Posted: 02 Feb 2017 06:49 PM PST
A crisis came to
Longmont, Colorado. And for once it wasn't snow falling from the sky.
Instead
top Longmont officials appeared less worried about the piles of snow that
blocked off roads and closed schools than a politically incorrect
octogenarian as they converged on the home of an 83-year-old man to demand
that he take down a yard sign critical of Islam and Muslim immigration.
"Muslims kill Muslims if they don't agree. Where does that leave you,
'infidel,'" the sign asked.
A story ran in the local paper. The Denver Post took note. The Associated
Press headlined this vital story as, “Longmont man refuses to take down
anti-Muslim sign”. The refusal of an 83-year-old man to recant his
politically incorrect, but factually correct, statement on Islam had become a
national crisis.
Some of the coverage contained information about the location of an elderly
man standing up to Islamic terrorists. But there was no objection to putting
his life in danger because of his “objectionable” views.
Longmont's Public Safety Chief and the Community and Neighborhood Resources
Manager visited Harry McNevin to urge him to take down the sign or change the
wording. A variety of other public officials also weighed in. A protest was
contemplated as soon as the potential protesters could “figure out exactly
what he means”. McNevin helpfully explained, "They're not our friends,
they're our enemies."
Or as Islamic teachings put it, “Do not take the Jews and the Christians for
friends; they are friends of each other; and whoever amongst you takes them
for a friend, then surely he is one of them.”
The threats poured in after the newspaper articles. And they succeeded. The
temperature fell well below zero and the sign came down. The left had notched
another social justice victory. It had every reason to be proud of itself. It
had terrorized an 83-year-old man to prove that Muslims aren’t terrorists.
But it’s not just Muslims who terrorize dissenters. Leftists have a long
history of intimidating, jailing and killing those they disagree with. The
war on Islamophobia is a perverse fusion of two intolerant ideologies
protecting their privilege to remain above criticism.
Longmont is an unlikely target for Islamic terrorism. And yet it intersects
with another encounter with Islamic terror. Start out at the offices of the
Longmont Times-Call and drive up to the University of Northern Colorado.
Assuming the snow isn’t too bad, it’ll take you around an hour to make the
trip. And there’ll you will find one of the more obscure battlefields in the
current Islamic war against the West.
The name Sayyid Qutb won’t ring any bells in Greeley, Colorado. It’s doubtful
that anyone remembers an ugly, scowling man with bulging eyes and a little
Hitler mustache who lived there in the 50s.
But Qutb certainly remembered them.
Back then the Muslim Brotherhood monster who serves as an inspiration to Al
Qaeda, Hamas and ISIS was just another foreign student at Colorado State
College. Like many of them, he violently loathed America and everything about
it. Hardly any aspect of life was safe from Qutb’s envy and loathing. These
he distilled into a hateful tract with furious subtitles such as, “Americans
Are Free of Humanity”.
The American character was “deformed” and the people he encountered were
“abysmally primitive” who might as well be living in “jungles and caves”.
They were in love with “hardcore violence”. The churches of Greeley were
places of “meeting and friendship” or “as they call it in their language
‘fun.’" Qutb even managed to describe in breathlessly outraged tones the
lyrics of "Baby, It's Cold Outside."
He groused that football was a primitive game of “great violence
and ferocity” which was misnamed because “the foot does not take part in the
game”. Reflecting typical Islamic racism, Qutb ranted that jazz was created
by “savage bushmen” to “satisfy their primitive desires... for animal
noises.” American clothes were too garish and primitive. Even the barbers who
gave him haircuts had “awful taste”.
They probably didn’t even appreciate his carefully nurtured Hitler mustache.
Qutb lusted for the “enticing legs, arms wrapped around waists, lips pressed
to lips, and chests pressed to chests” even as he denounced the “overwhelming
lust for the sensual pleasure” of Americans. He paid close attention to “the
round breasts, the full buttocks” of Greeley’s women and girls. The women
represented America to the Egyptian Islamist, as to so many Islamists after
him, desirable and hated.
America was unimaginably advanced. Qutb had been a big fish in a small pond.
His background, like that of many Muslim Brotherhood figures, was with the
landowners. But even Greeley couldn’t help making him feel backward and
small; a primitive savage in a land where peasants could live like kings.
Behind his sneering lay the sense of inferiority that motivates Islamist
violence. Islamic colonialism asserts its supremacist conviction of
superiority out of that same resentful knowledge that it is inferior.
Qutb’s writing, like all Islamist works, argued for the natural superiority
of Muslims. All these arguments are necessary because even casual observation
shows the superiority of the American way of life to the Islamic way of life.
It is Qutb’s civilization that is guilty of the flaws and faults he
attributed to America.
It was not the Americans who were "enthralled" with "flowing
blood and crushed limbs." It was a Hamas suicide bomber from Qutb’s own
Muslim Brotherhood movement who boasted, “We are a blood-drinking people and
we know that there is no better blood than Jewish blood.” It was a member of
Qutb’s Muslim Brotherhood Free Syrian Army in Syria who was videotaped eating
a human lung.
Qutb wrote that the “American love for peace” was an “illusion”. But it’s the
Islamic peace that is the illusion. Islamic peace is achieved only through
war. Muslims fight an endless war for peace against the rest of the world and
an endless war against each other to establish their version of the “peace”.
So Harry McNevin pointed out in a place not too far from where Qutb
fulminated against America.
It was not the people of Greeley who lacked all regard for the sanctity of
human life or respect for the dead. It is Qutb’s devout Islamic followers who
cry, “We love death, you love life.” And it is they who swarm over the bodies
of their victims and their terrorists alike, holding up bloody body parts.
Nor was it the good people of Greeley who lacked sexual mores or
self-control. That too could be found in Qutb’s Muslim Brotherhood mobs
swarming and assaulting women in Tahrir Square. Taharrush gamea mobs of
Muslim men converging on women, groping them and tearing off their clothes,
have been documented from Cairo to Cologne.
Qutb’s indictment of Greeley attributed to the American “other” the
malignancies of Islam. Once the sins of Islam are laid on the West, then it
may be saved from persisting in the pre-Islamic darkness of Jahiliyyah
through conquest, colonization and mass murder by the vanguard of Islamic
civilization.
For over a thousand years, Muslim colonialism has destroyed countless
civilizations the same way. America is only the latest to face the invasion.
Qutb, like Mohammed and countless predecessors, looked upon Greeley, Colorado
and decided it could be vastly improved with slavery and beheadings.
Harry McNevin’s critique of Islam is far shorter and to the point than Qutb’s
critique of America. But unlike Qutb, McNevin does not waste his time on
trivialities such as critiquing haircuts or complaining about anecdotal
incidents. Instead he notes that Islam does not bring peace even among
Muslims.
It’s
a critique that can have no answer. The Muslim world’s perpetual violence
speaks for itself.
And so the Muslim Brotherhood, the men who walk in Qutb’s hateful footsteps,
invented the very tool that would be used to censor Harry McNevin. They
popularized the accusation of Islamophobia.
The followers of that bigot with the bulging eyes and the Hitler mustache
found a way to silence an 83-year-old man and his yard sign. They did it with
the complicity of the Coloradans whom Qutb hated.
The crisis in Longmont, Colorado has been settled. The yard sign is gone. And
with the departure of that piece of wood, goes the need to think about what
all the Qutbs who arrive here every year will do.
As the snow falls in Longmont, the clash of civilizations continues around
the world.
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