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The Nuclear Card

Why Do They Hate Us? They Don’t.

Posted on 26 April 2012 by Danios

Mona Eltahawy, an Arab-American journalist, created a firestorm when Foreign Policy Magazine published her article “Why Do They Hate Us?”.  If you thought the they and us refers to Muslims and Americans, you’d be wrong.  In fact, they is Arab men, and us is women.  Her article is a stabbing critique of Arab culture, which she finds to be heavily misogynistic.

If that wasn’t provocative enough, she goes further: according to her, these Arab men hate women.  ”Yes: They hate us. It must be said.”  To prove her argument, she issues a challenge: “Name me an Arab country, and I’ll recite a litany of abuses [against women] fueled by a toxic mix of culture and religion.”  The rest of the article is a recitation of that litany, interspersed with jazzy catchphrases such as “[w]e are more than our headscarves and our hymens” and “poke the hatred in its eye.”

There is no way to deny the basic premise that the status of women’s rights in the Arab world is abysmal.  Why then did Mona Eltahawy evoke such a hostile reaction from even the Arab women whose rights she seeks to protect?  The easy answer, one that Eltahawy and her supporters might argue, is that these women are simply brainwashed.  Too much “Islamism” in their little brains.  The problem with this argument is that it’s sexist.  It’s basically saying Arab women are too stupid to think for themselves.

The real reason that Arab women recoil after reading Eltahawy’s article is that, while she tries to connect to them based on their gender, she attacks other aspects of their core identity: their race, nationality, religion, and culture.  In fact, her racist (and somewhat babbling) screed is nothing short of a vicious attack on their entire civilization.

Eltahawy cites “a toxic mix of culture and religion” as the source of the abuses against women.  Oddly, she later says, “You — the outside world — will be told that it’s our ‘culture’ and ‘religion’ to do X, Y, or Z to women.”  Yet, it is Mona Eltahawy herself who is arguing precisely that.

By attacking their core identity, Eltahawy has succeeded in alienating her own audience.  Imagine, for instance, an American feminist arguing for greater rights for African women, while at the same time assailing the black race, African culture, and traditional tribal religion.  How receptive or thankful do you think these African women would be?  How pleased would the black or African community be if someone was writing articles about how backwards their culture is?

Mona Eltahawy’s article engages in trite, racial stereotypes.  Legitimate problems in the Arab world are sensationalized.  They hate women.  What an absurd exaggeration!  They have mothers, sisters, wives, and daughters–and it is reasonable to assume that, like other human beings on earth, they love them.

A man can love his wife and still abuse her.  He can have undying affection for his daughter but still wrong her in horrible ways.  But, by going so far as to say they hate women, Eltahawy has dehumanized them.  One recalls similar invective against Palestinian parents: they don’t love their children.  The message being sent is: they are worse than animals.

Women’s rights is an area of concern in many parts of the developing world, not just the Arab world.  Why single out Arabs?  Women face major obstacles in India.  Should we demonize the Hindu religion and the great Indian civilization?

Eltahawy lists off “a litany of abuses”, bringing up extreme cases to make her point.  By citing isolated cases and stacking them all up together, she ends up portraying an imbalanced and biased picture of the Arab world.

Racists don’t see nuance.  They lump all people of a certain group altogether.  That’s exactly what Mona Eltahawy does in her article.  She paints the entire people of that region–or at least its men–with one broad bush.  They hate women.  All 170 million of them.

In fact, not all Arabs are alike.  During my travels in the Muslim world, I saw all sorts of people, with a broad diversity of views.  I met conservative Muslims, liberal Muslims, atheists, Christians, Communists, hippies, you name it.  No sweeping generalization could be made about them (aside for, perhaps, their disgust of American foreign policy).

It is true that I was deeply disturbed by the mistreatment of women, religious and ethnic minorities, poor people, servants, and animals.  But, I also met people there–men, no less–who were also deeply disturbed by these things and would have no part in it.

Just as the viral Kony 2012 video drew criticism for reinforcing the idea of White Man’s Burden, so too does Mona Eltahawy’s article tap into historically racist Orientalist attitudes towards the Arab world.

