Artikel di bawah ini nunjukin gimana Clinton dan media melakukan dobel 
standard, bermunafik ria. Ga beda dgn kelakuan orang2 Islam.




September 17, 2012 
Hillary Cheered Broadway's Book of Mormon, Condemns Innocence of MuslimsBy Jack 
Cashill

Read more: 
http://www.americanthinker.com/2012/09/hillary_cheered_broadways_book_of_mormon_condemns_innocence_of_muslims.html#ixzz26l78fNA0



On Thursday of last week, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called the video 
project Innocence of Muslims, the one that may or may not have provoked riots 
worldwide, "disgusting and reprehensible."

Although Clinton could have seen no more than a 13-minute trailer for the 
video,she condemned it in no uncertain terms: "Let me state very clearly -- and 
I hope it is obvious -- the United States government had nothing to do 
with this video.  We absolutely reject its content and message."

One would think that Clinton might have had a similar reaction to a musical 
comedy by the name of The Book of Mormon, a satirical, scandalously 
potty-mouthed riff on the Mormon religion.  What follows is one of the show's 
printable lyrics, this from the song "All-American Prophet."

>
>You all know the Bible
>Is made of Testaments old and new.
>You've been told it's just those two parts,
>Or only one, if you're a Jew.
>But what if I were to tell you
>There's a FRESH third part out there?
>That was found by a HIP new prophet
>Who had a little...
>Donny Osmond flair.

Apparently, Secretary Clinton has flexible standards.  The Associated Press 
reported soon after The Book of Mormon's opening that "[t]he show has been 
greeted not by protests but rhapsodic reviews and standing ovations from crowds 
that have included 
celebrities as diverse as Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, 
actor Jack Nicholson and composer Stephen Sondheim."  Indeed, the show 
has been the biggest hit on Broadway these past two seasons, winning 
nine Tony Awards along the way.

True, when the show premiered in 2011, the media were shocked.  NPR accurately 
called it "blasphemous."  The Washington Post called it "acidic."  The New York 
Times called it "more foul-mouthed than David Mamet on a blue streak."

But the media did not stop there -- not at all.  In context, NPR called The 
Book of Mormon "blasphemous, hilarious and oddly endearing."  The Post called 
the show "one of the most joyously acidic bundles Broadway has unwrapped in 
years."  And the Times called it, foul-mouthed or not, "a newborn, 
old-fashioned, pleasure-giving musical."

Although some likely found The Book of Mormon as "offensive and reprehensible 
and disgusting" as White House spokesman Jay Carney found Innocence of Muslims, 
the Obama administration chose not to denounce it.  Nor could I find any 
protest from Carney when his former employer, TIME Magazine, praised The Book 
of Mormon as "bright and enjoyable, and good enough to make even a grumpy 
critic's 10 Best list."

The White House certainly did not ask the Eugene O'Neill Theater "to review" 
whether The Book of Mormon "violates their terms of use," as it asked Google to 
review the trailer for Innocence of Muslims.

Nor did the White House ask the FBI to interview everyone associated with 
the show, from the set designers to the producers, as it has done for Innocence 
of Muslims.  "We cannot and will not squelch freedom of expression in this 
country," said Jay Carney.  "It is a foundational principle of this nation." 
 That bromide should reassure those people now being grilled by the FBI.

The media, even more than the White House, have been almost comically 
hypocritical about Innocence of Muslims.  When Washington Post reviewer Ann 
Hornaday called the film "vile," she stopped there.  It was not "vile, but."  
It was just simply vile.

Hornaday struggled to rationalize her contempt for its producers.  "The jumble 
of cheesy-looking scenes and badly dubbed dialogue on display," she 
concluded, "look less like promotional scenes culled from a fully 
realized motion picture than a primitive piece of cynical agitprop."  
That is all true enough, but the left's openly voiced hatred for this 
project has little to do its with its admittedly awful production 
values.

The Huffington Post, whose reviewer was "praying" that The Book of Mormon would 
be "a huge hit and lead the way for more original shows like it," was now 
leading the way to expose the culprits behind The Innocence of Muslims.  The 
publication has been running banner headlines that read "'Innocence Of Muslims' 
Filmmaker Identified By Law Enforcement" and "'Innocence Of Muslims' Shot On 
Hollywood Set, Film Permit Connected To Christian 
Charity."  If the FBI asked the editorsto hand out pitchforks and publish a map 
to the filmmaker's house, they likely would have complied.

The response by the media and the Obama administration would not have 
surprised Christopher Hitchens.  Hitchens discovered the moral emptiness of his 
colleagues on the left when he labored to shelter his friend, 
Salman Rushdie.  Rushdie, a westernized progressive, provoked a deeply 
serious death threat from the Iranian mullahs for his artful book The Satanic 
Verses. 

In his memoir, Hitch-22, Hitchens relates his surprise upon finding the 
"postmodern Left in 
league with political Islam."  He cites one prominent leftist after 
another denouncing Rushdie for having disturbed the status quo.  The 
moral cowardice of his friends on the left depressed him almost as much 
as the sight of crowds in British cities demanding not only "less 
freedom," but also "the destruction of an author's work and even the 
taking of an author's life."

For the left, Hitchens came to understand, the sensitivity to Islam had 
much less to do with respect for religion than it did fear of offending 
its allies in post-colonial anti-Americanism.  The "undercurrent of 
menace and implied moral and racial blackmail" paralyzed them.  Given 
Rushdie's status as one of their own, more or less, leftists could not 
exactly demand his head.  But the producers of Innocence of Muslims enjoy no 
such grace.  If they can be tied to a "Christian charity," 
even an Egyptian one, the folks at the Huffington Post will be leading 
the lynch mob.

By contrast, the Mormon response to the Broadway show that profanes their 
faith has been exemplary.  Church elders have said that "the musical 
might entertain you for a night, but the Book of Mormon, the 
scripture, will save your life."  Individual Mormons have been lining up across 
the street from the theater -- not protesting, but handing out 
copies of the actual Book of Mormon.

According to TPM, a leftist blog, Mitt Romney has been "echoing [the] White 
House position" on Innocence of Muslims.  "The idea of using something that 
some people consider sacred and then 
parading that out a negative way is simply inappropriate and wrong," 
Romney said.  "And I wish people wouldn't do it."  But this is hardly an echo.  
Wishing people would stop is not quite the same as dispatching 
the FBI. 


The real difference, though, between Romney's response and the White House's, 
certainly the 
difference between his and Hillary's, is that he could and would have 
said the very same thing about The Book of Mormon.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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