At The Globe and CBC, guerillas with
tenure
National Post
Tuesday, October
2, 2007
Page: A22
Section: Issues & Ideas
Byline: Jonathan Kay
Column: Jonathan Kay
Source: National Post
Over the summer, when Somali-born writer Ayaan Hirsi Ali
was promoting her new book about the atrocities she'd endured in the name of
Islam, she ended up on Avi Lewis' CBC television talk show, On The Map. The
result, recorded for posterity on the Web, was one of those over-the-top
examples of left-wing bias that critics of the CBC are forever mass-forwarding
to one another. The biggest whopper came when Ali -- who'd endured both genital
mutilation and forced marriage before escaping to the Netherlands -- explained
one of the key reasons her early life was so hellish: Whereas the Koran invades
every aspect of life in Muslim countries, Western Christians respect the line
between church and state.
To which an appalled Lewis replied: "Whoa. You live in the United States of
America. This is a country where Evangelical Christianity has ascended to the
highest ranks of power -- where conservative social values drawn [from] and
justified by the Bible are imposed on people every single day."
Ali interrupted Lewis: "I think you're exaggerating …"
Lewis cut her off: "They shoot abortion doctors in the United States of
America!"
Interested readers can see how Ali ably defended herself against this
nonsense by visiting www.youtube.com/ watch?v=08EYqwyns-k and advancing to the
4:30 mark. But what sticks in my mind about the exchange -- even months later --
isn't Ali's eloquent reply, but Lewis' casual tossing off of this ludicrous
equivalence into the face of a guest who has tragic firsthand knowledge of what
real religious fanaticism looks like. Sure many primitive Islamic societies turn
a blind eye to honour killings, treat women like chattel and marry off their
adolescent girls to polygamous old men. But Americans … shoot abortion doctors.
Except they don't -- not for almost a decade. Not since the reign of that
notorious social conservative, Bill Clinton. In all of U.S. history, exactly
seven abortion doctors have been killed as a result of their professional
identity -- an arithmetic nullity compared to the daily slaughter committed
across the Middle East and Central Asia in the name of Islam.
But what matters isn't the scale of the bloodshed, is it? What matters is the
talking point. Whether you're on TV or debating some turtle-necked Harper's type
at a dinner party, the phony rhetorical tit-for-tat is predictable. It doesn't
matter what Islamist barbarism is up for discussion, there is always someone
willing to offer up some offsetting American sin -- Hurricane Katrina, racism,
fast-food culture, etc. --as proof that the United States is just as bad, or
worse. It is the post-9/11 version of those Cold War liberals who defended
Soviet communism on the grounds that the Russians' alleged "freedom" from
poverty and inequality made up for their lack of freedom from gulags.
I was reminded of the phenomenon last Friday, when Globe and Mail columnist
Rick Salutin served up a particularly fine example of the genre. His subject was
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, a theocrat who denies the existence of
the Holocaust, even as he plots to perpetrate a second. Naturally, Salutin sees
Ahmadinejad and Bush as two "buffoons" to be dismissed in the same breath. His
logic: "Criticisms like those made against the Iranian leader can easily be made
of the West, and George Bush, and often are: about Western hypocrisy regarding
gays or women; or science being subjected to religious standards; or
human-rights outrages such as Guantanamo Bay and Abu Ghraib."
It's not quite clear what Salutin means by "Western hypocrisy regarding gays"
given that in Iran, as in many Muslim countries, gays get whipped, stoned or
executed; while in the West, they hop on floats and get feted in big urban
parades. Nor have I any idea what he means about women. Or science. But that's
not the point is it? When you're playing the equivalence game, you just spit the
topics out and your target audience connects the dots based on some
half-remembered Clinton-era factoid about abortion doctors.
The Western world is the only civilization in history whose intellectual
class has embraced societal self-loathing as a mainstream ideology -- even as we
have single-handedly launched a global human-rights revolution that, to our
everlasting glory, has liberated gays, women and a dozen other formerly
persecuted groups from discrimination. In the Cold War, our ivory-tower
"guerillas with tenure" (to cite Irving Howe's phrase) didn't sink our ship
because the enemy was itself a hollow shell spouting an ideology nobody
believed. But militant Islam is different: Men like Ahmadinejad truly do
ardently believe their loathsome world-view is ascendant, and that the green
tide they champion will one day conquer the decadent West.
Salutin seems quite pleased that, in this globalized age, specimens such as
this Holocaust denier are now able to "laugh" at us: It shows, he says, that
"the civilizational playing field is finally being levelled" after all those
centuries of Western cultural hegemony.
But I have a feeling that isn't why Ahmadinejad is laughing. Back home in
Tehran, when ordinary citizens praise the enemy or challenge the government,
they get thrown in jail or worse -- as a Canadian named Zahra Kazemi learned in
the most horrible way possible. Here in the West, people who do the same thing
get lifelong gigs as profs, talking heads and op-ed columnists. How do you say
"sucker" in Farsi?
jkay@nationalpost.com
Idnumber: 200710020077
Edition: National
Story
Type: Column
Length: 891 words
Keywords: CRIME; IRAN; MURDERS; TRIALS;
JOURNALISTS; CANADIANS
PRODUCTION FIELDS
NDATE: 20071002
NUPDATE: 20071002
DOB: 20071002
POSITION: 1