A few years ago, Harvard psychiatric instructor Kenneth Levin wrote
"The Oslo Syndrome: Delusions of a People Under Siege." In this
illuminating book, Levin examines the Israeli experience of
concessionary negotiations with a "peace partner" openly dedicated to
Israel's destruction. He also examines the historical Jewish Diaspora
experience in which Jewish populations typically identified with their
tormentors and even echoed their antisemitism.
Such interactions are driven by a permanent condition of siege
mentality, Levin explains, and clearly manifest two kinds of delusional
thinking.
First, there is the fantasy about the intentions of the aggressor (Arab
Muslim or European Christian); then, there is the fantasy about
changing the aggressor's intentions. Such thinking, Levin says, is
common to victims of chronic abuse, particularly children. They fool
themselves into thinking that they, the victims, control the abuser by
linking the abuse they suffer to their own behavior.
In other words, they believe they cause their own abuse. This mind
game, Levin says, actually gives victims a sense of control over
situations beyond their control (an abusive parent, for instance). This
allows them to avoid feelings of helplessness and despair.
And so the besieged victim pretends: Daddy doesn't really want to hurt
me; if I'm a better girl, he'll stop. Israel pretends: Muslims don't
really want to destroy our state, and so we'll give them land for
peace. Jews in pre-Nazi Europe pretended: The anti-Semites are really
right; we deserve a pogrom. Intriguingly, Levin writes:
"But the book's themes have a still broader relevance. Even ostensibly
powerful and secure populations, under conditions that entail ongoing
threat and vulnerability, can manifest similar trends."
I got a new one for the doctor: a trend of delusion so enormous as to
beg for immediate hospitalization and a transfer of power of attorney.
Problem is, the patient here is the United States government (USG),
which now says: If we just stop talking about jihad, Muslims will
neither become jihadis nor sympathize with them.
Such is the message of a crazy new government guide called "Words that
Work and Words that Don't" urging federal agencies, including the
Department of Homeland Security, to eliminate all references to Islam
when discussing, well, Islamic terrorism.
Not only does that mean no more talk of "Islam," it also means no more
talk of "jihad." ("Extremism" is the new "jihad.") And forget about the
"caliphate." (Try "global totalitarian state.") Even such politically
correct terms as "Islamist" and "Islamofascist," which take the
traditional teachings of Islam off the hook, are now verboten. And so,
more curiously, is the term "Muslim moderate." Says the government:
"The term `moderate' has become offensive to many Muslims, who believe
that it refers to individuals whom the USG prefers to deal with, and
who are only marginally religious."
So "moderates" don't want to look like patsies next to "jihadists," and
the USG doesn't want to be insensitive to their needs. Sounds like a
rest cure for Uncle Sam is long overdue.
Of course, the no-Islam (no-"moderate") lexicon itself -- which reads
like disinformation designed to confuse the American public -- is just
scratching the delusional surface. Animating the directive, written
with considerable input from unidentified American Muslim "experts," is
the delusional belief that what we say (or don't say) has
transformative power over Muslim attitudes and behaviors regarding
Islamic terrorism, the Islamic caliphate, the advance of Islamic law
(Sharia) and the so-called war on (Islamic) terror -- rebranded here,
no kidding, as "A Global Struggle for Security and Progress."
("Liberty," Uncle Sam tells us, was "rejected" as "a buzzword for
American hegemony.")
The basic idea is to shut the United States up. Or, more
diplomatically: "The terminology ... should avoid helping the
terrorists by inflating the religious bases and glamorous appeal of
their ideology." (Glamorous?) For example, "When we respond loudly (to
Osama bin Laden and other jihadists), we raise their prestige in the
Muslim world."
"We" raise their prestige? Come on. If a human being thinks turning
passenger jets into WMDs is an abomination, nothing anyone says can
raise the perpetrators' "prestige." Could our government rationally
think otherwise?
Alas, reason escapes the Oslo Syndrome sufferer.
This may explain why Uncle Sam is now actually assuming responsibility
for jihad itself: "Our terminology must be properly calibrated to
diminish the recruitment efforts of extremists (read: jihadists) who
argue the West is at war with Islam."
News flash for Uncle Sam: Islam, in myriad forms, is at war with the
West. And even if we never say the words, we can still darn well lose.
Original
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It's Islamic Jihad, Not Extremism, Uncle Sam
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