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Islamophobic Gibberish Taints U.S. Media Discourse on Middle East

By Rami Khouri, Middle East Online. Posted March 11, 2008.


It's the "Yellow Peril" all over again.
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My travels around the United States for the past two weeks, during an intense political moment leading up to two crucial presidential primaries Tuesday, have reinforced my sense of a dark hole in public political life of this country.

At a time when the United States is deeply involved militarily in the Arab-Islamic region of the world, serious, balanced and in-depth analysis or coverage of this region and its people remain elusive.

Other issues that are important for America's well-being, such as climate change, education reform, or immigration, are covered with much more depth, accuracy and balance.

The political campaigns, especially among conservative Republicans, have aggravated an already grim situation. Republican front-runner John McCain in particular wastes no opportunity to rally his supporters with emotional commitments to use every ounce of energy in his body to fight "radical Islamic militants." He'll chase them to the "gates of hell," he thunders. And the happy crowd roars approval -- not quite sure who the radical Islamic militants are, or why the combined powers of the world's mightiest democracies and allied Third World tyrannies have not even chased the rascals out of the mountains of Afghanistan and Pakistan, or suburban London, let alone to hell itself.

The crescendo of McCain's simplistic appeal is always that "I'll never surrender!" and the happy crowd roars again, secure in the knowledge that surrender is not an option -- though still blissfully confused about whom exactly one might surrender to if surrender were ever an option.

Other intellectual hooligans and cultural skinheads -- like Glenn Beck on CNN every night -- reflect a widespread tendency among conservative media commentators and hosts to replace sensibility with emotion, to act tough when that is easier than being smart and realistic.

Fox News panders to similar sentiments, simultaneously affirming a determination to fight bad Muslims and terrorists who threaten the United States, while proudly waving the American flag as an emotional symbol of one's commitment to something -- though what that something is remains unclear.

I suspect that the emotional patriotism and macho militarism that increasingly define the conservative side of the United States -- half the country, probably -- have increasingly come to serve as a substitute for consistent ideology and sound foreign policy. Many scholars, religious leaders, businessmen and -women, and civil society groups increasingly reflect the best of American traditions, by making the effort to grasp that a few criminal Arab-Muslims in the world are dwarfed by the billion-plus law-abiding Muslims and 300 million-plus Arabs who share most American values.

The political and media public space, however, is dominated by images, words and innuendo that overwhelmingly portray Arab-Muslims who are violent, extremist, religiously fanatic and generally alien, and therefore dangerous.

In the past two weeks in the United States, I have kept my eyes and ears open for signs of news media reports about Arab-Muslims that portray them as they really are -- normal people, usually politically placid, occasionally angry and very occasionally violent. Those images and reports are extremely rare, in a way that they are not rare in coverage of other population groups around the world or within the United States.

Sadly, more than six years after 9/11 and five years after the American-led attack on Iraq, the public debate on these issues in the United States -- with only a few exceptions -- remains mired in intellectual mediocrity, factual inaccuracy, analytical selectivity, cultural insensitivity and political values more worthy of a horse barn than a powerful and otherwise decent nation.

Politicians play on the ignorance and fear of their fellow citizens to rouse emotional responses in a desperate quest for votes; commercial media personalities do the same thing in pursuit of larger audience shares, in order to sell more advertising. Both appear irresponsible and uncaring that their simplistic emotionalist and reactionary chauvinism fosters a fresh form of racism that can only generate new tensions and greater conflicts down the road.

There is much to admire this season in the American political system. But we also clearly see much that is repugnant -- where the dark sides of American racism and xenophobia is hideously promoted in speeches -- and this repulsiveness shamelessly hidden by wrapping it in the flag.

We should not fall into the same moral morass that these few racists and hucksters have adopted as their home: This sort of deliberate exploitation of racist fears and ignorance is the sickness of a small minority of Americans living in a strange and desperate world of media and political competitiveness.

We should not brand all Americans as ugly and stupid because a small minority of them choose to be so, just as Americans should not see all Arabs and Muslims as dangerous fanatics because a small minority of them choose to be so.

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See more stories tagged with: mainstream media, muslims, arabs, west, media representations

Rami G. Khouri is editor-at-large of the Daily Star and director of the Issam Fares Institute for Public Policy and International Affairs at the American University of Beirut, in Beirut, Lebanon.

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Good On Ya
Posted by: Scott Griffith on Mar 11, 2008 4:18 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Good on ya, Rami Khouri. What you've written wants, in my view, to be drummed in over and over. Scott Griffith.

