03/05/2018 by Raymond Ibrahim
A February
Rasmussen report sheds light
on just how divorced from reality millions of American liberal voters are.
After pointing out that “Democrats are more likely to think Muslims are
mistreated in America than to think Christians are persecuted in the Islamic
world,” the report elaborates:
Fifty-six percent
(56%) of Democrats, however, believe most Muslims in this country [America] are
mistreated, a view shared by only 22% of Republicans and 39% of voters not
affiliated with either major party. Fewer Democrats (47%) think most Christians
are mistreated in the Islamic world, compared to 76% of GOP voters and 64% of
unaffiliateds.… Women are more likely than men to think most American Muslims
are mistreated here but less likely to believe Christians are mistreated in the
Islamic world. Nearly as many voters under 40 think most Muslims are
mistreated in America (51%) as think most Christians are mistreated in the
Muslim world (57%).
To put these dismal
statistics in perspective, consider some facts. Open Doors, an international
human rights organization that publishes annual reports concerning the global
persecution of Christians, noted in its most recent report: “215 million
Christians experience high levels of persecution.” During 2017, a reported
3,066 Christians were killed, 1,252 abducted, and 1,020 raped or sexually
harassed on account of their faith. And 793 churches were attacked or
destroyed.
The overwhelming
majority of this slaughter and destruction occurred in 50 nations — 38 of which
are Muslim-majority. “Islamic oppression” is further responsible for the
“extreme persecution” of Christians — meaning the abuse, rape, imprisonment, or
slaughter of Christians on sight — in eight of the worst ten nations.
“Every day,” the organization adds, “six women are raped,
sexually harassed or are forced into marriage to a Muslim under threat of death
due to their Christian faith.”
The above statistics
are actually conservative. Based on the findings of the Italian-based Center for Studies on New Religions, “90,000 Christians died for their
faith in 2016” alone, a great many under Islam. It’s worth noting
that the overwhelming majority of Muslims persecuting Christians are not
“terrorists” (at least not formally), but rather come from all rungs of Muslim
society.
Take Egypt, for example (the
17th worst nation where Christians experience “very high persecution”).
According to the report, along with “violent religious groups,” two other
segments of society are “Very Strong[ly]” responsible for the persecution: (1)
“Non-Christian religious leaders” — meaning Muslim clerics, sheikhs, imams, and
the rest — “at any level from local to national”; and (2) “Normal citizens
(people from the general public), including mobs.”
Similarly, “officials
at any level from local to national” are “strongly responsible” for the
“oppression” of Egypt’s Christians, particularly “through their failure to
vindicate the rights of Christians and also through their discriminatory acts
which violate the fundamental rights of Christians.” That the same segments of
Muslim society are involved in the same patterns of persecution of Christians
throughout the Islamic world — despite the racial, linguistic, cultural, and
economic-political differences of all these African, Asian, Arab, and Caucasian
nations — further underscores the only commonality, or true source of the
persecution: Islam.
Now, compare all this
to the supposedly worse — in liberal minds — “mistreatment” Muslims suffer in
America. According to a November 2017 Pew report: “In 2016,
there were 127 reported [Muslim] victims of aggravated or simple
assault.” In the preceding decades, assaults on Muslims averaged around 50 a
year. Even if this number were accurate, it pales in comparison to what
millions of Christians — not 127 — are experiencing under Islam. But the fact
is many of these anti-Muslim hate crimes are later found to have been fabricated or
grossly exaggerated. Note, for instance, how the Pew report conflates
“assaults” with “simple assaults” — even though the latter “does not involve physical
contact with the victim.”
Moreover, Muslims in
America do not experience institutionalized persecution — that
is, persecution at the hands of governments, authorities, and police — as
Christians under Islam do. And there is a final ironic difference: Muslim
persecution of Christians is religiously motivated and built on Islamic
doctrines that portray non-Muslims as subhuman chattel. And that’s what
the “assaults” and “simple assaults” on Muslims are generally motivated by, or
rather in response to: Americans knowing and disliking what Muslims are about.
That such assaults are so exceptionally rare proves that Americans understand
what makes such values incompatible with our laws.
Nonetheless, and as
usual, all these actual facts have little to do with what a
significantly large segment of the American voting population — mostly
liberals/Democrats, a majority under 40 and female — believe. Why they are so
misinformed becomes apparent when one understands that liberal media is
dedicated to maintaining liberal Narratives at all costs: in this case, that
Christians are always the aggressors, Muslims always the misunderstood victims.
Thus, when journalist
Shannon Bream recently announced a forthcoming segment on the growth of
Christian persecution around the world, ABC’s Matthew Dowd tweeted: “Maybe you
can talk about the bigger problem which is persecution of Muslims in America
and around the globe. Bigger issue.” The truly “bigger issue” is that tens of
millions of Americans are so deluded as to believe — and inevitably base their
votes on — the inverse of reality.
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