What the hell are these people still doing in Great Britain? We will never learn will we. No, not until the politics of terror reign supreme, the delusional denial suffocates us to a painful death and liberal deranged PC-thinking chokes us with the perpetual whining: “we don’t want to hurt people’s feelings..”....eh?
In turn, the Liberals in America have brought every argument of this nature down to accusations of racial prejudice, and ad hominem attacks of being against other cultures if you dare declare that America has a culture of it's own. They have entirely managed to kill any sense of proud heritage they once had, in favor of some sort of misplaced democracy which allows others to spit on their culture. Why? Why should the Americans and the British allow others to spit on their culture whilst living in THEIR country? What's next? We all have to speak Arabic, and live by the Law of Shari'a just so as not to upset our Islamic friends who think our infidel culture is inferior and we should all be dead or converted.
Until the West begins to pay attention to what Muslim extremists are saying in Arabic, Persian and Urdu, rather than what their apologists sprout forth for foreign consumption, the word insulting will not take on the new meaning and level of hatred it should do.
It is a matter of 'demographic time' before Islam will become the religion of the majority, ruled by the law of Shari'a. Just in case we think we are sitting cosily here, and this is someone else's problem, we need to know that Islam is the fastest growing religion in America. Today, the number of followers of Islam in the United States has reached 7 to 8 million Muslims in the United States. More than a quarter of a million people of Arab descent live in southeastern Michigan, making the area the second-largest Arab community outside the Middle East (after Paris, France).
The vast majority (80%) of American mosques are funded with Saudi Arabian money and most subscribe to 18th century Wahhabism that calls for the spread of Islam through violence. Many mosques, "Islamic Learning Centers" and Arab/Muslim Student Unions are distributing large numbers of pamphlets and leaflets attacking Judaism, Christianity and other non-Muslim religions and urging young Americans to convert to Islam.
The so called 'moderates' don't exist. There are only those who admit openly to supporting conversion to Islam through 'Jihad' and those who don't. There are only those who get their hands 'officially' dirty and those that don't. And then of course there are the 'Ellison atheists', and they belong to the 'nutball category'.
The threat of Islam is real. More so than Communism and Fascism ever was, because with Islam, Muslim activists are willing to kill and to die for the cause of spreading their religion. 'Jihad', is a sacred duty for all Muslims to perform, by any support or means available to them. Jihad is not, as asserted recently by apologists in the West a "spiritual struggle", but a Holocaust of non-Muslims.
How many times are we going to hear the liberal whine: "There's nothing we can do to be friends?"
And the cold simple answer: "There is something you can do to be friends. You can convert." Yeah right.
Or the solution to the conflict in the Holy Land according to Abu Saif, a prominent Muslim leader:
"We want the Jews to leave Israel, and to hand the whole of Israel, not just Gaza and the West Bank – the whole of Israel to the Muslims. Only then will the Muslims stop."
Like I said...yeah right.
Across town from the site of the recent attempted car-bomb attacks, several thousand Muslims gathered in front of the London Central Mosque to applaud fiery preachers prophesying the overthrow of the British government – a future vision that encompasses an Islamic takeover of the White House and the rule of the Quran over America.
"One day my dear Muslims," shouted Anjem Choudary, "Islam will govern Britain!" Choudary was a co-founder of Al Muhajiroun, the now-banned group tied to suspects in the July 7, 2005, London transport bombings and a cheerleader of the 9/11 attacks.
[...] For Humphries, the response of the Muslims at Islam's largest house of worship in the UK was telling. "Not one said, 'You're not speaking for me' or 'Not in my name.' They stood there and watched and applauded," he told WND.
Like the UK, Humphries said, the U.S. has three major vulnerabilities to patient, fundamentalist Muslims who believe their purpose for living in the West is to help fulfill Islamic prophecies: The loss of border control, the inability to say no and lack of assimilation.
"I feel like I'm Rusty Revere. I'm out there yelling the Muslims are coming, the Muslims are coming," he said. "But we don't want to hear it. We don't want to hurt people's feelings."
Humphries' interview with Abu Saif underscored the radically different vision many of Britain's citizens have for the country's future.