By firmly pegging abuses against women to the Arab culture and Muslim religion, Mona Eltahawy’s article was nothing short of bigotry.  Indeed, one could hardly tell the difference between Eltahawy’s article and what could normally be found sprawled on numerous Islamophobic websites, such as Robert Spencer’s JihadWatch and Pamela Geller’s Atlas Shrugs.  It is almost a surety that her article will be approvingly cited on such sites, which pit “our civilized, freedom-loving civilization” against “those barbaric, women-hating peoples.”

Had Mona Eltahawy been just any ole’ Islamophobe hacking away at the keyboard–had she been a Robert Spencer or a Pamela Geller–her article would hardly have made headlines.  It would have been just one of thousands and thousands of such hateful rants on the internet by anti-Muslim trolls.  But, like Irshad Manji and Asra Nomani, Mona Eltahawy has an official “I’m a Muslim” card.  That’s even better than the official “I’m an ex-Muslim” card that bigots like Ayaan Hirsi Ali and Nonie Darwish proudly carry.  It’s probably even a step above the “I’m a former jihadi terrorist” gold card.  Eltahawy holds the platinum card and gets extra points for being a woman.

As other pundits have noted, Mona Eltahawy is–along with Irshad Manji, Asra Nomani, Tarek Fatah, Zuhdi Jasser, etc.–acting in the role of the “native informant.”  Monica L. Marks writes on the Huffington Post:

Why Do They Hate Us?” asks the latest cover of Foreign Policy magazine. Beneath the title stands a cowering woman wearing nothing but black body paint resembling the niqab, or full Islamic face veil.

Egyptian feminist Mona Eltahawy authored the article. Her central contention — that Arab Muslim culture “hates” women — resurrects a raft of powerful stereotypes regarding Islam and misogyny. It also situates Ms. Eltahawy’s work within a growing trend of “native informants” whose personal testimonies of oppression under Islam have generated significant support for military aggression against Muslim-majority countries in recent years.

Books by these “native voices” — including Ayaan Hirsi Ali’s “Infidel,” Azar Nafisi’s “Reading Lolita” in Tehran, and Irshad Mandji’s “Faith Without Fear” — have flown off the shelves in post-9/11 America despite being roundly rebuffed by leading feminist academics such as Columbia University’s Lila Abu-Lughod and Yale’s Leila Ahmed. Saba Mahmood, another respected scholar, noted that native informants helped “manufacture consent” for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan by serving up fear-inducing portrayals of Islam in “an authentic Muslim woman’s voice.”

Although such depictions have proven largely inaccurate and guilty of extreme generalizations, they have become immensely popular. Why? Because these native “testimonials” tell us what we in the West already know — that there’s something inherently misogynistic about Muslims and Arabs.

By stirring up our sympathies and reinforcing our prejudices, individuals like Ms. Hirsi Ali and Ms. Eltahawy have climbed to the top of the media ladder. Their voices are drowning out the messages of more nuanced, well-respected scholars.

Marks goes on to say:

Her fault lies in extrapolating broad cultural judgments from context-specific abuses, implying that Islam and Arab culture writ large are have toxically combined to create a hopelessly backward region that “treats half of humanity like animals.”

These native informants just tell us what we want to hear.  Their job is to increase hatred of Arabs and Muslims, something that is needed in order to sustain our multiple wars of aggression in that part of the world.

Native informants do not help fix the problems they point to.  Why, for example, did Mona Eltahawy choose to publish her article in Foreign Policy, an American magazine?  Why didn’t she write it for an Arab/Arabic publication, with a primarily Arab readership?

Instead she chose Foreign Policy Magazine, which was founded by none other than Samuel P. Huntington.  His famous Clash of Civilizations theory pit the Judeo-Christian West against the Muslim world.  How very fitting that Mona Eltahawy’s us vs. them article was published in the magazine he founded.

Eltahawy’s audience is clear:

You — the outside world — will be told that it’s our ‘culture’ and ‘religion’ to do X, Y, or Z to women.

Monica Marks writes:

 It is important for her readers, however, to understand the dangers of sensationalist coverage that over-simplify complex matters of gender, politics, and religious observance in Muslim-majority countries.

