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Sunday, October 21, 2007 | Reason : In the News | print version Print | Comments

Document Interview with Ayaan Hirsi Ali

by Ayaan Hirsi Ali, Rogier van Bakel, Reason Online

Thanks to Linda Ward Selbie for the link.

Reposted from:
http://www.reason.com/news/show/122457.html

"THE TROUBLE IS THE WEST" - Ayaan Hirsi Ali on Islam, immigration, civil liberties, and the fate of the West.

It was a heinous murder that made the best-selling memoirist Ayaan Hirsi Ali internationally famous, but she was neither the victim nor the perpetrator. The corpse was that of Theo van Gogh, a writer and filmmaker who in November 2004 was stabbed, slashed, and shot on an Amsterdam street by a Dutch-born Muslim extremist of Moroccan descent.

The assassin, driven to rage by Submission, a short film Van Gogh had made about the poor treatment of women under Islam, left no doubt about his motives. A letter he pinned to his victim's chest with a knife was a call to jihad. It was also a death threat against Ayaan Hirsi Ali, a member of the Dutch parliament. She had persuaded Van Gogh to make Submission and had written the movie's script.

Then 35, Hirsi Ali had already seen plenty of turmoil. She had endured a heavily religious upbringing in Somalia, Saudi Arabia, and Kenya, including a brutal circumcision to keep her "pure." She chafed under the yoke of an embittered and sometimes violent mother and longed for a father who was perennially absent—often imprisoned or in hiding, due to his opposition to the Somali dictator Siad Barré.

In July 1992, Hirsi Ali defied her family's wishes, refusing to marry the man to whom her father had betrothed her. She fled Kenya for the Netherlands, gaining refugee status and finding employment as a cleaning woman and a factory worker. She assimilated quickly, learning perfect Dutch and studying political science, a choice that led to a job as an analyst at the Labor Party's think tank. There, to the consternation of her bosses, who had been courting the Muslim vote, Hirsi Ali worried out loud about Holland's ever-burgeoning immigrant community and the rising tensions between Muslims and the native Dutch.

In Rotterdam, the Netherlands' second-largest city, immigrants—mostly Muslims from Morocco and Turkey—had become a majority, with Amsterdam well on its way to a similar demographic sea change. That might not have been a problem, Hirsi Ali argued publicly, if the Dutch had only encouraged the newcomers to embrace the country's culture the way she had. But the country's multiculturalist mind-set, paired with the national inclination to tolerate almost any form of behavior, had led to minorities' ghettoization and to a certain lawlessness. Dutch Muslims were largely content to stay in the neighborhoods they formed together, Hirsi Ali observed. Raised on a steady diet of Islamic preaching and Middle Eastern and North African satellite TV channels, many of them rejected the Dutch way of life as hedonistic, even sinful.

Hirsi Ali wasn't shy about mentioning the Muslim community's self-imposed insularity, or the crime wave involving disproportionate numbers of second- and third-generation Dutch Moroccans. But mostly she agitated against the oppression of local Muslim women by male family members: forced marriages, denial of education opportunities, domestic slave labor, and, in some horrific cases, honor killings. By extension, she criticized the native Dutch for turning a blind eye to the injustices in their midst, and for tolerating those who themselves refused to tolerate alternative lifestyles.

It was a shock and a revelation to see a young, black, Muslim woman championing causes previously associated with middle-aged white male pundits who had often been dismissed as racists or Islamophobes. Hirsi Ali's star rose quickly, especially after she accepted an offer from the VVD, Holland's pro-market party, to run for parliament. By then, she was receiving a stream of death threats from radical Dutch Muslims and their sympathizers. Once she won her parliamentary seat, the hate mail intensified. A security detail shadowed her everywhere. Van Gogh's murder proved the threat was all too real.

Throughout her parliamentary career, which lasted from 2003 to 2006, Hirsi Ali reaped both praise and controversy. She continued writing and speaking out in favor of free speech and the right to offend. 2004 was an especially turbulent year both privately and publicly. In May she swore off Islam and all religion. Van Gogh's assassination made her internationally famous, and she garnered a spot on Time's list of the 100 most influential people in the world and a European of the Year Award from the European editors of Reader's Digest. Even the readers of De Volkskrant, a newspaper that had long embraced unfettered multiculturalism, were enthralled: They chose Hirsi Ali as their Dutch Person of the Year at the end of 2004.

In May and June of last year, a tempest in a teacup erupted over her alleged truth-twisting at the time of her Dutch asylum application. (She allegedly used false biographical data.) Hirsi Ali had already decided to move on. The publication of her autobiography, Infidel, was imminent. Early whispers about a resident fellow position with the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative think tank in Washington, D.C., turned out to be correct. Hirsi Ali moved to America, and she joined the institute in the fall of last year.

In June, Hirsi Ali talked with the Dutch-born journalist Rogier van Bakel in Washington, D.C. Comments can be sent to letters@reason.com.

Reason: Tell me how you came to the United States and the American Enterprise Institute.

Ayaan Hirsi Ali: I was a member of parliament back in the Netherlands, and my party asked if I wanted to run for the next elections, in 2007. I declined. Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende's cabinet was very precarious anyway; every two or three weeks we thought the government would fall, which would mean elections, which would force all of us members of parliament to think about what we were going to do next. So I had already decided I didn't want to run for elections, and wanted instead to go back to being a scholar. Cynthia Schneider, who was then the U.S. ambassador to the Netherlands, said she'd be delighted to take me around in the United States and introduce me—to the Brookings Institution, the Johns Hopkins Institute, Georgetown University, the RAND Corporation. I balked at paying a visit to the American Enterprise Institute, though.

Reason: Why the initial aversion?

Hirsi Ali: Because I thought they would be religious, and I had become an atheist. And I don't consider myself a conservative. I consider myself a classical liberal.

Anyway, the Brookings Institution did not react. Johns Hopkins said they didn't have enough money. The RAND Corporation wants its people to spend their days and nights in libraries figuring out statistics, and I'm very bad at statistics. But at AEI they were enthusiastic. It turns out that I have complete freedom of thought, freedom of expression. No one here imposed their religion on me, and I don't impose my atheism on them.

Reason: Do you see eye to eye with high-profile AEI hawks such as former Bush speechwriter David Frum and former U.N. Ambassador John Bolton?

Hirsi Ali: Most of the time I do. For instance, I completely and utterly agree with John Bolton that talking to Iran is a sheer waste of time.

When I was with the Labor Party, I'd get into trouble because the party bosses determined that some of what I wrote, or proposed to write about, wasn't conducive to their policies or to electoral success. But at AEI there are no such restraints. As long you can argue it with some intelligence, no one interferes.

Reason: Religion is hardly inconsequential in European politics, but it's virtually a prerequisite for electability here: If you're not devout, forget about it; you won't be elected to public office.

Hirsi Ali: I'm not going to become president, and I'm not going to run for Congress. Your Constitution doesn't allow it. [Laughs.]

Reason: But do you feel at all uncomfortable with that heavy emphasis on religion in American public life?

Hirsi Ali: Yes. And the good thing is—and that's what I've tried to tell all my European friends—I'm allowed to say so.

I think that it's a great mistake for this country to reject a very good atheist. I mean, when you have two candidates, and one is an atheist and the other is a religious person and the atheist would make the better public official, it's a great loss not to elect him. Anyway, atheists here can forward their agenda and fight back safely without risking violence.

I accept that there are multitudes seeking God, seeking meaning, and so on, but if they reject atheism, I would rather they became modern-day Catholics or Jews than that they became Muslims. Because my Catholic and Jewish colleagues are fine. The concept of God in Jewish orthodoxy is one where you're having constant quarrels with God. Where I come from, in Islam, the only concept of God is you submit to Him and you obey His commands, no quarreling allowed. Quarreling or even asking questions means you raise yourself to the same level as Him, and in Islam that's the worst sin you can commit. Jews should be proselytizing about a God that you can quarrel with. Catholics should be proselytizing about a God who is love, who represents a hereafter where there's no hell, who wants you to lead a life where you can confess your sins and feel much better afterwards. Those are lovely concepts of God. They can't compare to the fire-breathing Allah who inspires jihadism and totalitarianism.

Reason: In Infidel, you point out many positive religious experiences you had as a Muslim. For instance, you describe Mecca's Grand Mosque as a place of vastness and beauty. You praise the kindness that you experienced there, a sense of community, a lack of prejudice. Are there times when you miss that aspect of being a practicing believer?

Hirsi Ali: I'd love to go and visit the Mosque in Mecca again, just for the sheer beauty of it, not for God—much the way a non-Catholic might go to Vatican City because of the beauty of the buildings and the artifacts. There's a sense of calm in such places that's wonderful, and there's the awe you feel because of what humanity can accomplish.

