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I long ago lost count, just as I lost the clippings, of those occasions in which a local British police force could do no more than "warn" a woman whose life was in danger from the men around her. In late July 2009, the newspapers were featuring — but for not more than the usual few days — a case in which a woman had been "warned" after the men around her poured acid down the throat of the man she had been seeing. The man ended up in hospital with his tongue destroyed, but it appears that the tongues of the police had been destroyed too, because a "warning" was the only help they could give, apparently for fear that the local immigrant community might take offence. There is seldom, apparently, much chance of "warning" the men in such cases that if they publicly avow violent intentions towards a woman they will be hauled up, and there is never any chance at all that such men will be expelled from the country. No Minister of Community Cohesion has yet said that all communities would have a better chance of cohering with each other if those communities whose beliefs about honour were contrary to the law of the land could change them. 

By this time the words "community" and "culture" are starting to sound like what they are: weasel words for institutionalised sadism, which the naïve onlooker is likely to suspect might have something to do with the religion, whether it be Hindu, Sikh or Islamic. But at the mere mention of Islam, cue the experts: apparently these cases of honour have no justification in Sharia, and therefore honour crimes have nothing to do with the religion. In Sharia, four witnesses have to catch a pair of illicit lovers in flagrante before they can both be killed. We are supposed to be reassured by these rigorous requirements of sufficient evidence, and are thought to be niggling if we question the assumption that the death penalty is mandatory if the case is proved. The requirement that the culprits should be killed goes unexamined. No doubt, if it were examined, the community would be placed in danger and the culture begin to fray. But surely, if moderate Islam is to hold its own against its extremist wings, then fraying, in that one respect at least, is exactly what the culture needs to do. There are more than a billion Muslims who are not engaged in jihad against the West, and not likely to be. We should try to remember just how few people are trying to kill us, even when they feel sorely provoked. But if the non-fanatical majority can't find a voice to condemn the few among their fellows who see nothing wrong with killing their own women for imaginary crimes, then they either condone that attitude or are afraid of those who hold it: either way, not a very encouraging start towards the more liberal Muslim future that we have been promised. 

If Jordan is progressive, you can imagine what things must be like elsewhere: except that you can't imagine. Interviewed in our press, a Tunisian woman who dares to write about what is going on in her homeland clearly credits herself with the life expectancy of a snowflake on a hot stove. No wonder she is a lone voice. From Afghanistan, when the Taliban ruled, the reports were awful beyond belief. But we did better if we believed them, because it turned out that some of the Northern Alliance forces that replaced the Taliban were united only in their conviction that the Taliban were soft on women. Later on, the Taliban came back to prominence and in the areas under their control things were re-established on the same plane of dementia as was the rule until just yesterday in Pakistan's Swat Valley, where it was considered a mercy if, when a girl's school was burned to the ground, the girls were not still inside it. At the time of writing, the Pakistani army has cleared the Taliban out of the Swat Valley, to the point where the streets where they used to dump the bodies of the punished are now full again of living people. But when the BBC interviews boy "fighters" who have been rescued from the Taliban's suicide schools, the boys have to be fully masked for their "protection." It doesn't sound as if the madmen have gone very far away, and judging by the fact that the BBC correspondent has only her face showing, the local men who theoretically aren't insane might not be as sane as all that.

We had also better believe that where men alone decide what women's rights are, the results are rarely good. Western liberal democracy, or a reasonable imitation of Western liberal democracy when it comes to the rule of law, is still the only kind of society we know about where women are not at the mercy of systematic injustice — that is, of justice conceived of and maintained as a weapon of terror. Where women are concerned, countries like Japan have climbed out of their dark histories to the exact extent that they have become Western-style liberal democracies, and no further. The same is true for the "Tiger" economies: the condition of women might have been ameliorated only because it has been thought expedient to subject theocratic pressures to the rule of law, but it doesn't matter why the law is there, as long as it is there. The rule of law does not guarantee justice, but there is no justice without it. It has been one of the sour amusements provided by our feminist movement in its modern phase to watch its proponents trying to blink this fact. 

