You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Home Front: WoT
Cartoon Rage
2006-02-11
Diana West gets it. Washington Times Op-Ed. RB'ers will find these old news - good news is it's making the MSM
We need to learn a new word: dhimmitude. I've written about dhimmitude periodically, lo, these many years since September 11, but it takes time to sink in. Dhimmitude is the coinage of a brilliant historian, Bat Ye'or, whose pioneering studies of the dhimmi, populations of Jews and Christians vanquished by Islamic jihad, have led her to conclude that a common culture has existed through the centuries among the varied dhimmi populations. From Egypt and Palestine to Iraq and Syria, from Morocco and Algeria to Spain, Sicily and Greece, from Armenia and the Balkans to the Caucasus: Wherever Islam conquered, surrendering dhimmi, known to Muslims as "people of the book [the Bible]," were tolerated, allowed to practice their religion, but at a dehumanizing cost.

There were literal taxes (jizya) to be paid; these bought the dhimmi the right to remain non-Muslim, the price not of religious freedom, but of religious identity. Freedom was lost, sorely circumscribed by a body of Islamic law (sharia) designed to subjugate, denigrate and humiliate the dhimmi. The resulting culture of self-abnegation, self-censorship and fear shared by far-flung dhimmi is the basis of dhimmitude. The extremely distressing but highly significant fact is, dhimmitude doesn't only exist in lands where Islamic law rules.

This is the lesson of Cartoon Rage 2006, a cultural nuke set off by an Islamic chain reaction to those 12 cartoons of Muhammad appearing in a Danish newspaper. We have watched the Muslim meltdown with shocked attention, but there is little recognition that its poisonous fallout is fear. Fear in the State Department, which, like Islam, called the cartoons unacceptable. Fear in Whitehall, which did the same. Fear in the Vatican, which did the same. And fear in the media, which have failed, with few, few exceptions, to reprint or show the images. With only a small roll of brave journals, mainly in Europe, to salute, we have seen the proud Western tradition of a free press bow its head and submit to an Islamic law against depictions of Muhammad. That's dhimmitude.

Not that we admit it: We dress up our capitulation in fancy talk of "tolerance," "responsibility" and "sensitivity." We even congratulate ourselves for having the "editorial judgment" to make "pluralism" possible. "Readers were well served... without publishing the cartoons," said a Wall Street Journal spokesman. "CNN has chosen to not show the cartoons in respect for Islam," reported the cable network. On behalf of the BBC, which did show some of the cartoons on the air, a news editor subsequently apologized, adding: "We've taken a decision not to go further... in order not to gratuitously offend the significant number" of Muslim viewers worldwide. Left unmentioned is the understanding (editorial judgement?) that "gratuitous offense" leads to gratuitous violence. Hence, fear — not the inspiration of tolerance but of capitulation — and a condition of dhimmitude.

How far does it go? Worth noting, for example, is that on the BBC Web site, a religion page about Islam presents the angels and revelations of Islamic belief as historical fact, rather than spiritual conjecture (as is the case with its Christianity Web page); plus, it follows every mention of Mohammed with "(pbuh)," which means "peace be upon him"—"as if," writes Will Wyatt, former BBC chief executive, in a letter to the Times of London, "the corporation itself were Muslim."
Is it? Are we? These questions may not seem so outlandish if we assess the extent to which encroaching sharia has already changed the Western way. Calling these cartoons "unacceptable," and censoring ourselves "in respect" to Islam brings the West into compliance with a central statute of sharia. As Jyllands-Posten's Flemming Rose has noted, that's not respect, that's submission. And if that's not dhimmitude, what is?
The publication of the Muhammad cartoons solicited by Denmark's Jyllands-Posten was an act of anti-dhimmitude. Since no Danish artist would dare illustrate a PC children's book about Muhammad for fear of Islamic law (and Islamic violence), the newspaper boldly set out to reassert the rule of (non-Islamic) Danish law. It's as simple as that. And as vital. The cartoons ran to establish — or re-establish — Denmark as bastion of Western-style liberty. But in trying to set up a force field against encroaching sharia, Jyllands-Posten and the Danes have showed us that no single bastion of Western liberty can stand alone.

So, how do you say solidarity in Danish? If we don't find out now, our future is more dhimmitude.
Posted by:Frank G

#7  

Cartoon Rage, vid
Posted by: RD   2006-02-11 15:05  

#6  I see Bugs giving big Mo a head massage ala the Bunny of Sevile.
Posted by: 6   2006-02-11 13:27  

#5  Does anyone know whether reports that UK police denied British free speech protesters entry to Trafalgar Square today, while Muslim anti-cartoon protesters were allowed to protest, are true? I have been trying to find news reports on this, and haven't found them. I have seen webcams and photos only of the anti-cartoon protestors...
Posted by: Jules   2006-02-11 11:36  

#4  Dont forget the Jizya tax being paid in the form of 'assistance' to Palistine and whatever we pay to egypt....
Posted by: CrazyFool   2006-02-11 08:38  

#3  *
dittos phil_b, at least thats my hope anyway.

Hey, lets get optimistic, Europe will finally join us instead of playing us off on the cheap, to do the hard work against the Islamo-bammo asstards.

better late than never.
Posted by: RD   2006-02-11 04:01  

#2  thx Frank,

Diana West, she's tumbled alright, NO fu*king burkas for her eh!

Don't you just love 'em, Our WOMEN are our secret weapons against the Islamo-fascisti. »:-)

>for those of you who have some extra time. :)
relates to Diana's piece.
Wretchard @ The Belmont Club ties up some loose threads with an overview reaching across the history of WOT, Europe, cartoon/dhimminitude, Iran/UN security council and Middle East.

and a friendly read I might add, [as in, not deadly]

"Re-reading William Manchester's: Alone"
Saturday, February 04, 2006

6 posts.

"The young and the old"
Friday, February 10, 2006
Posted by: RD   2006-02-11 03:54  

#1  I predict a major backlash against PC and multicult supporting politicians in the next set of Euro elections. I believe France is first in a couple of months time.
Posted by: phil_b   2006-02-11 02:18  

00:00