*The Unchanging of the Guard *

*By Mark Steyn *

*Published May 29, 2017*

[image: Description: Description: The Unchanging of the Guard]

For me, the most interesting parts of a Trump speech are his diversions
from the script. Sometimes, if the speechwriter's got a line that tickles
his fancy, he'll just riff off it for a bit. Sometimes he diverges from the
prepared remarks in striking ways. This weekend in Saudi Arabia, addressing
the big Islamo-schmoozefest, he did both. The President was supposed to say
<http://www.cnn.com/2017/05/21/politics/trump-saudi-speech-transcript/>:

*That means honestly confronting the crisis of Islamist extremism and the
Islamist terror groups it inspires.*

Instead he said:

*That means honestly confronting the crisis of Islamic extremism and the
Islamists and the Islamic terror - of all kinds. We must stop what they're
doing to inspire because they do nothing to inspire but kill and we are
having a very profound effect if you look at what's happened recently.*

The last part is just one of those aforementioned riffs. But the
substitution of "Islamic" for "Islamist" is more intriguing. The first
deployment might just have been accidental. It was a long way into the
speech and sometimes the eye and mouth start to wander. On the other hand,
in this particular address, Trump had been unusually disciplined about
staying on-script. And then he started to speak the second reference - "the
Islamists" - and he seemed to catch himself and back up, to insist on
reiterating: "the Islamic terror". Not Islamist, but *Islamic*.

Longtime readers will recall that ten, fifteen years ago I used to use the
word "Islamist". And then I stopped doing so. It had once seemed to me a
useful distinction between hardcore nutters and the millions of Muslims
around the world who just want to run corner shops and drive taxis and get
on with their lives - and such a distinction might lead some of those
shopkeepers and cab drivers to resist the encroaches of "Islamism".

But in our less civilizationally confident time any such line is even less
bright. "Islamist" came to seem an equivocation, and one that led to darker
evasions - such as that "a small minority" has "hijacked" a "religion of
peace". And the evasions were followed by a ludicrous but insistent
inversion of reality - that, as John Kerry, Hillary Clinton and others will
have it, Islam has "nothing" to do with terrorism.

So I mothballed "Islamist". Ever since, around the world, I have had many
scholarly discussions into the small hours about the usefulness of the
word, and the precise differences between "Islamists" and Muslims, in the
course of which someone always makes the artful debater's point: "What
about Mohammed? Was he an Islamist?"

I think we all know the answer to that. President Erdoğan certainly does.
Having previously declared that the concept "moderate Islam" is ugly and
offensive because "Islam is Islam", he recently rebuked Angela Merkel
<http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4185796/Erdogan-tells-Merkel-stop-saying-Islamist-terrorism.html>,
mutasarrıf of his German sanjak, for using the term "Islamist terrorism".
"Such an expression is not correct because Islam and terror cannot be
associated. The meaning of Islam is peace." Or else.

So Trump's rejection of "Islamist" seemed conscious and deliberate -
especially in a speech written by some no-name Foggy Bottom types that
veered dangerously close to Kerryesque or Theresa May levels of blather.
Key line:

*Terrorists do not worship God, they worship death.*

Erdoğan could put straight whichever State Department flunky cut'n'pasted
that illusory boilerplate. For one thing, these things are not
incompatible, not an either/or choice. Terrorists worship death *and* God -
because this particular God promises that paradise is a brothel for which
this earthly life is a mere waiting room.



Left to his own devices, Trump would never utter such a line. On the
campaign trail, Trump proposed banning Muslim immigration until we can
"figure out what the hell's going on" - which, whatever else may be said
about it, indicates a certain prudent modesty rather than the blithe
assumption, to which 99 per cent of other western leaders subscribe, that
you know your enemy's motivations better than they do. Likewise, "Islamist"
is a speechwriter's word, "Islamic" is Trump's - and, like his uncovered
wife and daughter behind him, not a small thing to throw in the face of a
conclave of Islamic bigshots.

