skip to main |
skip to sidebar
The
most basic rule of psychological warfare is that anything you say can
be used against you, and with devastating effect. When a prominent imam
in Saudi Arabia, the self-proclaimed Defender of the Faith for Sunni
Islam as well as the owner of Mecca, describes Paradise as a celestial version of the Mustang Ranch, he makes his entire religion about as credible as Scientology.
If Muslims find the depiction of their Paradise as a whorehouse and Allah as a Mack Daddy offensive, their problem is with Saudi Sheikh Yahya Al-Jana' because these are his words and not ours. Here is the YouTube video with translation by Memri, and also a transcript.
Here is the first screenshot, which reminds me of an ad I saw in Las Vegas a few years ago.
The
next screenshot brings to mind "The World Famous Mustang Ranch Pleasure
Menu" which I am not going to link because it is decidedly NSFW. If you
want to compare it to the good sheikh's sermon, just Google on the
indicated phrase to find it. This, ladies and gentlemen, is what Sheikh
Yahya Al-Jana's all-knowing and all-powerful deity offers his followers:

The
good sheikh seems to have one, or more precisely two, things on his
mind. When Beavis or Butthead can summarize your learned theological
sermon in three words
(five, if you count the stupid laugh), your religion has a real
credibility problem. Remember, by the way, that the purpose of this
article is not primarily to entertain the reader. Ridicule can be an
overwhelming psychological warfare weapon that can reduce the enemy's
credibility to nothing with a single decisive blow and, as shown by the
next image, Sheikh Yahya Al-Jana' has left himself and Wahhabi Islam
wide open. Tell me again; is this a religious sermon or a pitch for the
Mustang Ranch?
This
is even more hilarious, by the way, if you watch the video and listen
to him say all this with a straight face. Who needs to pay to see a Las
Vegas stand-up comedy act when you can get this kind of stuff for free?
Listen to comedian Steven Wright, listen to Sheikh Yahya Al-Jana', and see who makes you laugh harder.
The
transcript continues, "Allah said that the dwellers of Paradise are
busy. What keeps them busy? They will be busy tearing hymens." The
Mustang Ranch admittedly can't do that because the women are definitely
not virgins but, with that sole exception, it differs little from Sheikh
Yahya Al-Jana's depiction of the Islamic Paradise.
Now
that we are done laughing, let's get to the bottom line. Sheikh Yahya
Al-Jana's own words should break the back of militant "Islam" by
reducing its afterlife to the status of a common house of prostitution
in which its deity is the chief pimp. Even if the ideology's own
followers are so deluded that they cannot recognize this as the farce it
is, the ideology cannot survive in an infidel-majority society.
Remember, though, Colonel Paul Linebarger's admonition in his book on
psychological warfare. "To be effective, leaflets must scatter. Bundles
of paper which fall intact make little impact on the enemy [or
prospective audience] unless they hit him on the head." This material
does little good if it stays at The American Thinker, so take it to your
blog, your local paper, and your social networks.
William
A. Levinson is the author of several books on business management
including content on organizational psychology, as well as manufacturing
productivity and quality.
No comments:
Post a Comment