Man, these French Muslims are tying us Western
liberals in knots. Like: The president of a mosque is asked by a
mayor to help keep their town's Muslim youth from going jihadist in Syria and
he (according to Midi Libre) says,
"This is their choice. It is not for me to judge them.”
They are free citizens of a free country. Until they harm a fellow citizen that
country, by the central principle of Mill's On
Liberty, cannot justifiably do anything to them. They are exercising their human right.
So Lahoucine Goumri
(the mosque president) can stick it to the mayor of Lunel (and me): Do you want
me to condemn a man for simply exercising his human right? to make his own
moral choice? to hold his own beliefs?
And we (at least I) find ourselves answering,
"You're damned right we do.
We can't wait for those beliefs to play out into consequences. They're too awful. And they follow so obviously. Believe the history (that ever
since the Crusades the West has been out to get the East), believe the
sociology (that Westerners exploit Easterners when they live together in the
same country), believe the morality (that abstinent, God-fearing Easterners are
ethically superior to indulgent, God-defying Westerners), believe the theology
(that there's a special place in Heaven for Eastern martyrs) and you've got a
high probability of an attack on Westerners. Including Westerners whose faith in John Stuart Mill keeps
them from making you a security risk."
So here I am, a Mill liberal, patrolling as a thought
policeman. How painful. And the pain gets worse when the New York Times tells me that "instead of condemning the surge of young recruits, Mr. Goumri
told local news media that the policies of President François Hollande were the
main culprit and complained that it was not his job to denounce the jihadists
when nobody protested French citizens who traveled to Israel to help the army
'kill Palestinian babies.'"
Unless there's protest on the other side terrorist
acts by Islamists — taking down airliners, blowing up schools, killing Western
journalists — are justified. If he
believes that he's dangerous. And
if he believes that martyrdom is a good thing he's more dangerous. Dangerous beliefs make dangerous people.
Dangerous
people? Because of what they
believe or how they worship? That's
the thought of a fascist. And of
medieval persecutors. "You're
the sort of people who need Christian blood for their matzo balls."
I'm hurting.
But with Mr. Goumri twisting the knife at
least I've got a pain I can calibrate.
I see that it will vary directly with the guilt I feel for supporting
Israel in its actions against the Palestinians (see Post 214). Israeli strikes have killed Palestinian babies. Go all the way backing the original takeover of Palestinian
land (from which nearly all horrors inflicted by Palestinians follow
blamelessly) and I'm crushed under it.
Back only the measures to stop rocket attacks from Gaza and my head is
nearly high.
So the best I can do is turn the dial down. I don't back the original takeover but
I back protecting what's taken over.
"Not back the move into Palestine? You'll deny the poor Jews of Europe,
those remaining after the Holocaust, a sanctuary in their ancient
homeland?"
It's the old contest, the voice of the tribe against
the voice of mankind. And with me the
first drowns out the second. As it
did earlier when I walked into Israel (see Post 214 again) and recognized my
Judeo-Christianity. So I have to
support the takeover of Palestinian land.
Mr. Goumri has a case.
All I can do now is argue that it's a weaker case
than mine, which has to be strong enough to justify serious restrictions on Mr.
Goumri's freedom. I can't argue it
properly here but I can sum it up in one sentence: Since your beliefs are a
threat to me and my people I am entitled to act against you.
There you are, right away, what we liberals all gag
on. To swallow it you have to,
first, credit the claim that beliefs play out into consequences. Then you have to quit thinking
inductively about religions.
A good test of your gag reaction is found in Israel,
where we have fundamentalist Jews sneaking into the Occupied Territory to set
up illegal settlements. Do you gag
on the notion that this action has something to do with their belief that God
literally gave them that land?
Would you say that somebody who holds that belief is more likely than
others to take extreme, illegal action?
If so you have sufficiently suppressed your gag reaction to swallow the
notion that those Muslims who hold certain beliefs (like those historical,
sociological, moral, and theological beliefs listed earlier) will be more
likely than others to take extreme, illegal action.
You may note here that you have quit thinking
inductively about religions. An
inductive thinker asks, "What behavior is characteristic of
believers?" He discards the
exceptional, the extreme. If he's
a traditional liberal he will go on to make a case for tolerance. The deductive thinker asks, "What
behavior follows logically from these beliefs?" It won't matter whether the behavior is characteristic or
not because the correlative questions are, "What behavior do they
encourage? What do they
allow?"
We are distinguishing among religions by looking at
their edges. We discriminate for
purposes of our own security. In
the case of terrorist acts that kill thousands one tenth of one percent will
suffice. "What deeds do its alienated youth characteristically perform in
order to feel what all alienated youth want to feel, powerful and admired? What turns its losers into
winners? What satisfies its
psychotics?" The answer will vary with the religion and when we find one
that threatens our security we are justified in restricting the freedom of its
preachers.
That, to my mind, makes a stronger case than Mr.
Goumri can make. I don't know how
accepting it would play out in France, but I can see how it would play out in
the U.S. Say Mr. Goumri lived in
Ohio, my state. The law (Ohio
Revised Code, Title 29, Chapter 2917) now makes incitement to violence a crime
only when
(1) The conduct
takes place under circumstances that create a clear and present danger that any
offense of violence will be committed;
(2) The conduct
proximately results in the commission of any offense of violence.
The legislature would vote to remove the words "and present"
from the first specification and drop the second. By deduction from the beliefs of the religion Mr.
Goumri preaches the danger is clear.
Satisfying the law is one thing;
satisfying the liberal conscience is another. The latter tells us that we are discriminating, we are
profiling, we are seeing harm where no harmful acts have been performed, we are
curbing freedom of religion, we are denying freedom of speech.
Each will answer his conscience in
his own way, and I don't expect it to be easy. We are seeing harm
where no harm has been done, we are
curbing freedom of religion and freedom of speech. That will torment us unless we see that we are doing it all
for the sake of our security, to which we give a higher priority. (If you don't give it a higher priority
now, conscience, you've got more explaining to do than we have.) As for discriminating and profiling, I
think they are handled by getting the conscience to think a little harder about
those words "discriminate" and "profile," which have larger
application than the liberal conscience customarily assigns.
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