That is hilarious. I love the ones that tell us weed will make us go crazy and kill our families. The communism-paranoia was quite ridiculous, but there were solid concerns by the west in the way Russia walled itself in post-ww2. Seperating what is a real concern and what is a false fear can be pretty hard. Jihadists need to be dealt with. How they are being dealt with is debatable, but not that they exist.
One thing I'm sick of is people like Oliver who immediately equate recognising a threat with being afraid.
I personally think Radical Islam has the potential, at current progress, of threatening the future of western civilisation in the next 50 - 100 years.
This is not some sort of irrational fear that leads me to this conclusion, it is a logical prediction based on my understanding of observable phenomenon. Many people probably disagree with me. That's fine. I'm sure others have solid arguments that come to a different conclusion. What I don't appreciate is when people like Oliver simply dismiss my views out of hand as a gross overreaction based on irrational fear.
The big problem is people like Oliver have completely the wrong mindset regarding Islamic terrorism. They think in terms of specific isolated attacks, with specific causes, that can be isolated from all other attacks.
As the writer of the "My plea to fellow Muslims" article discussed, this totally fails to take into account the foundation of Radical Islam - that is a very dangerous and intolerant ideology.
This ideology allows for acts of terror against opponents. All opponents. Yes, some followers of the ideology have issues with western presence in the Middle East, and thus they use the methods approved by their ideology to express those issues. So yes, a specific given act can be directly caused by western foreign policy.
But distaste for a US presence in Saudi Arabia, or distaste for British troops in Iraq is not their common ideology. That's just a particular issue some of them have. Some of them have issues with women in the west being treated equal. Some of them have issues with democracy. Some have issues with capitalism.
None of these are the root ideology that binds them together in common cause, and allows them to carry out terrorist attacks.
That root ideology is simple, and clearly explained in the article I mentioned before:
The centuries-old reasoning of Islamic jurists also extends to the world stage where the rules of interaction between Dar ul-Islam (the Land of Islam) and Dar ul-Kufr (the Land of Unbelief) have been set down to cover almost every matter of trade, peace and war.
What radicals and extremists do is to take these premises two steps further. Their first step has been to reason that since there is no Islamic state in existence, the whole world must be Dar ul-Kufr. Step two: since Islam must declare war on unbelief, they have declared war upon the whole world. Many of my former peers, myself included, were taught by Pakistani and British radical preachers that this reclassification of the globe as a Land of War (Dar ul-Harb) allows any Muslim to destroy the sanctity of the five rights that every human is granted under Islam: life, wealth, land, mind and belief. In Dar ul-Harb, anything goes, including the treachery and cowardice of attacking civilians.
Source
Yes, western foreign policy might dictate which targets are chosen. Specific individual attacks may be be a direct response to specific action by westerners.
But underneath all of this is their ideology. Even if the entire western hemisphere totally withdraws from the Middle East, in the eyes of these radicals, the world will still be Dar ul-Kufr. As long as there is no Pan-global Islamic State the world will be Dar ul-Kufr. As long as the world is Dar ul-Kufr the attacks will keep coming.
-Gumboot