nzherald.co.nz

Gwynne Dyer: Mosque tirade little threat to Democrats

By Gwynne Dyer
5:30 AM Saturday Sep 4, 2010

The great journalist H.L. Mencken once said that nobody ever went broke by underestimating the intelligence of the American public - but I may be about to prove him wrong.

Three or four months ago, I started betting various friends that the Democrats would lose control of both Houses of the US Congress in the mid-term elections this November. I was way ahead of the opinion curve, so I got lots of takers.

But now, when the general opinion has shifted in that direction, I begin to think I was wrong. And it all has to do with the "Ground Zero mosque".

If you have been paying attention you will know that it is not actually a mosque. If the sponsors can raise the money (which remains to be seen), it would contain a prayer room, but also a restaurant, a 500-seat theatre, basketball courts and a swimming pool that would be open to all.

It would not have a minaret but there would be a memorial to the 3000 people (including 300 Muslims) who died in the 9/11 attacks.

And it is not, of course, at Ground Zero. It is two blocks up and around the corner, invisible from where the World Trade Center once stood.

Not that there's any reason for it to hide around the corner - there's nothing wrong with an Islamic cultural centre.

It should also be pointed out that the Pussy Cat Lounge, an upmarket strip club, is closer to the site and not invisible at all.

So should we ask whether those on the right wing of the Republican Party who started this business about a mosque at Ground Zero intended to exploit the latent Islamophobia of the American public? You might as well ask if the Pope is a Catholic.

This is a "wedge issue", deliberately concocted to drive the dimmer elements of the Republican Party into supporting the right wing's other positions as well.

I hear you protesting that the Republican Party doesn't have a left wing any more, so how can it have a right wing? But everything is relative in politics, and the real contest this autumn is not being held in November.

Most Congressional districts have been gerrymandered to the point where they are safe seats for one party or the other, so the real contest is in the primary (which chooses the party's candidate) in any given district.

Senate seats cannot be gerrymandered in the same way, but there are also bitter primary struggles between "left" and "right" Republicans in many of them.

The "Ground Zero mosque" campaign was begun by players like Fox News and Mark Williams, organiser of the Tea Party Express, who warned that, "The mosque would be for the worship of the terrorists' monkey god." (It's really hard to tell Muslims and Hindus apart, especially if you're really stupid.)

But the campaign works for the hard right because a large proportion of the US population is anti-Muslim.

Exactly how large nobody knows, but we may safely assume that the 24 per cent of Americans who believe that Barack Obama is a Muslim are not thinking: "Good. When Americans elected a black, Muslim President, we showed how tolerant the country is."

They are thinking: "Oh my God, there's a black Muslim terrorist in the White House. America is doomed."

Let us assume, therefore, that the proportion of Americans who fear and hate Muslims (in most cases without ever having met one) is somewhere between that 24 per cent and the 61 per cent, according to a recent Time Magazine poll, who oppose the "Ground Zero mosque". How excited should we get about this? Not very.

You would probably get a similar figure if you asked people in almost any Muslim country whether they see contemporary Americans as a new generation of "crusaders". They aren't, any more than Muslims are terrorists, but the Muslim Middle East has a rather one-sided view of the Crusades.

After five centuries when the Middle East and North Africa had been mostly Christian, Islam conquered the whole region in the 7th and 8th centuries.

The Crusades, three centuries later, were a counter-attack aimed at recovering some of the lost territory for Christendom, neither more nor less reprehensible than the original Islamic conquest. It's just history, and nobody has clean hands. But I digress.

Why am I going to lose my bets on the outcome of the mid-term elections? Because the primaries attract at most 10 per cent of the potential voters, and they tend to be the ideologically committed ones.

Hard-right candidates can win that audience over - but 50 or 60 per cent of American voters come out in the real election, the extremists tend to lose in the critical districts where the outcome might go either way.

The Democrats will keep their Senate majority. They might even keep the House.

By Gwynne Dyer
Lisa in Titirangi (Titirangi) | 11:01AM Monday, 06 Sep 2010
Is this article a joke? I found it pretty funny. Islam is on the march in Europe, just ask Geert Wilders. Mr. Dyer needs to research why this mosque was going to be called Cordoba House.

Hint: it signifies conquest to put a mosque on a site where you've attacked. Hint #2: islamic extremists flew planes into the Twin Towers in ny. Or don't you recall? Wise up Mr. Dyer. The 'silent majority' in America is center right.

The pendulum has swung way too far left and it will be righted stared Nov 2, 2010. Next thing you'll probably write is you think bho is doing a great job? (more hilarity!)
Ken Maynard (New Zealand) | 11:01AM Monday, 06 Sep 2010
Gwynne. Firstly. The declaration of independence enshrines the pursuit of happiness. America exists to make people happy. The pursuit of happiness in an ~unreal~ venture, which has always fed a counter force of bizarre paranoia. Yet today is different, as we reach the limits of growth America seems to be making a traumatic transition from the pursuit of happiness to the pursuit of maturity. That puts the paranoia thing in context.
Ken Maynard (New Zealand) | 11:02AM Monday, 06 Sep 2010
Islam is a different question. Islam is not just another religion, but different to or ~other than~ all other religions. The balance of power between the Christian world & other faiths ebbs & flows. We can live with that.

Islam is forever. Once established Islam never lets go. Those who fell under its yoke 1,500 years ago are still enslaved to it today. The Serbs mourn Kosovo as the field on which all their freedoms were lost. Forever.

We cannot in our times, bind all future generations to such a restrictive & totalitarian option. The anti-Mosque campaigns are part bigoted (none are perfect) but mainly frustrated by the whole society sleepwalking into danger on the false assurances of people like yourself.

Instead of accusing the Republicans of bigotry (a mote exists for sure) look at the beam of bigotry in your own eye, when you claim Islam is just another religion. In fact Islam is different to or ~other than~ all other religions, & ~other than~ in a manner which is inimitable to the well-being of man & God.
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