But do I miss the religious experience? The feelings of belonging and family and community were powerful, but the price in terms of freedom was too high. In order to be able to live free, I've accepted living with the pain of missing my family. As for community, I experienced a very deep sense of community with my friends in Holland.

Reason: Should we acknowledge that organized religion has sometimes sparked precisely the kinds of emancipation movements that could lift Islam into modern times? Slavery in the United States ended in part because of opposition by prominent church members and the communities they galvanized. The Polish Catholic Church helped defeat the Jaruzelski puppet regime. Do you think Islam could bring about similar social and political changes?

Hirsi Ali: Only if Islam is defeated. Because right now, the political side of Islam, the power-hungry expansionist side of Islam, has become superior to the Sufis and the Ismailis and the peace-seeking Muslims.

Reason: Don't you mean defeating radical Islam?

Hirsi Ali: No. Islam, period. Once it's defeated, it can mutate into something peaceful. It's very difficult to even talk about peace now. They're not interested in peace.

Reason: We have to crush the world's 1.5 billion Muslims under our boot? In concrete terms, what does that mean, "defeat Islam"?

Hirsi Ali: I think that we are at war with Islam. And there's no middle ground in wars. Islam can be defeated in many ways. For starters, you stop the spread of the ideology itself; at present, there are native Westerners converting to Islam, and they're the most fanatical sometimes. There is infiltration of Islam in the schools and universities of the West. You stop that. You stop the symbol burning and the effigy burning, and you look them in the eye and flex your muscles and you say, "This is a warning. We won't accept this anymore." There comes a moment when you crush your enemy.

Reason: Militarily?

Hirsi Ali: In all forms, and if you don't do that, then you have to live with the consequence of being crushed.

Reason: Are we really heading toward anything so ominous?

Hirsi Ali: I think that's where we're heading. We're heading there because the West has been in denial for a long time. It did not respond to the signals that were smaller and easier to take care of. Now we have some choices to make. This is a dilemma: Western civilization is a celebration of life—everybody's life, even your enemy's life. So how can you be true to that morality and at the same time defend yourself against a very powerful enemy that seeks to destroy you?

Reason: George Bush, not the most conciliatory person in the world, has said on plenty of occasions that we are not at war with Islam.

Hirsi Ali: If the most powerful man in the West talks like that, then, without intending to, he's making radical Muslims think they've already won. There is no moderate Islam. There are Muslims who are passive, who don't all follow the rules of Islam, but there's really only one Islam, defined as submission to the will of God. There's nothing moderate about it.

Reason: So when even a hard-line critic of Islam such as Daniel Pipes says, "Radical Islam is the problem, but moderate Islam is the solution," he's wrong?

Hirsi Ali: He's wrong. Sorry about that.

Reason: Explain to me what you mean when you say we have to stop the burning of our flags and effigies in Muslim countries. Why should we care?

Hirsi Ali: We can make fun of George Bush. He's our president. We elected him. And the queen of England, they can make fun of her within Britain and so on. But on an international level, this has gone too far. You know, the Russians, they don't burn American flags. The Chinese don't burn American flags. Have you noticed that? They don't defile the symbols of other civilizations. The Japanese don't do it. That never happens.

Reason: Isn't that a double standard? You want us to be able to say about Islam whatever we want—and I certainly agree with that. But then you add that people in Muslim countries should under all circumstances respect our symbols, or else.

Hirsi Ali: No, no, no.

Reason: We should be able to piss on a copy of the Koran or lampoon Muhammad, but they shouldn't be able to burn the queen in effigy. That's not a double standard?

Hirsi Ali: No, that's not what I'm saying. In Iran a nongovernmental organization has collected money, up to 150,000 British pounds, to kill Salman Rushdie. That's a criminal act, but we are silent about that.

Reason: We are?

Hirsi Ali: Yes. What happened? Have you seen any political response to it?

Reason: The fatwa against Rushdie has been the subject of repeated official anger and protests since 1989.

Hirsi Ali: I don't know. The British sailors who were kidnapped this year—what happened? Nothing happened. The West keeps giving the impression that it's OK, so the extremists will get away with it. Saudi Arabia is an economic partner, a partner in defense. On the other hand, they—Saudi Arabia, wealthy Saudi people—spread Islam. They have a sword on their flag. That's the double standard.

Reason: I want my government to protest the Rushdie fatwa. I'm not so sure they ought to diplomatically engage some idiots burning a piece of cloth or a straw figure in the streets of Islamabad. Isn't there a huge difference between the two?

Hirsi Ali: It's not just a piece of cloth. It's a symbol. In a tribal mind-set, if I'm allowed to take something and get away with it, I'll come back and take some more. In fact, I'll come and take the whole place, especially since it's my holy obligation to spread Islam to the outskirts of the earth and I know I'll be rewarded in heaven. At that point, I've only done my religious obligation while you're still sitting there rationalizing that your own flag is a piece of cloth.

We have to get serious about this. The Egyptian dictatorship would not allow many radical imams to preach in Cairo, but they're free to preach in giant mosques in London. Why do we allow it?

Reason: You're in favor of civil liberties, but applied selectively?

Hirsi Ali: No. Asking whether radical preachers ought to be allowed to operate is not hostile to the idea of civil liberties; it's an attempt to save civil liberties. A nation like this one is based on civil liberties, and we shouldn't allow any serious threat to them. So Muslim schools in the West, some of which are institutions of fascism that teach innocent kids that Jews are pigs and monkeys—I would say in order to preserve civil liberties, don't allow such schools.

Reason: In Holland, you wanted to introduce a special permit system for Islamic schools, correct?

Hirsi Ali: I wanted to get rid of them. I wanted to have them all closed, but my party said it wouldn't fly. Top people in the party privately expressed that they agreed with me, but said, "We won't get a majority to do that," so it never went anywhere.

Reason: Well, your proposal went against Article 23 of the Dutch Constitution, which guarantees that religious movements may teach children in religious schools and says the government must pay for this if minimum standards are met. So it couldn't be done. Would you in fact advocate that again?

Hirsi Ali: Oh, yeah.

Reason: Here in the United States, you'd advocate the abolition of—

Hirsi Ali: All Muslim schools. Close them down. Yeah, that sounds absolutist. I think 10 years ago things were different, but now the jihadi genie is out of the bottle. I've been saying this in Australia and in the U.K. and so on, and I get exactly the same arguments: The Constitution doesn't allow it. But we need to ask where these constitutions came from to start with—what's the history of Article 23 in the Netherlands, for instance? There were no Muslim schools when the constitution was written. There were no jihadists. They had no idea.

Reason: Do you believe that the U.S. Constitution, the Bill of Rights—documents from more than 200 ago—ought to change?

Hirsi Ali: They're not infallible. These Western constitutions are products of the Enlightenment. They're products of reason, and reason dictates that you can only progress when you can analyze the circumstances and act accordingly. So now that we live under different conditions, the threat is different. Constitutions can be adapted, and they are, sometimes. The American Constitution has been amended a number of times. With the Dutch Constitution, I think the latest adaptation was in 1989. Constitutions are not like the Koran—nonnegotiable, never-changing.

Look, in a democracy, it's like this: I suggest, "Let's close Muslim schools." You say, "No, we can't do it." The problem that I'm pointing out to you gets bigger and bigger. Then you say, "OK, let's somehow discourage them," and still the problem keeps on growing, and in another few years it gets so bad that I belatedly get what I wanted in the first place.

I respect that it needs to happen this way, but there's a price for the fact that you and I didn't share these insights earlier, and the longer we wait, the higher the price. In itself the whole process is not a bad thing. People and communities and societies learn through experience. The drawback is, in this case, that "let's learn from experience" means other people's lives will be taken.

Reason: When I read Ian Buruma's review of your book in The New York Times, I felt he wasn't being fair to you when he wrote that you "espouse an absolutist way of a perfectly enlightened west at war with the demonic world of Islam." But maybe that's a pretty apt description of what you believe.

Hirsi Ali: No, that's not fair. I don't think that the West is perfect, and I think that standing up and defending modern society from going back to the law of the jungle is not being absolutist.

I don't know what Buruma saw when he went to Holland [to research Theo van Gogh's assassination for his book Murder in Amsterdam], but Theo rode to work on his bicycle one morning, and a man armed with knives and guns took Theo's life in the name of his God—and that same man, Mohammed Bouyeri, wasn't born believing that. The people who introduced this mind-set to Bouyeri took advantage of the notion of freedom of religion and other civil liberties.

Samir Azouz, another young man in Holland convicted of terrorist plotting, attended a fundamentalist Muslim school in Amsterdam which is still open. He had maps of the Dutch parliament. He wanted to kill me and other politicians. He wanted to cause murder and mayhem congruent with the set of beliefs that he was taught in school using Dutch taxpayers' money. Now go back in time a little. Isn't it extremely cruel when you put yourself in the shoes of that little boy? He was just going to an officially recognized school in a multicultural society. Everyone approved—and now he's being punished for it. He's in jail.

