Excerpt:
After Rick Santorum's surprising show in Iowa, he may be the only candidate standing between Mitt Romney and the Republican nomination. But there is no contest between the two as to which demonstrates a more realistic understanding of the threat of jihad and Islamic supremacism. In that arena, Santorum wins hands down.
"Jihadism is evil and we need to say what it is," Santorum said last March. "We need to define it and say what it is. And it is evil. Sharia law is incompatible with American jurisprudence and our Constitution." He added correctly, and in sharp contrast to the prevailing view, that "Sharia law is not just a religious code. It is also a governmental code. It happens to be both religious in nature and origin, but it is a civil code. And it is incompatible with the civil code of the United States."
Even though he made these remarks almost a year ago, as he rises in prominence, Santorum is going to get a lot of heat for this. The Islamic supremacist sympathizers in the mainstream media began calling to these remarks after the Iowa caucus, accusing Santorum of the phantom malady of "Islamophobia."