| Kari Vogt, historian of religion at the University of Oslo, has stated that Ibn Warraq's book "Why I am Not a Muslim" is just as irrelevant to the study of Islam as The Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion are to the study of Judaism. She is widely considered as one of the leading expert on Islam in Norway, and is frequently
 quoted in national media on matters related to Islam and Muslim
 immigration. People who get most of their information from the
 mainstream media, which goes for the majority of the population, will
 thus be systematically fed biased information and half-truths about
 Islam from our universities, which have largely failed to uphold the
 ideal of free inquiry. Unfortunately, this situation is pretty
 similar at universities and colleges throughout the West.
 
 London's School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), scene to a
 growing number of anti-Semitic incidents from an increasingly pro-
 Islamic campus, issued a threat to one of its Jewish students to
 cease his protests against anti-Semitism at the University. Gavin
 Gross, an American, had been leading a campaign against the
 deterioration of conditions for Jewish students at SOAS, which is
 part of the University of London. SOAS had witnessed an escalation of
 anti-Jewish activity, in both severity and frequency. At the
 beginning of the year, the Islamic Society screened a video which
 compared Judaism with Satanism.
 
 Meanwhile, in a move to "promote understanding between Islam and the
 West," Saudi Arabia donated about SR13 million to a leading British
 museum. The officials said the money from Prince Sultan would pay for
 a new Saudi and Islamic gallery, which would help to portray Islamic
 culture and civilization in right perspectives. It would also help
 fund scholarships for Saudi students at Oxford University.
 
 The Saudis and other oil-rich Arabs are busy buying influence over
 what Westerners hear about Islam. Prince Al-Waleed bin Talal bin
 Abdul Aziz Al-Saud, a member of the Saudi Royal Family, is an
 international investor currently ranked among the ten richest persons
 in the world. He is known in the USA for a $10 million check he
 offered to New York City Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani in October 2001
 for the Twin Towers Fund. Mayor Giuliani returned the gift when he
 learned that the prince had called for the United States to "re-
 examine its policies in the Middle East and adopt a more balanced
 stance toward the Palestinian cause."
 
 Prince Talal is also creating a TV channel, Al-Resalah, to target
 American Muslims. He already broadcasts in Saudi Arabia. In 2005, Bin
 Talal bought 5.46% of voting shares in News Corp, the parent of Fox
 News. In December 2005 he boasted to Middle East Online about his
 ability to change what viewers see on Fox News. Covering the riots in
 France that fall, Fox ran a banner saying: "Muslim riots." Bin Talal
 was not happy. "I picked up the phone and called Murdoch [...] [and
 told him] these are not Muslim riots, these are riots out of
 poverty," he said. "Within 30 minutes, the title was changed from
 Muslim riots to civil riots."
 
 A survey conducted by Cornell University found that around half of
 Americans had a negative view of Islam. Addressing a press conference
 at the headquarters of the World Assembly of Muslim Youth (WAMY),
 Paul Findley, a former US Congressman, said that the cancer of anti-
 Muslim and anti-Islamic sentiments was spreading in American society
 and required corrective measures to stamp out. It was announced that
 the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) would be launching a
 massive $50 million media campaign involving television, radio and
 newspapers. "We are planning to meet Prince Alwaleed ibn Talal for
 his financial support to our project. He has been generous in the
 past."
 
 The World Assembly of Muslim Youth, founded by the nephew of Osama
 Bin Laden in the US, is sharing offices with the Islamic Society of
 North America and the Islamic Centre of Canada. WAMY Canada runs a
 series of Islamic camps and pilgrimages for youth. US Special Agent
 Kane quoted from a publication prepared by the WAMY that said: "Hail!
 Hail! O Sacrificing Soldiers! To Us! To Us! So we may defend the flag
 on this Day of Jihad, are you miserly with your blood?! And has life
 become dearer to you? And staying behind sweeter?" According to him,
 14- to 18-year-olds were the target audience for these teachings.
 
