Sunday, December 31, 2006
The West: Fragile or Invincible?
Conventional wisdom maintains that America and the West are not under attack. The terrorist incidents are either dismissed as passing epiphenomena, or presumed to be the regrettably violent expression of a legitimate sense of Islamic grievance against the West.
The Islamists themselves keep adding to the list of alleged/imagined grievances, which the Left obligingly picks up and uses to attack those governments that do contribute to the world's defense against terror.
This defense is primarily being waged by the Anglosphere, the English-speaking world: the U.S., Britain, Australia, Canada, and India. The conservative governments in these countries are under relentless attack by the Left.
A majority of polemicists have taken the position that the West in general, and America in particular, is fragile in the face of a protean enemy: Islamic fascism. The Left is not in this fight. Indeed they do all they can to undermine our defense, in effect to assist the enemy. The Left has, in word and deed, joined the enemy. The sooner we acknowledge this truth the better.
So it is true that in the short and medium term the West will be increasingly fragile in meeting these two enemies: Islamic fascism and the international Left.
Orson Scott Card, in his article "How Our Civilization Can Fall", brilliantly argues a parallel between ancient Rome's Pax Romana and a modern Pax Americana, that the military of each provided the defensive bulwark behind which a trans-border trading system developed. Globalization is a system of global trade that America's military has made possible. Card explores how in the Roman world the system broke down as the Roman military's protection was gradually compromised.
The international Left compromises America's military from inside the West. The projection of American military power is constrained so routinely now, in a myriad ways, it's hard to see America ever launching another elective, pre-emptive military mission after the media circus of defeatism and negativity over Iraq of the past 3 years. The American military's protection of the global trading system has already been seriously compromised. Card's point is well-taken.
Gerard Vanderleun, in "Toying With Genocide", takes the opposite view. He maintains that the Islamists will be defeated, but only in the long term, when the West finally grows tired of the endless homicide bombings, hijackings, kidnappings and beheadings. A serious co-ordinated response will begin when that weariness sets in. In those early stages it will still be a war waged with the West's modern conceit of self-restraint.
Victory will only occur when the gloves come off, likely after a series of devastating terrorist attacks on Western and American targets. In that context, as many European cities continue their transformation into Mogadishu, Vanderleun sees Europe reverting to form. It will use those techniques of localized genocide "it perfected in the last century. Europe is very, very good at police states, purges, death camps, massacres and Gulags." The U.S. he sees deploying a 'remote genocide': nuclear strikes on population centers in the Moslem world. Not only can the West survive "another 9/11, it can survive another hundred 9/11's."
In the short and medium term the West will continue to be fragile, by choice. Inevitably, however, if the Islamists' terror attacks continue, a horrific reckoning will befall the Islamist forces and their Moslem hosts. It is an outcome the West would do almost anything to avoid.
The international Left will almost certainly continue its campaign of subversion, though it's hard to see how their credibility will be maintained once the endgame starts.
We have the Left to thank for this delay in the West's struggle for cultural self-defense.
Thursday, December 28, 2006
Daily reality of violence in the South is under-reported
The media outlets of Thailand are doing the Thai people a disservice by their inadequate reporting on the ongoing violence in the South. The murders and bombings occur on a daily basis. The Thai media appear to be repeating the Western media's mistake of believing that appeasement and silence over the Islamists' war on non-Muslim people will result in Muslim expressions of gratitude and cooperation. The reality is unequivocally the opposite.
In just the past week, from Friday to Friday, here is the actual record of atrocities committed by Islamist terrorists:
On Friday, November 24, in Narathiwat, four Islamic militants spray a teashop with automatic weapons, killing a patron and injuring four others. On the same day, in Pattani, a 42-year-old man is gunned down by Islamists on his way to work. The man survived with serious injuries.
On Thursday, Nov. 23, in Yala, Islamists murder a young man as he is sitting in his car. On the same day, in Pattani, a man is murdered near his home by Islamic gunmen and a 40-year-old Buddhist teacher is shot to death by Muslim militants; in Narathiwat, Islamists gun down a rubber tapper on his way to work.
