Sunday, February 15, 2009

from NY to Israel Sultan Reveals The Stories Behind the News






from NY to Israel Sultan Reveals
The Stories Behind the News

Link to Sultan Knish







One Man with Courage Makes a Majority


Posted: 14 Feb 2009 07:52 PM PST


Most people are naturally drawn to a crowd. Good or evil, right or wrong,
it's always easier to be part of the majority. The election strategies of the
past generations in the West has been for the winning party to seem to
represent the majority, a trick done by staying on the right side of the
polls, managing the media and putting out the message to the public
that insures you stand with the majority.

And with that approach the
bold style of leadership that
once characterized the
West has all but faded
away. We no longer want
boldness, we demand
mediocirty, and time
and time again we
get it. We want to avoid
making waves. We
want to be on the right
side of the mob, and so
very often we are.
The mass mob
that invaded
Washington D.C. to
annoint a leader who stood for no clear set of policies or
understandable agenda, were the product of the crowd.
The faceless crowd worshiping a man whose face was
everywhere, and whose ideas were nowhere,
was the perfect testament to how the democracy of
ideas had become supplanted by the democracy of the
lowest common denominator.

Today to take a stand is to invite controversy. The safest
way to succeed is to repeat what others are saying.
To find a leader and follow him. To be anything but on the
safe side of the moderates is to invite the wrath of people
who dread nothing so much as taking a stand.

And so increasingly the good guys stand alone.

The countries that are encircled by terrorism, whether it's
Columbia or Israel, whether it's Marxist terrorism or
Islamist terrorism, they are now on the wrong side of an
administration whose reigning figure had mentors who were
Marxist terrorists and Islamists. This administration had
contacts with both the Narcoterrorists and the Islamofascists,
and intends to reward both.

Cuba's failed Marxist regime, on the verge of Democracy,
too is set to receive a boost from Obama, that will work to
build US ties, and begin the flow of American trade with
Cuba, that will help sustain the brutal dictatorship, and
perpetuate its campaign to enslave other Latin American
countries into Marxist dictatorships, as they
have done to Venezuela
and Ecuador.

Those governments who resist terrorism will be the ones
branded as terrorist states, as human rights violators, and
evildoers. As states outside the "consensus" of the human
rights community. As enemies of the UN crowd, the backslapping,
head chopping
collection of tyrants and thugs. As extremist
countries who refuse to bow to terrorism.

Individually too, the good guys stand alone.

The agenda directed out of Washington and the EU, and carried
on by numberless organizations will be to intimidate and silence
dissenting views at home. The charge, as always, will be accusations
of extremism. And there of course is no defense.

A statement made or an association with someone else who is in
the process of being denounced ... and you can be denounced as
an extremist, while everyone is duly warned not to associate with
you. It can happen to members of parliament or just individuals
who have spoken their mind. The verdict comes down, the
denunciation process is spread across a series of forums, and
the persecution begins.

This of course is a cheap mimicry of the old Soviet process that
began with denounciation and concluded with a one way trip to
the Gulag. There are no Gulags now, but in Europe there are
prisons, and in America there is the dead silence of being
shunned as a non-person. An extremist.

The enemy's best weapon is the crowd. The crowd fears most
being outside of that comforting packed mass of bodies. And
the right and the anti-jihadi movement has its own crowds as well.

To be outside the crowd on your own is a scary thing. And so even
without the gulags and the prisons to back it up, the threat of being
called an extremist is a scary thing.
But what does being called an extremist really mean? There are
extremists who believe all sorts of things that are evil. But it's
perfectly possible to be specific in condemning their beliefs.
The general charge of extremism is aimed at the fear of being
distanced from the crowd. To be an
"extremist" is to be apart
from the majority, and that is a very frightening thing indeed.


We are in the twilight of the era of free speech. While there
may be free speech for the fanatics of the left, for the
maddened Imams who preach death from every
Mosque in London and Paris...
there is to be none for
their critics. Those who oppose them are to be silenced
and shunned.

Imprisoned if need be. The crowd has spoken. Or rather
the crowd has been spoken to. But consensus is not
truth, and to be with the crowd is to be more often
wrong, than right. The greatest danger for those who
have the truth on their side and are willing to speak
up for it, is factionalism. Is to be constantly split down
and on the hunt for "extremists". If the left will have its
way, we would spend the day doing nothing more than
chasing our own tails and denouncing them for their extremist
views.

When Obama seeks to split Republicans into moderates and
extremists, he is playing that game. When the "extremist hunt"
targets European parties, that game is still being played. When
the anti-jihadist blogsphere is full of denunciations and
counter-denunciations over claims of extremism, we chase our
own tail to no end or purpose.

We are not the members of the crowd. We do not sit in front of
the television all day nodding passively along as the talking heads
deliver their carefully worded profundities, urging us not to
worry, and go along with our leaders. We are those who
know something is wrong
and speak out against it. And that
makes us a threat.

When the crowd abdicates its responsibility and intelligence,
one man or woman with courage makes a majority. In that
absence, we become the majority, because we dare
to speak out. Just as a true assembly of nations is an
assemblage of civilized nations who refuse to bow to
terrorism, so too the true majority rests in those
individuals defending their countries by warning
them of the cliff ahead.

The most frightening thing to the shepherds of the
crowd, is that the crowd will wake up and realize that
they are being marched off a cliff. The bullhorn, the
alarm clock, even the whisper that may wake them up
must be denounced and made forbidden. Their challenge
is to reach the cliff at which point it will be too late to do
anything.

Our
challenge is to reach them before that happens.












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