 Harvard University and Georgetown University received $20 million
 donations from Prince bin Talal to finance Islamic studies. "For a
 university with global aspirations, it is critical that Harvard have
 a strong program on Islam that is worldwide and interdisciplinary in
 scope," said Steven E. Hyman, Harvard's provost. Georgetown said it
 would use the gift – the second-largest it has ever received – to
 expand its Center for Muslim-Christian Understanding. Martin Kramer,
 the author of "Ivory Towers on Sand: The Failure of Middle Eastern
 Studies in America," said: "Prince Alwaleed knows that if you want to
 have an impact, places like Harvard or Georgetown, which is inside
 the Beltway, will make a difference."
 
 Georgetown professor John Esposito, founding director of the Center
 for Muslim-Christian Understanding, has, probably more than any other
 academic, contributed to downplaying the Jihadist threat to the
 West. , Kramer states that during his early days in the 1970s,
 Esposito had prepared his thesis under his Muslim mentor Ismail R.
 Faruqi, a Palestinian pan-Islamist and theorist of the "Islamization
 of knowledge." During the first part of his career, John L. Esposito
 never studied or taught at a major Middle East center. In the 80s, he
 published books such as Islam: The Straight Path, the first of a
 series of favorable books on Islam. In 1993, Esposito arrived at
 Georgetown University, and has later claimed the status
 of "authority" in the field.
 
 In 2003, officials from the Islamic Society of North America (ISNA) ,
 recognized Esposito as the current "Abu Taleb of Islam" and the
 Muslim community, not only in North America but also worldwide. In
 appreciation of his "countless effort towards dispelling myths about
 Muslim societies and cultures," Dr. Sayyid Syeed, Secretary General
 of the ISNA compared the role of Esposito to that of Abu Taleb,
 Muhammad's non-Muslim uncle who gave unconditional support to the
 Muslim community in Mecca at a time when it was still weak and
 vulnerable.
 
 The rise to prominence of Esposito symbolizes the failure of critical
 studies of Islam – some would argue critical studies of just about
 anything non-Western – in Western Universities in the 1980s and 90s.
 Frenchman Olivier Roy as early as 1994 published a book entitled The
 Failure of Political Islam and wrote of the Middle East as having
 entered the stage of "post-Islamism." As Martin Kramer puts it, "the
 academics were so preoccupied with "Muslim Martin Luthers" that they
 never got around to producing a single serious analysis of bin Laden
 and his indictment of America. Bin Laden's actions, statements, and
 videos were an embarrassment to academics who had assured Americans
 that "political Islam" was retreating from confrontation.
 
 At least US Universities are noticing bin Laden now. Bruce Lawrence,
 Duke professor of religion, has published a book of Osama bin Laden's
 speeches and writings. "If you read him in his own words, he sounds
 like somebody who would be a very high-minded and welcome voice in
 global politics," Lawrence said. Lawrence has also claimed that Jihad
 means "being a better student, a better colleague, a better business
 partner. Above all, to control one's anger."
 
 Others believe we make too much fuss about this whole Jihad business.
 John Mueller, Professor of Political Science at Ohio State
 University, in the September 2006 issue of Foreign Affairs asked
 whether the terrorist threat to the USA had just been made up: "A
 fully credible explanation for the fact that the United States has
 suffered no terrorist attacks since 9/11 is that the threat posed by
 homegrown or imported terrorists – like that presented by Japanese
 Americans during World War II or by American Communists after it –
 has been massively exaggerated." "The massive and expensive homeland
 security apparatus erected since 9/11 may be persecuting some, spying
 on many, inconveniencing most, and taxing all to defend the United
 States against an enemy that scarcely exists."
 