Reason: One of the things in your book that struck me was that many of the women in the book made religious choices that seemed entirely free. Your childhood teacher, Sister Aziza, chose to cover herself "to seek a deeper satisfaction of pleasing God." You described dressing in an ankle-length black cloak yourself, and how it made you feel sensuous and feminine and desirable and like an individual. There's also the scene where many women in your own Somali neighborhood, including your mother, began dressing in burkas and jilbabs after encountering a preacher named Boqol Sawm. You and they apparently did so of their free will, without any obvious coercion. So what's the problem with that?

Hirsi Ali: I really thought Sister Aziza was convincing, and I wanted to be like her. And she talked about God and hell and heaven in a way I hadn't heard before. My mother would only scream, "Pray, it's time to pray!" without ever explaining why. Sister Aziza wasn't doing that.

But she did teach us to hate Jews. I must confess to a deep emotional hatred I felt for Jews as a 15-, 16-, 17-year-old living in Kenya. You almost can't help it; you become part of something bigger. I think that's how totalitarian movements function and that's what's wrong with them. You lose your faculty of reason. You're told, "Don't think for yourself. Just follow the leader."

"Hate people." OK. "Kill people." OK, fine.

Reason: But I don't think that you, at the time, would have said that you had lost your faculty of reason. Nor would your mother have copped to that. You and the other women believed you were all making a perfectly free, rational choice to dress religiously. And why not?

Hirsi Ali: Boqol Sawm is a Somali man who was offered a scholarship to go to Medina to learn true Islam. He was indoctrinated in Medina, and then he was sent with a message to go out and be a missionary, and that's what he was doing and he did it voluntarily. No one kidnapped him. And he convinced a lot of people.

Reason: Isn't it all in the eye of the beholder? When you say he was indoctrinated, he would say, "I was enlightened. I was gaining knowledge of my one true faith."

Hirsi Ali: I agree with you. When I was with Sister Aziza I thought I was being enlightened. I wasn't aware of all the terms that we are using now: fundamentalism, radical Islam, jihadism, and so on. We were simply true and pure Muslims. We were seeking to live as true Muslims, practicing true Islam, which you find in the Koran. But it's a problematic ideology because it demands subservience to Allah, not just from believers but from everyone.

Reason: Having lived in the United States for about a year now, do you find that Muslims in the United States have by and large integrated better here than they have in Europe?

Hirsi Ali: Since I moved here, I've spent most of my time in airports, in airplanes, in waiting rooms, in hotels, doing promotion for Infidel all over the world, so the amount of time I've actually lived in the U.S. is very small. But yes, I have the impression that Muslims in the United States are far more integrated than Muslims in Europe. Of course, being assimilated doesn't necessarily mean that you won't be a jihadist, but the likelihood of Muslims turning radical here seems lower than in Europe.

For one thing, America doesn't really have a welfare system. Mohammed Bouyeri had all day long to plot the murder of Theo van Gogh. American Muslims have to get a job. What pushes people who come to America to assimilate is that it's expected of them. And people are not mollycoddled by the government.

There's a lot of white guilt in America, but it's directed toward black Americans and native Indians, not toward Muslims and other immigrants. People come from China, Vietnam, and all kinds of Muslim countries. To the average American, they're all fellow immigrants.

The white guilt in Germany and Holland and the U.K. is very different. It has to do with colonialism. It has to do with Dutch emigrants having spread apartheid in South Africa. It has to do with the Holocaust. So the mind-set toward immigrants in Europe is far more complex than here. Europeans are more reticent about saying no to immigrants.

And by and large, Muslim immigrants in Europe do not come with the intention to assimilate. They come with the intention to work, earn some money, and go back. That's how the first wave of immigrants in the Netherlands was perceived: They would just come to work and then they'd go away. The newer generations that have followed are coming not so much to work and more to reap the benefits of the welfare state. Again, assimilation is not really on their minds.

Also, in order to get official status here in the U.S., you have to have an employer, so it's the employable who are coming. The Arabs who live here came as businessmen, and a lot of them come from wealthy backgrounds. There are also large communities of Indian and Pakistani Muslims, who tend to be very liberal. Compare that to the Turks in Germany, who mostly come from the poor villages of Anatolia. Or compare it to the Moroccans in the Netherlands, who are for the most part Berbers with a similar socio-economic background. It's a completely different set of people.

And finally, there's the matter of borders. In America, Muslim immigrants typically pass through an airport, which means the Americans have a better way of controlling who comes in—a far cry from Europe's open borders. Forty years ago, when Europe began talking about lifting borders between countries to facilitate the free traffic of goods and labor, they weren't thinking about waves of immigrants. They thought of Europe as a place people left. America, on the other hand, has always been an immigration nation, with border controls that have been in place for a long time. I know the southern border is difficult to monitor, but for Arab Muslims and Pakistanis coming to America, it's very hard to enter illegally.

Without passing any moral judgment, those are the differences between the two places.

Reason: Are you concerned about the efficacy of your message? Do you worry that, at least in the short term, you have exacerbated the miserable treatment of women under much of mainstream Islam by prompting moderate Muslims to turn inward to their religion because they really don't want to follow the path of the apostate Hirsi Ali?

Hirsi Ali: Young men now want to become terrorists in response to something I've written, that sort of thing? I don't think that is the case. If we continue that reasoning, we'll never scrutinize anything. Can we ever write? Can we ever criticize anything?

Reason: You write in your book that you would never have voted for Pim Fortuyn, the murdered leader of an anti-immigration party who had been considered a candidate for the Dutch prime ministership. I wonder what ideological differences you had with him.

Hirsi Ali: It wasn't an ideological difference I had with Pim Fortuyn. In the Netherlands, new parties provoke change; they're shock parties. They don't carry out policies. Also, Fortuyn had no experience and had an explosive temper. Don't get me wrong; he would have been a wonderful addition to the Dutch parliament, because rhetorically he was far stronger than all the other candidates. But I don't think he really wanted to become prime minister. He was only joking.

Reason: He was?

Hirsi Ali: I think he was. He was a flamboyant hedonist. To be a prime minister, you sleep about four hours a night. So anyway, I wouldn't have voted for him. I've always voted for the establishment.

Reason: You don't sound like an establishment-supporting kind of person. You're supposed to be a big rebel.

Hirsi Ali: Yeah, but there are rebels and rebels. There are rebels who are always against something, like the Socialist Party in the Netherlands. To them, rebelling itself is the aim. That's where they get their thrill from. But I'm rebelling for something. I want something to be established.

Reason: Tolerance is probably the most powerful word there is in the Netherlands. No other word encapsulates better what the Dutch believe really defines them. That makes it very easy for people to say that when they're being criticized, they're not being tolerated—and from there it's only a small step to saying they're being discriminated against or they're the victims of Islamophobia or racism or what have you.

Hirsi Ali: We have to revert to the original meaning of the term tolerance. It meant you agreed to disagree without violence. It meant critical self-reflection. It meant not tolerating the intolerant. It also came to mean a very high level of personal freedom.

Then the Muslims arrived, and they hadn't grown up with that understanding of tolerance. In short order, tolerance was now defined by multiculturalism, the idea that all cultures and religions are equal. Expectations were created among the Muslim population. They were told they could preserve their own culture, their own religion. The vocabulary was quickly established that if you criticize someone of color, you're a racist, and if you criticize Islam, you're an Islamophobe.

Reason: The international corollary to the word tolerance is probably respect. The alleged lack of respect has become a perennial sore spot in relations between the West and Islam. Salman Rushdie receiving a British knighthood supposedly signified such a lack of respect, as did the Danish cartoons last year, and many other things. Do you believe this is what Muslims genuinely crave—respect?

Hirsi Ali: It's not about respect. It's about power, and Islam is a political movement.

Reason: Uniquely so?

Hirsi Ali: Well, it hasn't been tamed like Christianity. See, the Christian powers have accepted the separation of the worldly and the divine. We don't interfere with their religion, and they don't interfere with the state. That hasn't happened in Islam.

But I don't even think that the trouble is Islam. The trouble is the West, because in the West there's this notion that we are invincible and that everyone will modernize anyway, and that what we are seeing now in Muslim countries is a craving for respect. Or it's poverty, or it's caused by colonization.

The Western mind-set—that if we respect them, they're going to respect us, that if we indulge and appease and condone and so on, the problem will go away—is delusional. The problem is not going to go away. Confront it, or it's only going to get bigger.

Rogier van Bakel is a freelance journalist and runs the blog Nobody's Business.

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1. Comment #80365 by GBG on October 21, 2007 at 1:08 pm

 avatarI like Ayaan Ali and admire her for standing up after what she has gone through, But this idea of "it's the wests fault" could be misconstrude as; "you can take the girl out of islam, But you can't take islam out of the girl".