The Muslim leader said he does not believe in democracy and insists there is no such thing as freedom of religion, "because freedom is an absolute term."
"Are we to say that Muslims can fully practice religion in America," he asked in an attempt to explain. "Say, for instance, I was a Muslim in America. Could I call for the destruction of the American government and establishment of an Islamic state in America? No. So where is the freedom of religion? There is none."
Humphries asked: "Do you call for that?"
"Of course," he replied, "we want Islam to be a source of governance for all of mankind. And we also believe that one day America will be ruled by Islam."
Abu Saif explained Islam, like Christianity, has a prophetic tradition.
"One of the prophecies of the message of Muhammad was the hour will never come, i.e., the last day – which you also believe in – will never come until a group of the Muslims … will rise and conquer the white house."
The reference, many Muslims believe today, is to America's symbol of executive power. Islamic leaders in the U.S. largely have been careful to not assert publicly the Muslim belief that Islam ultimately will gain worldwide supremacy. As WND reported, Omar Ahmad, the founder of a prominent U.S.-based Islamic lobby group, denies a newspaper report that he told a group of Muslims in the San Francisco Bay area they are in America not to assimilate but to help bring about Islam's rule over the nation. Like other protesters, Abu Saif presented a typical list of grievances Muslims have with the U.S. and Britain, such as the nations' part in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the wars in Afghanistan and Iran. But the Islamic leader admitted he believes Jews and Christians will always hate Muslims, because Allah has said it is so.
But then of course we do have the so called "moderates":
The leaders of the Islamic Academy are so moderate that they were recently invited to share a platform with Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury.
Yet there are growing suspicions that this suburban house is where the origins of the suspected London and Glasgow bomb plots may lie [...]













Um so I didn't read your whole article but I hope you realize that the KKK does not represent most Christians. That the Taliban doesn't represent the majority of Muslims.
I am white female American and yes Muslim. I am a feminist and yes i wear hijab or a scarf. I vote, I am friends with my Christian neighbors. I also have Buddhist friends and Jewish friends. One of my oldest friends is atheist. I am not trying to convert any of them. It is not for me to even consider weather they are going to earn paradise or earn hellfire.
I am a practicing Muslim and I was shocked, horrified and scared like everyone else on 911. I would love it if everyone on earth believed what I do but it is not any of my business. What is my business is how I am treated, how my family is treated and how we treat others. I have no control over what you do or say. And guess what the ideal Muslim according to many scholar, (basically everyone) the ideal Muslim minds their own business. We Muslims believe that just saying things, even if they are true, about a person that they wouldn't want you to say will be the cause of the following punishment: you will have to eat their flesh in the hellfire. Not exactly something i want to do. The only time it is permissible is to prevent a greater evil, say that the person you are about to donate a lung to is actually going to sell your lung on the black market...that would be awful.....or you were going to look into marring that person but the person is an alcoholic.
I really just want you remind you of something you probably already know, nut jobs are just that and not representative of anything but themselves.
Posted by: Muslimokieinthewest | Thursday, December 18, 2008 at 12:49 AM
This is what's happening to Greenland families:
http://sioe.wordpress.com/
Posted by: Anonymous | Friday, July 25, 2008 at 10:49 AM
We don't hold Christ to account for the inquisition or the lynchings carried out by the KKK. These acts of terror were perpetrated by people who considered themselves His followers.
Similarly we don't blame the Buddha for the acts of the Aum Supreme Truth Sarin Cult (which aligned itself with Buddhism, and received funding from the Dalai Lama). It is equally senseless to blame Muhammad for Wahabism and Al Quaeda.
The Jihad he spoke of meant inner warfare against one's own inner negativity. I hope you have the courage one day to face your own.
Posted by: Jeronimus | Friday, July 04, 2008 at 03:52 AM
A point about Islam that you may not have thought about:
The Koran was not written by Muhammad. He was illiterate.
The Koran was written by the man who persecuted and or killed much of Muhammad's family. It is therefore unfair to use quotations from the Koran to denigrate Muhammad.