That was the service the President provided during the campaign: as I said
to Greta van Susteren one night, in the objective sense Trump's call for a
"Muslim ban" is less nuts than John Kerry insisting, even as they're still
swabbing the blood from the streets of Paris, that Islam and terrorism have
nothing whatsoever to do with each other. In a world of Kerry, Merkel, May,
Cameron, Hollande, Macron, Trudeau, Turnbull et al, you need an outlier
like Trump just to move the meter of public discourse a sixteenth of an
inch out of dissembling and delusion toward something approximating reality.

The trouble is Trump is left to his own devices less and less. The
Republican base voted for Trumpism: an end to illegal immigration, an end
to one-sided trade deals, an end to the spiraling cost of and dwindling
access to health care, an end to decade-and-a-half unwon wars, an end to
the hyper-regulation of every aspect of American life, an end to freeloader
"alliances" like Nato, an end to the toxic bargain of "globalism" wherein
all the jobs in your town migrate to the Third World and all the Third
World migrates to your town. Trumpism is what appealed to these people,
and, if that's your bag, Trump was the only guy running on it. As I wrote
three weeks after he entered the race, the other 16 candidates were all
free to take up these signature issues. Indeed, prominent GOP operatives
were urging them to do so. Me in July 2015:

*If, as Karl Rove proposes, other candidates are able to talk about the
subject in a more "inclusive" way, so be it. But, if "inclusive" is code
for not addressing it at all, nuts to that.*

Who's to say how things might have gone had Jeb or Marco or some other
approved, house-trained candidate snaffled Trump's issues? But none did.
Republicans voted for Trump because he was the only advocate of Trumpism.

Unfortunately, most of the Republican leadership in Congress is opposed to
Trumpism, preferring some shriveled thing called "the Ryan agenda" that
nobody other than a few thousand of his constituents in a corner of
Wisconsin can be plausibly said to have voted for. Worse, significant
figures in his Cabinet, and even more in the second and third tiers of his
Administration, also reject Trumpism - including, one notes, members of his
own family. If rumors are correct, the new Director of the FBI will be an
open-borders zealot who voted for Hillary. If rumors aren't correct, you
can bet that in any meeting of five or more persons with the President at
least one will be bounding out of the Oval Office to leak details of some
infelicitous Trump aside to *The Washington Post* and *The New York Times*.
That's to say, the betrayals start *in the room*.

The Loyal Opposition isn't really the issue here: They'll always hate
Trump. A decade ago, I wrote of George W Bush that it takes some skill to
get demonized as the new Hitler when 90 per cent of the time you're Tony
Blair with a ranch. But the Dems hated the ranch - just as today they hate
Mar-A-Lago and Trump Tower, and the hair and the showgirls and the Slovene
supermodel. And "bigly" is the new "nucular". So they're having a grand old
time being led by the California Democrat chairman in mass chantalongs of "F**k
Donald Trump!
<http://www.powerlineblog.com/archives/2017/05/who-are-the-craziest-democrats-of-all.php>
"

But, beyond Trump, what of Trumpism? The guys who are seriously f**king him
are the GOP. The really damaging opposition is from Trump's own party: the
Disloyal Government. They seem determined to teach Republican voters that
you can vote for change all you want ...but you won't get any. In the
Eighties, the amusing Tory wet Norman St John Stevas liked to call Mrs
Thatcher "Tina" because she was fond of telling her Cabinet colleagues
"There Is No Alternative" - to her policies. Ryan et al are likewise
telling us "there is no alternative" - to the bipartisan consensus on mass
unskilled immigration, ineffectual interventionism, one-way globalism,
bureaucratized unaffordable health care, and all the rest. As I observed to
Stuart Varney on Fox Business, that's a very dangerous lesson to teach the
voters - that, to modify Obama, elections don't have consequences. No
matter who's in the Oval Office, they're not changing the guard.

So, if you prefer an unscripted Trump over an unTrumpish script, it was
modestly heartening to hear the President modify the State Department's
weasely equivocations - just for a moment, just for a single word, evoking
the Trump of 18 months ago. If it takes going off-script to get back
on-message, let's have more of it.


Read more at http://www.jewishworldreview.com/0517/steyn052917.php3#pBIvY
aTJLI2DkdsI.99




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