On Wednesday, Nov. 22, in Narathiwat, a husband and wife are pulled from their pickup truck and brutally killed by radical Muslims. The woman's body is burned.
On Monday, Nov. 20, in Sungai Kolok, 16 Muslim terrorists detonate a bomb at a market, killing two people.
On Sunday, Nov. 19, in Pattani, Muslims gun down a middle-aged Buddhist taxi driver standing in line for food. The man survived with serious injuries. On the same day, in Yala, a 68-year-old Buddhist man is nearly decapitated by Muslim attackers; in Hat Yai, Islamists murder a civilian and dump his body in a ditch; in Narathiwat, Islamists drive up to three men having tea and pound them with automatic weapons for 30 seconds.
On Friday, Nov. 17, in Pattani, a Buddhist villager is murdered by Muslim terrorists while shopping at a market and a Buddhist security guard is murdered by Islamic extremists; in Yala, Islamists shoot a man off of his motorcyle and a Buddhist ice-cream seller is gunned down by Islamic terrorists; in Narathiwat, 27 people are injured when Islamists set off three bombs, and a flower seller is killed.
This is just one week in the life in the southern provinces of Thailand. The more conciliatory the Thai government becomes, the more the attacks escalate. This is the same pattern playing out elsewhere in the world today.
The Islamists respond to silence and appeasement as a provocation. Show compassion, and they attack. Show tolerance, and they attack. Give them money, and they attack. Seek negotiations, and they attack. Isn't the solution obvious? Stop seeking peace. Seek war and peace will come very quickly indeed.
The media is abetting this situation by not reporting more thoroughly on the overt Islamist strategy of daily violence against innocent civilians. It is also a mistake to legitimize their activities by referring to them as "insurgents". They are not. They are killers and thugs.
In just the past week, from Friday to Friday, here is the actual record of atrocities committed by Islamist terrorists:
On Friday, November 24, in Narathiwat, four Islamic militants spray a teashop with automatic weapons, killing a patron and injuring four others. On the same day, in Pattani, a 42-year-old man is gunned down by Islamists on his way to work. The man survived with serious injuries.
On Thursday, Nov. 23, in Yala, Islamists murder a young man as he is sitting in his car. On the same day, in Pattani, a man is murdered near his home by Islamic gunmen and a 40-year-old Buddhist teacher is shot to death by Muslim militants; in Narathiwat, Islamists gun down a rubber tapper on his way to work.
On Wednesday, Nov. 22, in Narathiwat, a husband and wife are pulled from their pickup truck and brutally killed by radical Muslims. The woman's body is burned.
On Monday, Nov. 20, in Sungai Kolok, 16 Muslim terrorists detonate a bomb at a market, killing two people.
On Sunday, Nov. 19, in Pattani, Muslims gun down a middle-aged Buddhist taxi driver standing in line for food. The man survived with serious injuries. On the same day, in Yala, a 68-year-old Buddhist man is nearly decapitated by Muslim attackers; in Hat Yai, Islamists murder a civilian and dump his body in a ditch; in Narathiwat, Islamists drive up to three men having tea and pound them with automatic weapons for 30 seconds.
On Friday, Nov. 17, in Pattani, a Buddhist villager is murdered by Muslim terrorists while shopping at a market and a Buddhist security guard is murdered by Islamic extremists; in Yala, Islamists shoot a man off of his motorcyle and a Buddhist ice-cream seller is gunned down by Islamic terrorists; in Narathiwat, 27 people are injured when Islamists set off three bombs, and a flower seller is killed.
This is just one week in the life in the southern provinces of Thailand. The more conciliatory the Thai government becomes, the more the attacks escalate. This is the same pattern playing out elsewhere in the world today.
The Islamists respond to silence and appeasement as a provocation. Show compassion, and they attack. Show tolerance, and they attack. Give them money, and they attack. Seek negotiations, and they attack. Isn't the solution obvious? Stop seeking peace. Seek war and peace will come very quickly indeed.
The media is abetting this situation by not reporting more thoroughly on the overt Islamist strategy of daily violence against innocent civilians. It is also a mistake to legitimize their activities by referring to them as "insurgents". They are not. They are killers and thugs.
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