Excerpt:
This isn't a sectarian site, so let me reassure the readers that I don't intend to keep on indefinitely discussing the particulars of various Christian churches' attitudes toward religious toleration. Indeed, there have been a few complaints that I am giving aid and comfort to some dhimmis who wish to make an argument of moral equivalence between the intolerance practiced by Christians at various points in the past, and that prescribed by Muslims always and everywhere. Guilty as charged. I think that such arguments are extremely important to address, because they strike at the heart of one of the most vexing issues in the fight against Islamic supremacism: The resistance of conservative Christians to enlist in our ranks. We needn't spend much time wondering why we can't win over lax, worldly leftist believers who have internalized the suicidal, anti-Western ideology of Multiculturalism (brilliantly summed up by Robert Spencer in his contribution to a new book of essays aimed at college students, Disorientation). These people have so overreacted against the vice of Anger that they have blown right past the virtue of Patience, stumbling straight into the opposing vice, Servility. It's like fighting off Gluttony by turning into an anorexic--only here the good thing you're trying to enjoy in moderation isn't food, but self-respect. Modern liberal Christians have made themselves the prison-bitches of Islamic thugs, and now they congratulate themselves for turning the other butt-cheek. Perhaps, through the Stockholm Syndrome, they've come to enjoy it.
Such people are past persuasion. If the Ground Zero mosque is built--and some outraged 9/11 family member doesn't get a pilot's license and fly a private jet into the thing--these pallid Uniting Methodists will troop into the Park 51 "community center" for lectures about Sufi mysticism, and pick up paperbacks of Rumi's verse from the hijabbed sale girls in the gift shop. When the next Islam-sponsored atrocity occurs on American soil, they will act like most Swedes, and fret about its potential for threatening "diversity." Which is, as we all know, our strength.