Friday, November 19, 2010

Obama's Eid Al-Adha Greetings Incorporate Islamic Revisionism And Wishful Thinking

From Jihad Watch:

Whoops: Obama's Eid greetings incorporate Islamic revisionism


This year's Eid greetings say, in part:



On Eid, Muslims around the world will commemorate Abraham's willingness to sacrifice his son, and distribute food to those less fortunate -- a reminder of the shared values and the common roots of three of the world's major religions.

Less informed Americans will read that and recall the account of Abraham's willingness to sacrifice Isaac, Abraham's son by Sarah and a Biblical patriarch of the Jewish people. On the other hand, in an effort to demote Jews in its Islamic supremacist ordering of life, the universe, and everything, Islamic teachings hold that the son in this account was not Isaac, but Ishmael. That's a rather significant jab at "the common roots of three of the world's major religions."



Does this mean Obama is a practicing Muslim behind the White House walls and the mask is slipping? No.



But it is noteworthy in that it is sloppy. If it is intentional, it is disingenuous. If it is unintentional, it is alarmingly bumbling. In either case, it is symptomatic of a policy based on a glossing over of differences, and on lofty but false assumptions of common values, and compatible ideals of human rights and dignity. And the rest of that paragraph only continues to demonstrate all of those issues.



Utterly ignoring Islam's teachings on the subjugation of women and non-Muslims, cruel and unusual punishments prescribed in the Qur'an, the death penalty for apostasy, and other abuses that hold many Muslim societies in arrested development and threaten human rights in the West does not make those teachings go away. Nor does it do away with the widespread human suffering caused by them.



Wishful thinking is an alarming basis for policy, whether economic, diplomatic, or for national security. And as the old military adage cautions: "Hope is not a method."

Posted by Marisol on November 18, 2010 7:57 AM

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