So how’s that old Arab Spring going?
“So how’s that old Arab Spring going?”
Not so good, based on the candidates running for president in Egypt.
Then there is this key paragraph which sums up the West’s entire response to the totalitarian Islamic threat since 9/11:
One of the basic defects of the Bush administration’s designation of a “war on terror” was that it emphasized symptoms (bombs and bombers) over causes (the underlying ideology). In the war of ideas, the West has chosen not to compete, under the erroneous assumption that the ever more refined delivery systems for its sensual distractions [the internet] are a Big Idea in and of themselves. They’re not.
We aren’t fighting an emotion (“terror”), we are fighting violent Islamic radicals who believe that God has given them the right to kill anyone who disagrees with them.
“So how’s that old Arab Spring going?”
Not so good, based on the candidates running for president in Egypt.
Then there is this key paragraph which sums up the West’s entire response to the totalitarian Islamic threat since 9/11:
One of the basic defects of the Bush administration’s designation of a “war on terror” was that it emphasized symptoms (bombs and bombers) over causes (the underlying ideology). In the war of ideas, the West has chosen not to compete, under the erroneous assumption that the ever more refined delivery systems for its sensual distractions [the internet] are a Big Idea in and of themselves. They’re not.
We aren’t fighting an emotion (“terror”), we are fighting violent Islamic radicals who believe that God has given them the right to kill anyone who disagrees with them.