Blaming the west for putting up with Islam it is like blaming a battered wife for not leaving her husband - Yeah there is something she could have done, But it's ultimately his fault.

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2. Comment #80366 by Dr Benway on October 21, 2007 at 1:15 pm

 avatarGBG, she blames the west for blaming the west.

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3. Comment #80367 by sent2null on October 21, 2007 at 1:26 pm

 avatarI don't think she is putting all blame on the Western view regarding multi-culturalism at all. She clearly stated the problem is two fold, first that the West believes that Islam is just like any other religion, her argument is it is not. Secondly, is the issue of the west coddling the intolerant position that appears to be unique to modern Islam when it concerns other religions or secular western practices. I think she is absolutely correct on both points, ultimately religious views that seek to equate the dogma of their faith with reality should not be tolerated at all, whether it be Islam or any other religion. Here in the US we have been hoodwinked into following what just may well be religiously motivated decisions on the part of our own president regarding the "war on terror" because of this misplaced respect for religious beliefs. In Israel the same underlying religious sanction has been the chief promoter of the Zionist occupation that has led to the continued pathological destruction of Palestinian peoples. A majority of Israeli's claim to be secular yet the actions of the government over the last 50 years as been that of anything but a secular one. Illustrating yet again that when religion gets its teeth in government policy bad things happen, I think it important that people of like mind to Hirsi Ali sound the alarm now before it is too late.

Regards,

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4. Comment #80369 by Shane McKee on October 21, 2007 at 1:33 pm

 avatarI suggest part of the problem is precisely that we have learned to tolerate all sorts of rampant buffoonery in our society - we reap the benefits of a scientific and medical enlightenment, yet dare not confront the woo, superstition and outright garbage that is creationism, "alternative medicine", UFOlogy, Atlantis-lore, etc. And, yes, religion is part of that, whether it be Christianity or Islam or whatever. Ayaan Hirsi Ali is correct when she notes that our tolerance of wacko opinion is interpreted as weakness, and it encourages the wackos further. Tolerance has, it would seem, come to mean protection from contrary argument, and *that* is completely counter to the principles of the enlightenment. People can say what they like, but they need to prepare to face the counter-argument.

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5. Comment #80370 by LoneStarTravis on October 21, 2007 at 1:38 pm

So I take it that Hirsi Ali is in favor of the war?

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6. Comment #80374 by Dr Benway on October 21, 2007 at 1:56 pm

 avatar
So I take it that Hirsi Ali is in favor of the war?
From AHA's talk at the AAI conference, I gather she's in favor of responding to attacks in kind. She also said we need to be smarter than our enemy.

Given that Iraq had not attacked the US, and that those who planned the invasion and occupation do not appear more clever than the enemy, my guess is she's not crazy about the execution of this particular war.

The more important question now is what ought to be done with this clusterfuck. I don't really know myself. Who might? I would guess that the military people and contractors in Iraq now, the ones who've been there many months, might have the best sense of what's possible, what's reasonable, and what's needed. Those people stand to lose the most for any miscalculation, so I would tend to trust their opinions.

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7. Comment #80375 by steve99 on October 21, 2007 at 1:58 pm

 avatar
So I take it that Hirsi Ali is in favor of the war?


It is very complicated, and my impression is that so many people have simplistic ideas, that almost sound like just slogans.

There is no 'war' in Iraq right now. It is an occupation, and it is supported by UN resolutions. (I does make me wonder why so many people who wanted UN resolutions to support the invasion and now complaining about an occupation that is supported by just such resolutions).



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8. Comment #80388 by Vinelectric on October 21, 2007 at 3:36 pm

 avatar
why so many people who wanted UN resolutions to support the invasion and now complaining about an occupation that is supported by just such resolutions


It's because we now know that the political temper back then was the result of an overestimation of Saddam's military threat and that the likes of Hitchens have nothing but short-sightedness to justify their arrogance.

Furthermore a state of anarchy was induced by the almost instantaneous dissolution of the local law enforcement establishments. I don't know if that was supported by the UN.

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9. Comment #80391 by steve99 on October 21, 2007 at 3:44 pm

 avatar
It's because we now know that the political temper back then was the result of an overestimation of Saddam's military threat and that the likes of Hitchens have nothing but short-sightedness to justify their arrogance.


I think there is some arrogance from those who, unlike Hitchens, don't have very detailed knowledge of the culture and the history of the area. It seems rather perverse to me that so many are prepared, on the basis of little knowledge, to disagree with Hitchens because they want to conform to a standard left-wing viewpoint. I have little knowledge of this, so as a rational thinker, I am prepared to admit I just don't know what is right or wrong here. However, I am prepared to accept that Hitch knows far more about this than I do. Perhaps if knew what he did, I would disagree with him - I don't know, and, I suspect, neither do you.

Furthermore a state of anarchy was induced by the almost instantaneous dissolution of the local law enforcement establishments. I don't know if that was supported by the UN.


Ah good. So because mistakes were made in the past (and they certainly where), that somehow means that the UN should not support attempting to hold things together now (as it does)?

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10. Comment #80419 by Ashley1319 on October 21, 2007 at 6:45 pm

It's because we now know that the political temper back then was the result of an overestimation of Saddam's military threat and that the likes of Hitchens have nothing but short-sightedness to justify their arrogance.


The problem with that is that the general populace doesn't know all that much about what really goes on in the war: the left and right wing both lie their pants off to set their agendas in motion. However, I am going to agree with Hitchens about this: The war was needed, the occupation needed. The way we managed it however, and the (insert insulting name here____)politicians we have in office now have screwed things to oblivion. We need a new leader who will take care of the war, without forfeiting our civil liberties ( aka voting hard right).

Furthermore a state of anarchy was induced by the almost instantaneous dissolution of the local law enforcement establishments. I don't know if that was supported by the UN.


To wipe out all of Saddam's influence in the government and military, that was needed too. However, I think that the U.S. government is dawdling over there,for reasons unimaginable. We should have had a decent government established wayyy by now. We should have never brought in mercenary soldiers like Blackwater, run by Extremist right wing Christian Erik Prince ( who hangs out with author of armageddon styled Left Behind Series)..... and we sure as hell do not need to have christian missionaries over there making them think we are out to "destroy their faith".

We need a liberal president with a not so pacifistic war policy. I agree with Hirsi Ali. We are not dealing with reasonable people. The whole point of Islam is to dominate the entire world and convert or kill those who do not convert.

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11. Comment #80471 by windweaver on October 21, 2007 at 11:28 pm

 avatarAny justification for the war in Iraq has to take into account the enormous cost to the Iraqi people. The latest estimates put the death toll at around 1.2 million (most of that total due to direct US military action).
http://observer.guardian.co.uk/world/story/0,,2170237,00.html?gusrc=rss&feed=networkfront

Look at the international outrage when 3000 Americans were killed on 9/11 to get some perspective on this.

There is strong evidence that the Whitehouse began planning the invasion of Iraq from the moment it gained office. The last thing on Bush and Cheney's mind were UN resolutions. And Bush attempted to bully other nations into joining his "crusade".
http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=15&ItemID=14080
As for trusting Hitchens on Iraq because he has insider knowledge of the customs and traditions of the country, he neither speaks Arabic nor lives in the Middle East. Robert Fisk, on the other hand, having both the above attributes,has intimate knowledge of Iraqi society and can provide strong rebuttal to Hitchens' arguments for going to war.
http://www.counterpunch.org/fisk12302004.html

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12. Comment #80473 by Fanusi Khiyal on October 21, 2007 at 11:36 pm

Okay, first of all GPG, Ayaan Hirsi Ali is right to blame the West for appeasing Islam. We're not some powerless housewise, we're the greatest civilisation in human history.


As I understand it, she is in favour of gettting rid of Saddam Hussein, but believes the Wilsonian mission to spread democracy is doomed to fail, because of the tyrranical nature of Islam.

And please allow me to cheer, because Ayaan Hirsi Ali is saying what should have been said a long, long time ago:



Hirsi Ali: Only if Islam is defeated. Because right now, the political side of Islam, the power-hungry expansionist side of Islam, has become superior to the Sufis and the Ismailis and the peace-seeking Muslims.

Reason: Don't you mean defeating radical Islam?

Hirsi Ali: No. Islam, period. Once it's defeated, it can mutate into something peaceful. It's very difficult to even talk about peace now. They're not interested in peace.

...

Hirsi Ali: I think that we are at war with Islam. And there's no middle ground in wars. Islam can be defeated in many ways. For starters, you stop the spread of the ideology itself; at present, there are native Westerners converting to Islam, and they're the most fanatical sometimes. There is infiltration of Islam in the schools and universities of the West. You stop that. You stop the symbol burning and the effigy burning, and you look them in the eye and flex your muscles and you say, "This is a warning. We won't accept this anymore." There comes a moment when you crush your enemy.

