This blog explores the contemporary political and cultural trends from a distinct perspective
Identity based politics leads to crime
Published on November 7, 2009 By Bahu Virupaksha In Current Events

The horrific incident at Fort Hood, Texas, should come as a wake up call to all those in the American academia who promote identity based politics:Gays, lesbians, minority, sexual preference, etc etc. Now the Muslim identity is becoming increasingly problematic in the USA and I believe that years and years of promoting identity politics has left the country without the means of even admitting to itself that the islamic identity clashes head long with that of a secular nation state. The US media is already concluding that Major Hassan's crime does in no way reflect upon the patriotism of the Muslim-American population. May be so. My point is that the growing alienation of the Muslims from the mainstream of western collective life is contibuting to the sense of unease and the killings in Fort Hood stems from that feeling of unease.

Let me at the very out set condemn in the strongest possible manner the violence against the  armymen and women at Fort Hood. My point is not to justify the crime but to say why it happened. Major Nidal by all accounts was being radicalised and his peers at Walter Reed had drawn attention to a presentation he made in which he seems to have justified suicide bombings. If thiswas indeed the case why did the Army not pay any attention. The practice of identity based sensitivity forced the authorities to turn a blind eye to the increasing radicalisation of one of their own. In a conflict between secular law and identity based fith based customs the Army must enforce the secular law and in the name of minority rights it cannot permit the radicalisation of its members.

Major Nidal seem,s to have been harassed for his muslim beliefs and humiliated for praticing his religion. By the same token, if an armyman or woman is humiliated the authorities concerned must make a full and complete inquiry and set right the fraying human relations. This is absolutely essential in a heterogenous army.

Finally, it would be a good idea not to deploy Muslims in the Army to serve in Irq and Afghanistan as they would have to fight fellow muslims. Secularists may not understand this, but practicing Muslims put faith above politics and the State.


Comments (Page 1)
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on Nov 07, 2009

Finally, it would be a good idea not to deploy Muslims in the Army to serve in Irq and Afghanistan as they would have to fight fellow muslims. Secularists may not understand this, but practicing Muslims put faith above politics and the State.

Then don't join the military.  Why do we have to go out of our way to accomodate them?

on Nov 07, 2009

Even if a person is radicalized by events like harrassment and humiliation, it is not the foregone conclusion that such a person will run amok and kill and injure those around him. It can't have primarily to do with religion as not everybody who experiences mobbing for his religious beliefs, culture etc. turns out to be a massmurderer. It would be wrong to politicise Nidals ethnic and cultural background and a slippery slope to say the least.

on Nov 07, 2009

Bahu, I enjoyed reading your article.  I have seen your name posting before but I don't think I've read any of your articles. 

I totally agree with your comments that American Academia needs to wake up.  Most people in Academia feel strongly that Islam is a religion of peace.  They've been so fooled to the point to believe that the word Islam itself mean peace.  Which is a bunch of donkey poop.  Islam means to submit/surrender.  Now submit or surrender to who/what?  To Allah.  If you ask that's the response your get but the full thing is to submitt/surrender to Allah's will which has been revealed in his word, the Qur'an. 

For Utemia, your statement is true YET no one is using all statements nor do all at point a make it to point c.  There are many reasons for that but the primary reason is that a HIGH PERCENTAGE of Muslims don't understand a lick of Arabic.  Most of the prayers they resite are in Arabic.  The Qur'an is written in classical Arabic which is very hard to read (Classical Arabic that is. You need to get past the mesmerized caligraphy.)

Most people will agrue that Islam is not violent only a select few have hijacked the religion.  Well that's why we have the hadith.  Now most westerns particularly those in the States, have no stinkin clue what the hadith is.  The hadith is read more and used more on a daily bases THAN the Qur'an by Muslims.

The hadith is a collection of muhammad's actions, thoughts, and sayings.  It wasn't until the last 5 years been translated into English.  Even then there have been some stuff that has been conveniently left out.

After living in the Middle East, people need to read the Qur'an AND the hadith. Utemia, you need to read the Qur'an and the Hadith.  I know you're german. I don't know a good german translation.  An excellent english translation is by Abdullah Yusuf Ali.  I am still searching for a decent english translation of the hadith. After reading and studying both of those books you can better understand why fundmental/religious muslims think the way they do.

The media also espouses that Islam is peaceful (which I could easily say that's a slippery slope). 

Now Island Dog, I agree with your statement.  The States has turned into a catering politically correct country.  Let's have a gay pride day. Yeah, let's broadcast that to the world.  Let's continue to remind and show Muslims why we are THE GREAT SATAN!

