Sharing Sam's Sentiments
Courtesy of my girlfriend, Jen, who has an uncanny knack to both sharpen and encourage me with all kinds of news articles and other information I routinely miss while my head is buried in a book or fixated on mesmerizing TV programming (I'm not apologetic ~ "The Office" is classic entertaiment), I offer a full reprint of this fascinating and relevant (especially to our discussion on this blog over the past few months) article which appeared in the Los Angeles Times this week. It inspires and encourages me that people are beginning to see the truth across political aisles and in spite of political affiliations. The day American politics begins to altruistically serve the people instead of people bowing before political agendas will be one to celebrate! I have hope I'll see it.
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Head-in-the-Sand Liberals: Western civilization really is at risk from Muslim extremists.
~ By Sam Harris
SAM HARRIS is the author of "The End of Faith: Religion, Terror and the Future of Reason." His next book, "Letter to a Christian Nation," will be published this week by Knopf.
September 18, 2006
"TWO YEARS AGO I published a book highly critical of religion, "The End of Faith." In it, I argued that the world's major religions are genuinely incompatible, inevitably cause conflict and now prevent the emergence of a viable, global civilization. In response, I have received many thousands of letters and e-mails from priests, journalists, scientists, politicians, soldiers, rabbis, actors, aid workers, students — from people young and old who occupy every point on the spectrum of belief and nonbelief.
This has offered me a special opportunity to see how people of all creeds and political persuasions react when religion is criticized. I am here to report that liberals and conservatives respond very differently to the notion that religion can be a direct cause of human conflict.
This difference does not bode well for the future of liberalism.
Perhaps I should establish my liberal bone fides at the outset. I'd like to see taxes raised on the wealthy, drugs decriminalized and homosexuals free to marry. I also think that the Bush administration deserves most of the criticism it has received in the last six years — especially with respect to its waging of the war in Iraq, its scuttling of science and its fiscal irresponsibility.
But my correspondence with liberals has convinced me that liberalism has grown dangerously out of touch with the realities of our world — specifically with what devout Muslims actually believe about the West, about paradise and about the ultimate ascendance of their faith.
On questions of national security, I am now as wary of my fellow liberals as I am of the religious demagogues on the Christian right.This may seem like frank acquiescence to the charge that "liberals are soft on terrorism." It is, and they are.
A cult of death is forming in the Muslim world — for reasons that are perfectly explicable in terms of the Islamic doctrines of martyrdom and jihad. The truth is that we are not fighting a "war on terror." We are fighting a pestilential theology and a longing for paradise.
This is not to say that we are at war with all Muslims. But we are absolutely at war with those who believe that death in defense of the faith is the highest possible good, that cartoonists should be killed for caricaturing the prophet and that any Muslim who loses his faith should be butchered for apostasy.
Unfortunately, such religious extremism is not as fringe a phenomenon as we might hope. Numerous studies have found that the most radicalized Muslims tend to have better-than-average educations and economic opportunities.
Given the degree to which religious ideas are still sheltered from criticism in every society, it is actually possible for a person to have the economic and intellectual resources to build a nuclear bomb — and to believe that he will get 72 virgins in paradise. And yet, despite abundant evidence to the contrary, liberals continue to imagine that Muslim terrorism springs from economic despair, lack of education and American militarism.
At its most extreme, liberal denial has found expression in a growing subculture of conspiracy theorists who believe that the atrocities of 9/11 were orchestrated by our own government. A nationwide poll conducted by the Scripps Survey Research Center at Ohio University found that more than a third of Americans suspect that the federal government "assisted in the 9/11 terrorist attacks or took no action to stop them so the United States could go to war in the Middle East;" 16% believe that the twin towers collapsed not because fully-fueled passenger jets smashed into them but because agents of the Bush administration had secretly rigged them to explode.
Such an astonishing eruption of masochistic unreason could well mark the decline of liberalism, if not the decline of Western civilization. There are books, films and conferences organized around this phantasmagoria, and they offer an unusually clear view of the debilitating dogma that lurks at the heart of liberalism: Western power is utterly malevolent, while the powerless people of the Earth can be counted on to embrace reason and tolerance, if only given sufficient economic opportunities.
I don't know how many more engineers and architects need to blow themselves up, fly planes into buildings or saw the heads off of journalists before this fantasy will dissipate. The truth is that there is every reason to believe that a terrifying number of the world's Muslims now view all political and moral questions in terms of their affiliation with Islam. This leads them to rally to the cause of other Muslims no matter how sociopathic their behavior. This benighted religious solidarity may be the greatest problem facing civilization and yet it is regularly misconstrued, ignored or obfuscated by liberals.