Reason: Militarily?

Hirsi Ali: In all forms, and if you don't do that, then you have to live with the consequence of being crushed.


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13. Comment #80498 by briancoughlanworldcitizen on October 22, 2007 at 2:05 am

 avatarBlaming the west for putting up with Islam it is like blaming a battered wife for not leaving her husband - Yeah there is something she could have done, But it's ultimately his fault.

This is exactly what she is saying, adding that the battered wife should quit trying to love her cruel husband, and take out a restraining order. When he agrees to treat her with respect, then maybe he can move back in .... maybe:-)

It's the most cogent and convincing case, I've heard yet.

Still, the danger of over reaction lurks in the shadows, ever present. Restricting mosques that teach jihad for example is something of a no brainer, and a more coherent effort to integrate European muslims should be on everyones agenda. However, general war is completely indefensible, given the relative strengths of the parties involved.

She is some heroic individual though. She risks her life at every turn with her uncompromising outspokenness, the western press, and western politicians could learn some lessons in sheer courage from her.

Nonetheless, I reject her implicit call to war on 1.5 billion largely innocent people, that, I can't endorse.

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14. Comment #80503 by steve99 on October 22, 2007 at 2:22 am

 avatar
As for trusting Hitchens on Iraq because he has insider knowledge of the customs and traditions of the country, he neither speaks Arabic nor lives in the Middle East. Robert Fisk, on the other hand, having both the above attributes,has intimate knowledge of Iraqi society and can provide strong rebuttal to Hitchens' arguments for going to war.


Fine, so let the experts debate it. That is the way things should be. But for us to throw all kinds of accusations at Hitchens when we aren't experts about this is wrong.

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15. Comment #80507 by Russell Blackford on October 22, 2007 at 2:56 am

Well, surely she doesn't think we are "at war" with those communities of "very liberal" Pakistani and Indian Muslims in the US, which she refers to. She denies that moderate Islam is the solution, but what are those liberal Muslim communities supposed to do if the US really does take up an official stance of warfare with Islam itself? That sort of stance isn't moral or tenable.

I've been a fan of AHA. I totally enjoyed Infidel, and I fully support her campaign against the barbaric elements in Islamic practice ... but when she claims, point-blank, that we're in a war against Islam itself, that's surely a dangerous exaggeration.

There's a struggle going on, largely an intellectual one, against religion in general, and against theocratic tendencies in particular, and we must confront those things with the power of our ideas. And I agree with her that new policies may be needed whereby we cease to extend so much tolerance to the intolerant. But talk of "war" against an entire world religion, without distinctions and qualifications, really worries me.

Sorry, Ayaan, but that's not something I'm signing up for.

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16. Comment #80509 by BAEOZ on October 22, 2007 at 3:00 am

 avatarRussell, I have to concur (I'm in danger of being a Russell Blackford sychophant, please forgive), I think there are secular values that are non negotiable. But killing or waring with people who are not out to war with us and want secular values is madness. Assuming that is what we are talking about. I often get it wrong :)

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17. Comment #80545 by frankie1958 on October 22, 2007 at 6:04 am

AHA is NOT advocating war with Islam. She is saying stop pussy footing around with Political Correctness and put a stop to Islam infiltrating it's ideology into Western society. Stop allowing them to teach fascism in their faith schools. Stop allowing them to enter the country to commit heinous crimes against innocent people. Stop looking away when they mutilate their women, force them into marriages, or kill them in the name of honour and Islam.
AHA is blaming the West for allowing moderate Muslims to look away as well. If anyone should be in dialogue with the radicals it should be the moderates but there is a level of tolerance,understanding and advocacy and perhaps a level of fear from moderates for radicals. And if moderates are fearful, how much more fearful should the West be? If moderates outnumber radicals why arent they doing something about it? Not a word of dissent was heard from the Muslim community after 9/11.
Islam is killing and warring with people who are NOT out to war with them. I am quite happy to live, work, and play with Muslims. They can live next door, eat at my table, be my friend, work with me. However, I am not tolerant of anyone who behaves criminally or hurts, maims or kills innocent people whether they are Muslim or not. So those Muslims who commit their crimes in the name of allah must be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law and the West must not create opportunities for radicals to practice their evil ideology.

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18. Comment #80548 by cassdenata on October 22, 2007 at 6:17 am

While I surely admire her strong stance on what needs to be done about Islam, I think that strategically she is downright naive to think that Islam will go straight to non-Islam without a moderate form of the religion in between. Rome wasn't built in a day as they say. Secondly, I think her stance on cracking down on Islam creates a slippery slope. Who is to judge what clerics are preaching things radical enough to be shut down...the government? It reminds me of the anti-communism hysteria where people were getting arrested for leftist ideas that aren't popular. Not to contradict myself, I agree that these schools and clerics need to be clamped down upon but we need to be concerned about violating civil liberties and the great freedoms that we all have.

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19. Comment #80565 by Fanusi Khiyal on October 22, 2007 at 7:15 am

frankie, I have to disagree with what you say. For to stop the teaching of fascism to children, to stop forced marriages, to stop the killing of apostates, to stop all the horrors that you list...

To stop that is to go to war against Islam. Because, and this cannot be overstated, Islam is not primarily, let alone solely or exclusively, a system of personal spirituality. Islam is, first and foremost, a system of government. Islam is Shariah law. It is jihad against those who do not accept the will of Allah.

These elements are insepearable from Islam. There are no 'theocratic tendencies' in Islam; the entire religion is theocratic from its base up. We aren't going to get away from that.

I should like to know what Russel, brian and others mean by 'innocent'. Is it someone who has refrained from engaging in violent acts? By that standard, the overwhelming majority of Muslims are innocent. Unfortunately, by that standard, so is Adolf Eichmann.

Is it the numbers that do not support the goals and methods of Al Qaeda? The number just dropped, by 10% if you believe Daniel Pipes, or by 50% if you believe al-Jazeera. Is it the number who do not support the means of al-Qaeda but support the goals, i.e. Shariah law? The number just dropped again. Al-Arabiya did a survey of over one hundred and thirteen thousand Muslims from across the Muslim world and found that 73% support HAMAS, which is in essence and goal, identical to al-Qaeda.

Or do we mean those who actually, in fact, in word and deed, are against Shariah supremacism? Now we are down to a tiny number.

'All that is required for evil to triumph is for good men to do nothing.' That is why the way evil wins is to get good men to that point, by spreading lies and insane ideas to prevent them from taking action. And that is the way to view Islam. It isn't that all Muslims are Shariah supremacists - it's that, because of the explicit moral code they embrace, those who oppose totalitarianism have not the moral strength and courage to stand up against it.

Thus Islam is divided between those who support jihad, and those who will say nothing about it, those who will support Shariah, and those who will do nothing to oppose it.

That is the nature of what we face.

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20. Comment #80569 by briancoughlanworldcitizen on October 22, 2007 at 7:33 am

 avatar19. Comment #80565 by Fanusi Khiyal on October 22, 2007 at 7:15 am

I don't think you have a clear idea of what such a war would mean. The millions upon millions, perhaps billions that would be killed. You want us to start that because some of us are nervous?

I have confidence that the ideas of the enlightenment will outlive Islam, and the attempts of those who would essentially destroy those ideas to "save" them.

More than anything else we need binding and agreed international law, that the west adheres too, rather than the decades of short term, self serving, self indulgent foreign policy that has, at least in part, contributed to this crisis.

Hitler doesn't get off the hook because of the Versaille treaty, but we can see in retrospect that it was a stupid, nasty and penal document that radicalised an entire generation of Germanic peoples. It was a gift to a skilled demagogue, because it was so obviously injust. Same thing here.

We need to do everything in our power to manage and contain this, and genuine even handedness would be a start. However, launching a war that will kill millions of "them", on the off chance we may be saving thousands of "us", is not on my list of "ideas of the year". The meme of an existential threat to the west is a transparent myth. Well to those of us remotely familiar with the world we live in, and the cruel realities that determine it's course.

I will need to see bloody chunks of european and american shoppers on TV every night for a year before I'll be resigned to such an insane course of action, and maybe not even then.

I proffer this modest proposal for global governance that doesn't (generally) involve killing millions of people.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=98ScgQPt66E
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A1eEoTJ7hZc
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pRyU7BnkQLY


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21. Comment #80580 by Fanusi Khiyal on October 22, 2007 at 8:14 am

Hmmm... brian you seem to be making the classic mistake of assuming that you have any choice. We're already in a war, and your opinions count for nothing on that. Islam has fought a war for the domination of the world for fourteen centuries, and it is more than capable for fighting for another fourteen. We're at war, the only question is what we're going to do about it.