Posted by: Jeronimus | Friday, July 04, 2008 at 03:37 AM
Hi there,
I read your blog and think you're a good writer. I would like to invite you to join our new online community at polzoo.com. It is a user generated political editorial and social network. We also choose from amongst our own bloggers to be featured columnists on the front page. I think your voice would be a great addition to our site.
Polzoo
Posted by: polzoo | Monday, March 17, 2008 at 03:54 AM
Paul Krugman, once again, providing the facts..... the irrefutable facts about modern Republicanism also known as "movement conservativism"..... what was it really all about Paul?
No wonder Republicans slam the New York Times whenever they can..... they cannot challenge the facts...... the facts that more and more Americans are finding to be the truth of an American political party so ideologically inbred that they can't mount a viable counterpoint to any of it, because it is all so transparently true.
So it remains their sad mantra invoked against the "Liberal Media", that this or that "Liberal" writer is to blame for the increasing disgust and low esteem held by their fellow Americans and the World towards them and their failed malignant ideology.
Posted by: Ghost Dansing | Monday, November 19, 2007 at 05:03 PM
As a matter of ethics and competence, this Republican administration is faced with another test of it's crediblity in prosececuting the Iraq war..... I predict they will fail as usual.
Meanwhile, back at the ranch:
Krongard, it turns out, has a brother that sits on the Blackwater board.
Posted by: Ghost Dansing | Friday, November 16, 2007 at 04:59 AM
Here's something a little different..... times they are apparently changing in Iraq..... so how 'bout it?
Who’s the Enemy?In Iraq, It’s Getting Harder to Find Any Bad Guys Robert Dreyfuss
Posted by: Ghost Dansing | Monday, November 12, 2007 at 07:58 PM
Link
Posted by: Ghost Dansing | Saturday, November 10, 2007 at 11:14 PM
An excellent article in Tikkun by Steven Jonas, MD, MPH, discussing how torture is actually a useful tool afterall.
"Why Torture"
Any serious student of the issue would definitely read this..... that of course would rule out Republicans who aren't serious students of anything except the propagation of their own propaganda.
Posted by: Ghost Dansing | Sunday, November 04, 2007 at 09:13 AM
As usual an excellent piece by Frank Rich at the New York Times (you know, the National Treasure)....... a "Must Read" for anybody seriously doing the math on the Iran issue.
Link
Posted by: Ghost Dansing | Sunday, November 04, 2007 at 06:47 AM
by the way mac...... divinyls
Posted by: Ghost Dansing | Sunday, November 04, 2007 at 05:55 AM
I agree with mac Brachman on this...... I'm not of the opinion that the Koran turns everybody into terrorists.
Posted by: Ghost Dansing | Saturday, November 03, 2007 at 08:27 AM
Robocop- Not Islam. Islamofascism, the new absolutist belief system of those who are displeased with the idea that people may have different ideas, different notions of the Holy One and how to approach him/her/it, etc., different ways of organizing their lives, and seek to destroy all those who refuse to go along or convert and to impose their POWER-HUNGRY, DOMINEERING, and IMPERIALISTIC views on all others. There are many Muslims who do not believe this way. But I agree there is an enemy and it needs to be confronted. Incidentally, I'm Jewish so I have no particular bias in favor of Muslims or Islam. Shalom and Shabbat Shalom, Mac Brachman
Posted by: mac Brachman | Friday, November 02, 2007 at 08:23 PM
Some expert opinions have recently been provided on the water board technique..... Dubya and his Republican administration don't know if it is torture or not.
LinkAnother case of Republicans not knowing what they're doing.... incompetence? Surprising?
Posted by: Ghost Dansing | Friday, November 02, 2007 at 05:03 PM
Miss your blogging, Alexandra.
best,
-J
Posted by: Jeremayakovka | Friday, November 02, 2007 at 11:49 AM
First, let me compliment you on this blog. It is unique in a good way. Second, Islam is the enemy in this new cold war, except that this war is not so cold.
Posted by: Robocop | Thursday, November 01, 2007 at 08:10 PM
More on modern Republicanism and laissez faire political and economic philosophies.....
LinkSeldom in doubt, frequently wrong in all matters foreign and domestic. Dubya and this Republican administration are the rotten bitter fruit of movement conservativism, what I call modern Republicanism. Anyone casting a vote for a Republican after this administration truly has a lot to answer for.