History is rife with examples of seemingly women-friendly arguments hijacked in the service of imperialistic and aggressive ends. While emotional and sensationalist portrayals such as this most recent Foreign Policy cover will sell copies, they do little to deepen our understanding of the contexts and conditions shaping women’s oppression in Arab countries today.

Indeed, the issue of human rights was routinely used by the colonial powers to justify the conquest and expropriation of land.  The Americas, including the land that is now the United States, was brutally conquered and stolen by Europeans on this very basis.  The indigenous peoples were portrayed as savages needing civilizing.  The white man would bring them “democracy”, “freedom”, and “civilization” (Operation Iraqi Freedom?).

In her article, Mona Eltahawi enumerates numerous abuses Arab women face.  However, none of these inhumanities–not even female genital mutilation–can be considered as problematic as the cannibalism and human sacrifice that the indigenous peoples of the Americas sometimes engaged in.  And yet, whatever failings the indigenous peoples had in their culture and civilization, it is now widely understood who the real savage was.

We can continue to pat ourselves on the back for how civilized we are, how free our women are, how we are so much better than them.  But, none of that will change the fact that we are the ones waging wars of aggression and occupation in the Muslim world.  We are the ones killing hundreds of thousands of their innocent men, women, and children.

It was in another article, also published in Foreign Policy with almost the exact same title–Why They Hate Us?–that Prof. Stephen Walt calculated the number of Muslim lives the U.S. has extinguished:  “a reasonable upper bound for Muslim fatalities…is well over one million, equivalent to over 100 Muslim fatalities for every American lost.”  To use a jazzy catchphrase of my own: mutilating a baby girl’s genitals is horrible, but dropping a bomb on her head is much worse.

Danios was the Brass Crescent Award Honorary Mention for Best Writer in 2010 and the Brass Crescent Award Winner for Best Writer in 2011.

  • Ab

    Arabs do hate women…now if we can get back to focusing on outlawing contraceptives in America.

  • http://www.muslimheritage.com Muslim Heritage.com

    As an afterthought: Why are we stuck with these horrible women who claim to be Muslim, yet embrace radical ideologies and then condemn others for not living up to their expectations?

    Let’s see now, at the last count we have:

    1. A loose Asra Nomani, with sorry sexual morals who hasn’t a clue what Islam is, telling us how to be Muslims
    2. A lesbian Arshad Manji
    3. A radical Arab man hating Mona Altheway

    I hope there are no more undesirable characters, who abuse the ‘I am a Muslim woman’ card.

    Where are the nice normal girls?

  • Reynardine

    One fundamental shared by fundamentalists of all religions is keeping women down. A number of Victorian physicians actually proposed all little girls from “nice”, white, Christian families be prophylactically clitoridectomized in the same way children were then prophylactically tonsillectomized. This was supposed to insure that they would grow up feminine and pure, without those nasty, “masculine” urges caused by what was regarded as a sunted penis. The idea did not catch on widely in the English-speaking world, not because it was thought cruel, but because it was considered indecent. Nonetheless, some children were mutilated in this way, the last known case in Chicago in 1948 or so.

    Maltreatment of those who are half the human race and of everyone’s ancestors can’t be shrugged off. Hatred of women? The truth is that every little girl in the world has to be warned by the time she is eleven that there are men who will stalk her, rape her, beat her, mutilate her, and even kill her just for possessing a vulva. All women must live by simultaneously acknowledging this fact and denying it. They learn to imitate normalcy, but with this omnipresent danger, life is never normal. No, no one group is responsible for this, but no one is off the hook, either.

  • Ahmed

    A man gouged out the eyes of his girlfriend in the UK.

    http://www.itv.com/news/westcountry/2012-04-13/man-admits-gouging-out-womans-eyes/

    Shall we use this appalling crime to say the man did this because men in the West hate women?

    (And to the poor, poor woman, who suffered this – if you ever come across this article, please forgive me for bringing your tragic case into it – I have only done it to highlight the double standards, and hopefully you will understand).

  • aiman

    “I fail to see how being a liberal Zionist is like being a liberal supporter of Maududi. Zionism is a legal right given to the Jews through international law to assert their self-determinism in the land of their ancestors. This right was given to them before WW2 or the Holocaust.”

