Monday, September 13, 2010

Burn the Koran or the Constitution 

From Daniel Greenfield: 

The media's coverage of the 9th anniversary of the Muslim murder of 3,000 people was overshadowed by their panicked coverage of the possibility that Terry Jones, the pastor of a tiny Florida church, might actually burn the Koran. Last week Newsweek ran Fareed Zakaria's piece insisting that Americans overreacted to 9/11. So instead the media showed us where their priorities lie, by shortchanging the dead, ignoring their killers and instead turning the pastor of a small Florida church into a villain for even talking about the possibility of torching a book, whose contents helped inspire 9/11. It's as if on Holocaust Memorial Day, the key topic of discussion was not the murder of 6,000,000 Jews, but a protester who wanted to get his Bic lighter close to Mein Kampf.

In the weeks leading up to the anniversary, the media had been sanctimoniously lecturing Americans that their  sensitivities regarding Ground Zero were irrelevant in the face of a Muslim desire to put up a massive and completely unnecessary Islamic complex in the area. Constitutional freedoms, real or imagined, trumped any sensitivities. But when a Gainesville pastor proposed returning a couple of copies of the Koran back to the environment by way of lighter fluid, suddenly freedom of speech and freedom of religion, and all that other stuff created by dead white men before the age of Walter Kronkite and CNN, were irrelevant in face of Muslim sensitivities.

Time Magazine and USA Today both ran polls asking whether burning the Koran should be criminalized as a hate crime. CNN gave a forum to a Dr. Muhammad Tahir-ul-Qadri to argue that burning a Koran would have been worse than 9/11 and warned that such actions "should be stopped by the U.S. government at any cost". Now Dr. Muhammad Tahir-ul-Qadri shows in his article that while he may not know the difference between "principal" and "principle", or "ensure" and "insure", he understands exactly how to push for the imposition of the horrifying barbarity of Islamic Sharia law in America.

In Dr. Qadri's own words: "any act of an individual or group which... hurts the feelings of 1.5 billion Muslim should be stopped at any cost." There are no details of just what "any cost" would imply, but certainly Dr. Qadri argues that Freedom of Speech cannot be used to protect anything that offends Muslims. And since just about everything from eating on Ramadan to liquor in taxi cabs to ice cream cones that look like Allah, has been known to offend Muslims, that means for September 11 you can kiss freedom goodbye. Or risk offending 1.5 billion Muslims. And we know what happens every time you offend the peaceful worshipers of the Religion of Peace. Riots, murder, terrorism and of course burning the American flag.
 
Go read the whole thing.

3 comments:

Trencherbone said...

The opposite of dhimmitude is harbitude http://crombouke.blogspot.com/2010/01/harbitude-harbis-with-attitude.html

revereridesagain said...

FOX has a breaking news headline up that Rauf is going to make some announcement about the mosque.

revereridesagain said...

Apparently it's just more taqiyaddayaddayadda. Aside from the thought-stopping invisibility cloak of "religion" that covers the monster totalitarian theocracy of Islam, it's the widespread ignorance of its background and workings that allow manipulators such as Rauf to gain credibility.

I've known "Raufs", known that pseudo-sincere expression, the manipulation and the hidden agenda. He is any cult leader writ large. The first line of defense is to not cooperate, not quietly listen without interrupting and asking pointed questions, not confront him with the facts of his own belief system and demand to know how his words can be true when they contradict the basic tenets of Islam. When he sidesteps, cut him off, start over, insist he answer the question. At the very least if you do it often enough it will make him angry enough to slip up and say something he'll regret. No credible interviewer should ever let him get away unchallenged with making a remark that the mooslim world will "explode" with violence if we exercise our First Amendment rights.