When Liberty's The Ward Of A Higher Power's Rogues
In the eternal battle between reason and regression there's never been a rallying cry as powerful as Voltaire's
double-barreled phrase: Ecrasez l'infame. It has been translated variously as "crush the infamous," "crush the horror" or -- my preference -- "smash the
rogues." Voltaire's targets, his recent biographer Ian Davidson writes, "included superstition, theological repression,
Jesuits, monks, fanatical regicides, and the Inquisition in every shape and form; in short, all facets of the dark and
regressive alliance between the Catholic Church and the French State." By the 19th century, the phrase had done its job,
and not just in France. In the West, Church and State would be kept separate, for good reason: Absent a thick and
uncompromising wall, the two cannot help but corrupt each other while tyrannizing, in a "higher power"'s name, the
people they're meant to serve.
It's a lesson the Islamic world has not yet learned. It's a lesson the western world risks forgetting. If the
contemptible war over the Muhammad cartoons suggests anything, it is that the 21st century mutant of l'infame is as virulent as its Catholic forebear. It has rich new strains of hatred to draw on, it has abettors and enthusiasts
in the most liberal democracies, and globalism is its perfect means of propagation. Ecrasez l'infame should again be the rallying cry of liberal democracies, or else l'infame will be doing the crushing of freedom as we know it. Muslim fanatics, including their Ebola strain marketing as
al-Qaida, aren't the greatest threats. The threat to the West is as familiar as the reactionary next door.
So focusing on the violence triggered by cartoongate is a dodge convenient to both East and West. It helps the Muslim
East continue to pretend that simply saying bromides like "Islam is a religion of peace" can make it so. It helps the
West hide behind a facade of tolerance and enlightenment that hasn't kept its own demagogues from grabbing power by
manufacturing fears and appealing to prejudice. The joint appearance by George Bush and King Abdullah of Jordan last
week gelled it: The lawless, lying, fear-baiting, warmongering president and the generic Arab despot, whose torture
jails are a favorite CIA lay-over, preaching peace, respect for law and an end to violence. Mel Brooks couldn't write
comedy like that.
"Islam," the king said, "like Christianity and Judaism, is a religion of peace, tolerance, moderation." Well, no. What a
religion's founders say and what its followers do is as different as what Karl Marx wrote in the London Library and what
Stalin did with "Das Kapital" in Siberia. Ideals are nice. Upholding them is nicer. The world of Islam is overwhelmingly
not living up to its purported ideals. It is a world of tyrannies, intolerance, racism, of prideful bigotries that shame
any Muslim's claim of having the prophet defiled when Jews and foreigners are the daily objects of defilement in many of
these countries' media and official government pronouncements. Are we forgetting that the Darfur genocide is primarily
an Arab massacre of non-Arab, black Africans? Are we forgetting that Egypt, which has a peace treaty with Israel,
broadcast to the entire Middle East a 41-part-series based on the revoltingly anti-Semitic "Protocols of the Elders of
Zion," and did so during Ramadan, to maximize ratings? D
Illiberal regimes at least have an excuse. Regression is part of their gross national product. The West has no such
excuse, least of all in the world's self-appointed guardian of liberty. If l'infame's 21st century version is whatever
replaces liberty, reason and the rule of law with dogma, faith-based bigotry and the lawless presumptions of a few
arrogant men, then don't let the relative calm over cartoongate in America fool you. l'infame is alive and well here, in small and broad ways: It is people holding up signs at gay funerals that say "No Fags in
Heaven," and millions of people doing likewise in 11 states by voting to bar gays from marrying. It is columnist Ann
Coulter calling Muslims "ragheads" at a conservative political conference and getting an ovation, or Jacksonville's Rev.
Jerry Vines calling Muhammad a "demon-possessed pedophile" in an address to the Southern Baptist Conference, and getting
alleluias. l'infame is the National Cathedral service Sept. 14, 2001, belting th
With advocates like these, liberty and democracy have about as much chance as the fugitive honesty in the Bush White
House. But it worked in Voltaire's time. It'll work in ours: Ecrasez l'infame!
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Tristam is a Daytona Beach News-Journal editorial writer and columnist, and editor of Candide's Notebooks. Reach him at ptristam@att.net.