    The land was peopled by an Indigenous people. It was amoral and cruel to remove them and it is amoral and cruel what is happening to the Palestinians today. Let alone, it is a violation of Jewish ethics. It is also a Darwinian argument that provides the myth that man is in control of his destiny and he may do whatever it takes to “survive” even when survival is possible in many ethical ways.

    This right is no more “legal” than what happened to the population of Deigo Garcia, some of whose inhabitants died of “sadness” (for real).

    Zionism is an unethical reponse to political tumults that Jews faced following the Holocaust. There is no justification for oppression, just as there was no justification for Maududi to define an unethical form of nationalism for Muslims in Pakistan (which spread to Arab countries). This phenomenon is called “Islamism” which is the sister ideology of Zionism, of right-wing Indian Nationalism, of the American Christian Right, of New Atheism.

  • http://www.muslimheritage.com Muslim Heritage.com

    Here is the link:

    A Criticism of the Idea of Arab Nationalism
    Dr. Muhammad Yahya Vol III No. 2 , 1406 AH
    http://www.al-islam.org/al-tawhid/arabnationalism.htm

    ——–

    Believing Atheist

    Also the reason Eltahawy singles out Arabs is the reason Peter Beinart and Rabbi Lerner,

    I do not think Lerner or Beinart have ever said, ‘Jewish women hate us’. That would be unacceptable if they ever did, and they would be rightly labelled misogynistic.

    I see your point of view, but do remember, Mona did say, ‘Why they hate us’. This is pure nonsense. Sterotyping. Because she is a feminist, that does not give her a licence to pretend that all Muslim women are feminists. We are not. Men have a role to play, and women have a role to play, each enhance the other. That’s how most of us see it.

    There are misogynistic men, for sure, even Arab men, and there are feminist women. I don’t like either. And you cannot have one extremist like Mona (a radical feminist) condemning all Arab men, because she is probably a man hater herself, and projects.

    Don’t misunderstand: All the problems she described exist, but they should be tackled without resorting to bigotry or generalising about all men. How did decent Arab men, who treat their women well, feel when reading ‘Why they hate us?”

  • Ahmed

    Corey: Eltahawy uses the “why they hate us” statement as a journalistic tool to outline her well-documented reports of government abuses against Muslim women

    No she does not.

    She says Arab men hate women. Not Arab governments.

  • http://www.muslimheritage.com Muslim Heritage.com

    Mona Elthawy, this is for you…read and learn you pathetic woman, a large part of the problems in the Arab world are due to the fanatic embrace of strange ideologies that dictoators force upon their spiritually hungry people.

    I’d like to hear what others think of Dr Yahya’s thesis. It sure makes a lot of sense to me. Where as the European nations that these idiots seek to emulate have moved forward, they are stuck in a rut 300 year old, they do not adopt totally what the west does, for example total freedom of women, but SOME aspects usually their own religous heritage. Otherwise all the things that Mona Elthawy mentioned wouldn’t exist.

    A Criticism of the Idea of Arab Nationalism

    ———

    Dr. Muhammad Yahya
    Vol III No. 2 , 1406 AH
    This article was presented as a paper at the World Seminar on “The Impact of Nationalism on the Ummah,” London, Dhu al-Qi’dah 13 — 16, 1405 (July 31 — August 3, 1985), held by the Muslim Institute. The author is a scholar from Cairo, Egypt.

    ——–

    Not only were the Western ideologies appropriated in the manner sketched above but their peculiar terms, frames of reference, and methods of examining facts were also whole-heartedly adopted. This attitude is seen most clearly in that Arab nationalists see Islam, for instance, with European eyes. They ignore the immense scholarship on Islam that exists in their own cultural environment and look at their own religion, in name at least, through Western spectacles.

    In fact, Islam as well as all the other aspects of Arab reality are defined, examined, reinterpreted, and judged in terms of one Western ideology or another by the Arab nationalists. Favourite ideologies in this regard have been the secular-liberal, a diluted form of Marxism referred to as Arab socialism, and a collection of socio-political ideas of American origin. Thus, Islam is usually seen by Arab nationalist writers as a socio-economic projection from a certain `base’, or a flowering of the enlightened emancipatory spirit of the Arab nation, or as a `human revolution’ against, the reactionary and exploiting forces of the Quraysh.