Posted by: Ghost Dansing | Friday, October 26, 2007 at 06:33 PM
Amen!
Posted by: igout | Friday, October 26, 2007 at 09:28 AM
We need this blog back. Soon. It was one thing that helped me keep my sanity. (And I don't mean GD constantly showing us she/he is familiar with the contents of the NYT and WP). Alexandra, Kenny, anybody, let me know if there is anything I can do. Please get this blog up and running again. Shalom, Mac Brachman
Posted by: mac Brachman | Tuesday, October 23, 2007 at 10:17 PM
So what will Iraq ultimately look like?
LinkPosted by: Ghost Dansing | Tuesday, October 23, 2007 at 04:39 AM
The glorious results of modern Republicanism.... laissez faire economics.... insane profits for the few, chaos for the many.
Energy Traders Avoid ScrutinyAs Commodities Market Grows, Oversight Is Slight
By David Cho
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, October 21, 2007; A01
Posted by: Ghost Dansing | Sunday, October 21, 2007 at 11:11 AM
The sounds of flushing modern Republicanism down the toilet:
Posted by: Ghost Dansing | Wednesday, October 17, 2007 at 04:31 PM
Speaking of studies in demonization:
Paul Krugman
Posted by: Ghost Dansing | Monday, October 15, 2007 at 04:35 AM
That's why I always caveat my comments by saying "modern" Republicanism...... what the Republican Party has become..... who's running it..... who's running the nation.
If you go back to Eisenhower you see a totally different political Party..... more centrist..... Liberal. An ideological revolution started in the Reagan era that swung the Party's center of gravity far right, and the current crowd is rightist.
The strategy at the polls was to count on the loyalty of moderate Republicans while mining the "christian" right and a collection of fringe single issue voters to win narrow majorities...... this administration is the culmination of a stratetgy to gain power and employ it in such a way as to benefit only corporate America (actually now transnational corporations) and the wealthy elite. All the string-alongs for voting purposes were dupes. The objective was a sort of corporate plutocracy in which government is reduced to serving corporate interests and the interests of the nation's wealthy elite. The effects are not theoretical, they are documentable.
What is happening with the Republicans is that their political philosophy has become so rightest that their center is cracking.
Posted by: Ghost Dansing | Saturday, October 13, 2007 at 05:56 AM
Jess: Thanks; things are looking hopeful, but we're not out of the woods yet and more treatment is in store.
GD: I'm with you on this one. However, in PK's recent columns, he has taken the Bush/GOP heartlessness over S-CHIP and other issues and used it to make a blanket condemnation of ALL Repubs and ALL conservatives. We'd all be the spawn of Satan if judged by our worst thoughts and actions.
Shalom and Shabbat Shalom (It's Friday night), Mac Brachman
Posted by: mac Brachman | Friday, October 12, 2007 at 08:52 PM
The issue isn't Graeme Frost. The issue is the poverty of modern Republican ideology. This time they got caught in mid-swiftboat operations and the boat got scuttled.
Paul Krugman
I"m afraid it is movement conservativism, also known as modern Republicanism that is being revealed as "the fraud" on all matters foreign and domestic..... seldom in doubt, frequently wrong..... the Republican Party.
Posted by: Ghost Dansing | Friday, October 12, 2007 at 04:48 AM
Mac, Wishing you strength as you walk through this time of illness in your family. Do keep us posted, won't you? I don't get to stop by as often as I'd like. I find the silence from Kenny and Alexandra REALLY unnerving. Have you any idea what's behind it ?
Peace....
Posted by: jess1dering | Thursday, October 11, 2007 at 09:53 PM
Miss you Alexandria and hope you are well.
Posted by: olivia | Saturday, October 06, 2007 at 01:35 AM
It also makes my point about limiting yourself to a knife when you're going to a gunfight. Also, there is a difference..... movement conservatism (modern Republicanism) denigrated the terms Liberal and liberal by subtly changing the meaning..... specifically equating it with Leftism, a cluster of political wedge issues, and weakness on defense (which was never true).