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Islamophobia or just good sense
Posted by: frogman on Mar 11, 2008 5:30 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If your wondering if your Islamophobic or not just remember this: A phobia is an irrational fear, in other words if your afraid of something that can't harm you then you are phobic. On the other hand being afraid of something that can harm you is just good sense. So if your afraid of Islam are you islamophobic or just rational? This question could very well be the most important one that you'll ever have to answer. And I think we all have to answer it for ourselves. And I think that we should all base our answer on the evidence. Not on the ravings of racists or or on the rationalizations of Islamic apologists but on real life, observable facts. Thankfully this is real easy to do. All that you have to do is watch the TV news, read your newspaper, use your internet to access to read English language newspapers from around the world, especially the U K and India, visit wwww.thereligionofpeace.com. Do this for a week or two. Then take this test. If you are afraid of Islam you are rational. If you are not afraid of Islam you were not paying attention so watch the TV news, read your newspaper, use your internet access to read newspapers from around the world, especially from the UK and India, visit www.thereligionofpeace.com. Do this for a week or two. Repeat as necessary.

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» RE: Islamophobia or just good sense Posted by: Joshua Holland
» RE: Islamophobia or just good sense Posted by: Joshua Holland
Kipling calls out McCain on his war lust
Posted by: cognitorex on Mar 11, 2008 6:23 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Take up the White Man's burden—
Send forth the best ye breed—

Go, bind your sons to exile
To serve your captives' need;

To wait, in heavy harness,
On fluttered folk and wild—

Your new-caught sullen peoples,
Half devil and half child.

_______________________________________________

Far-called, our navies melt away;
On dune and headland sinks the fire:

Lo, all our pomp of yesterday
Is one with Ninevah and Tyre!

Judge of the Nations, spare us yet.
Lest we forget - lest we forget!

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America Needs Targets; Uncle Sam Wants You
Posted by: Gretchen360 on Mar 11, 2008 7:07 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
For the past 60 years or so, the American military/industrial complex has needed villains to fight. It requires perpetual war to maintain profit levels.
The CIA controls information fed the public through the mass media. With hatred, bigotry and racism at fever pitch, Americans can shift enemies with ease. They can't find the new foe on a map, but they are sure the US Air Force can bomb him into the Stone Age.
It is no wonder that citizens throughout the world are peace loving. Who wants to be a cinder?
Yet, they permit their leaders to whip up crowds in a nationalistic or religious frenzy against the USA. Presidents such as Ahmadinejad and Chavez travel to the UN to badmouth Emperor Bush. Why don't they dig a hole in the garden, jump in and take cyanide? They would be more productive. At least their bodies would become plant food.
The Americans can be duped into war with anyone. Why do many nations provoke them?

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This comment has been removed from the site due to non-compliance with AlterNet's community policies.
» I would also like to suggest: Posted by: shariavigilant
My Perspective...
Posted by: dave16 on Mar 11, 2008 8:24 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Please see www.discussrace.com

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This comment has been removed from the site due to non-compliance with AlterNet's community policies.
» RE: Bob Posted by: ninethreeone
» RE: Bob Posted by: shariavigilant
» RE: Bob Posted by: Joshua Holland
» RE: Bob Posted by: shariavigilant
Fair enough, however Cartoon Jihads and mob hit contracts ("fatwahs") issued by religious Dons...
Posted by: ABetterFuture on Mar 11, 2008 9:07 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...such as the rotting-in-hell Khomeini of the Iranian death cult don't improve the situation, either.

It's certainly accurate to say that there are some pretty stupid television and radio entertainment personalities floating around out there, not restricted to American Idol(atry), but also present in the news commentary business.

On the other hand, when--as a society--your* collectivist heads explode and you start chanting "Death to ________" because someone holds a less than favorable opinion of your flavor of superstition, you make it obvious and easy to rail both fairly and unfairly against said death cult.

I've got no problem with religion, folks should take it or leave according to their whims. State-sponsored religious gang activity remains a trifle unsettling.

*"your" and "you" in the broad, collectivist sense of the Cartoon Jihadis, etc, rather than specifically directed at a person

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"America is Beautiful, but she has an ugly side"-Neil Young
Posted by: wawa on Mar 11, 2008 9:32 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The idiot wind blown on FOX's Hannity & Colmes, Bill O'Reilly and Neil Cavuto show, by Walid Shoebat, author of "Why We Want to Kill You" a supposed ex-Islamic terrorist, who has now converted to Christo-terrorism, also blew through the annual political forum at the US Air Force Academy on Feb. 6, 2008.


