December 19, 2006
2006: The Year Of Perpetual Muslim Outrage
By
Michelle Malkin
It began with the
Danish cartoons. It ended with the
flying imams. Two thousand six was a banner year for
the Religion of Perpetual Outrage. Twelve turbulent
months of fist-waving, embassy-burning, fatwa-issuing
mayhem, intimidation, and murder resounded with the
ululations of the aggrieved.
All this in the name of defending Islam from
"insult." Let's review.
In late January, masked Palestinian gunmen took over
a
European Union office in Gaza City to protest the
publication of a dozen cartoons about Islam, Mohammed,
and self-censorship in the Danish newspaper the
Jyllands-Posten. They stormed the building, burned
Danish flags, and spearheaded an international boycott
of
Denmark's products across the Muslim world.
The rage was manufactured pretext. The cartoons had
been published four months earlier with little fanfare.
It wasn't until a delegation of instigating
Danish imams toured Egypt with the cartoons—plus a
few inflammatory fake ones, including an old image
of a French hog-calling contest participant deceptively
portrayed as "anti-Muslim"—that the fire started
burning.
Think the mainstream media will remember that? Not
likely. They fell for the ruse and were slow to
acknowledge it after American bloggers and Danish
television exposed the scheme.
What was really behind Cartoon Rage? Muslim bullies
were attempting to pressure Denmark over the
International Atomic Energy Agency's decision to report
Iran to the U.N. Security Council for continuing with
its nuclear research program. The chairmanship of the
council was passing to Denmark at the time.
Alas, Western journalists, analysts, and apologists
were too clouded by their cowardice and conciliation to
see through the smoke. More than 800 were injured in the
ensuing riots, and 130 people paid with their lives.
The innocents included Italian Catholic priest Andrea
Santoro, who was
shot to death in Turkey on Feb. 5, by a teenage boy
enraged by the illustrations. The Muslim gunman shouted,
"Allahu Akbar!" as he murdered Father Santoro
while the priest knelt praying in his church.
Several brave moderate Muslim editors who stood up to
the madness were
jailed, fined, and convicted of crimes related to
insulting Islam. The Danish cartoonists remain in
hiding.
The world soon tired of Cartoon Rage, but the
"peaceful" Muslim ragers were just warming up. They
found excuses large and small to riot and threaten
Western infidels. In India, they protested the magazine
publication of a
picture of a playing card showing an image of Mecca
and also burned Valentine's Day cards. An insult to
Islam, they screamed. In Spain, they protested a Madrid
store for selling a postcard with a mosque on it with
the words "We slept here." An insult to Islam,
they protested. In
Pakistan, they burned down a Kentucky Fried Chicken
restaurant, a Pizza Hut, and toppled Ronald McDonald. In
Jakarta, they smashed the offices of Playboy
magazine. You know why.
In June, the trial against lioness journalist Oriana
Fallaci for insulting Islam commenced in Bergamo, Italy.
She had been charged by professional Muslim rager Adel
Smith of the Muslim Union of Italy of "vilipendio"—vilifying
Islam—in her post-9/11 books slamming jihad. A judge had
refused to throw out the case. She faced a pile of death
threats and accusations of "Islamophobia" for
speaking truth to Islamo-power.
Fallaci's
death from cancer during the fifth anniversary week
of the September 11 terrorist attacks preempted the
trial in Italy, but her passing did nothing to preempt
the eternal rage of the perpetually outraged. The day
she died, the grievance-mongers were shaking their fists
and calling for the head of
Pope Benedict XVI for his
speech that made reference to a 14th-Century
conversation touching on holy war and jihad.
For engaging in open, honest intellectual and
spiritual debate, he was condemned, lit afire in effigy,
and targeted anew. The ragers bombed Christian churches
in Gaza City and Nablus. They murdered Italian
Sister Leonella Sgorbati, an elderly Catholic nun
shot in the back by a Somalian jihadist stoked by Pope
Rage. "Whoever offends our Prophet Mohammed should be
killed on the spot by the nearest Muslim," a
Somalian cleric had declared. The Vatican made nice with
Muslim leaders.
New outrages are always in bloom. In late September,
it was a
Berlin production of Mozart's Idomeneo that
featured the decapitated head of Mohammed. A week later,
it was a banyan tree attacked by
Indonesian Muslims who wanted to disprove its
mystical powers. A few days after that, it was former
British foreign secretary
Jack Straw, who had the audacity to make the very
obvious observation that full Muslim veils impede
communications between women and Westerners.
Offensive! Disturbing! An insult to Islam!
Not to be outdone, a
delegation of extortionist imams boarded a U.S.
Airways flight in Minneapolis in November and tried to
manufacture an international human-rights incident. They
clamored for a
boycott and threatened to sue.
The good news: The fire did not catch here this time.
The bad news: As
Oriana Fallaci warned
before her death: "The hate for the West swells
like a fire fed by the wind…The clash between us and
them is not a military one. It is a cultural one, a
religious one, and the worst is still to come."
Michelle Malkin [email
her] is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click
here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here for Michelle Malkin's website.
Michelle Malkin's latest book is "Unhinged:
Exposing Liberals Gone Wild."
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