The Neocons did take one Liberal idea, specifically the importance of national and military strenghth in defense of freedom (Liberal Democracy) and slammed it into a unconstitutional, rightist political philosophy of international bullyism, preemption and rull resurrection of ideals that are jingoistic in nature.
In the first case there is massive untruth intended to undermine the very basis of the American Nation. In the second case, there was expedient use of a concept borrowed out of context from Liberalism in order to pursue objectives outside the interests of the whole American People..... I would say in pursuit of Corporate transnational and other foreign interests.
Posted by: Ghost Dansing | Friday, October 05, 2007 at 05:41 AM
GD, maybe, just maybe, a little bit of the point Kenny P. was making months ago in his post on this website about the dangers of demonizing others who disagree with you is getting through to you. Even YOU may have a capacity for open-mindedness. Makes this Jewish agnostic wonder if there really is a God...
Old joke: (warning, possibly politically incorrect as it makes a joke about a recognized learning disability): Did you hear about the man with dyslexia who was agnostic and became an insomniac? He lay awake all night, every night, wondering whether or not there was a Dog... Shalom, Mac Brachman
Posted by: mac Brachman | Thursday, October 04, 2007 at 07:22 PM
An interesting piece in the NYT by Cohen...... Liberalism and Neoconservatism...... political word play an the problems of lost nuance by a writer who is making fine differentiations..... a Liberal.
Posted by: Ghost Dansing | Thursday, October 04, 2007 at 04:49 AM
Duh..... ya think?
Posted by: Ghost Dansing | Sunday, September 30, 2007 at 08:48 AM
Paul Krugman at the New York Times has provided another insightful article on the relationship between malignant Republican political ideology and the conduct of just about everything governmental..... even war.
Posted by: Ghost Dansing | Friday, September 28, 2007 at 04:43 AM
Jess- I'm fine, family is MOSTLY OK (some serious health issues have cropped up in immediate family but treatment is under way and prognosis is looking good, but in the meantime treatment is arduous); working as usual, missing Alexandra, Kenny and the rest of the crew. Shalom, Mac Brachman
Posted by: mac Brachman | Thursday, September 27, 2007 at 09:26 PM
Hello Mac,
I did write something. Haven't the foggiest notion of what that something was, though. I do thank you for the greeting. That was nice.
I am staggered to learn ( hope I misunderstood ) that Kenny is going through a divorce ??!!??!!
And where IS Alexandra ???
And how are you??
Sometimes I let too much time elapse betwee visits to ATB. Gotta stop doing that..
Posted by: jess1dering | Thursday, September 27, 2007 at 12:36 AM
Hello, all. Thought you might be interested in this piece from The Chronicle.
http://chronicle.com/temp/reprint.php?id=8ytztvdt6sy6x5p550p2m258myk1c1nm
Hope all is well with you, Alexandria, and the rest of you as well.
Posted by: LilMissIndie | Wednesday, September 26, 2007 at 08:58 PM
Here's some excerpts on the same issue:
In an interview with This Week, anchor George Stephanopoulos on Sunday, former President Jimmy Carter said that his recent book Palestine Peace Not Apartheid has led to the most personal criticism of his life. Carter said that he has been called a "liar," "anti-Semite," "plagiarist," "thief," "coward"--and yet the 82-year-old remains as focused, passionate and articulate as ever on his reasons for writing the book and what he hopes it will accomplish.
"If I have had one burning desire in my heart and mind for the last thirty years, I would put peace for Israel at the top of the list," Carter said. "And commensurate with that has to be justice and human rights for the Palestinians next door." (To readers who would still question Carter's commitment to Israel, read the article in The Nation by former national Director of the American Jewish Congress, Henry Siegman). Carter hopes his book will precipitate an open debate on the Israel-Palestine conflict and renew the abandoned peace process- certainly, as both Carter and Stephanopoulos noted, it has already accomplished the former.
In Carter's opinion, the need for this vigorous public debate is all the more crucial since he doesn't believe the Democratic Congress will take any more of a balanced approach to peace than its Republican predecessor. Aside from "maybe two or three members" Carter believes that our representatives view any position critical of the current conservative Israeli government as "politically suicidal."....