 Lee Kaplan joined a conference of MESA, the Middle East Studies
 Association, in San Francisco: "Free copies of a glossy newsmagazine
 called the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs were being
 distributed to the academics in attendance. Most people, upon seeing
 the publication, might assume it was similar to Newsweek or
 Time." "What most people don't know is that the Washington Report on
 Middle East Affairs magazine and Web site – indeed, the entire
 organization behind it – are funded by Saudi Arabia, a despotic
 regime that has been quietly buying its way onto every campus in
 America, particularly through Middle East Studies centers in the U.S."
 
 "I met Nabil Al-Tikriti, a professor from the University of
 Chicago." "I'd invite those academic Middle East scholars who
 actually support America's war effort overseas and security needs
 here at home. People like Daniel Pipes or Martin Kramer." I
 continued, "Why aren't they here at the MESA Conference?" "They'd be
 shouted down," replied Al-Tikriti.
 
 Jihad Watch Board Vice President Hugh Fitzgerald shares his worries
 about MESA: "As an organization, MESA has over the past two decades
 slowly but surely been taken over by apologists for Islam." "The
 apologetics consists in hardly ever discussing Jihad, dhimmitude, or
 indeed even introducing the students to Qur'an, Hadith, and
 Sira." "Books on the level of [Karen] Armstrong and Esposito are
 assigned, and feelgood nonsense like Maria Rosa Menocal's The
 Ornament of the World."
 
 "No member of MESA has done as much to make available to a wide
 public important new work on Muhammad, on the origins of the Qur'an,
 and on the history of early Islam, as that lone wolf, Ibn Warraq. No
 one has done such work on the institution of the dhimmi as that lone
 louve, Bat Ye'or. It is an astounding situation, where much of the
 most important work is not being done in universities, because many
 university centers have been seized by a kind of Islamintern
 International."
 
 Hugh Fitzgerald is right. The Legacy of Jihad, one of the most
 important works on Jihad to appear in recent years, was written by
 Andrew Bostom, a medical doctor who was dissatisfied with much of the
 material available on the subject following the terror attacks in
 2001. Bat Ye'or, perhaps the leading expert on the Islamic
 institution of dhimmitude, is self-taught. And Ibn Warraq has written
 several excellent books on the origins of the Koran and the early
 days of Islamic history while remaining outside of the established
 University system. This is all a great credit to them personally, but
 it is not a credit to the status of Western Universities.
 
 It is difficult to understand why American or Western authorities
 still allow the Saudis to fund what is being taught about Islam to
 future Western leaders, years after several Saudi nationals staged
 the worst terror attack in Western history. The United States didn't
 allow Nazi Germany to buy influence at US Universities. Although the
 Soviet Communists had their apologists in the West as well as paid
 agents, the US never allowed the Soviet Union to openly sponsor its
 leading colleges. So why are they allowing Saudi Arabia and other
 Islamic nations to do so? The Saudis are enemies, and should be
 banned from exerting direct influence over our Universities and major
 media. It is a matter of national security.
 
 Still, although bribes and Saudi oil money represent a serious
 obstacle to critical Western studies of Islam, they do by no means
 make up all of the problems. Quite a few academics are so immersed
 with anti-Western ideology that they will be happy to bash the West
 and applaud Islam for free.
 
 Few works have done more to corrupt critical debate of Islam in
 Western institutions for higher learning during the past generation
 than the 1979 book Orientalism by Edward Said. It spawned a veritable
 army of Saidists, or Third World Intellectual Terrorism as Ibn Warraq
 puts it. According to Ibn Warraq, "the latter work taught an entire
 generation of Arabs the art of self-pity – "were it not for the
 wicked imperialists, racists and Zionists, we would be great once
 more" – encouraged the Islamic fundamentalist generation of the
 1980s, and bludgeoned into silence any criticism of Islam."
 
 "The aggressive tone of Orientalism is what I have
 called `intellectual terrorism,' since it does not seek to convince
 by arguments or historical analysis but by spraying charges of
 racism, imperialism, Eurocentrism" on anybody who might
 disagree. "One of his preferred moves is to depict the Orient as a
 perpetual victim of Western imperialism, dominance and aggression.
 The Orient is never seen as an actor, an agent with free-will, or
 designs or ideas of its own."
 
