No matter the situation, no matter the cause or regime, the terrorist is the weaker party. Even when the terrorists are the majority, fighting against an oligarchal or tyrannical minority, they are wrong because they don't have a judiciary, executive or legislature; they are wrong because they don't have power; they are wrong because they are weak.
Monday, 30 June 2008
Monday, 9 June 2008
The Islamist
As I read this acclaimed book by Ed Husain, I couldn't help notice the sheer amount of editorial mistakes: from the reckless typo and lazy capitalisation inconsistency to the culturally ignorant Arabic term cock-ups and the never-ending parenthesis. I wouldn't usually be so anal as to complain about these things if the publisher wasn't as affluent and prestigious as Penguin Books Ltd.
Oh yes, the book itself. Well, aside from making me pull my hair out, I did enjoy the book. 'Enjoy' is probably not the right word here in light of the fact that I was horrified by it. Let me say rather that the book is informative and relevant. It has a lot to say about the current state of Islamism, as well giving a good overview of the current state of modern Islam. It is the first book by a former Islamist and therefore offers a vital perspective.
It gave me priceless behind-the-scenes knowledge of things I always see but never give too much thought to, and he is the first to justify my old confusion of Wahabbis and Islamists, both of whom adopt the same puritanical and literalist brand of Islam. I always thought they were one and the same before I heard each condemn the other. Husain reveals how the prevalence of Wahabbi mosques, literature and proselytising helped create fertile ground for the growth of modern Islamism.
While he sings the praises of the West and its freedoms, there is an implicit criticism of the 'West' through his scathing attack on Saudi Arabia and Wahabbism. At least there was for me. It reminded me of the film Syriana that showed so effectively how no one is an innocent party in this current war on terror, and how, rather than a clash of civilisations, what is really happening is a clash of many egos at the top of the political power chain. If Britain truly wanted to stamp out extremism on its shores, it can ban anything coming in from Saudi Arabia, for a start, and decapitate the current terrorism beast in one fell swoop.
Husain is right to say that the freedoms enjoyed by Hizb-ut-Tahrir in Britain are at great odds with their ban and the imprisonment, toture and execution of its members in Arab countries. He makes the damning point that the Hizb wouldn't be where it is today, wouldn't be able to recuit and grow, if it wasn't for the freedom and welfare provided to it by Britain. The question remains how productive banning them would be.
Posted by Ala Abbas at 04:24 0 comments Links to this post
Labels: Hizb-ut-Tahrir, Islamism, Wahabbism
Saturday, 7 June 2008
flat earth news
Myths of the mass media
Flat Earth News by Nick Davies; Chatto and Windus, 2008; pp 416.
The mainstream media have never made news of themselves because they have every reason to perpetuate the myth that they are the conduits of pure factual information about the world; that they are the founts of unadulterated truth and wisdom. This myth remains subconsciously in society until someone in the media themselves decisively stands up and points out that the emperor has no clothes. Nick Davies has not only revealed the machinations of media emperors in his new book, but has revealed their disastrous consequences for the state of the world. The book analyses every part of the news factory: from sourcing and supplying, to news desk assembling, to reveal that rather than being the result of some grand conspiracy, the sorry state of the world’s media is merely the sum of the twin human evils of greed and incompetence.
Davies demonstrates how a lot of PR is outright lies and pure manufactured publicity stunts. An overstretched media outlet that is looking to cut more costs will welcome pre-set and pre-written streamlined news from PR companies, when all it has to do is run it and pass it off as its own. There are no safeguards in the media to prevent them from becoming hosts to all kinds of subtle advertising that works so brilliantly because we not only don’t know we’re being advertised to, but think we’re being simply and edifyingly informed.
Yet more unscrupulously, out and out black propaganda is passed off as independent journalism. Davies shows how a lot of media outlets are themselves subsidiaries of intelligence services, which pump out direct propaganda to other countries, especially those they are seeking to invade. The battle for
Posted by Ala Abbas at 10:48 0 comments Links to this post
Labels: media, published work, reviews

