The California National Guard made the mistake of reaching out a welcoming hand to its opponents. According to a July 11 story in Mercury News (Hat tip: LGF), the Guard invited a group of antiwar activists to visit its headquarters in Sacramento, in order to demonstrate that the Guardsmen were normal, decent human beings, and not the ravening bloodthirsty baby-killers of wide repute.
Big mistake.
As it happened, one of the Guard members had posted a flyer on his cubicle featuring the hoary old story about General Pershing and the Muslim terrorists.
The Pershing flyer recounts a tale -- which may have been embellished or entirely woven of legend -- that resurfaced after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on the United States. According to the tale, Pershing captured 50 Muslim extremists before World War I while stationed in the Philippines. He tied 49 of the men up, slaughtered two pigs in front of them, dipped bullets in the pig’s blood and had the men executed, believing that by doing so they would doom the men to hell. | |
The extremists were then buried in pig’s blood and parts while one survivor was set free to relate the horrifying tale. For the next 42 years, the flyer states, there were no Muslim terrorist attacks in the world. | |
Whether the story is true remains unclear. Pershing is said to have threatened to bury Philippine rebels in pig skins and splatter pig’s blood on their houses, but some historians have been unable to verify the story of Pershing overseeing the controversial execution. |
But to the antiwar activists, it is a misfeasance of the highest order.
“It’s troubling to see a governmental organization dedicated to the security of our country promoting culturally and religiously insensitive ideas,” said William Youmans, media relations manager for the Council on American-Islamic Relations in Santa Clara. “It’s very possible to combat terrorism without offending the cultural values of a major world religion.” | |
[…] | |
Below the Pershing tribute is a second flyer with the wings and tail of a bomber forming the legs of a peace sign with the slogan: Peace the old fashioned way. There’s also a cartoon from a Web site known as www.stopislam.com that depicts a Red Crescent ambulance stuffed with weapons and a cartoon figure that looks like the late-Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat unloading the cargo. |
But, predictably, the Guard caved under the pressure and took the flyer down.
On Monday, Islamic, Arab-American and anti-war groups called the Pershing flyer reprehensible. They praised the Guard for taking the flyer down, but said more may need to be done to educate the citizen soldiers. | |
“Muslims are not our enemies,” said Ruth Robertson, a member of Raging Grannies who saw the flyer. |
Here’s the clincher:
“It makes it sound like what we are doing is some sort of religious war,” said [Jackie] Thomason… |
Ms. Thomason is a volunteer for the GI Rights Hotline, “a coalition of nonprofit groups that offers advice and help to soldiers”. If I were offering advice to a soldier, it would be that he is fighting a religious war. I would assert that it is a religious war because the enemy is fighting a religious war. He wants to kill us because of what he perceives to our religion; if we believed exactly as he does, then he would not be fighting us.
And when the Great Islamic Jihad eventually arrives at the Left Coast — as it has in Israel, Iraq, Spain, Indonesia, the Netherlands, Thailand, and, most recently, London — it will do the well-meaning peace activist no good whatsoever to protest that he is an atheist, or an agnostic, or secular, or a lapsed whatever. He can keep repeating his non-religious mantra right up to the moment when the hooded mujahid holding the bloody scimitar hoists his severed head high up before the video camera.
Or, if he is lucky, he can become a dhimmi, and pay the jizyah. Then his life will be spared.
For a while.
5 comments:
Did you look up the GI Rights Hotline?
It's a conscientious objector organization, funded by the Quakers, which functions to help file grievances and obtain discharges based on psychological, gender orientation, hardship, and "I-changed-my-mind" reasons. Needless to say, it is anti-war and anti-military and dedicated to, as you quote, "educating our citizen-soldiers."
Truth Out is one organization which supports the GI Rights Hotline. This group is convinced we have a "creeping draft" with George Bush ready and waiting to pounce on young cannon fodder. Just like the Raging Grannies.
Definitely none of them hail from the Scots-Irish clan -- these are people who would be very at home in Canada.
That article is repulsive, absolutely repulsive. The GI Rights Hotline is not some benevolent "coalition of nonprofit groups that offers advice and help to soldiers," as the article says. It's a pacifist group actively working to undermine the war effort, promote treason, and eliminate the US military completely.
I especially love this part of the article:
Since Sept. 11, the United States has had to defend itself against several incidents in which the military used degrading efforts to humiliate Muslims, including forcing prisoners in Iraq's Abu Ghraib prison to masturbate and smearing faux menstrual blood to get an inmate at Guantanamo Bay to talk. Most recently, a now-retracted report that guards at the island prison flushed a Koran down the toilet sparked deadly riots in Pakistan.
Hmmm, I wonder what event caused all of these people to be interrogated? Gosh, were we attacked? I can't remember!
When we lived in the East Bay, we had a "Raging Granny" who lived down the street from us. It was awful.
For someone so dedicated to "helping soldiers", they sure seem to hate them when they actually see them.
They push the story about the supposed rise in AWOL because of the Iraq war, without mentioning that a huge chunk of those AWOL listed go back to the early 80s... invading Iraq was not on the priority list at that time.
Any military organization should shut the doors in their faces. They aren't going to join, they aren't going to be nice, and they are looking for ways to make servicemembers come out on par with Vlad Tepes.
Baron
About the items posted on the walls.
It is nice to see GI humor hasn’t changed since I retired from the reserves. Really didn’t any think to make a walking tour before inviting in guests?
At least they did not have this official US Army artwork displayed which has been filling up blank space on Army walls since the early 50’s.
Hank, that's great art! We could use more like it.
But when you said "official US Army artwork", I thought it was going to be Betty Grable painted on a tank or a plane...
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