....At a time when there is too little honesty or boldness in our politics, Jimmy Carter speaks his mind, with sanity and humanity. His ideas deserve discussion and debate, not vituperation and ad hominem attack.
I agree
Posted by: Ghost Dansing | Tuesday, September 25, 2007 at 10:47 AM
But Carter is not completely wrong..... just read what he actually said. Do you disagree? On the basis of what? Do you really think Iran could pull off a preemptive attack on Israel without getting its clocks-cleaned by Israel and possibly other Western nations?
Carter is demonized because he doesn't go along with rightest rhetoric and sees both sides of the Israeli-Palistinian issue..... and there are a lot of Israelies (non-Likudnic) Israelies that see it the same way.
This Republican administration has accomplished nothing in a any area of foreign affairs..... made America weaker and chosen the wrong fights that actually make things worse.
Compared to Carter, most Republican politicians have the IQ of a carrot.
Posted by: Ghost Dansing | Tuesday, September 25, 2007 at 10:08 AM
Yeah: actually, Carter may be completely wrong, but he is a pretty straight shooter... to shoot his own feet.
Posted by: Ernesto Ribeiro | Tuesday, September 25, 2007 at 09:00 AM
Kenny- (Now that the Yom KIppur fast is over and I'm over my caffeine-withdrawal headache, which usually sets in about 3 p.m. on Yom Kippur afternoon). I'm very sorry to read about your travails and wish you and yours Godspeed. I too hope it will be over soon. Until then, our thoughts are with you, and looking forward to your (and Alexandra's) return to blogging. Shalom, Mac Brachman
Posted by: mac Brachman | Sunday, September 23, 2007 at 03:21 PM
we need the draft, too much of our country just doesn't understand.
Posted by: vetman | Sunday, September 23, 2007 at 12:41 AM
Mac,
I appreciate the implied compliment; but the divorce is really brutal, and it takes all my energy NOT to write, a cryptic statement upon which I will now make the effort not to write further...[wry grimace]
Really, I just have nothing in the tank. I hope it'll be over soon.
Posted by: Kenny | Saturday, September 22, 2007 at 11:39 AM
Missing Link
Posted by: Ghost Dansing | Friday, September 21, 2007 at 08:17 AM
Jimmy Carter may be occasionally wrong, but he is a pretty straight shooter compared to many many others..... especially rightists.
Posted by: Ghost Dansing | Friday, September 21, 2007 at 08:06 AM
Israelinsider.com reports today that, in a major address at Emory University in Atlanta, the Nobel Peace Laureate, author, and distinguished former President of the U.S. and governor of Georgia, His Highness the Sage of Plains, Jimmy Carter, has pronounced it "inconceivable" that Iran would attack Israel or send its missiles toward it. Well, I'm certainly glad we cleared that up. I'm sure Ghost has more reassuring words of wisdom to add to Mr. Carter's words of wisdom. Shalom, Mac Brachman
Posted by: mac brachman | Thursday, September 20, 2007 at 08:44 PM
Jess- Did you write something? Haven't seen you for a while; please re-post it. Good to see your name on a post, even if the post didn't come through. Now if we can only get Alexandra and Kenny P. out of the woodwork... Shalom, Mac Brachman
Posted by: mac Brachman | Wednesday, September 19, 2007 at 10:05 PM
Posted by: jess1dering | Wednesday, September 19, 2007 at 08:58 PM
I'm back to see that Ghost has posted quite a long retort to my assertion that the problem with the USA is the liberal left, not the right. Well, we'll just have to agree to disagree. As a conservative, I don't recognize anyone on the leftist side of the political continuum who expresses my ideological beliefs and standards, with the sole exception of Joe Leiberman. But I'm no fan of Dubya, either. I wrote in my daughter's name on the ballot card for the last Presidential election.
Posted by: Pugnus | Wednesday, September 19, 2007 at 09:00 AM
There are many paradoxes, yet much can be clarified if viewed from an accurate perspective:
Krugman, NYT, 14 September 2007
It is amazing how many seeming paradoxes make sense from this perspective.
Posted by: Ghost Dansing | Friday, September 14, 2007 at 04:59 AM