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Tuesday, July 26, 2005
The War
The London bombings and other recent events have taught us a great deal about the nature of the Global War on Terrorism. Before London, our focus was overseas – at terrorists, like those who attacked on 9-11, who entered from abroad with, at the most, minimal assistance from those born and raised in this country. The “American Taliban”, John Walker Lindh, was thought to be an aberrational figure – a freak of nature, not a portent of dangers ahead.

We now know that, with minimal resources, Islamic forces reared and recruited within this country may be deployed against us and create terror and havoc with minimal cost. We all should now recognize what I have long maintained, namely that Islam is not a religion like any other: while there are millions of “Good Muslims” in this world, it is also true that the Islamic faith, in and of itself, is hateful and will, as a natural outgrowth of the practice of that faith, produce individuals, even those given every opportunity in the world by the richest and freest society in the history of the world, determined to kill in the name of Islam.

To begin, we need to be honest about the nature of the treat. While it’s true that all Muslims are not the threat, it is also true that Islam itself is the threat. This is a fine distinction, but an important one. In World War Two all Germans were not bad, or a threat, but Germany was the enemy. In the Cold War all Russians may not have been either evil or communists, but Russia was the enemy. In this war not all Muslims are bad, but Islam is the enemy. We need to be honest with the people about this simple fact.

Islam is our enemy.

We need to repeat that.

Islam is our enemy.

That is, as I have already said, not to say that all Muslims are bad, but that the threat that we face is, at its core, not the threat of “terrorism” (there are, after all, plenty of terrorists who pose no threat to us at all) but the threat posed by the ambitions of an Islamic faith which is, at the highest levels, controlled almost entirely by individuals who are either terrorists themselves, supporters of terror, or justifiers of terror.

Why are we fighting Islam, rather than “terrorism”? That’s a rather simple question: because “terrorism” is not the enemy, it is the tactic preferred by our enemies. We can no more destroy “terrorism” than we could have declared war against the Blitzkrieg. To pretend that this war is about Bin Laden and al-Qaeda alone would be akin to declaring war only on the Japanese Navy and Admiral Yamamoto after Pearl Harbor.

Islam is a very old faith, and it has seen glorious days in its past. Though all Moslems may not agree with the aims of the people who provide much of the leadership within the Islamic world, they can be fairly broadly defined.

The leaders of the dominant wing of world-wide Islam believe first that all lands ever occupied by Moslems should forever be so. The most obvious manifestations of that design are in places (like Israel, Chechnya, and the Kashmir) where Islam bumps up against other civilizations, but their territorial ambitions are not limited to these places alone. The more zealous among Islamic leaders no more seek to end their war with the recapture of these “lost territories” than Hitler meant to end his conquests with the Sudetenland. If Islam manages to win in the present-day battlefronts, they’ll move on to other areas – most notably in Europe, which Islam has sought to conquer for thirteen centuries. Already at least one of Bin Laden’s videos has begun to make menacing noises about Spain which, of course, was Islamic-occupied for centuries.

It is entirely clear to me that we are rapidly headed towards the Israelization, as the brilliant columnist Mark Steyn has dubbed it, of much of Europe. Tolerant Holland has, in recent years, been blighted by savage Islamist violence designed to suppress by murder any speech that Islamists find intolerable. Poor Theo Van Gogh, the nephew of the great man slaughtered in the streets, is the Canary in the European mine. It will not be long before the streets of Paris, Rome, Brussels, Oslo, and the other European cities who thought themselves immune from the dangers posed by this enemy – the streets of the cities of those countries who condemned Israel and America – are running with much blood.

And what, in response, will Europeans do? Will the fight, or will they run? At first glance, it seems an absurd question, but I’m not so sure. After all, the French can’t abandon Paris again, can they? What will happen when one in five, or one in four, people in France is a Moslem? And that day on which that will be a reality is coming very soon.

It will not, of course, be tomorrow, but let me point out something to you. In France today, somewhere between one in ten and one in eight people is a Moslem. That percentage is rapidly increasing. There are, at this very moment, somewhere between six million and nine millions Moslems in France. We don’t know an exact number because they live in the inner cities which have become so dangerous that, in sections, the police dare not enter without armored vehicles.

It seems entirely likely to me that, in the face of the chaos such a turn of events is sure to bring, the French elite and middle classes, those who can get out, will flee abroad, to places like Canada, Australia, and, indeed, right here to America. And they will leave behind their underclass, led by Le Pen-like thugs, to fight it out.

How will that end? I don’t know. But I don’t think that anyone can say with any certainty that, by 2050-something, France will not have become the Islamic Republic of France.

