By George Neumayr on 8.19.10 @ 6:09AM
Obama's religious boosterism gets him into another mess.
By modern secularist standards, Barack Obama's boosterism for
Islam violates the "separation between Church and state." Had
George W. Bush held a rosary and modest fish dinner at the White
House to mark the beginning of Lent, the ACLU left would have
freaked out. But these same secularists didn't mind Barack's
"Iftar dinner" last Friday night.
That is, until he wimped out on his endorsement of the
Ground Zero mosque. Now his dinner looks to them more like the
production of Ishtar, as finger-to-the-wind Dems
cravenly scramble for cover. The search is on for a "compromise."
Perhaps the self-styled Solomonic Obama can convince the mosque
planners to transfer their property rights to NASA. Administrator
Charles Bolden could then turn the land into a satellite office
for contractors who pursue the space agency's "perhaps foremost"
mission (as explained to him by Obama): "to reach out to the
Muslim world and engage much more with dominantly Muslim nations
to help them feel good about their historic contribution to
science…and math and engineering."
The moment one thinks this presidency has hit the bottom of
grim parody it finds a new one. It is hard to keep track of them
at this point, but any list of the White House's greatest
Islamophilic hits would have to include: wanting a civilian jury
trial for the 9/11 planners, refusing to identify radical Islam
as a terrorist motive, endorsing the concept of jihad, fretting
over the loss of "diversity" after the Fort Hood shooting, and
vacationing through the fallout of an aborted Christmas day
bombing over Detroit.
The White House's ideologically willful self-delusion about
radical Islam is staggering. Here, for example, is its
self-reporting at
whitehouse.gov about the Ramadan dinner: "Last night,
President Obama continued the White House tradition of hosting an
Iftar -- the meal that breaks the day of fasting --celebrating
Ramadan in the State Dining Room." Continued a tradition? Exactly
which White House tradition is that?
The answer: Obama was referring not to a White House
"tradition" but to one distant event that he carefully left
vague: Thomas Jefferson's war negotiations with Tunisian envoy
Sidi Soliman Mellimelli.
Jefferson, desperate to end the Barbary war with Islamic
pirates, invited Mellimelli to Washington for negotiations.
According to Gaye
Wilson, the visit put Jefferson and his staff on the spot:
James Madison, then the Secretary of State, had to field
Mellimelli's request for "concubines." Jefferson told shocked
colleagues to calm down; after all, peace with the Barbary
pirates required passing "unnoticed the irregular conduct of
their ministers." Mellimelli, in his own way, was grateful. After
hearing some gossip about the wan mood of the childless
Madisons, he "flung his 'magical' cloak around
Dolley Madison and murmured an incantation that promised she
would bear a male child. His conjuring, however, did not
work."
The war negotiations happened to coincide with Ramadan.
Consequently, a scheduled dinner at the White House had to be
moved back from "half after three" to "precisely at sunset" in
order for Mellimelli to show up.
While it is true that the basically agnostic Jefferson was
an arrogant secularist in embryo (the type on display now who
dislikes all religions save Islam), he was under no illusions
about jihadists. The Obama White House makes references to the
"Koran" Jefferson owned, as if he had purchased it for religious
edification. The truth is that he purchased it for
self-protection: he wanted to understand the attitudes and war
tactics of the Barbary pirates.
The cocky frat-boy "Republican" on MSNBC, Joe
Scarborough, a hopelessly smug lightweight who tries to weigh in
on the "big issues" of the day when not playing early-morning
grabass with his equally shallow but self-important guests, has
said repeatedly that the Founding Fathers wrote the First
Amendment to protect projects like the Ground Zero mosque. No,
they didn't. "Morning Joe" is mistaking Thurgood Marshall's
"living" Constitution for theirs.
While the Founding Fathers certainly didn't want anyone
coerced in matters of faith, they wrote it to protect the states
from a future federal government that might swoop down and crush
the public religious life of majorities in those states. (And, by
the way, let's cut the PC crap about Jefferson as the father of
the First Amendment; he wasn't even at the Constitutional
Convention. He was in France as an ambassador, gazing with
approval at budding French Revolutionaries.) For many decades
after the Constitution was enacted several states still had
religious litmus tests for public office and sent tax dollars
directly to the churches of their choice.
In other words, it is the very First Amendment that
Scarborough mangles which permits New Yorkers to block the
construction of a mosque. The First Amendment was designed to
protect the majority from the tyranny of a religious minority
favored by the federal government. What radical Islam's useful
idiots in the White House and the press call "religious freedom,"
the founders would have called insanely dumb religious relativism
and self-hating stupidity.