Joining The Dots

By Tabatha, 14 November, 2009, 4 Comments

So let’s get this straight.

We now know that Nidal Hasan publicly and repeatedly praised suicide bombers. We know that he was in contact with Anwar Al Awlaki, an Imam who regularly preaches the Joys Of Jihad.  We know that Hasan actually tried to get in touch with Al Queda.


Yet still the great big Dhimmi in the White House, plus countless others,  tries  to tell us that Hasan’s murderous rampage had ‘nothing’ to do with Islam…?

Can you imagine if it had been a Jewish or Christian man who had gunned down innocent people? How long do you think it would have taken before his Jewish or Christian faith was placed under the microscope?

But when the killer is a Muslim?  Well, even when he himself utters the age old Islamic war cry of ‘Allah Akbar’ while cutting down innocent infidels,  still we’re told his actions are ‘nothing’ to do with his religion.   G-d forbid anybody concludes that Islamic terrorism has anything to do with, well, Islam…!

Here’s Mark Steyn on this lunacy:

Tragedy or Scandal?


By Mark Steyn


Shortly after 9/11, there was a lot of talk about how no one would ever hijack an American airliner ever again — not because of new security arrangements but because an alert citizenry was on the case: We were hip to their jive.

The point appeared to be proved three months later on a U.S.-bound Air France flight. The “Shoebomber” attempted to light his footwear, and the flight attendants and passengers pounced. As the more boorish commentators could not resist pointing out, even the French guys walloped him.

But the years go by, and the mood shifts. You didn’t have to be “alert” to spot Maj. Nidal Hasan. He’d spent most of the last half-decade walking around with a big neon sign on his head saying “JIHADIST. STAND WELL BACK.”

But we (that is to say, almost all of us — and certainly almost anyone who matters in national security and the broader political culture) are now reflexively conditioned to ignore the flashing neon sign. Like those apocryphal Victorian ladies discreetly draping the lasciviously curved legs of their pianos, if a glimpse of hard unpleasant reality peeps through we simply veil it in another layer of fluffy illusions.

Two joint terrorism task forces became aware almost a year ago that Major Hasan was in regular e-mail contact with Anwar al-Awlaqi, the American-born but now Yemeni-based cleric who served as imam to three of the 9/11 hijackers and supports all-out holy war against the United States.

But the expert analysts in the Pentagon determined that this lively correspondence was consistent with Major Hasan’s “research interests,” so there was no need to worry. That’s America: Technologically superior, money no object (not one but two “joint terrorism task forces” stumbled across him). Yet no action was taken.

On the other hand, who needs surveillance operations and intelligence budgets? Major Hasan was entirely upfront about who he was. He put it on his business card: “SOA.” As in “Soldier of Allah” — which seems a tad ungrateful to the American taxpayers who ponied up half a million bucks or thereabouts in elite medical-school education to train him to be a Soldier of Uncle Sam.

In a series of meetings during 2008, officials from both Walter Reed and the Uniformed Services University of Health Sciences considered the question of whether then-captain Hasan was psychotic.

But, according to at least one bigwig at Walter Reed, members of the policy committee wondered “How would it look if we kick out one of the few Muslim residents?” So he got promoted to major and shipped to Fort Hood. And 13 men and women and an unborn baby are dead.

Well, like they say, it’s easy to be wise after the event. I’m not so sure. These days, it’s easier to be even more stupid after the event. “Apparently he tried to contact al-Qaeda,” mused MSNBC’s Chris Matthews. “That’s not a crime to call up al-Qaeda, is it? Is it? I mean, where do you stop the guy?”

Interesting question: Where do you draw the line? The truth is we’re not prepared to draw a line even after he’s gone ahead and committed mass murder. “What happened at Fort Hood was a tragedy,” said Gen. George Casey, the U.S. Army’s Chief of Staff, “but I believe it would be an even greater tragedy if our diversity becomes a casualty here.”

A “greater tragedy” than 14 dead and dozens of wounded? Translating from the original brain-addled multicult-speak, the Army chief of staff is saying that the same fatuous prostration before marshmallow illusions that led to the “tragedy” must remain in place.

If it leads to occasional mass murder, well, hopefully it can be held to what cynical British civil servants used to call, during the Northern Irish “Troubles,” “an acceptable level of violence.” Fourteen dead is evidently acceptable. A hundred and forty? Fourteen hundred?

I guess we’ll find out. “Diversity” is one of those words designed to absolve you of the need to think. Likewise, a belief in “multiculturalism” doesn’t require you to know anything at all about other cultures, just to feel generally warm and fluffy about them.

