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“Dhimmitude, or dementia”—take your pick—is
how commentator
Lawrence Auster lamented Patrick J. Buchanan’s recent lapses. Mr.
Buchanan has come out against the Danes for their finger-in-the-dyke
bravery in the face of Islamic bullies; and for foreign aid for Hamas
for their election victory in the Palestinian Authority.
Before Hamas came to power, Buchanan had been a principled opponent of
foreign aid, rightly calling it a racket and a shakedown. But Hamas, a
deeply and indelibly anti-Semitic terrorist outfit, changed that. In a
positively
bacchanalian column, Buchanan exalts Hamas for its “sacrifice” and
dedication, and mocks Israel for being “close to hysterical” over the
outcome, adding that it was its behavior in the first place that elected
Hamas.
To round up this orgy of immorality, Mr. Buchanan urges Americans to
open the spigots and let the aid flow, provided Hamas keeps “armed
resistance” against Israeli civilians to a minimum. (I foresee a
follow-up column, praising Russian President Vladimir Putin for
embracing Hamas.)
A careful reading of the brilliant Buchanan’s oeuvre reveals that he is
consistent in his inconsistencies. To dismiss him as demented or
indentured is to underestimate the man’s astringent mind and, I’m
afraid, the sinister nature of his thinking.
I say “I’m afraid,” because I admired Mr. Buchanan,
even writing that he was “one of the few American patriots left
among the ‘nattering nabobs,’ a thorn in the side of the swarm of
neoconservatives and their pseudo-conservative allies—Messers Limbaugh
and O'Reilly—with whom he was forced to joust.”
In “the
cartoon wars,” Mr. Buchanan is every bit as preoccupied as a
neoconservative with recruiting Americans to serve a grand, national,
Rousseauist purpose. This time, Jean-Jacques Bush wants us to win the
hearts and minds of Muslims, most of whom are moderates, or so Mr.
Buchanan insists.
Here’s the rub: what Mr. Buchanan considers “moderate” is not moderate
in any real sense. For these “moderates,” as Mr. Buchanan attests, “all
believe that to depict the face of the prophet or to ridicule him as
Salman Rushdie did is a sacrilege.” This is the standard of moderation
Mr. Buchanan wants the free world to abide.
A standard which has been flouted with respect to the saintliest of
Western icons.
Why, Christopher Hitchens subjected a nun to a coruscating critique in
The Missionary Position: Mother Teresa in Theory and Practice.
How on earth can we motivate for an exemption for Mohammad, peace be
upon him (offering praise when the prophet is mentioned is now
mandatory)?
Mohammad’s “practice and constant encouragement of bloodshed are unique
in the history of religions,” says
historian Serge Trifkovic (good luck with that, Serge):
Many commands of the
Kuran and Muhammad’s actions and words recorded in the Traditions are
morally abhorrent and/or criminal by the standards of our time. But even
in the context of 7th century Arabia they were often considered
repugnant. Muhammad had to resort to “revelations” as a means of
justifying his actions and suppressing the prevalent moral code of his
own society. Attacking caravans in the holy month, taking up arms
against one’s kinsmen, slaughtering prisoners, reserving a lion’s share
of the booty, murdering people without provocation, violating treaties,
and indulging one’s sensual passions, was also at odds with the moral
standards of his Arab contemporaries. Only the ultimate authority could
sanction it, and Allah duly obliged him.
These facts, all gleaned from the Qur’an and the hadiths, could be
construed as insulting. If Mr. Buchanan’s fatwa is heeded, they’d have
to be suppressed.
Nor is the Top Dog exempt from dhimmitude. According to Mr. Buchanan,
Bush ought to have followed “the lead of our best friends in the
region,” who denounced “the insulting content of the cartoons.”
The Israelis did that? Most Americans think of them as America’s “best
friends in the region.” But not Mr. Buchanan, who is dedicated to
delegitimizing the Middle East's only true democracy—a small spot of
sanity in a sea of savagery, where enlightened Western law prevails, and
where Christians, Jews and their holy places are safe (Muslims are
always safe in liberal countries).
Were anyone to recommend that we follow the lead of our Israeli friends
in the region, Mr. Buchanan would have a conniption, and carp about “outsourcing
Middle East policy to Tel Aviv.”
You see, to Blowback Buchanan, Israel, and Israel alone, is to blame for
Muslim disaffection. The Israeli lobby (and the “Illuminati Jews From
The Center of the Earth”) has driven the Empire to war with Muslims, and
alienated it from its natural allies in the region.
Thus the buddies Mr. Buchanan wants the president to bow to are
“Abdullah, Hosni Mubarak of Egypt, Recep Erdogan of Turkey, and Hamid
Karzai of Afghanistan.” By crowning them America’s “best friends in the
region,” Mr. Buchanan has once again tipped his hand. He’s an Arabist,
not a proponent of a neutral foreign policy.
Mr. Buchanan, however, is much more than an Arabist; he’s an
Occidentalist—one who hates the West for its “rootless cosmopolitanism,”
irreligiousness, free market, and imperialism. This contempt has, I’m
afraid, led Mr. Buchanan into an ideological latrine and locked him
there.
After conflating the Danes with the most off-putting exemplars of free
expression—Larry Flynt the pornographer, the Nazis of Skokie, and the
late Robert Mapplethorpe of the bullwhip-bedecked behind—Buchanan allows
that we are all entitled to be contemptuous of “the beliefs and values
the Islamic faith holds dear, and for the prophet.” “But if we wish to
exercise our right to air [these views] in print or broadcast, we should
expect to reap what we have sown.”
With these obligatory lines, Mr. Buchanan discharges his duty to the
West and its puny freedoms. What follows is an ode to Islam. Buchanan’s
paean to this faith’s brute force is crucial in divining why he demands
the West’s capitulation, following the cartoon Jihad.
Far from being revolted by the barbarians going berserk on the Muslim
Street, Mr. Buchanan is awed by them, describing these Muslims
glowingly, as “devout and resolute in defense of their faith.” Compared
to their faith-inspired savage splendor, Mr. Buchanan thinks “the
milquetoast Christians of modernity,” who reason in response to
“sacrileges such as ‘The Last Temptation of Christ,’” are “pathetic.”
To understand contemporary Muslims’ “devoutness,” Mr. Buchanan suggests
we hearken to Christianity’s past. Christians were once warriors too.
Hallelujah!
To Mr. Buchanan, might is right when it comes to the faithful (although
Jewish religious zealots he abhors—yet another of those consistent
inconsistencies.)
Mr. Buchanan went AWOL on the West because he respects a Muslim
fanatic’s right (and might) to threaten scribes and illustrators more
than he honors the right of these fallen pacifists to live aggression
free.
In Mr. Buchanan’s universe, the meek in faith are not to be blessed—or
even defended—but are to be subjugated to “Blood and Soil” barbarians.
Such Muslims he views as the admired faithful who deserve to inherit the
earth.
©2006 By Ilana Mercer
WorldNetDaily.com
February 17
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