As a culture and a society, the States has an attitude of I want it my way right now and I don't care what anyone else thinks nor the consequences (Burger Kings ad campaign 'I want it my way' was a very successful one in the United States and actually briefly eclipsed McDonald's sales due to it).  Being a society of extreme excess and with that attitude I'm not the slightest surprised that there's a decay going on in the U.S.

on Nov 07, 2009

One more thing: its not wrong to show Nidals ethnic and culture background.  For our environment helps to create who we are and particularly our personality.

on Nov 07, 2009

This is another one of those rare occasions when I get to agree (partially) with Bahu.

My quibbles are with this:

My point is that the growing alienation of the Muslims from the mainstream of western collective life is contibuting to the sense of unease and the killings in Fort Hood stems from that feeling of unease.

And this:

Finally, it would be a good idea not to deploy Muslims in the Army to serve in Irq and Afghanistan as they would have to fight fellow muslims. Secularists may not understand this, but practicing Muslims put faith above politics and the State.

Well, actually, with everything after the next-to-last sentence of the first paragraph.

Near as I can tell, faith and the State are indistinguishable to many Muslims, if not most.  I think that is the source of the 'growing alienation' more than identity politics.  Even many American converts to Islam consider their country of birth the Great Satan.  I agree that Muslim faith without Sharia appears to be very problematic, but wholly apart from identity politics, something that without question has itself been very corrosive to our culture.  I also don't yet buy a generalized 'feeling of unease' as the 'cause' of Major Hasan's murder spree.  That would be a lazy, facile way to avoid dealing with the specifics and is reflective of the 'everyone is a victim' (usually of rightwing 'meanness') mentality that is so prevalent on the left.

The idea that we should not expect Muslims in the Army (a volunteer outfit, you will remember) to do the job they signed up to do is just idiocy and would be the penultimate example of the 'identity politics' you claim to oppose.  If there is no way for Muslims to share the values of our country sufficiently to fight for it, how can they ever not be alienated from the 'mainstream of western collective life'?

on Nov 07, 2009

the_Peoples_Party
Bahu, I enjoyed reading your article.  I have seen your name posting before but I don't think I've read any of your articles. 

I totally agree with your comments that American Academia needs to wake up.  Most people in Academia feel strongly that Islam is a religion of peace.  They've been so fooled to the point to believe that the word Islam itself mean peace.  Which is a bunch of donkey poop.  Islam means to submit/surrender.  Now submit or surrender to who/what?  To Allah.  If you ask that's the response your get but the full thing is to submitt/surrender to Allah's will which has been revealed in his word, the Qur'an. 

For Utemia, your statement is true YET no one is using all statements nor do all at point a make it to point c.  There are many reasons for that but the primary reason is that a HIGH PERCENTAGE of Muslims don't understand a lick of Arabic.  Most of the prayers they resite are in Arabic.  The Qur'an is written in classical Arabic which is very hard to read (Classical Arabic that is. You need to get past the mesmerized caligraphy.)

Most people will agrue that Islam is not violent only a select few have hijacked the religion.  Well that's why we have the hadith.  Now most westerns particularly those in the States, have no stinkin clue what the hadith is.  The hadith is read more and used more on a daily bases THAN the Qur'an by Muslims.

The hadith is a collection of muhammad's actions, thoughts, and sayings.  It wasn't until the last 5 years been translated into English.  Even then there have been some stuff that has been conveniently left out.

After living in the Middle East, people need to read the Qur'an AND the hadith. Utemia, you need to read the Qur'an and the Hadith.  I know you're german. I don't know a good german translation.  An excellent english translation is by Abdullah Yusuf Ali.  I am still searching for a decent english translation of the hadith. After reading and studying both of those books you can better understand why fundmental/religious muslims think the way they do.

The media also espouses that Islam is peaceful (which I could easily say that's a slippery slope). 

Now Island Dog, I agree with your statement.  The States has turned into a catering politically correct country.  Let's have a gay pride day. Yeah, let's broadcast that to the world.  Let's continue to remind and show Muslims why we are THE GREAT SATAN!

As a culture and a society, the States has an attitude of I want it my way right now and I don't care what anyone else thinks nor the consequences (Burger Kings ad campaign 'I want it my way' was a very successful one in the United States and actually briefly eclipsed McDonald's sales due to it).  Being a society of extreme excess and with that attitude I'm not the slightest surprised that there's a decay going on in the U.S.

