Erdogan Piles Up Those `Crimes Against Humanity'
PJMedia.com
February 28th, 2013
By Andrew C. McCarthy
I think `crime against humanity' has become a verbal tic for Turkey's
Islamic-supremacist Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
In Vienna, at one of the UN's nauseating =80=9Cdialogues' between
Islam and the West (you know, those conferences where Western leaders
explain how much they admire Islam and Islamic leaders reciprocate by
explaining how much they, too, admire Islam), Erdogan pronounced
Zionism a `crime against humanity,' which he placed on a par with
anti-Semitism. The latter is a subject Erdogan knows a thing or two
about. As I recount in Spring Fever: The Illusion of Islamic Democracy
(just released in paperback this week), Erdogan first burst on the
scene almost 40 years ago as the 20-year-old writer-director-star of a
theatrical production called Maskomya. As Andy Bostom edifies us,
Mas-Kom-Ya is short for Masons, Communists, and, yes, Yahudi -
Jews. In Erdogan's telling, these were evil subversive groups whose
common denominator was - all together now! - Judaism.
Spring Fever documents Erdogan's application of `crime against
humanity' label to calls for Muslims in Europe and America to
assimilate in the Western societies where they've chosen to live. He
also said it was a `crime against humanity' for Israel to defend
itself in 2008=80ēs `Operation Cast Lead' after over 3000 rockets and
mortar shells were fired into Israeli territory by Hamas =80' the
international terrorist organization that Erdogan's Turkey lavishly
funds and whose leaders he receives as dignitaries.
In this week's Vienna speech, Erdogan reached unprecedented
epistemological buffoonery when he explained that not only Zionism but
Islamophobia is a `crime against humanity.' Either he does not know
what a crime is or he does not know what a phobia is, but since a
rational mental state is required for the former the latter doesn't
qualify. Or maybe Erdogan knows exactly what crimes and phobias are,
but as an Islamo-fascist he figures such niceties should never get in
the way of a good smear. Oh, almost forgot, Erdogan also said fascism
was a `crime against humanity.' Between his invocation of
anti-Semitism and fascism, we see that Erdogan at least knows how to
project.
In 1975, a year after Maskomya had its run, Erdogan's fellow
Islamic-supremacists engineered the passage of U.N. General Assembly
Resolution 3379, declaring that Zionism was a form of racism. The
condemnation by the United States of this blatant act of anti-Semitism
was unequivocal. The late Daniel Patrick Moynihan, then the
U.S. Ambassador to the U.N., asserted, `The United States ... does not
acknowledge, it will never abide by, it will never acquiesce in this
infamous act.' Even the fraudulent enterprise that is the
U.N. eventually felt compelled to buckle under forceful American
leadership (much of it provided in the Bush 41 State Department by a
young assistant secretary named John Bolton). The noxious `Zionism
equals racism' resolution was finally repealed in 1991. Now, Erdogan
has seen racism and raised it to a crime against humanity, but we've
thus far heard no Moynihan-like condemnation from the Obama
administration.
Notwithstanding that the prime minister's claim to fame is imprisoning
uncooperative journalists and political opponents on trumped up
charges, President Obama has described Erdogan as one of his most
`trusted friends' among world leaders. Although Erdogan is a top
provider of material support to Hamas, a serious felony in the United
States, Obama recently said of him: `The bottom line is that we find
ourselves in frequent agreement upon a wide range of issues.'
And, indeed, it is Erdogan who has been prodding Obama to repeat the
administration's Libya debacle by overtly supporting the Syrian
`rebels' - the jihadist-rife, Muslim Brotherhood-dominated opposition
seeking to topple the Iran-backed regime of Bashar al-Assad. It
appears Obama and his second-term foreign policy team are poised to
give Erdogan his way.
Sigh. Maybe for just a few minutes, Obama could pretend that Erdogan
was a Republican and that anti-Zionism was the sequester
PJMedia.com
February 28th, 2013
By Andrew C. McCarthy
I think `crime against humanity' has become a verbal tic for Turkey's
Islamic-supremacist Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
In Vienna, at one of the UN's nauseating =80=9Cdialogues' between
Islam and the West (you know, those conferences where Western leaders
explain how much they admire Islam and Islamic leaders reciprocate by
explaining how much they, too, admire Islam), Erdogan pronounced
Zionism a `crime against humanity,' which he placed on a par with
anti-Semitism. The latter is a subject Erdogan knows a thing or two
about. As I recount in Spring Fever: The Illusion of Islamic Democracy
(just released in paperback this week), Erdogan first burst on the
scene almost 40 years ago as the 20-year-old writer-director-star of a
theatrical production called Maskomya. As Andy Bostom edifies us,
Mas-Kom-Ya is short for Masons, Communists, and, yes, Yahudi -
Jews. In Erdogan's telling, these were evil subversive groups whose
common denominator was - all together now! - Judaism.
Spring Fever documents Erdogan's application of `crime against
humanity' label to calls for Muslims in Europe and America to
assimilate in the Western societies where they've chosen to live. He
also said it was a `crime against humanity' for Israel to defend
itself in 2008=80ēs `Operation Cast Lead' after over 3000 rockets and
mortar shells were fired into Israeli territory by Hamas =80' the
international terrorist organization that Erdogan's Turkey lavishly
funds and whose leaders he receives as dignitaries.
In this week's Vienna speech, Erdogan reached unprecedented
epistemological buffoonery when he explained that not only Zionism but
Islamophobia is a `crime against humanity.' Either he does not know
what a crime is or he does not know what a phobia is, but since a
rational mental state is required for the former the latter doesn't
qualify. Or maybe Erdogan knows exactly what crimes and phobias are,
but as an Islamo-fascist he figures such niceties should never get in
the way of a good smear. Oh, almost forgot, Erdogan also said fascism
was a `crime against humanity.' Between his invocation of
anti-Semitism and fascism, we see that Erdogan at least knows how to
project.
In 1975, a year after Maskomya had its run, Erdogan's fellow
Islamic-supremacists engineered the passage of U.N. General Assembly
Resolution 3379, declaring that Zionism was a form of racism. The
condemnation by the United States of this blatant act of anti-Semitism
was unequivocal. The late Daniel Patrick Moynihan, then the
U.S. Ambassador to the U.N., asserted, `The United States ... does not
acknowledge, it will never abide by, it will never acquiesce in this
infamous act.' Even the fraudulent enterprise that is the
U.N. eventually felt compelled to buckle under forceful American
leadership (much of it provided in the Bush 41 State Department by a
young assistant secretary named John Bolton). The noxious `Zionism
equals racism' resolution was finally repealed in 1991. Now, Erdogan
has seen racism and raised it to a crime against humanity, but we've
thus far heard no Moynihan-like condemnation from the Obama
administration.
Notwithstanding that the prime minister's claim to fame is imprisoning
uncooperative journalists and political opponents on trumped up
charges, President Obama has described Erdogan as one of his most
`trusted friends' among world leaders. Although Erdogan is a top
provider of material support to Hamas, a serious felony in the United
States, Obama recently said of him: `The bottom line is that we find
ourselves in frequent agreement upon a wide range of issues.'
And, indeed, it is Erdogan who has been prodding Obama to repeat the
administration's Libya debacle by overtly supporting the Syrian
`rebels' - the jihadist-rife, Muslim Brotherhood-dominated opposition
seeking to topple the Iran-backed regime of Bashar al-Assad. It
appears Obama and his second-term foreign policy team are poised to
give Erdogan his way.
Sigh. Maybe for just a few minutes, Obama could pretend that Erdogan
was a Republican and that anti-Zionism was the sequester