Islam is the Problem
By Daniel Greenfield
SultanKnish.Blogspot.com
On a mild London afternoon, two Muslims rammed a
car into a British soldier returning to the barracks
after working at the Tower of London. They shouted
Allah Akbar and hacked and slashed at his body in an
attempt to behead him. By the time they were done,
his body could only be identified through dental
records.
Shortly afterward, British Prime Minister David
Cameron said that “there is nothing in Islam that
justifies this truly dreadful act”. London Mayor
Boris Johnson added, “It is completely wrong to
blame this killing on Islam.”
Now former Prime Minister Tony Blair has thrown in
his two pence writing, "There is not a problem with
Islam. For those of us who have studied it, there is
no doubt about its true and peaceful nature."
Blair previously claimed to have read the Koran
every day, but apparently did not get as far as
Chapter 5, which contains the verses that the Muslim
murderers quoted after their butchery. And that’s
understandable. Between his business deals with the
Qatari royal family, which is behind much of the
terrorism in the Middle East, the Kuwaiti royal
family and the royals of the United Arab Emirates,
it stands to reason that Tony probably never got
past a few verses a day.
It’s easy to picture Tony Blair after a hot muggy
day of clasping the greasy hands of Emirs and
Sheikhs and trading his expertise for blood money,
remembering to always eat with the right hand, not
the left, returning to his five star hotel room,
climbing into bed with his room Koran, flipping it
open to the first chapter, reading, “In the name of
Allah, the Gracious, the Merciful” and deciding that
sounds peaceful enough, letting his head hit the
pile of plush pillows and calling it a day. If Tony
had made it as far as Chapter 2, where the Koran
proclaims “Fight in the cause of Allah”, then the
expert on Islam might have been able to entertain
some doubts about its truly peaceful nature.
In what the Daily Mail describes as a “brave assault
on Muslim extremism”, Blair writes, “There is not a
problem with Islam... But there is a problem within
Islam – from the adherents of an ideology that is a
strain within Islam.”
It is rather sad that political bravery now consists
of admitting that there may be some sort of problem
within Islam and that it “is not the province of a
few extremists... the world view goes deeper and
wider than it is comfortable for us to admit.”Having
exhausted all his courage by admitting that there is
a problem somewhere within Islam, Blair bravely
avoids admitting it by babbling about international
affairs and the need to intervene in Syria.
Over in Afghanistan, Lee Rigby, the murdered
soldier, might have been credited with a brave
assault on “Muslim extremism”. Blair, writing a
Daily Mail article that concedes that the problem
may be a bit bigger than just that legendary tiny
minority of extremists is hardly in that category.
Political courage now involves minimizing a grave
threat less than all the other politicians who are
also minimizing the grave threat. If the political
consensus is that the mountain is nothing but a
molehill, the brave pol courageously comes out and
says that it’s actually a minor hill.
But let’s take Blair at face value for a moment. If
there is a problem within Islam, then how can the
problem not be with Islam? If Tony Blair had picked
up a virulent intestinal parasite on a trip to
Dubai, wouldn’t there be a problem both within Blair
and with Blair? If there is an epidemic of drug
abuse in the United Kingdom, isn’t there a problem
both with and within the UK? Can there really be a
problem within Islam that involves the willingness
of millions of Muslims to kill in the name of Islam
that is not also a problem with Islam?
The purpose of Blair’s meaningless distinction is to
contend that it’s not a structural problem with
Islam, but some sort of aberrant mutation brought on
by Western colonialism. The trouble with that is
that it requires a willful refusal to address the
actual text of the Koran and the entire body of
Islamic history.
Even if we were to assume that the problematic
“strain” of Islam is not universally representative,
who exactly is Tony Blair to declare it so based on
his casual readings of a book that contains more
death threats per page than the Daily Mail’s
comments section?
Governments are not supposed to define the nature of
religion or pick and choose between various sects.
And indeed the legality of declaring that one form
of Islam is legitimate and another is not has
frequently been challenged.
It is the role of Muslims to argue amongst
themselves what is and isn’t legitimate Islam. Such
an argument is currently being waged in Syria using
the theology of heavy artillery and death squads.
Perhaps Tony Blair should think twice before
involving the UK in such an Islamic religious debate
or trying to hold one at home.
No government should be determining what is and
isn’t legitimate Islam. What they should be doing is
addressing threats emanating from Islam. There is no
need to study the Koran in order to understand those
threats. Muslim terrorists have been willing to
patiently explain that they are killing us in the
name of Islam. We can take them at their word or,
like Blair and Boris, foolishly argue the doctrines
of their religion with them.
If Tony Blair returned home from Kuwait City with
the Swine Flu, the authorities would quarantine him
without making any fine distinctions as to whether
there was something wrong with Tony or within Tony.
Like the nature of the one true Islam, that is a
metaphysical question that governments are not
qualified to answer.
If the UK quarantines foreigners and even natives
with the Swine Flu, which has killed far fewer Brits
than Islamic terrorism, should it not begin
quarantining the even more dangerous strain of
Islam?
It was Blair’s government that brought the Islamic
plague to the United Kingdom in large numbers as
part of a deliberate policy to forcibly transform
the UK into a multicultural paradise. That policy
has led to constant killings by the affected and the
spread of strains of Islam to non-Muslims like the
two Woolwich attackers.
There is no question that Islam is the problem. When
men kill in the name of Islam, they are making a
bloody statement that Islam is the problem. The only
remaining question is whether to stop importing more
strains of the terrorist disease before it’s too
late or to waste more time splitting hairs on what
exact percentage of the affected are truly
dangerous.
1 in 4 British Muslims said that the 7/7 bombings
were justified. If 1 in 4 visitors from Pakistan
were infected with the Swine Flu, there would be an
immediate ban on travel from Pakistan. It may be
time to apply the logic of the quarantine to stop
the Islamic strain that Blair brought to the United
Kingdom.