 Ibn Warraq also criticizes Said for his lack of recognition of the
 tradition of critical thinking in the West. Had he delved a little
 deeper into Greek civilization and history, and bothered to look at
 Herodotus' great history, Said "would have encountered two features
 which were also deep characteristics of Western civilization and
 which Said is at pains to conceal and refuses to allow: the seeking
 after knowledge for its own sake." "The Greek word, historia, from
 which we get our "history," means "research" or "inquiry," and
 Herodotus believed his work was the outcome of research: what he had
 seen, heard, and read but supplemented and verified by inquiry."
 
 "Intellectual inquisitiveness is one of the hallmarks of Western
 civilisation. As J.M. Roberts put it, "The massive indifference of
 some civilisations and their lack of curiosity about other worlds is
 a vast subject. Why, until very recently, did Islamic scholars show
 no wish to translate Latin or western European texts into Arabic? Why
 when the English poet Dryden could confidently write a play focused
 on the succession in Delhi after the death of the Mogul emperor
 Aurungzebe, is it a safe guess that no Indian writer ever thought of
 a play about the equally dramatic politics of the English seventeenth-
 century court? It is clear that an explanation of European
 inquisitiveness and adventurousness must lie deeper than economics,
 important though they may have been."
 
 Martin Kramer points out the irony that novelist Salman Rushdie
 praised Said's courage: "Professor Said periodically receives threats
 to his safety from the Jewish Defense League in America," said
 Rushdie in 1986, "and I think it is important for us to appreciate
 that to be a Palestinian in New York – in many ways the Palestinian –
 is not the easiest of fates." But as it happened, Said's fate became
 infinitely preferable to Rushdie's, after Khomeini called for
 Rushdie's death in 1989. It was ironic that Rushdie, a postcolonial
 literary lion of impeccable left-wing credentials, should have been
 made by some Muslims into the very personification of Orientalist
 hostility to Islam."
 
 In his essay The Intellectuals and Socialism, F.A. Hayek noted
 already decades ago that "Socialism has never and nowhere been at
 first a working-class movement. It is a construction of theorists"
 and intellectuals, "the secondhand dealers in ideas." "The typical
 intellectual need not possess special knowledge of anything in
 particular, nor need he even be particularly intelligent, to perform
 his role as intermediary in the spreading of ideas. The class does
 not consist of only journalists, teachers, ministers, lecturers,
 publicists, radio commentators, writers of fiction, cartoonists, and
 artists." It also "includes many professional men and technicians,
 such as scientists and doctors."
 
 "These intellectuals are the organs which modern society has
 developed for spreading knowledge and ideas, and it is their
 convictions and opinions which operate as the sieve through which all
 new conceptions must pass before they can reach the masses."
 
 "The most brilliant and successful teachers are today more likely
 than not to be socialists." According to Hayek, this is not because
 Socialists are more intelligent, but because "a much higher
 proportion of socialists among the best minds devote themselves to
 those intellectual pursuits which in modern society give them a
 decisive influence on public opinion." "Socialist thought owes its
 appeal to the young largely to its visionary character." "The
 intellectual, by his whole disposition, is uninterested in technical
 details or practical difficulties. What appeal to him are the broad
 visions."
 
 He warns that "It may be that as a free society as we have known it
 carries in itself the forces of its own destruction, that once
 freedom has been achieved it is taken for granted and ceases to be
 valued, and that the free growth of ideas which is the essence of a
 free society will bring about the destruction of the foundations on
 which it depends." "Does this mean that freedom is valued only when
 it is lost, that the world must everywhere go through a dark phase of
 socialist totalitarianism before the forces of freedom can gather
 strength anew?" "If we are to avoid such a development, we must be
 able to offer a new liberal program which appeals to the imagination.
 We must make the building of a free society once more an intellectual
 adventure, a deed of courage."
 
