Your Brother Daniel
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Generalizations:
Nazis, Muslims, and Nicholas Kristof
Generalizations are the
currency of scholarly debate and decision-making. For instance, one study,
attempting to measure the impact of pornography on rape, observed:
· Victimization rates for rape in the United
States demonstrate an inverse relationship between pornography consumption and
rape rates.
While there has been an
array of anecdotal evidence that the rapist first used porn before raping, generalizations based on this kind of
study are quite germane. Another study found that:
· A preschooler living with one biological parent
and one step-parent was forty times more likely to be sexually abused than one
living with two natural parents.
From this study and
others like it, we can generalize
that preschoolers are safer with two biological parents.
To claim that there is
something the matter with making generalizations is to silence debate and
inquiry. Even more fundamentally, such a proscription starves and blinds the
mind. However, this is just the thing that multi-cultural (religious
pluralistic) dogma is doing. It claims that, since we lack any absolute
standards, we cannot judge other cultures, religions, or ideologies.
Others assert that we
cannot make generalizations about the people who ascribe to a given ideology.
However, while it is true that every Nazi might have believed differently in
some respects, it would be wrong-headed to conclude that we should not speak
about Nazis in general. Why:
1. The majority still shared many beliefs.
2. The evils of Nazism were almost universally
experienced in every nation Nazis entered.
3. Even though they only represented a minority of
the German people, their violent tactics were able to commandeer the entire
nation.
4. To refuse to make generalizations about Nazi Germany would have defused,
de-motivated, and de-focused the Allied effort to stop this horrible evil.
We need generalizations,
but we must use them wisely. However, columnist Nicholas Kristof argues against
the use of such generalizations. In essence, he claims that all religions are
basically without behavioral distinctives, and therefore, we cannot make such
generalizations about them:
· Beware of generalizations about any faith
because they sometimes amount to the religious equivalent of racial profiling.
Hinduism contained both Gandhi and the fanatic who assassinated him. The Dalai
Lama today is an extraordinary humanitarian, but the fifth Dalai Lama in 1660
ordered children massacred “like eggs smashed against rocks.” Christianity
encompassed the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and also the 13th century papal
legate who in France ordered the massacre of 20,000 Cathar men, women and
children for heresy, reportedly saying: Kill them all; God will know his own.
There were also Nazis
who performed heroic and noble acts, but does this mean that we cannot make any
generalizations about Nazism? However, Kristof claims that:
· The caricature of Islam as a violent and
intolerant religion is horrendously incomplete.
Should we also apply
such a conclusion to Nazism because there were good people fighting under the
Nazi flag? Instead clarity requires us to distinguish between “Nazis” and
“Nazism,” and to examine the overall thrust of Nazism.
Likewise, we need to
recognize that there are good and peaceable Muslims like the small-minority
Sufis. However, they do not reflect the ideology and overall trust of Islam as
German individuals, like Dietrich Bonhoeffer, did not reflect the Nazi
ideology.
How then should we make
generalizations about Nazism? By focusing on their ideology, interpretation of
this ideology, and impact! What can we safely say about Islam? For one thing,
it is a religion of world domination under Shariah Law and the Islamic
Caliphate. Ibn Khaldun, the 15th century Tunisian historian, wrote:
· In the Muslim community, the holy war is a
religious duty, because of the universalism of the Muslim mission and the
obligation to convert everybody to Islam either by persuasion or by force...
The other religious groups did not have a universal mission, and the holy war
was not a religious duty for them, save only for purposes of defense... Islam
is under obligation to gain power over other nations.
Here’s some of the
Koranic basis for this teaching:
· “Make war on them until idolatry is no more and
Allah’s religion (Islam) reigns supreme, (Koran 8:37)
· “When the Sacred Months are over, kill those who
ascribe partners [like Jesus] to God wheresoever ye find them; seize them,
encompass them, and ambush them; then if they repent and observe prayer and pay
the alms, let them go their way’.” (Koran 4:5)
- “…kill the disbelievers wherever we find them” (Koran 2:191) and
“murder them and treat them harshly” (Koran 9:123), and “Strike off the heads
of the disbelievers” (Koran 8:12, cp. 8:60).
