http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/publications/id.9171/pub_detail.asp

 

April 6, 2011


Ashes for Allah: New Calls for Censorship


 <http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/authors/id.93/author_detail.asp>
Edward Cline


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Comments (7)
<http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/publications/comments.asp?id=9171> 

http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/imgLib/20110405_JonesKoran.jpg

 

In the 21st century, on the lunatic fringe of American religion, a man
decided to revive the medieval practice of putting an animal or inanimate
object on trial for some grave offense, which was usually for witchcraft or
being an instrument of the devil. The medievalist man is
<http://www.cnsnews.com/news/article/pakistan-stoked-anger-about-qur-burning
> Terry Jones, pastor of the Dove Outreach Center in Gainesville, Florida,
who announced plans to hold a “trial” of the Islamic Koran, charging it with
“inciting murder, rape and terrorism.” Mr. Jones’s capacity for intellectual
discourse on the evil of the ideas contained in the book being severely
limited (he is a Baptist), burning an inanimate object was all that is left
to him in the way of rebuttal and protest. 

 

On the evening of March 20, the “trial” went ahead with Jones presiding. It
ended with another pastor setting alight a kerosene-soaked copy of the
Qur’an.

A brief
<http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5gIAU2611yDuRcHmDyA-nwslN
aV7g?docId=CNG.7230d9828bd6255bbc7388f9c1d4bcea.801> Agence France
Presse(AFP) report said that although the event was open to the public fewer
than 30 people attended. A subsequent local media report said the only
journalists who turned up on the day were an AFP stringer, several students
and an unassigned photographer. A video clip was posted online, however.


The news media paid the event little or no attention. Jones had promised to
burn a copy of the Koran last September 11, on the anniversary of 9/11, but
was talked out of it by officials who feared a repetition of the Danish
Mohammad cartoon riots. They feared in vain. The riots occurred anyway. For
Muslims, knowledge is a dangerous thing. If it doesn’t fit, they throw a
fit.

Everyone underestimated the determination of Jones to make some statement,
however addled it might be, and presumed that his apparent thirst for
publicity had been slacked. 

The “trial” served as an excuse for another round of
<http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2011/04/01/501364/main20049745.shtml?utm_sou
rce=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed:+CBSNewsTheEarlyShowFoodRec
ipes+(The+Early+Show:+Food+&+Recipes:+CBSNews.com)>  riots, murder and
mayhemby Muslims. Warring Muslim factions, however, have burned or destroyed
more copies of the Koran than have any group of Westerners, but this fact is
an unthinkable thought to Muslims. As with Jones’s original broadcast
intention to burn a copy of the Koran, together with the publication of the
Danish cartoons, there was also this time a measurable delayed reaction that
went unnoticed. Time passed between knowledge of the “offenses” and Muslim
reaction. This was to give the doyens of “anger management” time to whip
their predisposed flocks and armies of manqués into a frenzy. 

As of April 5th, the riots and protests against Jones and a potpourri of
things Western continue. 

A unique train of events ensued, one that led to the latest blathering of
American politicians.

 

Afghan  <http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20110403/wl_nm/us_afghanistan_protests>
President Hamid Karzai, who last week drew Afghan public attention to the
burning, an event that initially gained little media coverage, on Sunday
called on the U.S. Houses of Congress to join in the condemnation and
prevent a repeat incident.


Several Muslim clerics seized on this unsolicited piece of Constitutional
advice by our alleged “ally” to give their humble congregations double doses
of feverish outrage. 

Karzai was abetted in this by Pakistan.

 

On March 22, Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari, in a speech to the federal
parliament, condemned the incident “in the strongest possible words,” and
Pakistan’s foreign ministry called the burning a “despicable act.” Dozens of
reports on the Qur’an burning appeared in Pakistani media outlets on March
22-23, but the story received negligible coverage elsewhere in the Islamic
world.


The klaxon of hurt Muslim feelings was also sounded by the
<http://www.cnsnews.com/news/article/un-religious-defamation-resolution-not-
d>  Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC) at the
<http://arabnews.com/middleeast/article330915.ece>  U.N. Human Rights
Commission. 

 

On March 31, 2011,  <http://canadafreepress.com/index.php/article/35133>
Pakistan’s United Nations ambassador, Abdullah Hussain Haroon, spoke to
reporters at UN headquarters on behalf of the 56 member state Organization
of the Islamic Conference (OIC) Ambassadorial Group, condemning the recent
burning of a copy of the Koran by the pastors of a small Baptist Church in
Gainesville, Florida. He highlighted the OIC’s “grave concern that the
despicable act had severely hurt the feelings of 1.5 billion Muslims around
the world” and warned reporters that it could lead to “incidents that are
uncontrollable.”