    The purpose here is not to study what Arab nationalism has adopted from the West. It is rather to expose one of its major contradictions. With its present content, terms, principles, and method of analysis it is neither Arab nor nationalist for that matter. It is, rather, Western and internationalist. Looked at from its intellectual angle it is simply a tool for propagating and universalizing Western ideologies.The terms ‘Arab’ and ‘nationalist’ are convenient masks facilitating the acceptance of the surreptitiously smuggled Western contents among the suspicious Muslims.

    Arab nationalism is not condemned here for failing to completely adopt the ideas, directions and the general social and cultural heritage of the Arabs (the Muslims). It would have been unreasonable to tax the nationalists for not using the old traditions of the Arabs as their guiding programmes of action just to make themselves deserving of the epithet ‘Arab’. Nevertheless, a continuation, revival, and renewal of Arab heritage in all fields of life is certainly the natural attitude to expect from those who base their idea on Arabism and build a huge emotional aura around that term, putting it at the centre of their propaganda.Instead, they have abandoned the Arab heritage altogether and opted for a Westernized content for their idea.

    The Arab (Islamic) heritage certainly offers a viable wealth of major values, premises, concepts, ideas, etc. for anyone who wishes to undertake a revival project for the ‘Arab nation’ even if he has reservations on what, may be called the purely “religious” part of that corpus. Islamic jurisprudence, social and moral values, concepts or principles of government, and practical experience in running a flourishing civilization for many centuries are valid and fruitful bases that can be developed, modified, and enriched even by a secularly-bound Arab nationalism to yield a genuinely Arab project for renaissance and progress.

  • Ahmed

    I think this is a good article by Danios – those criticising him are talking nothing but nonsense.

    Mona Eltahawy says that men in the Middle East hate women. And that is simply not true. She cites female genital mutilation as proof that Arab men hate women. But there is no correlation between “hate” and FGM – I am sure there are many men who want their daughters who they love very much to be circumcised, because that is the cultural norm and so they think it should happen.

    People have to realise, not everyone who fights for the right of the oppressed does it purely out of compassion – some do it because they want fame and want others to “love them”. So let me play Mona’s game, and generalise – Mona is not interested in women’s rights, all she cares about is making a name for herself. I bet she doesn’t like that now, does she?

  • http://www.muslimheritage.com Muslim Heritage.com

    Danios made a good point, about her stereotyping, but I also agree with some of the comments above too, Believing Atheist for example. But on the whole, it’s a good artile. Thank you Danios. But sometimes I think, you really need to actually visit countries to see it’s not just women it’s the men too.

    I still have not had a response from the usual apologists here that how are you supposed to respond to terror attacks like 9/11 if not by war? I havn’t had a serious response (just silence) when i’ve mentioned to those who like to bash ‘wahabi bahsers’ about the Saudi support for Al Qaeda and terrorism and extremism.

    We get silly responses from expatriates living in compounds telling us how wonderful it is. Of course it’wonderful for them. They don’t get to meet those extremists. Anyhow back to the subject…

    I think Mona Elthawy meant well, but she is a prize idiot.

    I think she herself hates Arab men, and instead of saying so, projects he hate on them.

    Granted, that there are Arabs who deserve condemnation, and all the things she highlights are serious problems, that should not exist in Islamic societies. But then agian they are not Islamic societies, they are blind wannabe secular societies.

    This woman is not the kind of person, I want speaking for me, or for women. She is a disgrace.

    Mona Elthawy if you read this, shame on you. You have a platform and you abuse it by bigotry against Arab men. You don’t do yourself any favours. I’m not saying there are no problems in the Arab world, for sure there are, but can you please tackle them in a ladylike manner? We are not all raging feminists, we like to be ladies, cherished by men. We do not want to be men.

  • Believing Atheist

    @aiman,

    I fail to see how being a liberal Zionist is like being a liberal supporter of Maududi. Zionism is a legal right given to the Jews through international law to assert their self-determinism in the land of their ancestors. This right was given to them before WW2 or the Holocaust.

    If you say that liberal Zionism is like being a supporter of Maududi, what would you think of Noam Chomsky who according to Norman Finkelstein is a Zionist or Norman Finkelstein himself who also is a Zionist (in that he believes Israel is a state for the Jews)?

