Archive for the ‘I resemble that remark!’ Category

Hey, I resemble that remark!

Monday, August 10th, 2009

A new, ongoing series of posts. I will do my best to keep a thick skin:

Five surgeons from big cities are discussing who makes the best patients to operate on…

The first surgeon, from Bristol , says, “I like to see accountants on my operating table, because when you open them up, everything inside is numbered.”

The second, from Manchester , responds, “Yeah, but you should try electricians! Everything inside them is colour coded.”

The third surgeon, from Edinburgh , says, “No, I really think librarians are the best, everything inside them is in alphabetical order.”

The fourth surgeon, from Birmingham chimes in: “You know, I like construction workers…those blokes always understand when you have a few parts left over.”

But the fifth surgeon, from London shut them all up when he observed: “You’re all wrong, Politicians are the easiest to operate on”

“There’s no guts, no heart, no balls, no brains and no spine, and the head and the arse are interchangeable.”

Source.

Hey Tarek, I resemble that remark!

Thursday, July 23rd, 2009

I have been an admirer of much of the writing of Canadian Tarek Fatah for quite some time now. As an outspoken critic of radical Islamism Tarek has shown a very rare – and very brave – willingness to speak out about the injustices and the hypocrisy of Islamic institutions that many within the Muslim world have been silent on.

In his recent posts he has taken his criticism even further, once again reflecting critically on adherents of his own left-leaning political views:

“I am going to ask Chomsky why the US left appears to have a soft corner for some of the most brutal murderers of Muslims—the al Qaeda and the Taliban,” says Fatah. “Would he have remained silent if the victims of the Taliban had been Americans? I will suggest to him that part of the Left that seems unable or unwilling to slam the misogyny and homophobia of the jihadi radicals, is practicing a racism of lower expectations that places Muslims as less than human.”

Source.

But alas, the intention of this post is not to heap more praise on Tarek – even though his work deserves praise. Rather, I wanted to draw attention to one of Tarek’s recent remarks, quoted in the National Post. The article itself is worth a read, but it was this that caught my attention:

The racist right will talk about these things to frighten people about immigrants. The liberal-left has abandoned its responsibility to fight medievalism. And nobody wants to talk about what is really happening here.”

Tarek, many of us here on the right are talking about this issue, and I must question why you denigrate the credit for this discourse by claiming the right is motivated only by racism and a desire to curtail immigration. Is it not conceivable that there are some values that we share, and that we might be as passionate about them as you are? Values such as individual freedom, gender equality, and political self-determination? Why are you able to claim noble motivations for your position, while the right is demonized, accused of being motivated by racism?

Not only is the “racist” stereotype you are perpetuating offensive to right-leaning folks like myself, but it damages the cause you have so bravely fought for.