Radical Islam, Fantasy Ideology

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BB93YJ

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This is a long article by Lee Harris in Policy Revue Online.

It is, however, very interesting in it's analysis.

First two paragraphs:

Al Qaeda’s Fantasy Ideology

By Lee Harris

"Know your enemy†is a well-known maxim, but one that is difficult to observe in practice. Nor is the reason for this hard to fathom: If you are my enemy, it is unlikely that I will go very much out of my way to learn to see things from your point of view. And if this is true even in those cases where the conflict is between groups that share a common culture, how much more true will it be when there is a profound cultural and psychological chasm between the antagonists?

Yet, paradoxically, this failure to understand the enemy can arise not only from a lack of sympathy with his position, but also from a kind of misplaced sympathy: When confronted by a culturally exotic enemy, our first instinct is to understand such conduct in terms that are familiar to us — terms that make sense to us in light of our own fund of experience. We assume that if our enemy is doing x, it must be for reasons that are comprehensible in terms of our universe.

Follow the link below for the entire article.

Al Qaeda's Fantasy Ideology
 
You do not make treaties with evildoers or try to adjust your conduct to make them like you. You do not try to see the world from the evildoers’ point of view. You do not try to appease them, or persuade them, or reason with them. You try, on the contrary, to outwit them, to vanquish them, to kill them. You behave with them in the same manner that you would deal with a fatal epidemic — you try to wipe it out.

Exactly correct.
 
That's from his book Civilization and its Enemies which is very good(my opinion) and which I recommend to all you guys.
 
Sure makes a lot of sense. Nick Berg was just a prop to the evildoers.
 
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