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Dorothy Rabinowitz in the Wall Street Journal
today has a bracing piece about the almost surreal disconnection
between what’s increasingly clear about the Ft. Hood killer, Maj. Nidal
Hasan, and what officials and some commentators seem unable to
acknowledge. As she writes: “It was an act of terrorism by a man with a
record of expressing virulent, anti-American, pro-jihadist sentiments.
All were conspicuous signs of danger his Army superiors chose to
ignore.” She quotes Army Chief of Staff Gen. George Casey Jr. as
saying, “"This terrible event would be an even greater tragedy if our
diversity becomes a casualty." As Mona Charen
points out, the idea of a witch hunt is false and dangerous. Surely the
general doesn't mean that in our quest for diversity in the military,
we embrace fanatics in our midst. Rooting them out has to be to the
benefit of the brave, patriot Muslims who serve. Ralph Peters
makes the larger point that, “By protecting the fanatics, we betray the
peaceful majority of our Muslim citizens, leaving them afraid to speak
out, since the feds shield the fanatics in charge of their mosques and
communities” ... (Read the rest of this article in DoubleX.)
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