As someone who looks at culture and politics regularly, I
often write about problems and on occasion, proffer solutions. Sometimes the
solutions are relatively straightforward and obvious, like suggesting to the GOP that if
they don’t pass the SAVE Act and bring about something resembling honest
elections they’re going to get their asses handed to them in November. Others, I recognize, are far more complex than
my 30,000 foot take on the issue. This is most certainly the case when I
suggested the government
should get out of the wealth redistribution business. Knowing that there
are thousands of programs handing out trillions of dollars annually, just suggesting
the government should get out of the business of taking money from Peter to
give to Paul seems a bit trite. And it
might be, but trying to explain a problem and proffer a detailed solution in
under 1200 words is a bit challenging, at least it is for me.
But that doesn’t mean that I’m going to stop highlighting
issues and making suggestions.
For years I’ve struggled with the idea of limits on
tolerance, but didn’t really have a definition for it. I do now. I recently saw a post that referred
to Popper’s
Paradox of Tolerance, something with which I was unfamiliar. I looked it up
and immediately recognized it as the perfect distillation of exactly what had
been running through my head, basically: Does society have a duty to be
tolerant to that which seeks to destroy said society?
For a long time, America clearly understood the answer was
no. The obvious example is Communism. America knew that Communism was a threat
and Congress did what it could to thwart the party and extinguish the idea
itself. Under the Smith Act
(Alien Registration Act of 1940), it became illegal to act “with intent to
cause the overthrow or destruction of any such government, prints, publishes,
edits, issues, circulates, sells, distributes, or publicly displays any written
or printed matter advocating, advising, or teaching the duty, necessity,
desirability, or propriety of overthrowing or destroying any government in the
United States by force or violence…”
The party was outlawed and leaders were thrown in jail, and
while being a Communist wasn’t technically illegal, just being one could get
you fired or blacklisted, both in Hollywood and beyond. Eventually the Supreme Court, in Yates v. United
States (1957), narrowed Smith, ruling that abstract advocacy of revolution
or teaching doctrine was protected by the First Amendment. Only advocacy
directed at inciting imminent illegal action could be punished.
Today Communism is tolerated in America, and sadly,
celebrated even. Indeed, it’s basically merged with the Democrat party and their love child has
just been elected as mayor of New York. And the reality is, the Democrat
party of 2026 is far more of a danger to the Republic than the Communists ever
were.
The merger actually dovetails with the primary subject of
this piece on tolerance: Islam.
Our 1st Amendment guarantees Americans freedom of
religion. Indeed, it’s literally the very first right protected in the Bill of
Rights: “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion,
or prohibiting the free exercise thereof…”
There is no definition in the Constitution or anywhere else
in government however that states exactly what a religion is. In truth, religion in America encompasses
everything from traditional Catholicism, reformed Judaism and thousands of
Protestant sects to the late Heaven’s Gate cult and being a conscientious
objector!
Perhaps nothing else demonstrates the reality that America
is, in a word, tolerant.
But are there limits to that tolerance? And should those
limits apply to Islam?
I’d like to suggest that there should be, and yes they
should apply to Islam.
The reality is, while Islam is most certainly a religion, it
is also something else. It
is a theology of conquest and subjugation. From its very beginning Islam
was about conquering and conquest, through any means necessary, including
deception.
On a daily basis we hear Muslim “scholars” and
others speak in
the streets, on college campuses
and online
among other places, telling us that Islam will basically take
over. Even in high schools they are
welcomed to proffer Sharia.
And that gets to the crux of the problem. At its very core, Islam is incompatible with western civilization. It does not believe in freedom of speech. It does not believe in freedom of religion. Women are 2nd class citizens and non-Muslim women fare even worse.
All of this might just be an exercise navel gazing, if it
were not so deadly. Since 9/11 there have been more than 64,000
Islamic terrorist attacks around the world.
Most were actually in Muslim countries, particularly those with American
troops on the ground. But not all. Here
in the United States, since 1994 there have been a total of 740
Islamic terrorist attacks or plots disrupted while in Europe between 1994
and 2021 that
number was 367.
But it’s not just naval gazing. Across
Europe, they’re seeing what happens when Muslims reach just
5% of the population. In France over
half of young Muslims want Sharia law, in Austria a court
made Sharia legal, while in the UK Muslim rape rings were allowed to rape
thousands of young white girls for more than a decade because the
authorities were scared of being called racists. Indeed across Europe Muslims are rapidly
increasing in numbers and not only are they not assimilating, they are
bringing unprecedented
rates of violent crime across the continent. Here at home Muslims gather in large groups tell
us they are
taking over, something they have explicitly wanted
to do for over 30 years!
And so back to my original question: Does society have a
duty to be tolerant to that which seeks to destroy said society? Is Islam to be tolerated? If yes, ask
yourself, is there a “religion” that might ever NOT be tolerated?
What tenants might it have that are not present in Islam? What kinds of activities would its adherents
have to engage in that have not been so by Muslims?
Our Constitution was written as a vehicle for preserving the
fundamental ideas of limited government, free speech, freedom of religion and
individual liberty. A creed that explicitly targets those simply cannot be
tolerated.
This is one of those problems for which solutions would take
far more 1200 words to cover. Whatever
solutions are to be had, they must start with recognizing that the Constitution
is not a suicide pact.


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