Shoebat has built a lucrative speaking career by manipulating the fears and whipping up hatred between Jews and Muslims.

He also rakes in the bucks with $100.00 video sets and up to $1,000.00 with pre-show meet-and greets.

This civilian journalist attended the 'three stooges' of fundamentalism at the "WAKE UP AMERICA! Confessions of 3 X-Terrorists" show in Melbourne, Fl. February 25, 2008.

Walid's oratory style is part pep talk and part exhortation with a Hitler-eske intensity and his show is slickly produced to incite the masses.

Walid spewed that, "I love FOX News, but not Geraldo Rivera! His biggest mistake wasn't drawing the line in the sand in Iraq; it is his support of a Palestinian state."

The audience roared with laughter and exuberant applause as they also did as Walid preached, "Islam is a revolutionary faith out to destroy all governments…Muslim nations have a command from Allah to rule the world…Islam is a constitutional form of government…when you have a senator take the oath of office on the Koran he is pledging to uphold Sharia law and not the Constitution."

I wish it were a 'small minority' who are taken in by the spin of fundamentalists, but reality is we are not in a clash of civilizations or a clash of religions.

We are in a clash of Fundamentalism-meaning anyone who has quit thinking-and people of good will who seek justice, equal human rights for all and peace.

The Rest of the Walid story on WAWA Blog February 26, 2008:
http://www.wearewideawake.org/

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elaborate...
Posted by: shariavigilant on Mar 11, 2008 9:56 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Please elaborate on this statement if you will...

"We are in a clash of Fundamentalism-meaning anyone who has quit thinking-and people of good will who seek justice, equal human rights for all and peace."

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» RE: elaborate...Seems obvious to me Posted by: AngryWhiteFemale
critical-thinking
Posted by: tibetsun on Mar 11, 2008 10:08 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You, like many others, lump Muslims together. Do your research, folks. There are small cabals everywhere. We have the neo-con evangelicals, there are the Zionists, there are the Jihadists. Wake up! The only thing to fear, is FEAR ITSELF! Stop naming all Muslims, Jihadists! Do you actually think, all Muslims consider us, in total, neo-cons? Start doing some "CRITICAL-THINKING"!

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» RE: critical-thinking Posted by: shariavigilant
"cultural skinheads"
Posted by: Cwood on Mar 11, 2008 10:44 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This isn't really a big deal, but I'd just like to point out that skinhead does not equal racist. The term "cultural skinheads" should read "cultural white-power skinheads" or "cultural racists." Most skinheads you'll actually meet are not racist people nor are they nazis, so it would be unfair to assume that at first.

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Ancient Arabic Saying
Posted by: o on Mar 11, 2008 11:01 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A wise man associating with the vicious becomes an idiot; a dog traveling with good men becomes a rational being.

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Bob
Posted by: shariavigilant on Mar 11, 2008 11:07 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Let me see if I can do this correct this time so as to not have my comments deleted...

Oh yes this article was GREAT!!!

There is no problem with fundamental Islamism and a desire to reestablish the caliphate so go back to sleep. Nothing to see here.

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» RE: Bob - darn right Bob Posted by: tapadance
» I wonder when we will wake up? When. Posted by: shariavigilant
» here: Posted by: shariavigilant
Sharing most of my American Values is just not enough!!!
Posted by: tapadance on Mar 11, 2008 11:59 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yes I agree with the author that the vast majority of the people moving to Europe and to America share in his words. 'most American values'

It's the values they don't share that scare me.

Because most of the noise on that front comes from the right, we 'liberals' think we have to prove how tolerant we are by tolerating the intolerable. We look the other way, or change our way of life we reduce our American Values, and our American way of life. So that our newcomers will be more comfortable.

You don't have to read right wing hate sites, you can read local newspapers and see changes in how we are expected to live our lives. In Texas, two young girls are murdered by their parents, because they will not accept an arranged marriage. Did the MSM say anything, no of course not.

Harvard University has closed it's main gym to all males and all non Muslim females for 8 hours a week. So the students don't have to see people who are different. Who wear 'inappropriate clothes to the gym' as one student said.

When will they start protesting that all people in Harvard be required to wear only appropriate clothing?

I had last year a Muslim family as neighbors. When my dog went into my yard they threw stones. Because dogs are unclean, because I as a single female property owner was a sin against god. The police suggested I sell my home and move, since telling them to stop stoning me and my dog would be intolerant! I thought stoning was illegal in America, but I guess it is not. I wonder would they have felt justified in killing me if I was gay?