Now, I have said before, and I will say again, there is a chance that we will get out of this on the cheap. By which I mean with fewer than a million casualties on our side. That means getting real. Because if we are struck by further instances of catastrophic terror, especially if it's CBN, we will have the choice of doing nothing, which is unthinkable, or lashing out blindly. This is why I think we should fight this war while it's still a war, before it becomes something much worse - a blood feud. A blood feud that is carried out with nuclear weapons.

Which brings me to my point about what should be done. Firstly, we should cordon off Islam. Stop Muslim immigration, expel any Muslims that support Shariah law, seize the property - including Mosques - of any individual or group that teaches jihadism, and enforce laws against treason on the teachers. By which I mean, putting them to death. There is no real other option. Cut them loose? Imprison them so that they can use our prisons as recruiting grounds? These steps should be combined with an intensive campaign attack the ideas at the foundation of Islam. In the newspapers, on the airways, on the internet - everywhere Islam's teaching should be held up for the pitiful rubbish that they are.

If we do this, we have a chance at breaking Islam before we resort to the unmentionable.

International law is a chimera, that is, dream and monster. A law is only a law if it can be enforced. That is, if there is a sufficient threat of force backing it up. So we can either ask for a one-world government, or a world hegemony (which would have to be an American one, because no other country is both civilised and powerful enough to do so), or be reduced to the global hypocrisy of the United Nations.

You see, brian, to be making a very serious error in attributing rationality to Islamic maniacs, in the sense of the 'rational actor'. But being a rational actor isn't very rational, if you are a society continualy at war. In such a situation, fearless fanaticism gives you an enormous edge. We have been waiting over a century for the Enlightenment to erode Islam, for Muslims to turn away from the nightmarish aspects of their religion. Not only are they not doing so, there is no incentive for them to do so, since fanaticism is such an effective technique.

And finally, brian, your willingness to throw your own people to the wolves - and, yes, eing able to identify those who share certain basic values as your own people is the essence of civilisation - does not make you morally superior. It makes you a moral coward, unwilling to protect good against evil.

But let's leave that aside. As you may have guessed, if we continue down this path, and end in a situation of blood feud, you may have guessed that I am capable of that kind of ruthlessness. Capable of defending my own against the enemy, come what may. Now you may dislike this, but ask the following question: If we see a mushroom cloud appear over a major Western city, which view is likely to prevail? Mine or yours? History gives the answer. In such a situation, it is my view that will prevail.

So, we have the choice between the harsh, and the unthinkable.

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22. Comment #80581 by automath on October 22, 2007 at 8:24 am

 avatar5. Comment #80370 by LoneStarTravis - "So I take it that Hirsi Ali is in favor of the war?"

Are you talking bout the liberation of Iraq? I'd have to read what she has to say on the matter before I decided if she though it was a good thing. Whatever her opinion, I certainly think it could have been conducted better than it has, but then most things we do, can usually be done better with hindsight.

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23. Comment #80583 by briancoughlanworldcitizen on October 22, 2007 at 8:31 am

 avatarIf we see a mushroom cloud appear over a major Western city, which view is likely to prevail? Mine or yours? History gives the answer. In such a situation, it is my view that will prevail.

I'm quite certain yours will prevail at that stage, my concern is that you seem terribly keen to have it prevail first, because of what might happen.

As regards your jibe about "my" people, all humans are "my" people, not just those to whom I'm related by blood, nation, village, skin colour, language, culture or continent ... whatever arbitrary demarcation you care to draw.

I think the route I have outlined, has plenty of precedent behind it, as does yours. However, although mine is likelier to take longer, it is also likelier to have a much lower body count.

You have an unnatural view of those that have embraced Islam. As if they were the Borg from star trek. Monstrous, inhuman, unstoppable. It is a pretty familiar dehumanisation of the enemy prior to slaughtering them in large numbers. Human beings, even those that embrace stupid, bronze age myths are not like that, and whats more, they never have been like that.

These monsters exist only in the imagination of those who urgently need a justification for the unconscionable.

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24. Comment #80585 by frankie1958 on October 22, 2007 at 8:51 am

Fanusi Khiyal
Perhaps you are right. I am not Muslim and do not understand the mindset of Islamism let alone Islamic extremism. However, I cannot agree to going to war in the classic bombs and bullets sense of the word. The West can win by putting in place policies that prevent the things mentioned in my previous post. Dialogue is also important. It is one thing to be tolerant but we cannot be accepting of criminal behaviour in our midst from any group. And if that group abuses the freedoms and civil liberties available they should be imprisoned or deported. What we shouldnt do is give them the opportunities to expand their ideology if that ideology advocates the murder and destruction of innocents. This can be done peacefully with legislation (such as the abolishment of all faith schools) and robust national security without going to such abhorrent lengths as war or trodding on the civil liberties of peaceful citizens.

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25. Comment #80596 by Fanusi Khiyal on October 22, 2007 at 9:51 am

There's a very good book I recommend to absolutely everyone who wants to have some idea of what the hell is going on: "Civilisation and its Enemies" by Lee Harris

There's a problem with this business of 'Dialogue'. Dialogue is only possible among people who have abandoned the concept of the initiation of force. And that's an advance that took millenia to achieve. The Muslim world is still frozen at a very low level of development; it is still stuck in the world of the tribe and gang.

brian you're talk about how all humans are your people sounds very noble and enlightened. It is also completely meaningless. By that definition, 'your people' contain a truly huge number more than happy to enslave you or kill you if you do not confirm to their ethos, and a great deal of them will kill you if you embrace the ethos of the other lot. How on earth is it possible to identify yourself with, say, the members of the Chinese police state, or the Muslims of Afghanistan, or the janjaweed in the Sudan?

This is an old conceit, and it is so popular because it demands nothing whatsoever of the one who voices it. Contra to that, my identification with those who share the basic ideas of the Enlightenment does, in fact, make demands on me. I know what my 'team' is, and who comprises it, and can act upon that knowledge. You can call this jingoistic, but given that this encompasses a group of, probably, a few billion, it leaves the objection looking pretty foolish.

Now we get to the nitty-gritty, as well as an actual demonstration of the two approaches:


I'm quite certain yours will prevail at that stage, my concern is that you seem terribly keen to have it prevail first, because of what might happen.


Well, what do you think the odds are? We know that there is a truly vast number of jihadists out there - estimates of 300 million are not uncommon - and we know that they are willing to use catastrophic terror. We know that Iran is building nuclear weapons, we know that bin Laden pursued biological agents, and we know that Pakistan is one coup away from being a nuclear Taliban-state. Do you feel good with these facts in play?

What I advocate has a reasonable chance of pre-empting a nuclear war and a global genocide. I would have thought that this counts for something.

This can't be overstressed. We can go on and on about what is and is not moral, but without the ability to implement it in the real world, it's utterly meaningless. It's fantasy. If your much vaunted tolerance has no chance of stopping, and in fact seems to be dragging us into a genocidal war, what the hell good is it?

There's a case study cited by Lee Harris. When Locke first wrote about tolerance he meant that the different Protestant sects should extend tolerance to each other, but they should not, emphatically not, extend it to the Catholics. Hypocritical? No; Locke knew that the Catholics had so much power that, if they were tolerated, they'd be able to mop up the Protestants and all tolerance would perish.

And here, finally, is the root of this nonsense:


You have an unnatural view of those that have embraced Islam. As if they were the Borg from star trek. Monstrous, inhuman, unstoppable. It is a pretty familiar dehumanisation of the enemy prior to slaughtering them in large numbers. Human beings, even those that embrace stupid, bronze age myths are not like that, and whats more, they never have been like that.


You call my view unnatural. But that is because yours is solipsistic. You believe that everyone sees the world as you do, through the lenses of Enlightenment liberalism.

But it's not true, and it never has been true. Look at Andy Thompson's lecture again. For the overwhelming majority of human history, man has been exactly like that: vicious, primitive and cruel. Our state of civilisation is the exception, an exception bought at a bitter price, the final result of millenia of work.

If you think that that state of civilisation is acquired automatically, you are making the classic mistake of all those who have forgotten what it takes to climb out of tribal savagery. It isn't and it never has been, easy or automatic to break free from the rule of savagery and tribalism.

And, by the by, I did not say that they were 'like the Borg'. I simply base my view of them on what they say. Hence my citations of those polling data, which you ignored.

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26. Comment #80621 by briancoughlanworldcitizen on October 22, 2007 at 10:55 am

 avatarWe've had this out before and very little has changed in our positions.

I would however dispute that your view is shared by billions around the world. Perhaps a few tens of millions of the more bloodthirsty and reactionary westerners.