    Beinart has many Arab and Muslim supporters. These include Hussein Ibish (Arab but agnostic), and member of the American Task Force on Palestine and Rashid Khalidi (Palestinian and I believe Muslim) who writes for Beinart’s blog Open Zion.

    I withdrew the name of Atzmon I got his name confused with Gideon Levy.

    Furthermore even Palestinian anti-Zionists hate Atzmon see this letter from Electronic Intifada:
    http://electronicintifada.net/blogs/ali-abunimah/palestinian-writers-activists-disavow-racism-anti-semitism-gilad-atzmon

  • aiman

    BA: “For the same reason Noam Chomsky singles out Americans and Israelis for the great majority of the time.”

    Chomsky only singles out the United States. That’s one of the problems with his critiques, particularly when its comes to the Israel-Palestinian conflict as several writers have noted. I have also heard him speak in person and feel his reputation is slightly overblown. Many intellectuals have said the same and more profound things.

  • Lawrence of America

    I was tricked in to supporting this flakey opportunist because I had not had much exposure to her besides her support for the Egyptian revolution. Once i started reading more by her and watching her i noticed she is khawaja; or one who views westerners as superior and our own culture as inferior. the two worst products of imperialism and colonialism in the arab world are the reactionary religious extremists and confused “progressive” anglo-western-philes like mona.

  • aiman

    Oops, a couple of spelling mistakes in my previous post, sent it too quick. Kindly overlook those. Thanks.

  • aiman

    Excellent response, Danios.

    I am myself a critic of elements of hypermasculinity in my community. Hypermasculinity, which is explicitly forbidden in Islam. You have illuminated and pointed out the problem with Eltahawy’s critique. Other than it being published in Foreign Policy, which Muslims don’t read, this is only running to confirm prejudices.

    When feminist writers talk about issues such as patriarchy in social work literature, they don’t slam men for being male, don’t essentialise their (own) culture, and never talk about through enthnocentric lens. They look at the problem of patriarchy. They look at examples of the problem.

    Unfortunately “popular feminists” from Fay Weldon to Pamela Bone to (now it seems) Mona Eltahway are fixated on Islam and “Muslim men”. This is a form of imperial chauvinism. They are imperial feminists. Their guiding ideology is a form of liberal imperalism that “may be more dangerous because of its open-ended nature – its conviction that it represents a superior form of life” (Hywel Williams). In Eltahway’s case, this is to ingratiate herself (as an outsider) to the establishment.

    Believing Atheist: “Also the reason Eltahawy singles out Arabs is the reason Peter Beinart and Rabbi Lerner, and Gilad Atzmon for the most part single out Jews and Israelis. It is because they are either Jews or Israelis themselves and do not like the direction their people/country is heading towards.”

    Beinart is a liberal Zionist. That’s like me being a liberal supporter of Maududi. Additionally Beinart’s audience is mainly Jewish. Can you imagine him critiquing Israel on Al Arabiya? He has been nothing but defensive about Israel in the minutest of debates with pro-Palestinian speakers. Beinart also don’t single out Jews, nor should he, but he (wrongly) singles out Netanyahu in Israel without admitting that the liberals in Israel (such as Tzipi Livni) have just as much if not more blood on their hands.

    Atzmon is widely shunned by Jewish anti-Zionists.

  • Believing Atheist

    Sorry mentioned the wrong person’s name. Not Gilad Atzmon but rather Gideon Levy.

  • khushboo

    I’m very disappointed in her. Last year, she was cheering the Egyptians for the uprising on Bill Maher and totally shut him up for his usual Islamophobic rhetoric. Now she’s criticizing those who accuse others of Islamophobia which was aired on yesterday’s NPR. She’s done a 180. She’s now stereotyping Arab men and supporting those who also stereotype. what a shame!

  • Believing Atheist

    Also the reason Eltahawy singles out Arabs is the reason Peter Beinart and Rabbi Lerner, and Gilad Atzmon for the most part single out Jews and Israelis. It is because they are either Jews or Israelis themselves and do not like the direction their people/country is heading towards.