So, what is the solution? It’s simple: we need to defeat and discredit the idea of Islam as it is advancing today – “Modern Islam” if you will – and we need to replace it with a peaceful and democratic alternative.

Now, that’s easier said than done. To win requires a war fought on two fronts. It requires a war overseas, and war at home.

To win, we must take on modern Islam, and we must humiliate, destroy, and discredit it.

If we are fighting Islam, some might ask, are we fighting to destroy it? The answer to the question is no: we are no more fighting to destroy Islam itself than we fought Germany or Japan to destroy them. We are fighting Islam to end the threat is poses to us and, hopefully, to purify and reform it along the war by combining it with values imported from the Anglosphere, as we did in both Germany and Japan.

There’s a popular myth out there that terrorism is inspired by “desperation” and so on. This myth is mostly perpetuated by the left, because it ties into both their brown-people-as-victims worldview and their general belief that the government throwing away more money at undeserving people is the best way to solve any problem. Terrorism has nothing to do with desperation – terrorism is used by modern Islam because the leaders of the movement believe that they have a strong chances of being successful using it. And, if the knee-jerk appeasing tendencies of modern Democrats are to be any guide, they’re probably right.

People don’t join armies because they want to die. They join them, go to war, generally in the belief that, one way or another, they’re going to win and that, even if they don’t, they’ll bring success, honor, whatever, to their families and their loved ones.

At the same time, there are some die-hards who will fight to the death, no matter what.

We need a strategy which can deal with both of these threats.

Abroad, we’re mostly on the right track. We’ve kept on the offensive against the enemy, and we’ve killed a lot of terrorists. We should keep that up, with two major modifications.

First, we should consider adopting Israeli-policy with regard to terrorists. When we identify the homes of known terrorists, we should target them and destroy them (along with anyone who remains in them) from the air. Terrorists should be made to pay a personal price for their crimes. When their homes are accessible to us from the ground, we should evacuate and demolish them.

Second, we should establish a policy of nuclear deterrence. One of my greatest fears is that, if the terrorists do ever strike with Weapons of Mass Destruction, we won’t have a leader with the moral certainty to retaliate and that, amid pressure from all sides, we’ll back down. Instead, we should establish a system whereby we have pre-declared targets to be struck in the event of a nuclear attack against America. And, of course, Mecca should be on that list.

At home, it’s time to consider other measures to defend against terror. Specifically, there are two policies which should be put into effect.

It’s time to consider the internment of those in certain risk groups. Internments have a bad reputation because of what happened to Japanese-Americans during World War Two (something I know a great deal about). The problem is that people have taken the problems with that one internment and generalized them to conclude that all internments are bad. The Japanese internment was wrong because it interned all people, including those who posed no conceivable threat, and it resulted in the confiscation of personal property without proper compensation being paid.

Instead, we should begin a targeted internment of those most likely to pose a threat – and we should do so after investigation. Broadly, we should intern people who fall into a number of groups such as young Islamic men who’ve taken extended trips without any obvious purpose (IE – visits with close family) to nations considered terrorist havens, those who fall into a likely terrorist profile and have made pro-terrorist statements, and those identified as being directly linked to terror groups or terrorist financing groups. The overall number would not be large, probably somewhere in the neighborhood of 10,000 people.

Second, it’s time to consider something which, reluctantly, I feel it necessary to endorse – universal military service on the Israeli model, but with a caveat.

We should have universal military service – for home service only. Universal Servicemen should be enrolled in a new, mega-National Guard which will be used to guard vital installations against terror, to inspect all incoming cargo, to defend our borders, and conduct other vital tasks which it’s simply impossible to conduct with a handful of law enforcement personnel.

Whatever we do, we must remember that wars are not won without innovation. Until we’re prepared to do everything necessary to defeat terror, we will continue to face the ever-present threat of sudden death in our streets.
Saturday, July 02, 2005
The Case Against ‘Live 8’
To be entirely frank all of the publicity around Bob Geldof’s ‘Live 8’ concert series, designed to push for Third World debt relief (among other things) is really starting to get on my nerves. Over the last few days it’s been practically impossible to escape the overwhelming publicity for this grand display of celebrity egoism and ignorance. The combination of the moral arrogance of fame, the cluelessness of vapid whores, and the general willingness of the general public to be led along on this march of folly is enough to make one sick.

Now, what’s wrong with ‘Live 8’ and the associated “Make Poverty History” campaign? Well, I have two particular issues with them.

First, I object to the concept at its heart. The whole point of ‘Live 8’ isn’t to raise money for aid – a goal admirable in its aims, though often dubious in its results – but rather to use the power of celebrity in an attempt to bully national leaders (and, by extension, the populations which they serve) into forcibly transferring a portion of their country’s wealth to various undeserving Third World cesspools.

