Sullivan article
Jon Ford
jonmfordster@hotmail.com
Fri, 12 Oct 2001 16:24:17 -0700
Mike is right about the URLs. I got this fairly long article in xerox form
at school, and I have known Sullivan's work for some years (even published a
reprint of one of his essays in a book I edited).However, I don't agree with
him that the war is entirely religious, although we do have Muslim
extremists lined up against right-wing Christians and, on the Israeli side,
some fanatical ultra-Orthodoxers. In many ways, despite the pursuit of the
elusive terrorist network of Bin Laden, a man without a country or even real
estate, this is a traditional war of control and turf, if we include culture
as part of the turf. Muslim "extremists" would like, as Middle East natives,
to control their own land and resources. They resent some of the corrupt
governments the US helps keep in power there, and the "cultural control"
that comes over the US owned mass corporate media. Israelis want to control
land, as in the case of the settlers, who have nibbled away at lands
originally banned from further settlement by the original peace accords.On
the other hand, Palestinians want their land back, never accepted Israeli
right to be there, always resented seeing them have good land and good homes
Paelestinians had the original deeds to. The US would like more control over
land and resources in the Middle East, where the stability of US sponsored
governments (and now our own domestic safety) is being menaced by the
extremists.
Bin Laden hates the United States (in part because of the reasons just cited
above,I'm sure), and he whips up a great deal of religious rhetoric to
justify and "cleanse" his horrible terrorist acts, but underneath that is
the same old resentment of have not countries for a superpower that seems
invulnerable, that seems to desire world hegemony and doesn't seem to listen
or care about the poverty and ruin in many of the countries in the Middle
East.
So it seems to me that to say the whole thing is "religious," and to evoke
the checkered history of Muslim fanaticism, which is certainly repellent
(although more so if seen in a vacuum, decontextualised from history and the
struggle of control over land, food, and resources), is to avoid fuller
thinking and to sink down to a level of theological philosophizing that can
be self-defeating (not that it isn't important to understand Muslim
extremism and its roots). But if the problem is seen simply as evil Muslims
and crazed terrorist fanatics, I guess we'll have to kill them all, because
they sure ain't gonna convert. I think this could become a kind of horrible
scorched earth crusade against the "evil ones," and that would be horrible
indeed. Indeed, it's already horrible enough for me.
>From: Michael Eisenstadt <michaele@ando.pair.com>
>To: austin-ghetto-list@pairlist.net
>Subject: hint as to its gist should be your mantra
>Date: Thu, 11 Oct 2001 11:05:37 -0500
>
>Don Laird wrote:
> >
> > Below is a very insightful explanatory model and forecast from the
>NYTimes
> > Magazine.
>
> > > This Is a Religious War...
>
>Don and other forwarders. This is too long a forward (Rule 22 again).
>Roger for example has acquired laudable terseness and knows how to paste
>in URLs.
>
>You praise the article in your top sentence but it would be helpful
>if you give us a hint as to its gist. Even better than posting the
>entire article to us would be to paste in its URL address.
>
>Mike the Manager
>
_________________________________________________________________
Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com/intl.asp