Was that a “prophecy,” a hope, or a threat?

 

The very next day Ambassador Haroon’s warning turned into a tragic,
self-fulfilling prophesy. A large mob of demonstrators in Afghanistan, angry
at the Koran burning and apparently responding to calls for revenge by three
mullahs who had addressed worshippers at Friday prayer in one of
Afghanistan’s holiest mosques, stormed a United Nations compound in the
northern region of the country and killed a number of innocent people,
including at least seven UN staff members - two reportedly by beheading.


Not to be outdone in condemning Jones for “causing” the Afghan riots, a
number of American politicians, a Supreme Court justice, and one American
general chimed in with their own “anger.” South Carolina Republican Lindsey
Graham, Senate majority leader Nevada Democrat Harry Reid, one Supreme Court
justice, Steven Breyer, and General David H. Petraeus, commander of the NATO
International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) and U.S. Forces Afghanistan,
<http://nation.foxnews.com/koran/2011/04/04/senators-want-punish-koran-burni
ng> allpiled on the hapless Jones. 

 

Senate Majority Leader Harry
<http://nation.foxnews.com/koran/2011/04/04/senators-want-punish-koran-burni
ng> Reid says congressional lawmakers are discussing taking some action in
response to the Koran burnings of a Tennessee [sic] pastor that led to
killings at the U.N. facility in Afghanistan and sparked protests across the
Middle East, Politico reports. “Ten to 20 people have been killed," Reid
said Sunday on CBS’ “Face the Nation.” “We’ll take a look at this of course.
As to whether we need hearings or not, I don’t know.”


Lindsey Graham was more specific, but just as ignorant. 

 

Senator Lindsey Graham said Congress might need to explore the need to limit
some forms of freedom of speech, in light of Tennessee [sic] pastor Terry
Jones’ Quran burning, and how such actions result in enabling U.S. enemies.
"I wish we could find a way to hold people accountable. Free speech is a
great idea, but we're in a war," Graham told CBS' Bob Schieffer on “Face the
Nation” Sunday.


ABC’s George Stephanopoulos of “Good Morning America” reported these
interesting instances of ignorance.

 

We also saw Democrats and Republicans alike assume that Pastor Jones had a
Constitutional right to burn those Korans. But Supreme Court Justice Stephen
Breyer told me on “GMA” that he's not prepared to conclude that -- in the
internet age -- the First Amendment condones Koran burning.

Last week President Obama told me that Pastor Jones could be cited for
public burning – but that was “the extent of the laws that we have available
to us.” Rep. John Boehner said on “GMA” that “just because you have a right
to do something in America does not mean it is the right thing to do.”


General Petraeus offered his own politically correct obloquy:

 

"We condemn, in particular, the action of an individual in the United States
who recently burned the Holy Quran. We also offer condolences to the
families of all those injured and killed in violence which occurred in the
wake of the burning of the Holy Quran.

We further hope the Afghan people understand that the actions of a small
number of individuals, who have been extremely disrespectful to the Holy
Quran, are not representative of any of the countries of the international
community who are in Afghanistan to help the Afghan people."


Where have all the great generals gone? Can you imagine George Patton being
outraged over a desecration of Mein Kampf, or William Sherman frowning on a
mocking rendition of “Dixie”? 

 

Lastly,
<http://content.usatoday.com/communities/theoval/post/2011/04/obama-condemns
-quran-burning-violence-in-afghanistan/1>  President Barack Obama consulted
his script writer and had this to say:

 

“The desecration of any holy text, including the Koran, is an act of extreme
intolerance and bigotry. However, to attack and kill innocent people in
response is outrageous, and an affront to human decency and dignity. No
religion tolerates the slaughter and beheading of innocent people, and there
is no justification for such a dishonorable and deplorable act.”


Empty but ominous words. In Indonesia, as a boy, Obama reputedly studied the
Koran, and should know better than any other politician that the Koran
indeed tolerates – nay, encourages – the slaughter and beheading of
non-Muslims and other infidels. Note that he specified the “text,” and not
the physical object. The “text” contains ideas that sanction a brutal
ideology. Mr. Obama is certainly smarter than Terry Jones.

