Muslim Brotherhood “Machinations”, Or Vox Populi?(AT). Andrew G. Bostom.Vote Compass is an interactive electoral literacy application, originally founded by Clifton van der Linden at the University of Toronto and subsequently applied internationally by political scientists, including within Egypt.
Dutch Political Scientist André
Krouwel, working with an academic team of Egyptian
political scientists at Vote
Compass Egypt, was interviewed for a story published today (12/8/12) in
the Vancouver
Sun (hat tip Diana
West) about data on Egyptian attitudes toward the draft constitution.
Despite Egypt’s ongoing political crisis, including violent clashes precipitated
by President Morsi’s assertion of
executive powers to break the 6-month deadlock which had stalled Egypt’s
constitutional draft and referendum process, Krouwel (ostensibly speaking for
his Vote Compass
Egypt team) acknowledges,
About 70 per cent of the population will
vote in favor of the constitution.
This overwhelming support for the draft
constitution was registered despite the fact that as my colleague Andrew
McCarthy reaffirms today (12/8/12), the charter effectively, “denies freedom
of conscience,” and “denies freedom of expression.”
Dating
back to within a few days of their publication in April, 2007, I have repeatedly
highlighted data from Egypt indicating that 74% of Egyptians favored
“strict” application of the Sharia in general.
As recently as December 2010, Pew polling data revealed that 84% of Egyptian Muslims rejected freedom of conscience in the most ugly terms claiming apostates should be killed (i.e., that percentage would likely be well over 90% if less draconian punishments, such as imprisonment and beating till recantation were queried), 82% favor stoning adulterers to death, and 77% approved of mutilating punishments for theft.
Moreover, just last week when seven expatriate Copts and Terry Jones
were condemned
to death for “blasphemy” not a single high profile Egyptian “liberal” or
“non-Islamist,” or “authentic moderate reformer” — whatever moniker one wishes
to use for such individuals — has forcefully and unequivocally condemned this
heinous verdict in the Egyptian public square.
None of this bedrock, totalitarian,
liberty-crushing mass Islamic mindset can be blamed on the behind the scenes
“machinations of the Muslim Brotherhood (MB)”; it is merely a reflection of
Islamic beliefs and mores the MB openly shares with the mass of Egyptians, and
has shared since the undercurrent of public longings in the 1920s first lead to
the MB’s flowering.
Islamologist James Heyworth-Dunne’s
observations, published shortly after his
death in 1949, made clear that “…should the ikhwan [Brotherhood]
acquire power,” it would impose the orthodox Islamic, Sharia-based restrictions
advocated by founder Hasan al-Banna (i.e., such as the compulsory veiling of
women; closing “un-Islamic” newspapers and periodicals, and making impossible
the purchase of English and French novels; closing bars, restaurants, and
cabarets, while forbidding the sale or consumption of alcohol and scourging
anyone found consuming alcoholic beverages). However, Heyworth-Dunne added that
these restrictions merely represented a “…return to their Islamic customs
which, in fact prevailed only 25 years ago.” Thus Heyworth-Dunne (writing
prior to 1950) confirms that before 1925 (or earlier, i.e., “25 years ago”) —
antedating by at least three years the advent of the MB — their “version” of
Sharia and its mores represented in fact a recent, previously longstanding
status quo.Hmmmm.........Welcome to A.D. 630?Read the full story here.
No comments:
Post a Comment