escapes Friedman.
His
answer is olive trees and Lexus
sedans.
But, as Part I to this essay
pointed out, understanding Islam and its drive for
the One Universal State as the flip side of the
Leftist coin stamped with the Marxist rhetoric of
universal egalitarianism is the starting point of
any serious inquiry.
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