We on the left condemn and rightly so, any attacks on homosexuals. Except when they are done by Muslims, then to do so would be intolerant of their way of life. So we look the other way, as attacks on homosexuals increase, as woman are attacked for improper behavior, as in the 2006 Lisbon riots, when Muslim youths stormed the beaches, beating and assaulting their way through the crowded beach. I live in a beach community, just a few feet from a public beach, I wondered could that happen here?

I know this post will get blocked, it will get dumped, reported and other wise ignored.

Europeans might enjoy living in dimmitude to their new residents. It should not be that way in America.

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» RE: You are making it up Posted by: PakiBoy
Where are the 300 million that share Western values?
Posted by: Swedish liberal on Mar 11, 2008 12:40 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There are 1.2 bn Muslims in the world and between 2-6 million in the US.

Are we to believe that there are 300 million of Muslims share Western values?

1. The separation of church and state, that god has no place in politics?

2. In liberal democracy?

3. In free market capitalism?

4. In freedom of thought, right to free speech even if it is blasphemous?

5 Right to religious freedom, the right to believe but also the right not to believe?

6. That homosexuals have the same right to express their sexuality as heterosexuals?

7. That women have equal rights as men have?

8 That children have the same rights to religious freedom as their parents have?

I dare you to show me where these 300 million are.

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Eekamouse
Posted by: Eekamouse on Mar 11, 2008 1:52 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"We are in a clash of Fundamentalism-meaning anyone who has quit thinking-and people of good will who seek justice, equal human rights for all and peace."

I saw the islamophobe ask for a clarification on this quote, and given that the author hasn't expounded on it, I will.

Religious fundamentalism is the death of thought. It is the point where the recipient of that particular revelation, be it Christian, Muslim, whatever, accepts the literal interpretation of their "holy" books as the answer to all questions. From that point on, anything that doesn't fit in with their particular belief system, is either ignored, disdained, or murdered.

For instance, the fundamentalist muslims who threw stones at the single woman's dog are no longer capable, because of their fundamentalist mindset, of recognizing any good in that woman or her dog. Any evidence to the contrary would be completely ignored.

The same goes for christian fundamentalists. Whatever fits their worldview they will latch onto. Whatever doesn't, they will ignore or belittle.

Fundamentalists have accepted and welcomed their boundaries. They do not go beyond those boundaries. They are most comfortable where there is nothing new to think about. They are no longer beings who use their minds to grow. Hence their rejection of evolution, a round earth, and gravity.

This is not to say there aren't religious people, both muslim and christian who are able to leave the rigid boundaries of their religions for harmony and good will toward others, and I believe this is what the previous poster was saying.

Fundamentalism, I agree, is a major part of the problem and the primary force behind the perpetuation of cultural hate.

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» RE: ekamouse - your correct Posted by: tapadance
USA and Islam
Posted by: ShoShenQ on Mar 11, 2008 5:06 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
USA needs an enemy to justify its military actions, its that simple, it has a bloody and shady history (congrats on being the last civilized country to abolish slavery btw) and knows no other way than the violent one .

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» RE: USA and Islam Posted by: tapadance
Deb
Posted by: debmcd on Mar 16, 2008 2:46 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Instead of adding fuel to the fire, McCain should be trying to calm people's fears. He should spend some time learning about the religion which is not violent and stop talking about a few criminals like they represent the whole Islamic religion. When are Republicans going to figure out that the American people are tired of hearing them tell us to be afraid. Bush and his administration went far overboard in response to a criminal act on 9/11 and the Republican party has tried to advance themselves by using fear and misinformation. It does nobody but them any good. They have had power for two terms and have managed to trash the Constitution and all the freedoms we are guaranteed therin by using terms like Islamic facistss. I think it's time for a change. I'd like a president who will tell the truth about what it is exactly we're doing around the world and how exactly it's making us safer because right now with Bush and I'm afraid with McCain we won't get the truth. All we'll get is more of the same fear mongering and misleading rhetoric that is making us hated throughout the Muslim world. I guess in some way we aren't safe but that is due to the fact that our Republican leaders have alienated the entire Middle East with the exception of the Saudis and even they seem to be fed up with the U.S. We need a logical, realistic and honest dialog about Islam and we won't get that with a Republican in the White House especially one who can only parrot the current administration's hate and fear rhetoric.

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