    Hence, they feel they have a moral obligation as being part of that community or larger community is engaging in course-correction and correcting the wrongs of their people.

    I am very disappointed at this article from Danios. I expected better from him. He has engaged in logical fallacies like the Tu quoque fallacy.

    Forgive my spelling mistakes, I have typed too fast.

  • http://gmail Truth Seeker

    Mona Eltahawy should be commended for her extraordinary courage to speak on the topics which Non-Mulims dare not talk for being labeled as ISLAMOPHOBE by defensive Muslims and their lackeys.She could never express her opinions freely in the Muslim World for fear of her head being severed.Mohammad put this Idea in their little heads 1400 years ago that these VEGINAS were good for only one thing-and that is BED ROOM JIHAD.They are supposed to be deficient in Intellect.He must have hated his mother immensely for dumping him with the Bedouin family to be raised in his infancy when children need love and affection most.No wonder,he did not know what love meant.We are all the product of our past experiences which shape our future lives.Islam,Mohammad and Quran must be exposed like any other faith.Blasphemy laws are being used strenously by Muslims but thanks to INTERNET,the knowledge can penetrate through thick walls of fort mentality although not through the thick heads of Muslims and some Non-Muslim enablers and supporters for MONEY which makes the mare go,whether it has legs or no.

  • Archer

    CORRECTION:

    Sorry, I’m writing poetry right now, I meant to say PETS not POETS!! Silly me!

  • Archer

    We can apply the same standard of judgment to Westerners! Don’t they love PETS (dogs and cats) more than children? For example, they have TWO KIDS and one DOG (symbolizing the third child?) or ONE child and TWO pets. Does the dog symbolize the THIRD CHILD? I wonder if the CAT represents that son or daughter who doesn’t exist! Needless to say, it’s more cheaper to have a PET than ANOTHER screaming baby. Instead of having a large family (as the Bible commands) they use that EXTRA MONEY on luxurious vacations and MORE POETS.

  • mjasghar

    That native informant thing is gonna get ramped up now. People are questioning islamophobia, so the haters are finding juads types who will sell out to give the hate a veneer of acceptability.
    Case in point : didn’t Peter King hold up Jasser as a native informant? something like how a muslim had told him about radicalization happening. I’m sure someone can find the link in loonwatch, but i’m lazy/tired atm :P

  • Corey

    This article is a great disappointment and not worthy of loonwatch. Simply, you took a page from the Jihadwatch play book and put a spin on the Eltahawy article that misstates her argument. Eltahawy uses the “why they hate us” statement as a journalistic tool to outline her well-documented reports of government abuses against Muslim women. There is no hysterical accusations. I can’t fault her research and conclusions. I do fault her for addressing these issues to a Western audience, which in no way helps Muslim women. I am Muslim, as is my wife. We live in Saidi Arabia. And the men I know and certainly the women I know won’t argue with the facts in FP’s article. Yes, they may be offended with the overreaching “why they hate us” statement but not the facts as outlined by the author. And for loonwatch to draw comparisons to 18th and 19th century Judeo-Christian abuses is laughable. Eltahawy is a Weastern feminists reaching a Western feminist audience. She has no truck with Muslim feminist, but that doesn’t diminish her argument.

  • Believing Atheist

    I don’t agree with this statement from Danios:

    “Women’s rights is an area of concern in many parts of the developing world, not just the Arab world. Why single out Arabs? Women face major obstacles in India. Should we demonize the Hindu religion and the great Indian civilization?”

    For the same reason Noam Chomsky singles out Americans and Israelis for the great majority of the time. Simply because Chomsky is an American and a Jew

    Similarly the answer to Danios’s question is because,Mona Eltahawy is an Arab and as Chomsky said:

    “My own concern is primarily the terror and violence carried out by my own state.”

    and Chomsky continued:

    “It is very easy to denounce the atrocities of someone else. That has about as much ethical value as denouncing atrocities that took place in the 18th century.”

    Eltahawy’s concern is with the terror and violence carried out by her own people. Just as charity begins at home, so too does condemnation.

    (Note I am not comparing Chomsky to Eltahawy, they are not even close in the level of intellectual stardom, but simply positing similar motives.

  • Jinn

    Excellent reply to the self professed scholar of the Arab world.

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