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Monday, April 30, 2007
Dinesh D'Souza :: Townhall.com Columnist
How I de-fanged Alan Wolfe
by Dinesh D'Souza
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So in my rebuttal I listed Wolfe’s accusations (I support Bin Laden, I want to make pacts with holocaust deniers, I favor penal laws against adultery) and I challenged Wolfe to substantiate them. He couldn’t give a single citation to back up any of his charges. He didn’t even attempt to provide textual evidence or support them, relying entirely on the claim that if what he said wasn’t true, the New York Times would not have printed it!

During my cross-examination I decided to test Wolfe’s knowledge of Islam. I asked him what percentage of Muslims in the world live in a democracy. Long silence. He said he couldn’t give a precise number. I asked him to give an approximate number. He just stood there. Finally I said, “You have no idea, have you?” He didn’t. Then I asked him which is the most populous Muslim country. He was blank on this too. Finally he guessed, “India?” I informed him that India is not a Muslim country, it is a predominantly Hindu country, but in any case, it does not have the largest Muslim population. The correct answer is Indonesia, which also happens to be a democracy. Among democracies, I asked, which is the second largest Muslim country. Once again Wolfe guessed, “India?” The correct answer is Bangladesh.

So here is a guy who heads a center on religion at Boston College, and it turns out he doesn’t know the first thing about Islam. Yet incredibly the New York Times invited Wolfe to review my book. The Enemy at Home is based on a study of how America and the West are viewed through the prism of Islamic history and by the leading thinkers of contemporary Islam. Criticism is welcome, but a minimal familiarity with Islam might be helpful here.

I wish that the editors of the New York Times Book Review were present at the debate because they would have been thoroughly embarrassed. Looking into the audience I could see the faces of the students, including some of Wolfe’s own students. Some had their mouths open. Others looked like they had been slapped. Still others—especially the conservatives—were grinning and chuckling. Rarely do professors who tyrannize over their students in class get exposed in front of their students as buffoons.

Boston College taped the event, and they are going to post it online. This way viewers across the country will have a chance to see for themselves how I de-fanged Alan Wolfe. I’ll be linking to the event on my daily blog which you can access through my website. Get popcorn.

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About The Author
Dinesh D'Souza's new book Life After Death: The Evidence is published by Regnery.
 
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Dinesh does not support Al Qaida
And arguments of this sort are just as straw man as Alan Wolfe's. I challenge you to cite one example of where Dinesh has ever stated or even implied that he would in any way suppport radical Islam over Western liberalism.

Yes, Dinesh is critical of (liberal) America's values. But he's not critical of America itself. He's critical of radical secularism, which is (in his view) nearly as dangerous as radical Islam, because it has largely been responsible for empowering radical Islam.

Only radical secularists like the ones who rail against Dinesh fail to see the difference between secular goverment and secularism. The first promotes freedom of religion and tolerance between all peoples, regardless of faith. The second imposes cultural and institutional prejudice against religious values and beliefs.

Reasonable people can have a debate about what a secular goverment should be like, and which public expressions of faith are appopriate and which are not. But only secularists think that their particular form of "reason" is beyond debate and beyond critisism to the degree that anyone who dare challenge them (as Dinesh has done) should be labeled terror symphathisers. What hubris!

Believe it or not, it is possible to be be pro-Islam and anti-terrorist at the same time. Only bigoted secularists seem to be incapable of noting the distinction.

The reason, Dan,
that Dinesh didn't mention that the "reason these Muslims hate us is unwavering support for Israel". The column was not a list of all the reasons why some Muslims hate us. It was an examination of the vaccousness of this critic's argument against his book, and how it all fell apart upon when challenged.

If you don't want to take things off topic, try staying on topic yourself.
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