All I'm saying is that this could end up in a witch hunt, especially since knowing the US media a little bit and how the internet works. Amok killings are rare, even though they happen too often as it is. Even radicalized people usually don't act like this, they make hate speeches and call for jihad and talk about the great satan america, but they don't usually go about shooting indiscremenantly into a crowd in a health facility. The investigation needs time to interview Hasan and find out his motive, and then he'll get a trial or a court martial as he did commit murder on a US base and is (still) an US army officer. That falls under military jurisdiction (I loved JAG lol) That trial will be a media circus unless they decide to have it behind closed doors.

Islam in general just puts me off. No reason not to inform myself though, thanks for the note on the english translation. I am fluent enough in english to read it.

on Nov 08, 2009

Near as I can tell, faith and the State are indistinguishable to many Muslims, if not most
If there is no way for Muslims to share the values of our country sufficiently to fight for it, how can they ever not be alienated from the 'mainstream of western collective life'?
Most people will agrue that Islam is not violent only a select few have hijacked the religion.
Bahu, I enjoyed reading your article

tHANK YOU.

tHIS IS THE PROBLEM WITH ALL REVEALED RELIGIONS. aFTERALL THE mIDDLE eAST HAS NOT FORGOTTEN OR FORGIVEN THE CRUSADES.

This is a difficult question and I cannot pretend to have an answer to it. I feel that less stress mon the anularities mof identity issues will help.

Islam mdoes have a concept of State except that the stateerves religion and through religion the community of believers. Completely opposite to the view espoused in Europe since the Eighteenth century.

on Nov 08, 2009

State serving religion,  that concept only leads to dictatorship. It has in the past and does so currently in those countries that apply it that way. People are unfree in such a system and risk their lives if they say anything against those in power.

on Nov 08, 2009

The horrific incident at Fort Hood, Texas, should come as a wake up call to all those in the American academia who promote identity based politics:Gays, lesbians, minority, sexual preference, etc etc. Now the Muslim identity is becoming increasingly problematic in the USA and I believe that years and years of promoting identity politics has left the country without the means of even admitting to itself that the islamic identity clashes head long with that of a secular nation state.

This was a classical case of a member of a minority doing exactly what people say this minority is prone to doing.

Homosexuals and blacks have been mistreated in the US far worse than Muslims. But they are not known for running around and murdering people because of it. And prejudices against homosexuals and blacks are not based on what they actually do.

Prejudices against Muslims are based on what many, many self-proclaimed Muslims do.

The three major prejudices against Muslims I know if are "Muslims are anti-Semitic", "Muslims mistreat their women", and "Muslims celebrate their religion by murdering people". And guess what? For a large number that is exactly true.

 

The US media is already concluding that Major Hassan's crime does in no way reflect upon the patriotism of the Muslim-American population. May be so. My point is that the growing alienation of the Muslims from the mainstream of western collective life is contibuting to the sense of unease and the killings in Fort Hood stems from that feeling of unease.

On the contrary, I find that Hassan's crime creates a feeling of unease for non-Muslims.

I don't know how alienated Muslims feel from western society and how much of that has to do with the fact that many don't integrate. But I do know that they don't feel much unease, sine they hardly try to hide the fact that they are Muslims.

I am constantly told, by European liberals, that Muslims in Europe face discrimination and that they fear being singled out for violent attacks. But violent attacks against Jews in Europe are four times as likely as violent attacks against Muslims, and while many Jews do not advertisde the fact that they are Jewish on the street, I see thousands of Muslims on the streets in Europe who are obviously Muslims and do not seem to fear the fact that everybody around them sees it. How afraid and alienated can they really be?

 

Let me at the very out set condemn in the strongest possible manner the violence against the  armymen and women at Fort Hood. My point is not to justify the crime but to say why it happened.

We know why it happened: the man is a terrorist.

It is true that these things can be avoided by giving in to their demands and doing what they want. But giving in to violence is wrong. Remember the homosexuals you mentioned? And the blacks I mentioned? For their sake we cannot give in to the terrorists. Because after the Jews they are numbers 2 and 3 on their list.

 

Finally, it would be a good idea not to deploy Muslims in the Army to serve in Irq and Afghanistan as they would have to fight fellow muslims. Secularists may not understand this, but practicing Muslims put faith above politics and the State.

In that case there is something wrong with the Muslim.

Many Muslims serve in the Israeli army. They fight for the Jewish state and they are proud of it. They are also among the best soldiers Israel has. In fact one of the top three Israeli war heroes is a Muslim.

