Robert Tracinski has an excellent treatment of The Cartoon Jihad, one of the better articles I've seen re: the War. His analysis of the Islamist threat is spot-on:
"Now, seventeen years later, the Muslim fanatics are making it clear: you don't have to come to our country, you don't have to be a Muslim. Even in your own countries and under your own laws, you will not be safe from our intimidation.
For the whole Western world, this is an opportunity to learn an important truth about the goal of the Islamists. Their goal is not to achieve any specific political demand or settlement. Their goal is submission: our submission to their will, to their laws, to their dictatorship — our submission, not just to one demand, but to any demand the Muslim mobs care to make...."
He then goes on to analyze the unimpressive roles played in the debate by the Left generally (its typical fawning before fascism these days) - and also by some on the right. The conclusion happens to be one I agree with, and a worthy reminder.
Thanks to our comments section, I can also recommend the "The Shame of the Invertebrate Liberals" article linked at L'Ombre D'Olivier (with important additional background) and Harry's place, and originally published in Worker's Liberty. Its message is amusingly convergent as it targets the same left and the right-wingers whom Tracinski whacked, from a totally opposite point on the political spectrum:
"Western governments who do not want to have their embassies burned down, or their trade with Islamic countries boycotted and ruined, or the lives of their nationals in Muslim countries placed in jeopardy, had better make themselves enforcers for the rules of a religion which their citizens do not accept. That is the demand.
They must curb free speech and free expression. Curb the freedom to criticism and mock and outspokenly denounce religion - the freedom from which over centuries most of our freedoms have been spun and consolidated."
True, but not all religions. The media's two-faced approach makes their lie of "sensitivity" stunningly obvious. Meanwhile, see Olivier's article for more evidence... apparently, the EU is looking at a "voluntary" code of press conduct. Meanwhile, Oregon University offers a classic illustration cited in "Our Darkening Sky: Postcards from the Edge," installing the Shari'a promoting and Wahabbist Muslim Students Association as censors of anything written in the school paper about Islam.
But Worker's Liberty goes on to make its most telling point - and this where the religious right's "yes, but..." corps especially needs to listen up:
"The issue is free speech, but it is not just that. It is not just a matter of finding and adhering to general and universal principles. The right to criticise and mock and denounce religion is not just one right among many similar rights. The freedom to criticise religion is, in history, the root out of which all other such freedoms have developed.
It was a long, slow development from the assertion by heretics and protestants - by Albigenses, Hussites, Wycliffites, Lutherans, Calvinists - of their right to disagree with the Catholic church and with each other, to our erstwhile right to freely express atheistic contempt and condemnation of religion — all religion.
It was not a matter of reaching an amicable agreement with the religious in the time of their strength and predominance. It was a matter of drawing a line between them and us and standing on it, of fighting them tenaciously to win the right to dissent and mock and criticise their entrenched bigotry.
Marx wrote truly in 1844, of a German society where religion had only recently been dominant and all-pervasive:
“The criticism of religion is the prerequisite of all criticism”. In history that is what it was.
It took us centuries of battles between dissenters and established religion, and the stages with which it was symbiotically entwined, to win the rights that the short-memoried invertebrate liberals now cravenly surrender!
The secular and social rights we have, the freedom from power-inflated superstitions armed to the teeth with the coercive power of a state, the right to think for ourselves and express our thoughts — all these we owe to the heretics who risked and often lost their lives in the struggle to let non-clerics read what they thought was the word of God, the Bible, and construe it for themselves in their own way.
The translator of the Bible whose work was the main basis of the King James version, William Tyndale, was in the early 16th century part of a free-thinking religious underground: he was kidnapped by Papal agents and burned at the stake. In 1880s Britain Charles Bradlaugh had to win four elections in succession before he gained the right for elected atheists to sit in the House of Commons as MPs without first hypocritically taking a religious oath. There were many many battles in between Tundale and Bradlaugh - and afterwards too. All that is being betrayed and prostituted by those who meekly accept the diktats of medievalist-minded political Islam. So are all those who now fight an equivalent battle for the same rights in Muslim countries."
“The criticism of religion is the prerequisite of all criticism”. Damn straight. We forget it at our peril.








Over in the UK the Harry's place blog has found excellent commentary
about the Muhammed cartoons from a far left website that has come up
with an excellent description of the MSM - "invertebrate liberals". I
wrote more at http://www.di2.nu/blog.htm?20060307
The article itself is http://www.workersliberty.org/node/view/5720 and seems to chime in quite well with this article
This cycle of denial and appeasement followed by the slow dawning of the truth is something we have seen before. Only this time, thankfully, the Islamists do not have the military ability to launch a blitzkrieg on an unsuspecting world, unless . . .
While I don't often find myself agreeing with Karl Marx, his point that "The criticism of religion is the prerequisite of all criticism" is bang-on.
Of course, that prerequisite also encompasses the religion he helped found, and its modern temples, imams, et. al....
Joe,
I had an Op-Ed in the Capital Times here in Madison that ran much of the same route, suprrising as The Cap Times is a Progressive paper.
"We must resist Islamist demand for submission"http://www.madison.com/tct/opinion/column/guest/index.php?ntid=72891
Remarkable, really. You've got a big story - Islam and the world - many in the media want to talk about, of whom only a few still are, less the head-hackers catch up with them. This leads to discussion of the self-censorship, culminating in Those Cartoons.
So the EU suggets self-censorship as a solution.
That's not going to fly, guys.