Daniel Greenfield summed it up neatly on
<http://sultanknish.blogspot.com/2011/04/muslims-and-moral-handicaps.html?ut
m_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed:+FromNyToIsraelSultan
RevealsTheStoriesBehindTheNews+(from+NY+to+Israel+Sultan+Reveals+The+Stories
+Behind+the+News)>  Sultan Knish. Citing the incident of a German
propagandist jailed during WWI, he notes:

 

Today we aren't jailing filmmakers who traffic in anti-American propaganda
in wartime. If we did then half of Hollywood would be behind bars. Instead
Democratic and Republican Senators are discussing banning speech offensive
to the enemy. Because even though they're killing us already-- we had better
not provoke them or who knows how much worse it will become.


What it will all lead up to is a kind of selective censorship that will
insulate Islam from any criticism. Politicians, generals and pundits do not
become overwrought about the burning of bibles, Torahs, or other religious
documents. Only about Korans. This is because Islam is always in the news,
in some form or another, and that is because Muslims are always being
“provoked” by the least criticism of them and their creed to throw bloody
tantrums. Islam is another “culture,” another religion, another “way of
life,” and by the criteria of political correctness and an affinity for
dhimmitude, it must be protected from all forms of offense.

And that selective, privilege-granting censorship will serve as a precedent
and lead to other brands of censorship, including prohibiting the kind of
writing you are reading here. Calm, reasoned, and deserved criticism of
Islam must sooner or later be classified as a “hate crime,” as “injurious,”
“hurtful,” and “bigoted” as burning a Koran. Observe the intellectual and
moral stature of Americans who attempt to establish a causal relationship
between the Afghan riots and Jones’s publicity stunt-cum-protest.

These people are not going to defend the First Amendment. They are unable
to. They are intellectual troglodytes. For evidence of the fishbowls of
swirling, floating abstractions their minds are, I invite anyone to read the
transcript of an interview of Lindsey Graham by
<http://www.nationalreview.com/articles/263848/graham-responds-steyn-stuttaf
ord-robert-costa?page=1>  The National Review and to reach his own
conclusion. The interview was conducted to give Graham a chance to expand
and qualify his weekend statements on the Afghan riots and Jones’s
Koran-burning. I challenge anyone to find an operating principle in his
illiterate, emotionalist gibberish, the kind of equivocating rhetoric that
can justify the kind of fascism that is congealing around American life. To
wit:

 

"Let me tell you, the First Amendment means nothing without people like
General Petraeus. I don’t believe that the First Amendment allows you to
burn the flag or picket the funeral of a slain service member. I am going to
continue to speak out and say that’s wrong. The First Amendment does allow
you to express yourself and burn a Koran. I’m sure that’s the law, but I
don’t think it’s a responsible use of our First Amendment right."


And if Graham, Boehner, Reid, Petraeus, and Obama do not think my writing
here is a “responsible” use of my First Amendment right, what do they
propose to do about it? How do they propose to make me “accountable”? The
menacing growl is in their words. The First Amendment has already been
whittled down to a splinter of what it once meant. It would be nothing to
them to reduce it to a sliver.

What distinguishes their position on freedom of speech from that of the
United Nations? Nothing. A U.N. spokesman felt compelled to add his own two
cents about freedom of speech as he recounted the murders of the U.N. staff
by the Muslim mob in Mazar-i-Sharif.
<http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com/mobile/?type=story&id=2014670522
&>  Staffan de Mistura, the U.N’s Envoy to Afghanistan, described the
Koran-burning as an “insane and totally despicable gesture.”

 

"Freedom of speech does not mean freedom of offending culture, religion or
traditions," de Mistura said. "Those who entered our building were actually
furiously angry about the issue about the Quran. There was nothing political
there."


Oh, but there was, Mr. Mistura. Freedom of speech now stands to be
sacrificed on the altar of pragmatic accommodation to Muslims and Islam. And
as a Graham or Reid or Boehner touch a match to a compromise-soaked
Constitution, Muslims, gathering after their prayers, will watch the ashes
and smoke rise in the sky, and chant: “Burn, baby! Burn!”

They will not need to chant, “Death to America!” America will already be
dead.

 

 <http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/> FamilySecurityMatters.org
Contributing Editor
<http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/authors/id.93/author_detail.asp.>
Edward Cline is the author of a number of novels, and his essays,
<http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/publications/id.2749/pub_detail.asp>
books, reviews, and other nonfiction have appeared in a number of
high-profile periodicals.

 



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