Had a GI used “Mein Kampf” for target practice, Patton wouldn’t have kissed “Mein Kampf” to appease Nazis



Diana West has this commentary on Townhall: Blind Defense of Koran Abrogates Reality.

It begins:

What interested me most about the official reaction to this month’s Koran Sniper story — apologies galore, a kissed Koran for probable former insurgents, a punished soldier — was what it made vivid about our society: American deference to Islam, from the sacralization of Islam’s book to the ideology of anti-infidelism, supremacism and totalitarian conquest within it. After all, Maj. Gen. Jeffrey Hammond called the sniper’s action “criminal behavior,” but the only law broken was Islamic law.

Contrast that, I wrote last week, with the repudiation Americans once displayed toward a similarly anti-Semitic, supremacist and warlike ideology as codified in “Mein Kampf” — the treatise Winston Churchill dubbed “the new Koran of faith and war, turgid, verbose, but pregnant with its message.” Had a mid-century GI used “Mein Kampf” for target practice, I noted, Gen. George S. Patton would hardly have kissed one to appease a band of former Nazis . . .



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