The fundamental idea behind this – that musicians and movie stars are, by virtue of their artistic “talents” our moral betters – is both absurd and offensive. The notion that they should use their cultural influence in an attempt to, in essence, force the implementation of policies that the general public has little or no interest in – and do so with the full assistance of a compliant media is anti-democratic at its core.

More than anything else, what upsets me is the often repeated statement that the people running this damnable enterprise aren’t trying to get at our wallets. This self-evidently untrue assertion is best exemplified by the “Make Poverty History” commercials now being aired on television here in North America. At the end of one commercial, an earnest-looking (but when isn’t he?) Tom Hanks says, “We're not asking for your money. We're asking for your voice.” Yah-huh. Sure.

They’re not “asking for our money.” Instead, they’re trying to bully the government into giving away our money. Billions and billions of dollars of it, in fact, to be poured into about fifty bottomless pits. The organizers an emphatic about this “not asking for your money” thing and, I suppose, in this they’re technically correct. They’re not “asking for your money” they’re asking for your government to simply take your money from you, in the form of taxes, to hand it over to undeserving people who will promptly waste it, and to throw you in jail if you fail to pay up.

Of course, these objections ignore the obvious fact that both debt relief and direct aid to Africa are, for the most part, fundamentally bad ideas.

The African borrowed the money – let them pay it back, or let them default on their debts. It’s only fair. More to the point, providing Africa with debt “relief” would, in the long-term, be bad for Africa as a whole. The reason for this is simple: though various African nations might, in the short-term, be helped by receiving the forgiveness of debts, in the long term it would do nothing but further reinforce a general reluctance to lend money to or invest in Africa.

At its core, the whole impulse behind these “Make Poverty History” campaigns is itself far more paternalistic than anything believed by evil conservatives such as myself. The basis idea behind “Live 8” and other such ventures is that Africa and Africans are fundamentally incapable of caring for themselves, or building a decent life for themselves, and must therefore be cared for by Western taxpayers.

Of course, if we really believe that, then the only reasonable solution is for all of the Western powers to go back to Berlin, sit around a table with a map of Africa, and give it another go. Since, if we can’t trust Africans to make a decent life for themselves, I’m quite sure that we can’t trust them to manage the aid that it’s proposed that we send them.

Liberals, in their capacity for double-think, seem both to blame Western “colonialism” for Africa’s troubles and to believe that a form of Western neo-colonialism (massive aid distributed by the United Nations) is the solution. What stuff.

Perhaps the left has good reason to think that Africa isn’t able to care for itself. After all, were it not for Europeans heroes, it seems doubtful that the Dark Continent would possess either electricity or the combustion engine today – let alone any technology developed after the year 1900. Without the West, it may be fairly confidently asserted, Africa would still be the same sort of tribal hell-hole that it was before the Europeans came.

Africa’s problem isn’t that it was assisted by the West in the last few centuries – it’s that modern Africa is governed, for the most part, by morons whose incompetence is exceeded only by their corruption. Add to that the fact that, thanks to a few generations of idiotic government policies, the only educated people in Africa are Western-educated socialists, and it is little wonder that African governments aren’t even capable of performing elementary tasks such as educating the public on the nature of a major disease or controlling its spread.

That being said, I see no reason to believe that modern Africans, with full access to modern science and wisdom, should not be able to make something of themselves if left to their own devices. After all, most of Asia went from being the poorest part of the world to competing with much of Europe in about fifty years. The only reason to think that Africa would not be able to replicate Asian results is to believe that Africans (who certainly don’t lack natural resources) are somehow inherently incapable of organizing and discipline themselves for modern life. I certainly wouldn’t claim that – but one does wonder if that’s just what some part of the left thinks.

Of course, that would presume (and it’s a mighty big presumption) that most of the left, especially the sort of people on stage and in the audience at those ‘Live 8’ concerts does think which is a mighty presumption indeed. It’s more likely that, rather than having given any real thought to the nature of the African problem the majority of the people involved have simply concluded based upon what they’ve seen on TV that there’s a problem and that he solution should be to get the government to throw other people’s money at it. The people on stage at these things, after all, have enough money so as not to worry about where their tax dollars are going and, from the look of the crowds on TV, I’m fairly confident is suggesting that most of people in those crowds don’t pay taxes at all.

Fortunately for all of us, the G8 has any easy way out of this. They can come out of the Summit, make all sorts of lavish promises about aid to Africa, and then fail to keep them. By the time anyone notices, all of the celebrities will have moved on to their next scandal and their various acolytes, most of whom can’t remember what day it is, let alone hold any sort of coherent political agenda, will have moved on.