 In his book Modern Culture, Roger Scruton explains the continued
 attraction of left-wing ideology in this way:
 
 "The Marxist theory is as form of economic determinism, distinguished
 by the belief that fundamental changes in economic relations are
 invariably revolutionary, involving a violent overthrow of the old
 order, and a collapse of the political "super-structure" which had
 been built on it. The theory is almost certainly false: nevertheless,
 there is something about the Marxian picture which elicits, in
 enlightened people, the will to believe. By explaining culture as a
 by-product of material forces, Marx endorses the Enlightenment view,
 that material forces are the only forces there are. The old culture,
 with its gods and traditions and authorities, is made to seem like a
 web of illusions – `the opiate of the people,' which quietens their
 distress."
 
 Hence, according to Scruton, in the wake of the Enlightenment, "there
 came not only the reaction typified by Burke and Herder, and
 embellished by the romantics, but also a countervailing cynicism
 towards the very idea of culture. It became normal to view culture
 from the outside, not as a mode of thought which defines our moral
 inheritance, but as an elaborate disguise, through which artificial
 powers represent themselves as natural rights. Thanks to Marx,
 debunking theories of culture have become a part of culture. And
 these theories have the structure pioneered by Marx: they identify
 power as the reality, and culture as the mask; they also foretell
 some future `liberation' from the lies that have been spun by our
 oppressors."
 
 It is striking to notice that this is exactly the theme of author Dan
 Brown's massive international hit The Da Vinci Code from 2003,
 thought to be one of the ten best-selling books of all time. In
 addition to being a straightforward thriller, the novel claims that
 the entire modern history of Christianity is a conspiracy of the
 Church to cover up the truth about Jesus and his marriage to Mary
 Magdalene.
 
 Australian writer Keith Windschuttle, a former Marxist, is tired of
 that anti-Western slant that permeates academia: "For the past three
 decades and more, many of the leading opinion makers in our
 universities, the media and the arts have regarded Western culture
 as, at best, something to be ashamed of, or at worst, something to be
 opposed. The scientific knowledge that the West has produced is
 simply one of many "ways of knowing."
 
 "Cultural relativism claims there are no absolute standards for
 assessing human culture. Hence all cultures should be regarded as
 equal, though different." "The plea for acceptance and open-
 mindedness does not extend to Western culture itself, whose history
 is regarded as little more than a crime against the rest of humanity.
 The West cannot judge other cultures but must condemn its own."
 
 He urges us to remember how unique some elements of our culture
 are: "The concepts of free enquiry and free _expression and the right
 to criticise entrenched beliefs are things we take so much for
 granted they are almost part of the air we breathe. We need to
 recognise them as distinctly Western phenomena. They were never
 produced by Confucian or Hindu culture." "But without this concept,
 the world would not be as it is today. There would have been no
 Copernicus, Galileo, Newton or Darwin."
 
 The re-writing of Western history has become so bad that even
 playwright William Shakespeare has been proclaimed a closet
 Muslim. "Shakespeare would have delighted in Sufism," said the
 Islamic scholar Martin Lings, himself a Sufi Muslim. According to The
 Guardian, Lings argued that Shakespeare's "work resembles the
 teachings of the Islamic Sufi sect" in the International Shakespeare
 Globe Fellowship Lecture at Shakespeare's own Globe Theatre in
 London. Lings spoke during Islam Awareness Week.
 
 "It's impossible for Shakespeare to have been a Muslim," David N.
 Beauregard, a Shakespeare scholar and coeditor of Shakespeare and the
 Culture of Christianity in Early Modern England, told.
 Shakespeare "maintained Roman Catholic beliefs on crucial doctrinal
 differences." Beauregard notes that "this is not to say that
 Shakespeare was occupied with writing religious drama, but only that
 a specific religious tradition informs his work."
 