Heading out from my hotel room the other day, I caught a glimpse of that 7-Eleven video showing Major Hasan wearing “Muslim” garb to buy a coffee on the morning of his murderous rampage.

And it wasn’t until I was in the taxi cab that something odd struck me: He was an American of Arab descent. But he was wearing Pakistani dress — that’s to say, a “Punjabi suit,” as they call it in Britain, or the shalwar kameez, to give it its South Asian name. For all the hundreds of talking heads droning on about “diversity” across the TV networks, it was only Tarek Fatah, writing in the Ottawa Citizen, who pointed out that no Arab males wear this get-up — with one exception: Those Arab men who got the jihad fever and went to Afghanistan to sign on with the Taliban and al-Qaeda.

In other words, Major Hasan’s outfit symbolized the embrace of an explicit political identity entirely unconnected with his ethnic heritage. Mr. Fatah would seem to be a genuine “multiculturalist”: That’s to say, he’s attuned to often very subtle “diversities” between cultures.

Whereas the professional multiculturalist sees the 7-Eleven video and coos, “Aw, look. He’s wearing . . . well, something exotic and colorful, let’s not get hung up on details. Celebrate diversity, right? Can we get him in the front row for the group shot? We may be eligible for a grant.”

The brain-addled “diversity” of General Casey will get some of us killed, and keep all of us cowed. In the days since the killings, the news reports have seemed increasingly like a satirical novel the author’s not quite deft enough to pull off, with bizarre new Catch 22s multiplying like the windmills of your mind: If you’re openly in favor of pouring boiling oil down the throats of infidels, then the Pentagon will put down your e-mails to foreign jihadists as mere confirmation of your long established “research interests.”

If you’re psychotic, the Army will make you a psychiatrist for fear of provoking you. If you gun down a bunch of people, within an hour the FBI will state clearly that we can all relax, there’s no terrorism angle, because, in our over-credentialized society, it doesn’t count unless you’re found to be carrying Permit #57982BQ3a from the relevant State Board of Jihadist Licensing.

Ezra Levant, my comrade in a long battle to restore freedom of speech to Canada, likes to say that the Danish cartoons crisis may one day be seen as a more critical event than 9/11. Not, obviously, in the comparative death tolls but in what each revealed about the state of Western civilization.

After 9/11, we fought back, hit hard, rolled up the Afghan camps; after the cartoons, we weaseled and equivocated and appeased and signaled that we were willing to trade core Western values for a quiet life. Watching the decadence and denial on display this last week, I think in years to come Fort Hood will be seen in a similar light. What happened is not a “tragedy” but a national scandal, already fading from view.

— Mark Steyn, a National Review columnist, is author of America Alone.


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4 Responses {+}
  • DimLamp DimLamp

    People prefer to live in denial and scapegoat Jews and Christians these days. It reminds me a bit of the Inquisition days, when Jews or innocent Christians spoke truth to power, that was interpreted way too often as being overly defensive, hence guilty of crimes that were purely fictitious. The more an innocent Jew or Christian defends the truth, the more vigorously their opponents yell and scream they are guilty until proven innocent.

    Shalom Tabatha,
    DimLamp

  • Tabatha Tabatha

    Shalom DIMLAMP :)

    Lovely to hear from you!

    Yes, it does indeed seem that both Christians and Jews make easy scapegoats at present. I read all the time about Christians being persecuted in Muslim lands – Jews have already been kicked out so aren’t there any longer. Now it is Christians who are suffering at the hands of Islam.

    I was very saddened yesterday to read that here in the UK, the Archbishop of Canterbury said he was ‘unsure’ of the future of his Church/movement. I don’t recall ever hearing British Christian leaders sound so weary. Islam fills any spiritual gap that arises, which is scary. Churches are being torn down here – and Mosques built.

    Of course, if Islam was truly a peaceful religion, this wouldn’t be a problem and Jews and Christians wouldn’t be alarmed as we are!!

    Thanks for stopping by – do visit again :)

  • Sultan Knish Sultan Knish

    the funny thing is that an article about a man who sent him flowers identified him as a “Religious Christian”. But Hasan himself still can’t be identified as a religious Muslim.

  • Tabatha Tabatha

    SULTAN KNISH -

    Really? That’s interesting. There truly is a collective madness at work here, whereby some people will do anything rather than name Islam as the driving force behind Islamic terrorism.

    Your post illustrates that again, the same rules don’t apply to members of other faiths.

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