from: The Los Angeles Times June 23, 2007
Where is the West's Outcry?
by Tim Rutten/Regarding Media
For a writer, Salman Rushdie has had a rather turbulent career. Even by his standards, however, this has been quite a week for Indian-born, British-educated, Booker Prize-winning novelist, now a resident of New York.
Queen Elizabeth II knighted him for services to literature, he turned 60, and across the Muslim world, a variety of jihad-minded fanatics and their essentially mindless apologists renewed their demand that Rushdie be murdered as soon as possible.
The Islamicists antipathy toward Rushdie goes back 19 years, when his fanciful novel "The Satanic Verses" was deemed by some of them to blaspheme Muhammad. There was a great deal of rioting and fulminating at the time, culminating in the Ayatollah Rhollah Khomeini's pronouncement of fatwa against Rushdie. As the Iranian revolution's spiritual leader said on Tehran radio, "The author of 'The Satanic Verses,' —which is against Islam, the Prophet, the Koran—and all those involved in its publication who were aware of its content, are sentenced to death."...
What masquerades as tolerance and cultural sensitivity among many U.S. journalists is really a kind of soft bigotry, an unspoken assumption that Muslim societies will naturally repress great writers and murder honest journalists, and that to insist otherwise is somehow intolerant or insensitive.
Lost in the self-righteous haze that masks this expedient sentiment is a critical point once made by the late American philosopher Richard Rorty, who was fond of pointing out that "some ideas, like some people, are just no damn good" and that no amount of faux tolerance or misplaced fellow feeling excuses the rest of us from our obligation to oppose such ideas and such people....
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