I don’t know about you but I long for the days when
the only thing called ISIS was the dog on Downton Abbey.
Practically every day for weeks now mornings have
brought fresh images of some ghastly beheading or indiscriminate slaughter
perpetrated by this band of black-garbed Muslim fighters. We are told that it
is their intention to establish a worldwide caliphate and to one day raise
their black flag over the White House. This is a group who executes Christians
and anyone else they encounter who doesn’t prescribe to their brand of Islam,
including fellow Muslims. They have no use for gays, and like their women
barefoot, pregnant and young. In just a few short months they have stormed onto
the scene and cut a swath of land from Syria to Iraq which they now “control”
in much the same way as prison guards “control” a prison. Religion of peace,
indeed.
We are reminded by tenured professors, secure in
their ivory towers 5000 miles from the slaughter, that ISIS represents a small
minority of Islamic thought. We are assured that the vast majority of Muslims
are peaceful folks just like us who just want to live in peace. Perhaps they
are right. However, whenever I see these professors on television I am reminded
that it was these same men and women who assured us three years ago that the “Arab
Spring” was about to bloom all over the Middle East, ushering in a new era of
democracy and pluralism.
I have no doubt that ISIS and other violent permutations
of Islam do indeed represent a minority of thought in a religion as vast as
Islam. However, they are the ones with the guns and they are the ones that
always seem to grab the initiative. It is also true that the Nazi’s in Germany
never won a majority of the German vote in their rise to power. But the majority
of German thought had neither the energy nor the will to stand up to Hitler, so
in the end it didn’t matter.
From the PLO, through Hamas, and Al Qaeda, now to
ISIS, the only strain of thought that has ever mattered in the Muslim world has
been the guys with the AK-47’s.
I eagerly await the day when the world is talking
about the groundbreaking medical research being done in the great Islamic
universities. I can’t wait to discover the Islamic Shakespeare, Michelangelo,
Dante and Bach. I’m counting the days until some Islamic businessman dies and
endows a peace prize to rival the Nobel.