If you’re looking for ratification of my gloomy post below (let’s hope you’r enot), you need go no further than Publius Pundit yesterday. Robert Mayer’s blog is one of the best and frequently covers interesting events ignored by the MSM. This time it’s the protest of Khatami’s appearance at Harvard. According to Robert, 150-200 people showed up. Robert, keeping some kind of good face, pronounced this a success. No, it’s not. 200 people in a city the size of Boston is an abysmal failure. Nobody cares.
Roger L. Simon
Blacklisting Myself Memoir of a Hollywood Apostate in the Age of Terror
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14 Comments
1. Ron:I just finished writing to my two Senators about this rat. A 16 year old girl was just hung by the Islamic Intolerants, the prison guards wouldn’t even let the girls father give her solace and say good bye.
I told Senators Boxer and Feinstein that I thought it terrible that this murderer was given a visa but maybe even worse that they didn’t say anything.
Sep 11, 2006 - 12:54 pm 2. Terrye:Well that is about 200 more than showed up for Sheehan’s last book signing. I think people are just getting tired of it all.
How many bloggers went to Boston to demonstrate? A lot fewer than complained about the visit.
Sep 11, 2006 - 12:58 pm 3. Mitch:Terrye, we were there.
Sep 11, 2006 - 2:31 pm 4. photoncourier.blogspot.com:“Nobody cares”–Don’t lose heart, Roger, we need you.
I suspect there are a lot of people who were appalled by the Khatami visit, but have never gotten into the habit of going to demonstrations…which, in the U.S. at least, have tended to pretty much be a left-wing thing.
Sep 11, 2006 - 3:29 pm 5. Terrye:Mitch:
I am glad to hear it, but most people just do not do things like that, even bloggers. It does not mean they like the guy.
Sep 11, 2006 - 4:16 pm 6. Lem:It seems to me that the war on terror has not yet reached the critical mass AIDS for example has been able to summon.
If I recall correctly the MSM was on board and has remained on board as an unqualified ally. Same with Global Warning.
Does the WOT need an Al Gore PowerPoint?
Sep 11, 2006 - 5:24 pm 7. Mitch:There were more people waiting on line to get into the hall than there were outside protesting the event. This does not surprise me in the least, since it was happening in Cambridge, the bluest city in the bluest state. There is nothing they prize there as highly there as “tolerance.” By “tolerance,” they mean the moral equivalent of profound mental retardation. They are unable or unwilling to form an ethical judgment, and take a perverse pride in their inability to feel disgust, or at least in their willingness to suppress it. Moral idiots, in other words.
Luckily, this is not the only place I have lived. It would be a mistake to think anything happening in Cambridge is real life. In real life, there is enough evidence to hang Khatami.
Sep 11, 2006 - 8:19 pm 8. Henry Bowman:The small number of people who appeared does not surprise me in the least. Cambridge, Mass., is infamous for its intolerance, especially at Harvard, despite the fact that its citizens typically think that they are the tolerant ones.
I am sad to report that I think that these United States will not take terrorism seriously until a nuclear weapon is detonates in one or more of its cities. We have to think quite seriously about how to deal with the aftermath, as it seems probable, though not certain, that such will occur. Until such time, politcal correctness will dampen our resolve. Despite its bravado, I cannot believe that the Bush Admin is much more serious than the Clinton Admin in actually going after terrorists and the sponsors of such — after all GWB left Norm Mineta in as Sec. of Transportation for years when he was obviously and horribly incompetent. The same is true for George Tenet. GWB is simply not serious in fighting terrorists.
There are so many who worry about North Korea, but it seems completely obvious that Pakistan is the big long-term problem, in addition to Iran. What the hell are the folks in the Admin doing? They won’t talk about it!
I liked the ‘Path to 9/11′ if only because it provided blame for failures all around — the Clintonites only got most of the blame because they had been been in charge for many years leading up to the attack, whereas the dimwits in the Bush Admin only had a year in which to screw up.
Sep 11, 2006 - 9:00 pm 9. heather:One of the people at that demonstration was carrying a photo of a woman being buried half way into the ground, in preparation for her stoning to death. She is wrapped in a white ‘bag’, with her face bare (an interesting inversion of the Islamic custom). This photo will haunt me to my grave. I wish I knew her name.
It has occurred to me that the Green Helmet guys, and Reuters, and the very slick jihadi media machine is predicated upon one insight: we, in our civilization, are able to feel Pity. Thus, the hijinks with the dead babies, the pieta arrangements made with pretend ‘victims’, all the setups from Pallywood.
How they must chuckle and sneer at this ‘weakness’ of ours.
Sep 11, 2006 - 9:00 pm 10. heather:Amir Taheri has a GREAT article at the New York Post… one that cheered me up, anyway. You can access it via RealClear Politics. I emailed the thing directly to Roger, too, as he is so depressed.
Roger is doing the right thing: he has developed blogging capabilities, through Pajamas Media. The MSM is no longer getting a free ride. Now, if we could only help kids figure out that they do NOT have to go to an expensive university in order to make a good living, and have a great life. I would love to see the universities suffer a reality check to end reality checks. Imagine: they are fighting over getting Saudi students to come to their ‘palace of higher learning.’
It is a long road we are on, and each of us must do as much as we are able, in the best way we know how. AND cheer each other up when our hearts falter.
Sep 11, 2006 - 9:16 pm 11. Inigo Montoya:Roger,
There is hope.
I’m sure that there is a very strong correlation between people who find the likes of Mr. Khatami to be wretched, and people who have better things to do than attend a protest.
Besides, attending a protest is almost by definition a narcissistic exercise. And those of us who have outgrown our dislike of the West have also outgrown our narcissism. No?
Sep 12, 2006 - 12:30 am 12. David Thomson:ìBesides, attending a protest is almost by definition a narcissistic exercise.î
Baloney! Whereís my shovel? Itís getting deep in here. The protesters deserve our thanks. Those who didnít participate in the protest were likely too lazy.
The idiots at Harvard University allowed Khatami a public relations victory. He apparently spent little, if any, time engaging in vigorous debate. When does Harvard plan on hosting Khatamiís victims?
Sep 12, 2006 - 9:02 am 13. photoncourier.blogspot.com:“I am sad to report that I think that these United States will not take terrorism seriously until a nuclear weapon is detonates in one or more of its cities”….I’m pretty confident that the reaction of many “progressives” to such an event would be to blame (a)the Bush administration, and (b)Israel.
Sep 12, 2006 - 9:18 am 14. photoncourier.blogspot.com:heather..”predicated upon one insight: we, in our civilization, are able to feel Pity.” I think this is an important truth, but only part of the story.
The World War II generation was also able to feel pity, but they were able to combine it with thinking. They could surely feel pity for, say, the French civilians killed because of Allied bombing raids against the French rail system (in preparation for D-Day), but their cognitive facilities allowed them to understand that if no such raids were undertaken, the Nazis would dominate Europe forever.
I don’t think it’s so much that our present culture exceeds previous generations of Americans in pity; it’s that it lacks the ability to combine emotion with thought.
Sep 12, 2006 - 9:22 am