Given the mendacity and shocking incompetence of the Bush administration — especially its mishandling of the war in Iraq — liberals can find much to lament in the conservative approach to fighting the war on terror. Unfortunately, liberals hate the current administration with such fury that they regularly fail to acknowledge just how dangerous and depraved our enemies in the Muslim world are.
Recent condemnations of the Bush administration's use of the phrase "Islamic fascism" are a case in point. There is no question that the phrase is imprecise — Islamists are not technically fascists, and the term ignores a variety of schisms that exist even among Islamists — but it is by no means an example of wartime propaganda, as has been repeatedly alleged by liberals.
In their analyses of U.S. and Israeli foreign policy, liberals can be relied on to overlook the most basic moral distinctions. For instance, they ignore the fact that Muslims intentionally murder noncombatants, while we and the Israelis (as a rule) seek to avoid doing so. Muslims routinely use human shields, and this accounts for much of the collateral damage we and the Israelis cause; the political discourse throughout much of the Muslim world, especially with respect to Jews, is explicitly and unabashedly genocidal.
Given these distinctions, there is no question that the Israelis now hold the moral high ground in their conflict with Hamas and Hezbollah. And yet liberals in the United States and Europe often speak as though the truth were otherwise.
We are entering an age of unchecked nuclear proliferation and, it seems likely, nuclear terrorism. There is, therefore, no future in which aspiring martyrs will make good neighbors for us. Unless liberals realize that there are tens of millions of people in the Muslim world who are far scarier than Dick Cheney, they will be unable to protect civilization from its genuine enemies.
Increasingly, Americans will come to believe that the only people hard-headed enough to fight the religious lunatics of the Muslim world are the religious lunatics of the West. Indeed, it is telling that the people who speak with the greatest moral clarity about the current wars in the Middle East are members of the Christian right, whose infatuation with biblical prophecy is nearly as troubling as the ideology of our enemies. Religious dogmatism is now playing both sides of the board in a very dangerous game.
While liberals should be the ones pointing the way beyond this Iron Age madness, they are rendering themselves increasingly irrelevant. Being generally reasonable and tolerant of diversity, liberals should be especially sensitive to the dangers of religious literalism. But they aren't.
The same failure of liberalism is evident in Western Europe, where the dogma of multiculturalism has left a secular Europe very slow to address the looming problem of religious extremism among its immigrants. The people who speak most sensibly about the threat that Islam poses to Europe are actually fascists.
To say that this does not bode well for liberalism is an understatement: It does not bode well for the future of civilization.
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3 Comments:
That is an interesting article. Sam Harris has an unusual perspective and seems to have taken the first steps toward a world view that can co-exist with a Christian world view. However, he clearly sees "the radical Christian right" as lunatics that are a threat to society. That is a natural conclusion if you can't accept the truth of the Bible or even the concept that there is such a thing as "absolute truth". He may serve to bring some of the wackiest liberals to a place where we can communicate but clearly he is also missing what is important to those of us who are Christians first and Americans second. The truth is that adherants of Islam are at war with Judaism and Christianity. It is not Iraq nor Iran nor any other geographical region (even the loosly defined Middle East). It is the nation of Islam. And it is well established in England and USA and every other country. They truly hate any religion that excludes the teachings of Muhammad. And they are more committed and more willing to state clearly who their enemies are. Sam Harris is right, we are not at war with terrorists nor Iraq but rather a belief system. The sad and frightening reality is that Americans are not ready to hear that.
I agree with you on all counts.
I posted this article because it encourages me in that someone so deeply ensconced in the more liberal "camp" among us is beginning to see the light of the truth about F.I.B.'s. It encourages me that more astute and shared understanding of the TRUTH about stringent adherents of Islam is beginning to be more univerally accepted. Politics needs to get the heck out of the way and shove over to make room for the truth to begin soaking in. Soon.
This article, though I am pained that its' author omits the grace of Jesus in the equation, gives me ample reason to hope that we are moving in the direction of BELIEVING that we are at war with deadly intolerance bred by one increasingly rampant religious ideology that transcends the foreign geographical boundaries our minds tend to categorize "terrorism" within.
Right on, Roxy.
I also liked the article. I think part of the problem that people are having in dealing with this is that they are becoming wedged between 'the Rock' and a hard place. Meaning that they don't want to agree with the Christians who say that Islam is evil, but it's getting harder deny that truth.
If Christians are right, then they have to consider Christ, and that's the last thing prideful man wants to do. So they cling to the illusion that Islam is a religion of Peace.
And that moderate Muslims exist who really don't want Islam to rule the world.
As I just wrote elsewhere-3 billion Muslims are nothing more than 3 billion sinners needing the true Savior, Jesus Christ. And some are hearing and responding to the Gospel-'Voice of the Martyrs' recent newsletter tells of brave Christians sharing the Gospel even in Iran.
I'm so glad that I read the end of the book, so we know how it all turns out. Have a good night, Lachen and guests.
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