Kristof and others admit
that there are many violent verses in the Koran but claim that these are little
different from the Bible. Therefore, we shouldn’t denigrate the Koran and the
Sayings of Mohammad because of the many violent admonitions in the Koran and
Hadiths.
However, it doesn’t seem
matter how many times the secularists, like Kristof, are told that the violent
verses of the Hebrew Scriptures do not apply to us today, they refuse
to drop their equation likening Koran to the Bible. But what does the average
Muslim believe about the violent teachings of their holy books? Recent surveys
provide the answer:
- Polling data released (April 24, 2007) in a rigorously
conducted face-to-face University of Maryland/ WorldPublicOpinion.org interview survey of
4384 Muslims conducted between December 9, 2006 and February 15, 2007—1000
Moroccans, 1000 Egyptians, 1243 Pakistanis, and 1141 Indonesians—reveal
that 65.2% of those interviewed-almost 2/3, hardly a “fringe
minority”-desired this outcome (i.e., “To unify all Islamic countries into
a single Islamic state or Caliphate”), including 49% of “moderate”
Indonesian Muslims. The internal validity of these data about the present
longing for a Caliphate is strongly suggested by a concordant result:
65.5% of this Muslim sample approved the proposition “To require a strict
application of Sharia law in every Islamic country.”
This "strict
application of Sharia law" is not only utterly incompatible with Western
liberties and protections; it rejects them! Sharia subjugates everyone,
regardless of religion, to Islamic law. Forget about equality or freedom of
religion!
And how about the Muslims the USA had liberated from Sadam Hussein and the Taliban? Would they also seek to subjugate their liberators?
And how about the Muslims the USA had liberated from Sadam Hussein and the Taliban? Would they also seek to subjugate their liberators?
- The Pew Research Forum report,
“The World’s Muslims:
Religion, Politics and Society,”
released April 30, 2013, confirms the broad appeal of the totalitarian Sharia, across Islamdom. Specifically, 91% of Iraqi Muslims
and 99% of Afghan Muslims supported making Sharia the official state law
of their respective societies, after both nations were liberated at the
expense of much priceless U.S. blood, and great U.S. treasure.
In the face of such
findings, Kristof responds:
· Let’s not feed Islamophobic bigotry by
highlighting only the horrors while neglecting the diversity of a religion with
1.6 billion adherents — including many who are champions of tolerance, modernity
and human rights. The great divide is not between faiths, but one between
intolerant zealots of any tradition and the large numbers of decent, peaceful
believers likewise found in each tradition.
Truly, there is
diversity within the Islamic community. However, the “moderates” seem to be
irrelevant in the face of the great and violence-prone Islamic masses. The
proof of this is ubiquitous. Everywhere, in Islamic nations, non-Muslims live
in subjection and fear. If there was but Islamic country where non-Muslims live
as equals beside Muslims, we might have cause for hope. If there could be found
in any nation a sizable Islamic community that is willing to adopt Western
values, allowing non-Muslims to live as equals, or where Muslims are not attempting
to institute and impose Shariah laws, we might have hope.
However, these findings
tell us that Muslims interpret their holy writings in just the way these
writings seem to speak – as commands to bring the world under Islam, and, if
necessary, with the most extreme forms of violence.
We cannot blind our eyes
to these generalizations. One European recently admitted to me:
· Well, we now know that we have a big problem,
but what can we do? Everyone is still too comfortable. We can still live with
the occasional outbursts of violence and intimidation.
Comfort can kill!
However, Kristof and the secularists are still in denial mode.
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/09/opinion/nicholas-kristof-the-diversity-of-islam.html?emc=eta1&_r=1
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