 According to Robert Spencer, "Shakespeare is just the latest
 paradigmatic figure of Western Christian culture to be remade in a
 Muslim-friendly manner." Recently the [US] State Department asserted,
 without a shred of evidence, that Christopher Columbus (who in fact
 praised Ferdinand and Isabella for driving the Muslims out of Spain
 in 1492, the same year as his first visit to the Americas) was aided
 on his voyages by a Muslim navigator. "The state of American
 education is so dismal today that teachers themselves are ill-
 equipped to counter these historical fantasies."
 
 The Gates of Vienna blog quoted a report by The American Council of
 Trustees and Alumni (ACTA) on US Universities. Their survey
 revealed "a remarkable uniformity of political stance and pedagogical
 approach. Throughout the humanities and social sciences, the same
 issues surface over and over, regardless of discipline. In courses on
 literature, philosophy, and history; sociology, anthropology, and
 religious studies; women's studies, American studies, [...] the focus
 is consistently on a set list of topics: race, class, gender,
 sexuality, and the "social construction of identity"; globalization,
 capitalism, and U.S. "hegemony"; the ubiquity of oppression and the
 destruction of the environment."
 
 "In class after class, the same essential message is repeated, in
 terms that, to an academic "outsider," often seem virtually
 unintelligible." "In short, the message is that the status quo, which
 is patriarchal, racist, hegemonic, and capitalist, must
 be "interrogated" and "critiqued" as a means of theorizing and
 facilitating a social transformation whose necessity and value are
 taken as a given." "Differences between disciplines are beginning to
 disappear. Courses in such seemingly distinct fields as literature,
 sociology, and women's studies, for example, have become mirror
 images of one another."
 
 Writer Charlotte Allen commented on how Harvard University President
 Lawrence Summers caused a storm by giving a speech speculating that
 innate differences between the sexes may have something to do with
 the fact that proportionately fewer women than men hold top positions
 in science. Summers in 2006 announced his intention to step down at
 the end of the school year, in part due to pressure caused by this
 speech. "Even if you're not up on the scientific research – a paper
 Mr. Summers cited demonstrating that, while women overall are just as
 smart as men, significantly fewer women than men occupy the very
 highest intelligence brackets that produce scientific genius – common
 sense tells you that Mr. Summers has got to be right. Recently,
 Harvard's Faculty of Arts and Sciences passed a vote of no confidence
 in Mr. Summers. Wouldn't it be preferable to talk openly about men's
 and women's strengths and weaknesses?"
 
 Yes, Ms. Allen, it would. Summers may have been wrong, but it's
 dangerous once we embark on a road where important issues are not
 debated at all. One of the hallmarks of Western civilization has been
 our thirst for asking questions about everything. Political
 Correctness is thus anti-Western both in its form and in its intent.
 It should be noted that in this case, Feminists were in the vanguard
 of PC, the same ideology that has blinded our Universities to the
 Islamic threat.
 
 It makes it even worse when we know that other Feminists in academia
 are asserting that the veil, or even the burka, represent "an
 alternative Feminism." Dr. Wairimu Njambi is an Assistant Professor
 of "Women's Studies" at the Florida Atlantic University. Much of her
 scholarship is dedicated to advancing the notion that the cruel
 practice of female genital mutilation (FGM) is actually a triumph for
 Feminism and that it is hateful to suggest otherwise. According to
 Njambi "anti-FGM discourse perpetuates a colonialist assumption by
 universalizing a particular western image of a `normal' body and
 sexuality."
 
 Still, there are pockets of resistance. Professor Sigurd Skirbekk at
 the University of Oslo questions many of the assumptions underlying
 Western immigration policies. One of them is the notion that rich
 countries have a duty to take in all people from other nations that
 are suffering, either from natural disasters, political repression or
 overpopulation. According to him, it cannot be considered moral of
 the cultural, political and religious elites of these countries to
 allow their populations to grow unrestrained and then push their
 excess population onto other countries.
 