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Graham Davis
August 30th, 2009
12:08 PM
It is right to encourage feminists to make a stand against Islam as women are one of its main victims. However what is really required is a united front by all of us who are concerned about freedom and liberty. Am I exaggerating by comparing Islam to the rise in Fascism in the 30’s? The similarities are remarkable, a supremacist ideology, a ruthless opposition to libertarian values and an aggressive policy of expansion along with a political class largely indifferent to the threat. All religions would like to muddy distinction between church and state but only one, Islam, seeks to remove it altogether. Sharia is not a folksy neighbourhood arbitration service, it is a parasite that seeks to destroy our secular legal system and replace it with its own, misogynistic, homophobic and barbaric practices. Take a look at Saudi Arabia if you want to see what Sharia is like for all but the privileged few. For many Moslems the goal is a global caliphate where no authority is tolerated other than their own. As the film Fitna aptly demonstrates the Quran provides ample justification to pursue any amount of barbarism so long as it is sanctioned by the word of “God”. And what are we doing about it? Nothing and the reason is that we are not willing to assert the superiority of our own values. The fear of offending minority interests and the assumption that multiculturalism, so favoured by the left, is the only policy, has allowed the wooden horse of Islam to take root in many of our cities. So what about moderate Moslems who simply want to get on with their lives? Of course they are not all fellow travellers of the 9/11 or 7/7 terrorists, but polls have shown that when push comes to shove many tacitly sanction the use of terrorist tactics when Islam is threatened, wherever that may be. The problem is that most Moslems identify primarily with other Moslems, rather than their fellow countryman, regardless of the country in which they live, their ethnicity or even the language they speak. Wherever they settle be it Bradford or Brisbane their allegiance is first to God. This is why creeping “islamification” needs to be confronted. We Brits are famed for our tolerance and moderation but if they blind us to a threat to our way of life that is moving inexorably towards us, they will have served us poorly and we will live to regret it.

Sophia
August 29th, 2009
5:08 PM
Thank you, thank you for this blunt, uncompromising polemic on the hypocrisy of "multi-cultural" feminism -- I write as a "Classical" rationalist feminist of the old school. It seems any atrocity can be excused as long as it occurs in a homoginized middle-distance of the mind where individuals and their suffering cannot be made out and the choreography of "culture", and its internal consistencies, are the only values. It all gives cultural imperialism a good name.

kimserca
August 29th, 2009
3:08 PM
oh god the usual guff about 'australian intellectuals' blah blah. No-one ever named or quoted, save for a stray quote by greer, who resides in the UK. a shoddy, self-indulgent, rambling exercise saying nothing new. doubtless you'll be coming out against the afghan govt, now theyve endorsed such laws, Clive? you know, the one we're expending blood and treasure defending?

Tina Trent
August 27th, 2009
7:08 PM
We need to come to terms directly with the phenomenon of justice movements as progenitors of virulent misogyny. South Africa, Australia, throughout the revolutionary Islamic world -- in every one of these places, liberation of a formerly oppressed population is followed by a whiplash of rage against all female populations, some of it directed inward, some outward, but always at women. In the United States, you can see a similar phenomenon in the hate crimes movement, which declares war on "hate motivated" crimes "in the name of justice" with one hand while working hard to deny that women represent by far the greatest number of victims selected on the basis of identity. Whether it is Former U.N. Ambassador Andrew Young trading on his civil rights credentials to whitewash Saudi gender apartheid in corporate America, or President Obama's transition from a paid anti-racial-apartheid worker to an apologist for Islamic gender apartheid, the legitimation of woman-hating through the mechanisms of liberation movements goes a long way to explaining (though not at all justifying) the silence of the feminists: they know perfectly well that silence is the price they must pay for a place at the table. So perhaps it is not the feminists who most urgently need to change their views.

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