Breakpoint: "Islamic Fascists? What's In A Name?" by Chuck Colson
I'm not going to comment on the commentary but I do want to provide a couple of quotes to strike up some interest:
"The expression 'Islamic fascism' is used in order to distinguish between ordinary Muslims and the perpetrators of terrorism. It serves also to make a point that our enemy isn’t Islam itself, but a particular kind of Islam that perpetrates terrorism and tyranny. These are the distinctions that groups like CAIR ought to be supporting."
"As Stephen Morris of Johns Hopkins recently wrote, fascism’s goal is to 'achieve national greatness' through totalitarian control of both political and social life; it seeks to create an empire; and it 'aspires to re-create a mythical past.'"
"The expression 'Islamic fascism' is used in order to distinguish between ordinary Muslims and the perpetrators of terrorism. It serves also to make a point that our enemy isn’t Islam itself, but a particular kind of Islam that perpetrates terrorism and tyranny. These are the distinctions that groups like CAIR ought to be supporting."
"As Stephen Morris of Johns Hopkins recently wrote, fascism’s goal is to 'achieve national greatness' through totalitarian control of both political and social life; it seeks to create an empire; and it 'aspires to re-create a mythical past.'"
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