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Pat Buchanan
25 May 2012
The Unraveling Myth of Watergate

It was, they said, the crime of the century. An attempted coup d'etat by Richard Nixon, stopped by two … Read More.

22 May 2012
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18 May 2012
Has the Bell Begun to Toll for the GOP?

Among the more controversial chapters in "Suicide of a Superpower," my book published last fall, … Read More.

“Second Period of Islamic Power"

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For the 30 years since "The McLaughlin Group" began to run on network television, the Christmas and New Year's shows have been devoted to the conferring of annual awards.

The first award on the Christmas show is "Biggest Winner."

This year, clearly, one of the world's big winner was — Islam.

For this was the year when what Catholic apologist Hilaire Belloc predicted in 1938 would be the "second period of Islamic power" became manifest to all mankind.

From Morocco to Pakistan, a great awakening is occurring. And perhaps the most dramatic example of Islam rising again came in Egypt, with the fall of the 60-year-old military dictatorship.

With the ouster of Hosni Mubarak after weeks of demonstrations in Tahrir Square, the West hailed the coming of democracy.

But democracy delivered a rude shock. In the first round of voting, over 60 percent of all Egyptians cast their ballots for either the Muslim Brotherhood or the radical Islamist Nour Party of the Salafis. In the second round last week, 75 percent voted Islamist.

In Tunis and Tripoli, too, the overthrow of autocrats revealed a silent majority sympathetic to Islamism.

Recep Erdogan, the most important Turkish ruler since Kemal Ataturk, was a candidate for Time's Man of the Year as he turned his nation's back on a century of secularism and embraced a form of Islamism.

Muslim Uighurs seek to rip China's largest province away from Beijing and establish an East Turkestan. Muslims in the North Caucasus seek to strip Dagestan and Ingushetia out of Russia. In Iraq and Afghanistan, Americans are in retreat and Islamists are celebrating our eviction.

While all the world has heard of the atrocity against Muslims in Srebrenica, that world ignores the desecration and destruction of Orthodox churches and cathedrals in Kosovo and the ethnic cleansing of Serbs by the Muslim Albanians that President Clinton brought to power.

Worldwide, the Muslim population has surpassed Catholicism as the world's largest religion, with 48 members of the U.N. General Assembly now boasting a Muslim plurality or majority.

India, with 150 million Muslims, has more than both Egypt and Iraq. Russia, with 25 million, has more Muslims than Libya and Jordan combined. China has more than Syria. Five percent of Europe is Muslim, and the numbers continue to rise.

And as with Christianity when it was surging in the 16th and 17th centuries, Islam is marked today by militancy and intolerance.

From Nigeria to Ethiopia, Egypt, Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan, Christians are being made the victims of Muslim pogroms. And as with Christianity in the 16th and 17th centuries, Islam is a house divided, between Shia and Sunni.

If demography is destiny, the future would seem to belong to Islam.

Consider. The six most populous Muslim nations — Bangladesh, Egypt, Indonesia, Pakistan, Nigeria and Turkey — had a total population of 242 million in 1950. By 2050, that 242 million will have quintupled to 1.36 billion people.

Meanwhile, Europe's fertility rate has been below zero population growth since the 1970s. Old Europe is dying, and its indigenous peoples are being replaced by Third World immigrants, millions of them Muslim.

Yet there is another side to the Islamic story.

In international test scores of high school students in reading, math and science, not one Muslim nation places in the top 30. Take away oil and gas, and from Algeria to Iran these nations would have little to offer the world. Iran would have to fall back on exports of carpets, caviar and pistachio nuts.

Not one Muslim nation is a member of the G-8 economic powers or the BRIC-four emerging powers — Brazil, Russia, India, China.

In the 20th century, the world saw the rise of the Asian "tigers" — South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore, Hong Kong. Where are the Muslim tigers?

A few years back, the gross domestic product of the entire Arab world was only equal to Spain's. Take away oil and gas, and its exports were equal to Finland's.

Measured by manufacturing power, the Islamic world, though more populous, cannot hold a candle to China. And while Islam was a civilization superior in some ways to the West from the 7th to 17th century, somewhere that world began to stagnate and decline.

So the question arises: If Islamism is capturing Libya, Tunisia and Egypt, and will capture other Muslim nations as the Arab Spring advances, where is the historic evidence that these Islamic regimes can convert their states into manufacturing and military powers?

Where is the evidence that Islamist regimes, such as Sudan and Iran, can deliver what their peoples demanded when they brought down the dictators?

And if, like the communist regimes of the 20th century, they cannot deliver the good life that the rebels sought when they dumped the tyrants, what will follow Islamism, when Islamism inevitably fails?

In the long run, does Islamism really own the future of the Islamic world? Or has the clock begun to run on the fundamentalists as well?

Patrick J. Buchanan is the author of "Suicide of a Superpower: Will America Survive to 2025?"To find out more about Patrick Buchanan and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2011 CREATORS.COM


Comments

3 Comments | Post Comment
Mr. Buchanan. You are like a fizzy. Remember fizzies? You popped the pill in the glass of water and it bubbled up a soft drink. But you keep on fizzing. That's why I keep on reading your stuff, even though I disagree with a lot of your conclusions.

But, unlike a lot of those so-called conservatives, you provide information. Valuable information. And interesting ideas, some good, some not so. For that I thank you.

Your perspicacity about Islam should lead you to similar conclusions about Christianity. Islam is like a later retracement of what we already went through with the inquisition.

Isn't it time for us to leave all of that superstitious, utterly violence-prone,and inhumane conception of what is holy behind?
Comment: #1
Posted by: Masako
Mon Dec 19, 2011 8:03 PM
Sure looks like the USA will be engaged in perpetual war in the Middle East for the next 1000 years

This is not what the founding fathers envisioned for America

RON PAUL 2012 will be our last chance

Comment: #2
Posted by: Soothsayer
Tue Dec 20, 2011 9:19 AM
To me, it appears that the arabs during ancient times were like our modern day illegal immigrants. They approached the powerful, organized civilization and worked menial jobs. Jesus appears to have been more a part of the powerful structure like a guy born in the United States who is barely making it. Then, Jesus said, "Enough, all this greed and monolithic power is not cutting it," sort of what Wilson said back in the day. Someone needs to tell Beck, by the way, that Reagan's middle name was Wilson. Mohammed came along six hundred years later, and he has less credence than the founders of the Jewish faith or the founders of the Christian faith. The Bible seems to be a manual about how to maintain a civilization, while Revelation seems to be a prediction that we won't be able to make it work in the end. So our goal should be to attempt to make the civilization continue as long as possible. Currently, we are being ruined by "animal theory" in the universities which states that people are animals. This is the exact opposite of the Bible's message that we are humans. Animals don't feel love, the basic message of Christianity. Also, the Soviet Union and organized crime believed in animal theory. I guessed that Reagan had pushed the end back by twenty years to approximately 2020, but then Bush Clinton brought the end back by about seven years to 2013.
Comment: #3
Posted by: Mike Hayne
Tue Dec 20, 2011 6:12 PM
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