| August | 13 |
| 2006 |
Sarah Baxter has a superb piece in the Sunday Times on the incongruity of feminists who ally, even if only passively, with Islamists:
On the defining issue of our times, the rise of Islamic extremism, what is left of the sisterhood has almost nothing to say. Instead of “I am woman, hear me roarâ€, there is a loud silence, punctuated only by remonstrations against Tony Blair and George Bush — “the world’s number one terrorist†as the marchers would have it.Women are perfectly entitled to oppose the war in Iraq or to feel that Israel is brutally overreacting to Hezbollah’s provocation. But where is the parallel, equally vital debate about how to combat Islamic fundamentalism? And why don’t more peace-loving feminists regard it as a threat?
...I prefer to take Islamic fundamentalists at their word when they spout insults about Jews being the descendants of “pigs and apes†and launch their chillingly apocalyptic tirades.
Why? Because they not only talk centuries-old nonsense about the place of women in society, but they also purposely oppress the female sex whenever they are given the chance. As regards their treatment of women, there is no discernible difference between their acts and their words.
...Chesler has fallen out with many old friends in the women’s movement. They have in effect excommunicated her for writing in right-wing publications in America, but she has found it impossible to get published on the left. There are whispers that she has become paranoid, mad, bonkers, a charge frequently levelled against the handful of women writers who are brave enough to tackle the same theme.
In Britain there is the polemicist Julie Burchill, who has written incisively about the desire of terrorists to commit acts “not so that innocents may have the right to live freely on the West Bank, but so that they might have the right to throw acid in the face of innocent, unveiled womenâ€. Well, the outrageous Julie has always been bonkers, hasn’t she.
Then there is “mad†Melanie Phillips, the Cassandra of our age, banging on that “if we wish to learn what was going on in Europe in 1938, just look aroundâ€. Of course she would say that, wouldn’t she. She’s Jewish, and anyway didn’t you know that she is crazy enough to believe in two-parent families? In America the radical feminist Andrea Dworkin died last year virtually unmourned by women on the left in part, as her friend Christopher Hitchens remembered, because “she wasn’t neutral against a jihadist threat that wanted, and wants, to enslave and torture females.
“That she could be denounced as a ‘conservative’,†he concluded, “says much about the left to which she used to belong.â€

MessageSpace
"Then there is “mad†Melanie Phillips, the Cassandra of our age, banging on that “if we wish to learn what was going on in Europe in 1938, just look aroundâ€."
Ms. Phillips was actually quoting from a Victor Davis Hanson article in the National Review.
From the article by Ms. Baxter:
"She has noticed that today’s feminists are inclined to keep quiet about the march of radical Islam. “There’s a great fear of tackling the subject because of cultural relativism. People are scared of being called racist,†Cochrane observes."
Virtually no one feels the same inhibitions these days in Europe when it comes to insulting Jews.
Many people are ignorant enough to believe that the West actually created the Islam that treats women as sub-human. Some seriously believe that Islamic extremism and human rights violations began with the Balfour Declaration.
The Ban the Bomb freaks were wrong then, and their modern Ayatollah-hugging variants are wrong now. They've just swapped the totalitarian ideology they're shilling for from Communism to Islamism.