The only thing Islam has to do with not fighting for one's country is the fact that it offers an excuse people in the west will believe. We in the west have been taught that Muslims do and don't do all sorts of weird things and these days the word "Muslim" is anough to explain or excuse absolutely anything.

The fact is that Muslims never ever had a problem killing other Muslims for politics. Iraqi Muslims did not worry about the fact that they killed Iranian Muslims when the _secular_ Iraqi government decided to attack Iran. Nor did Iraqi Muslims worry about Kuwaiti Muslims when Saddam decided to invade Kuwait. (Note that some Iraqi Muslims did have a problem with killing people. But those same Iraqi Muslims also had a problem with killing non-Muslims. You can find them in Kurdistan.)

There is a civil war between Muslims in Yemen.

There is a genocide perpetrated by Arabs against _Muslim_ Africans in Darfur.

Everywhere in the world the combination of Muslims killing other Muslims for politics is the most common piece in the Lego set that makes up wars.

Secularists like Saddam Hussein understood very well that Muslims will do absolutely everything for politics. Muslims follow their leader, regardless of who he is and what he wants. Even Hitler famously noticed that attribute of followrs if Islam.

I think what the US and the US military need is a stronger leadership. Muslim culture rewards strong leadership.

on Nov 08, 2009

This guys religion will be mostly off-limits for the media and opinion makers. It's no secret that the only group in the US that it is politically correct to criticize is Christians, and especially the Catholic church. No backlash, no boycotts, no problem.

on Nov 08, 2009

Heh.. because there is a mystery about the vatican, forbidden books and secret archives, secret societies.. and a pretty violent past rife with secrets. It is no wonder that the vatican appears so often in conspiracy theories in books and films. People love a good secret and story, it's entertaining.

on Nov 08, 2009

Nitro Cruiser
This guys religion will be mostly off-limits for the media and opinion makers. It's no secret that the only group in the US that it is politically correct to criticize is Christians, and especially the Catholic church. No backlash, no boycotts, no problem.

This is differently true! In the film 2012 they destroyed several catholic and Christians areas.  The writers wanted to destroy the kaaba in Mecca as millions of muslims were going on Haijj there but feared a fatiwa would be announced. 

Here's the quote: "Well, I wanted to do that, I have to admit, But my co-writer Harald [Kloser] said, 'I will not have a fatwa on my head because of a movie.' And he was right. We have to all, in the western world, think about this. You can actually let Christian symbols fall apart, but if you would do this with [an] Arab symbol, you would have ... a fatwa, and that sounds a little bit like what the state of this world is. So it's just something which I kind of didn't [think] was [an] important element, anyway, in the film, so I kind of left it out." You can read the article here: http://movies.yahoo.com/feature/movie-talk-roland-emmerich-fatwa.html

People bash christians all the time due to the fact that no one can cry up a storm of discrimination, have the fear of being labeled something, or being killed because you said.

A show that I enjoy watching, they mock christians all the time (its a comedy) to the point of blanantly ridiculing it. They've mocked Judiasm as well but by far probably 80 to 90 percent of their religious jokes are towards christians.

The media is trying to down play his religion as well.  On the state run CNN they say what caused him to snap was because of him going to Afghanistan and fighting the war.  To most media networks this HAD NOTHING to do with religion and everything to do with him fighting that war.  In essence, saying that if there was no war he wouldn't have done this.

Ignorant people about Islam drive me insane. Like I've said before, there are some that aren't violent but those are the ones that just are doing it because its cultural.  They are the ones that don't understand arabic nor do they read the qur'an because they can't read arabic nor would they want to.

Once you find people that read the qur'an you'll notice a correlation with them being destructive.

If you want to hear about a man who speaks openly about what Islam means (he's not a muslim, but he is an Arab).  Look up Father Zakaria BotrosHis radio show is in Egypt and many Muslims want him to be killed    .

yet many hear his message and reject islam.  Utemia, if you're interested in islam look him up.  I think some of his messages have been translated into German.  Actually Utemia, I don't know if you know this but Leauki is fluent in German.

on Nov 08, 2009

p.s Leauki, I hope you don't mind me saying that though I know you've posted and talked about it.

on Nov 08, 2009

dumb keyboard keeps wanting to write from right to left.  Hence, the gap in between the yet in my post.  I need more practice in writing languages that go from right to left.

on Nov 08, 2009

He was ridiculed?

Yeah, I imagine he was..And occasionally by the men and women he "counseled" (read: attempted to screw up) with his own brand of therapy.  After all, most of them had been to combat while he was only "worried" about going.

I wonder how much damage he did to people in his role as therapist.

 

 

 

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