Your position is predicated upon the idea that we are existentially at risk, and if we were I'd be on board, but this is clearly nonsense. The most casual glance at the relative strength of the two "sides" exposes this carnard at once. We are not remotely existentially threatened, which completely collapses your position, expressiable as a simple equation, 1 of "us" = X of "them". I'm guessing X is in the hundreds? Let me know if I'm being uncharitable:-)

Basically, you are ok with incinerating millions of innocent (yes innocent by any reasonable definition) people because of maybe? What self serving rubbish. Dialouge and restraint, especially from our position of unparalleled power is not just the ethical choice, but the rational one. Particularly taken from the perspective that all the lives "in play" are equal.

I can only stress again ... I don't believe you have a real concept of what you are proposing, although you like to sound bloodthirsty, there is still something abstracted and unreal about your formulations. That is perhaps the kindest thing I can say.

There is also something tragically comical about claiming to be upholding the values of the enlightenment while simultaneously, I mean in the same post, calling for the executions of people you disagree with. Jesus, you've got some balls, I'll give you that:-)

And yes it is quite clear to me that humans can be bloodthirsty and murderous, I need only examine my own emotional response at the thought of harm to my daughter. However, this is emphatically not what you are saying. You are systematically dehumanising 1.5 billion people, making them less than human. Deranged animals to be culled, before they present a serious threat.

Tell me I'm wrong.

For example : , to be making a very serious error in attributing rationality to Islamic maniacs

Yet I do consider most muslims rational actors. This claim of collective derangement is likewise mutually visited upon the various sides in any conflict. Your entire repetoire is tiresomly familiar, you probably just flipped through a copy of "Demagouges through the ages" and lifted the speeches whole:-)

I'm sorry, but it's going to take more than your penchant for hysterical hyperbole to stampede me into endorsing or cheerleading a mass cull of the "mad muslims", or indeed any group of fellow humans. I and my family will take our chances with sanity.

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27. Comment #80644 by Fanusi Khiyal on October 22, 2007 at 1:31 pm

We've had this out before and very little has changed in our positions.


Of course. You don't like what I say, and I do not say what you want to hear.

You suffer from a terminal inability to deal with facts. I cite studies from bodies as diverse as Pew, al-Jazeera, and al-Arabiya. I cite the experiences of those who have actually lived with Islam, such as AHA, or the knowledge of those who have given twenty years to study it. And always you do not even try to find a counterargument, but ignore it.

You smear me as desiring the deaths of millions. As though knowing what is inevitable is the same thing as desiring it. As though seeing an aproaching storm is the same as having caused it.

And the reason is clear. You only want your hands clean. You want to be able to say 'I don't approve of violence', and regardless of how much violence that view causes and permits, you will pursue it. And if your views cause, as I have said before, a nuclear war and a global genocide, you will be satisfied in being able to stand free and say 'Well, _I_ never advocated it.'

Your self-love, your need to see yourself as morally superior makes you blind to the horrors that it will unleash. You care more about your own self-image in your own eyes, than about the blood and horror that will inevitably befall real lives, and real human beings if your fatuous views are listened to,

My only hope is that better people than you, who read this, will use their human reason and look at the facts for themselves. And, just maybe, we will be spared horror beyond all imagination.

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28. Comment #80648 by Monera Man on October 22, 2007 at 1:39 pm

 avatarI'm sick and tired of this site being turned into a
forum for Ali's hysteria.

Set up your own blog Ali, and take your armchair crusaders
over there.

Or are you worried that you won't get the exposure
level of the RDF site because you have nothing else to
offer besides "kill da ay-rabs"?

Fanusi Khiyal said:

Okay, first of all GPG, Ayaan Hirsi Ali is right to blame the West for appeasing Islam. We're not some powerless housewise, we're the greatest civilisation in human history.


As I understand it, she is in favour of gettting rid of Saddam Hussein, but believes the Wilsonian mission to spread democracy is doomed to fail, because of the tyrranical nature of Islam.


When will you be enlisting to go fight in the Middle East, Mr.
Armchair Caesar?

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29. Comment #80655 by briancoughlanworldcitizen on October 22, 2007 at 2:02 pm

 avatarYou smear me as desiring the deaths of millions. As though knowing what is inevitable is the same thing as desiring it. As though seeing an aproaching storm is the same as having caused it.

This is so unfair. Tsk. Tsk, nothing is "inevitable", not least kicking off WW III. I don't need to smear you, your own words condemn you.

By which I mean with fewer than a million casualties on our side. That means getting real. (My italics)

I'm assuming you're expecting to inflict exponentially higher casualties on the "enemy", so where is the smear? Am I misreading you? Is it that you don't desire it? Well the Buddha might have something to say about that, you seem pretty damn keen to me.

In your own way, you consider yourself a rational actor. All mass murders have justified their actions in much the same messianic and urgent tone that you use here. I guess we can consider ourselves fortunate indeed that your activites appear restricted to ranting about the end of civilisation on web sites. I'm just saying you're ... you know ... nuts. Given an objective reading of the realities that is.

One example. The US invades Iran, or nukes them. What will the Pakistanis do? Or even the Russians, or the Chinese? What about Taiwan, or any of a dozen other disputed zones in the world? Did you just skip 20th century history completely? When something like this is kicked off, we've no idea where it will go, and that is exactly the point. Do you think the Germans imagined, on the day that France fell, that a few short years later their country would be pounded into rubble and millions of them would be very, very dead? Yet it seemed like such a great idea at the time. Didn't it? Are you just oblivious to the Turkish troops massing on Iraqs northern border? Christ on a crutch, you want to START this party?

Human beings came out of WWII with a clear grasp of the realities and horrors of war. Those people created the UN, a radical and unprecedented pooling of soverignity for the time. Laid the foundation for the EU, the most successful mutually agreed confederacy of nation states the world has ever seen.

I don't know. Perhaps you are right. Maybe we need a reminder of how bad it can be to kill off all the war mongers and get us to the next level, but wouldn't it be cool if we could get there without killing 50 million people? So much more civilized, and wouldn't it be fun to do something different this time?

Well, you're welcome to your opinion, as long as you don't have me and mine rounded up and killed for ours ... but thats the problem see ... you don't draw the line at that, do yah? First they came for the radical muslims .... see above for details. Good night.

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30. Comment #80677 by Eric Blair on October 22, 2007 at 3:22 pm

Fanusi Khiyal wrote

Firstly, we should cordon off Islam. Stop Muslim immigration, expel any Muslims that support Shariah law, seize the property - including Mosques - of any individual or group that teaches jihadism, and enforce laws against treason on the teachers. By which I mean, putting them to death. There is no real other option. Cut them loose? Imprison them so that they can use our prisons as recruiting grounds? These steps should be combined with an intensive campaign attack the ideas at the foundation of Islam. In the newspapers, on the airways, on the internet - everywhere Islam's teaching should be held up for the pitiful rubbish that they are.

...

We know that there is a truly vast number of jihadists out there - estimates of 300 million are not uncommon - and we know that they are willing to use catastrophic terror. We know that Iran is building nuclear weapons, we know that bin Laden pursued biological agents, and we know that Pakistan is one coup away from being a nuclear Taliban-state. Do you feel good with these facts in play?


Paranoia is an understandable emotional response to the sense of the inevitable such language provokes.

Reason, and the values and principles that built our societies, demand a more studied response. We must -- and we will -- respond clearly and confidently, and in ways consistent with our view of ourselves.

We must not lash out at spectres or be stampeded to take drastic actions by those who pretend to offer a special wisdom in understanding the Islam world. The world sees many agendas and forces at play, and Islam however powerful it may be is but one.

We face these challenges as we have many others, one a time, do the research and analysis, and take action. We may not have a full response for Fanusi Khiyal today, but we will tomorrow, and one we can belive in.

As always, we mustn't rush to throw away our most precious values to met someone else's agenda.

EB

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31. Comment #80692 by Russell Blackford on October 22, 2007 at 4:33 pm

We really need those liberal Muslims - whose existence AHA acknowledges - to stand up proudly and declare unequivocally that they support Lockean tolerance and individual liberty, that they are glad to join the Enlightenment compromise, and that anywhere where Islam can be practised without persecution is already the house of Islam, not the house of war.

They can hardly do that if Western societies claim that we are at war with Islam itself - as opposed to some of us committing to a struggle against all forms of theocracy - and if we actually do start persecuting Muslims.

More generally, I was disappointed with this interview. I am predisposed to like and defend AHA, but she seemed to be all over the place. It didn't seem to be thought through, though she was given ample opportunity to explain her position.

Apart from the recommendation that we close Muslim schools, I couldn't see much there that was concrete. All the stuff about how terrible it is that our enemies (and the extremists concerned are, indeed, our enemies) express their hatred of us by burning our symbols left me thinking, "So what?" Yes, people who hate you will find ways of expressing it. And?

Otherwise, what Brian and EB are saying.