 Skirbekk points out that European countries have earlier rejected the
 Germans when they used the argument of lebensraum as a motivation for
 their foreign policy. We should do the same thing now when other
 countries invoke the argument that they lack space for their
 population. According to him, there is plenty of literature available
 about the ecological challenges the world will be facing in this
 century. Running a too liberal immigration policy while refusing to
 confront such unpleasant moral issues is not a sustainable
 alternative in the long run. We will then only push difficult
 dilemmas onto future generations.
 
 In Denmark, linguist Tina Magaard concludes that Islamic texts
 encourage terror and fighting to a far greater degree than the
 original texts of other religions. She has a PhD in Textual Analysis
 and Intercultural Communication from the Sorbonne in Paris, and has
 spent three years on a research project comparing the original texts
 of ten religions. "The texts in Islam distinguish themselves from the
 texts of other religions by encouraging violence and aggression
 against people with other religious beliefs to a larger degree. There
 are also straightforward calls for terror. This has long been a taboo
 in the research into Islam, but it is a fact we need to deal with."
 
 Moreover, there are hundreds of calls in the Koran for fighting
 against people of other faiths. "If it is correct that many Muslims
 view the Koran as the literal words of God, which cannot be
 interpreted or rephrased, then we have a problem. It is indisputable
 that the texts encourage terror and violence. Consequently, it must
 be reasonable to ask Muslims themselves how they relate to the text,
 if they read it as it is," says Magaard.
 
 The examples of Skirbekk, Magaard and others are indeed encouraging,
 but not numerous enough to substantially change the overall picture
 of Western academics largely paralyzed by Political Correctness and
 anti-Western sentiments.
 
 Writer Mark Steyn comments on how "out in the real world it seems the
 true globalization success story of the 1990s was the export of
 ideology from a relatively obscure part of the planet to the heart of
 every Western city." "Writing about the collapse of nations such as
 Somalia, the Atlantic Monthly's Robert D. Kaplan referred to
 the "citizens" of such "states" as "re-primitivized man."
 
 "When lifelong Torontonians are hot for decapitation, when
 Yorkshiremen born and bred and into fish `n' chips and cricket and
 lousy English pop music self-detonate on the London Tube, it would
 seem that the phenomenon of "re-primitivized man" has been
 successfully exported around the planet. It's reverse globalization:
 The pathologies of the remotest backwaters now have franchise outlets
 in every Western city."
 
 It is possible to see a connection here. While Multiculturalism is
 spreading ideological tribalism in our universities, it is spreading
 physical tribalism in our major cities. Since all cultures are equal,
 there is no need to preserve Western civilization, nor to uphold our
 laws.
 
 It is true that we may never fully reach the ideal of objective
 truth, since we are all more or less limited in our understanding by
 our personal experiences and our prejudice. However, this does not
 mean that we should abandon the ideal. That's what has happened
 during the past decades. Our colleges aren't even trying to seek
 truth; they have decided that there is no such thing as "truth" in
 the first place, just different opinions and cultures, all equally 
valid. Except Western culture, which is inherently evil and should be 
broken down and "deconstructed." Western Universities have moved from 
the Age of Reason to the Age of Deconstruction.
While Chinese, Indian, Korean and other Asian Universities are 
graduating millions of motivated engineers and scientists every year, 
Western Universities have been reduced to little hippie factories, 
teaching about the wickedness of the West and the blessings of 
barbarism. This represents a serious challenge to the long-term 
economic competitiveness of Western nations. That's bad, but it is 
the least of our worries. Far worse than failing to compete with non-
Muslim Asians is failing to identify the threat from Islamic nations 
who want to subdue us and wipe out our entire civilization. That is a 
failure we quite simply cannot live with. And we probably won't, 
unless we manage to deal with it.
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