A final thought ... Richard may not be too happy with this being said, but I think a time is coming when he will have no choice but to distance himself from some of the pronouncements by his allies. Hitchens and AHA are making extreme claims about how the West should respond to Islam, in particular. Some of us smaller fry are troubled by them (it's not just people who've commented on this thread; PZ Myers is obviously quite worried about Hitchens, over at Pharyngula).

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32. Comment #80705 by mmurray on October 22, 2007 at 5:29 pm

 avatarLike many here I have read her book and admire her personal courage enormously but I don't see how you can say we have the right to print cartoons of Mohammed in the west but in islamic countries they can't burn the US flag.

As for WWIII. Those of us who grew up during the Cold War will remember that there were people then who said the west was weak and would inevitably lose to the rise of unstoppable totalitarianism. I am not a historian but I think it would be instructive to go back and look at how many people were advocating no compromise and no negotiation --- particularly amongst those who had escaped the nightmare of the soviet gulags. In that case only the real loonies advocated a first strike as it was clear a nuclear war meant everybody would lose.

Michael

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33. Comment #80739 by briancoughlanworldcitizen on October 22, 2007 at 10:51 pm

 avatar
A final thought ... Richard may not be too happy with this being said, but I think a time is coming when he will have no choice but to distance himself from some of the pronouncements by his allies.


Exactly. How are these calls for war (not quite genocide, but these things can morph awfully quickly) not exactly the kind of morally reprehensible actions that Christians trot out as examples of the very kind of things that atheists do?

Oh and it just occurred to me while reading RB's post, .... Are we supposed to attack Turkey too, one of NATO's largest militaries? You know, I've had this completely ingroup feeling about them until just now. But yeah, those guys are Islamers too!!

Or are they expected to sit on the sidelines while we ... ah .... subdue their co-religionists? They are part of the Axis of Islam, strictly speaking we should go after them. Maybe once we've trimmed 'em down to size, then we can let them in the EU?

Gah .....

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34. Comment #80740 by Fanusi Khiyal on October 22, 2007 at 10:55 pm

Okay, first of all Modera Man

1. First of all, you don't have to agree with the asinine idea that you can bring freedom to people who don't want it, in order to recognise the threat of Islam.

2. I don't know where you've been living, but in this civilisation we have civilian control of the military. So, unless you want to go the Heinlein route, and suggest that only those who have done military service get to vote, shut it. In any case, the opinion amongst veterans is usually alot closer to mine.

3. Tough talk coming from someone who slanders Ayaan Hirsi Ali to protect his own cowardice.

mmurray if you did grow up during the Cold War, you may remember that it almost did end in nuclear confrontation a few times. Witness the Cuban Missile Crisis. The only reason that the Soviets were able to be deterred is because they did not want to see Armageddon. Let's see, does that apply to guys like Ahmadinejad? Not really.

And if we are to treat them burning the US flag as on a par with the Muhammad cartoons, I take it it is okay for us to send death threats to a few nations, yes?

Eric Blair could you - or anyone for that matter deal with minor things like those polling results I cited? Or the ones that Sam Harris cites? Could some one deal with actual facts?

When it comes to brian, how exactly am I supposed to deal with someone so devoid of reality that, in order to prove my nefarious desire to kill millions, he gives a quote from me hoping for the exact opposite? I mean, how is one even supposed to answer such nonsense? I'll leave him alone with the Iluminati and the Elders of Zion, or whatever the hell goes on in his reality.

Russel Ayaan's interview is 'poorly thought out'? Given the utter gutlessness and cowardice of our governments when it comes to dealing with Islam, not to mention the widespread ignorance about Islam, isn't it correct for Miss Ali to harp on these points? Of course, I'm sure you know better than a woman who spends her life fighting Islamic totalitarians.

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35. Comment #80743 by windweaver on October 22, 2007 at 11:30 pm

 avatar
Richard may not be too happy with this being said, but I think a time is coming when he will have no choice but to distance himself from some of the pronouncements by his allies. Hitchens and AHA are making extreme claims about how the West should respond to Islam, in particular. Some of us smaller fry are troubled by them (it's not just people who've commented on this thread; PZ Myers is obviously quite worried about Hitchens, over at Pharyngula).


I'd like to second your comments, Russel. There are ethical and moral principles at stake here and I'm sure RD is aware of this. I'd like to point out that I've travelled extensively in the Islamic world and not once was I abused for being an infidel or made to feel unwelcome. Even when I pointed out that I have no religious belief I was treated with courtesy and respect. I'll never forget being in Ramallah and people coming up to me and giving me sweets and fruit and offering to put me up for the night. Even when the subject turned to politics, I found people interested to debate and eager to hear my opinions on things like the Israeli/Palestinian conflict. Having said all this, I'm not naive about the problems we face regarding radical Islam. Yes, we need to be vigilant about the threats we face and act when necessary (deporting a jihadist cleric who openly advocates suicide bombing for example). But we need to preserve our Enlightenment values in doing so. Declaring war on the muslim world would be a monstrosity and make us no better than the religious fanatics we rightly condemn.

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36. Comment #80744 by Fanusi Khiyal on October 22, 2007 at 11:41 pm

On rereading some of these comments I am struck by what seems to be their common feature. Now, this is a simple question and I would appreciate a straight answer:

Everyone here seems to believe that a moral principle can enforce itself, that it can exist independently. Is this correct?

Because it can't. A moral principle requires an entire social system to support it, and without that, it is completely meaningless. Once again, see Locke. He knew that total, indiscriminate tolerance would result in destruction of the possibility for any tolerance at all.

windweaver I appreciate your experiences, but ask yourself the following: how sure are you that any of the people you met would speak up or stick their necks out for you, if the jihadis come for you? How sure are you? Because that is the question on which this all rides.

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37. Comment #80764 by briancoughlanworldcitizen on October 23, 2007 at 2:15 am

 avatarEveryone here seems to believe that a moral principle can enforce itself, that it can exist independently. Is this correct?

Well no, I think it is safe to say that absolutely no one here believes that. Only an idiot would believe that. You really are the master of what I like to call the "bleeding obvious".

This just exposes your thinking more clearly. You see this as an existential struggle to the death, it's not, because we have the bulk of the money, weapons, political power and technology. See now you've got me doing it!!!

But OK, I'll concede the following. From your perspective your proposal is rational. If I believed the same thing, in essence that millenia of dragging ourselves up by our boot straps was seriously endangered, that failure to act NOW would result in more deaths later, I'd be on the barricades with you.

I don't though, for the very brief, but I think utterly compelling, reasons I've outlined above. There is a religious analouge here. Specifically the belief in hell. In much the same way as the theist must consider why I find the threat of eternal torment so unlikely as to be dismissed out of hand, you must also consider why I find your concerns similarly flawed. Getting this wrong puts me and hundreds of my immediate family at risk, yet I remain stubbornly unconvinced.

The other strand of your thinking relates to what will happen if "they" get a nuke, and use it on "us". Won't we go bonkers and wipe them off the face of the Earth? Here, you do have a point, and it is a risk.

However it is a risk that all parties share, "we" for obvious reasons, and "they" because of our potential response. You want to ameloriate the risk to "us" by pre-emptivley pushing the brunt of pain onto "them". This illustrates the us them equation that features so pervasivley in your thinking in action again. I think however, that even this calculation is wrong because the intial risk has been hopelessly overstated.

Here are the three reasons I think it a small risk.

1) I do attribute rationality to most actors, and especially actors in leadership. Cynicism about the religion embraced by the people has a millenia long history of precedent amongst the "ruling class" and some of that precedent comes from the Islamic world. I mean if they really believed all this stuff, wouldn't restoring the "Caliphate" be childs play?

2) The potential genocidal response to a nuclear attack particularly on an American city has got to give even the most deranged pause for thought. Remember most actors are rational within the context of their world view. People in leadership have to interact, convince and articulate themselves daily. So is the eradication of Iran worth say 10 million americans, 20 million? I don't think anyone in leadership in Iran (or anywhere in the muslim world) is seriously embracing that calculation.

3) For the reasons cited above, not just "our" security services are desperate to avert this horror, but so are "theirs". This leaves the real nut jobs very little room for maneouver, and concern on this front is universal.

Maybe that was just two reasons.

Look I really don't think you are crazy, but you'r e not doing your sums on this one. I stand by my "bloody chunks of shoppers" comment. It is really going to take some serious and persistent social breakdown, directly in Europe, to convince me that we are in a fight to the death here.

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38. Comment #80770 by windweaver on October 23, 2007 at 2:32 am

 avatar
Fine, so let the experts debate it. That is the way things should be. But for us to throw all kinds of accusations at Hitchens when we aren't experts about this is wrong.


Steve, I'm going to continue to "throw accusations" at Hitchens for as long as he lines up with the neo-cons and the far right in his secular jihad against the muslim wo