A quarter of Britons think Churchill was a myth

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Speaking of atheists telling me that my has no basis in reality (Robert, why haven’t you written? I miss you…):

Britons are losing their grip on reality, according to a poll out Monday which showed that nearly a quarter think was a myth while the majority reckon was real.

The survey found that 47 percent thought the 12th century English king was a myth.

And 23 percent thought prime minister Churchill was made up. The same percentage thought nurse did not actually exist.

Three percent thought , one of ’s most famous writers, is a work of fiction himself.

Indian political leader and victor the also appeared in the top 10 of people thought to be myths.

Meanwhile, 58 percent thought ’s fictional detective Holmes actually existed; 33 percent thought the same of ‘ fictional pilot and adventurer .

What does this demonstrate?

Well, for starters, it goes to show a couple things. Yes, it does go to show that people can believe that people who never did exist were, in fact, real people, as in the case of Sherlock Holmes. But it can also go to show that, in spite of any weight of evidence to the contrary, people can mistakenly think that people who did actually exist were nothing more than cultural myths.

47% of Britons think King Richard is just a thing of fantasy, and almost a quarter of Britons think of Winston Churchill in the same way. Maybe was just a myth — even I can admit that is a possibility. But then, what if Jesus wasn’t a myth, but was in fact everything the Gospels say He was? Atheists who assert that Jesus never existed couldn’t possibly be…what’s the word?…wrong, eh? They might not be making the same mistake a quarter of Britons are?

(In Soviet Russia, hat tips you: Vox Day)

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A better primer would be hard to ask for

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provides a quick, three-paragraph summation of the challenges that the Western world is facing today. In what can’t really be called a surprise (except perhaps by a progressive mind to crippled by multicultural pieties), takes the lead role:

We (the U.S. and allies) are winning in , and , and losing everywhere else. The ns are now murdering independent Lebanese politicians with impunity. The pressure on has been relieved. is teetering towards a civil and military collapse from which only the Islamists can gain. Islamist demands for the imposition of h, and for the legal persecution of religious minorities, have entered the mainstream of political life in countries that were once free of religious zealotry — , , . Islamist terrorists are winning effective control over the remoter Muslim-settled regions in many countries of and , creating streams of Christian refugees from the southern Philippines, of Buddhist refugees from southern , of Christians and Animists fleeing south across the breadth of Africa.

Saudi-sponsored Wahabi Islam is consolidating its hold over the mosques of the West, and radicalizing the huge Muslim immigrant communities that have congregated in almost every major European city. Across , and increasingly in North America (and as we’ve seen in Canada in the obscene “human rights” trials of and ), the most radical Muslims are exploiting state multiculturalism, to score victories over free speech and win pathetic apologies from anyone accused of the thought crime of “.”

Islam is a broad and ancient religion — we are not discussing that, today. We are discussing instead the contemporary reality. For internationally, Islam has been morphing into a violent and puritanical cult. Yet this very large and very hard fact is being rendered undiscussable, in historical or any other terms.

And a quick note on the current state of affairs in , a concept which is broadly applicable to the whole of the Muslim world at present:

In Egypt as elsewhere, to say that “the great majority of Muslims are peaceful, unaggressive people, just trying to get on with their lives” is to utter something deeply fatuous. The great majority of Germans were likewise, in the 1930s.

As Kathy Shaidle is fond of pointing out, Paul Revere was not credited with shouting “Some of the British are coming!” And that is because he did not need to, nor did the Minutemen need to be alerted to the impending onslaught with a wordy explanation that the Redcoats about to descend upon them were not representative of the wider majority of British folk world-wide. Likewise, in , we didn’t go to war against some of the Germans, or some of the Japanese.

The common thread between those two examples, which is unfortunately missing from many peoples’ analysis of the current situation of the West vs. the Islamic world, is the concept of war. Whether a war for independence, or a globe-spanning war against fascism, it’s easier to look at the historical examples above and note that while it may be true that while our forebears weren’t so careful as to classify the enemy beyond using broad cultural categories, that is explicable because of the urgency of the conflict taking place at the time. The extension of such an argument, then, is that we in the West today are not currently embroiled in a war with Islam.

Which is true, in a sense…that is, in the sense that no war has formally been declared by means of the normal diplomatic channels. But in a more important sense — objective reality — the war is already on, and has been for some time. If, under Sharia, the average Muslim (even though s/he might otherwise be a decent sort, and quite personable), regards the world as divided into two realms — that of Islam and that of harb () — then whether or not any Islamic nation or group has formally issued a declaration of war is irrelevant. If in fact it is the religious obligation of Muslims everywhere to “fight those who do not believe in Allah, nor in the latter day, nor do they prohibit what Allah and His Messenger have prohibited, nor follow the religion of truth, out of those who have been given the Book, until they pay the tax in acknowledgment of superiority and they are in a state of subjection,” (), then whether or not any war has been formally declared is irrelevant. Under Sharia, it is the religious duty of every Muslim to strive to bring about the day when Islam rules over all other faiths and demands their submission.

And even the rather typical sidestep that some will attempt to do in regard to the opening like of the passage above — that is, make the argument that the Muslim and the Judeo-Christian are the same being, so the above passage does not apply to other monotheistic religions — is, at best, a half truth. Even if it were completely true, and even if Christians and Jews get a pass (and if one believes the rhetoric coming out of the two major players on the global Islamic scene, Iran and , there is no way that will get a pass), that still wouldn’t bode well for many people in Western society, and so is still an idea which cannot be tolerated.

But here’s the thing: the Muslim Allah and the Judeo-Christian God are, theologically, not the same being. Oh, I’m willing to grant that in the final summation, they may well be the same, but unfortunately that is beyond the scope of human knowledge. And if one looks at the revelation that has come to (which inherits directly from Judaism), and if one then looks at the teachings that purportedly came to through the angel , there is no way to reconcile the Judeo-Christian conception of who and what God is with the Islamic one.

So even Jews and Christians aren’t exempt from Sura 9:29, if in fact they, and Muslims, stick to their theological traditions and exegesis.

War may not have been declared, but there is a war going on, pitting the ideals of the West — which, unfortunately, few enough people in the West have the necessary courage to defend — against those of the jihad. Already, this war has claimed many lives. But mere exchanges of casualties are but a small part of any war. Territory is what matters. And, as has been pointed out on this blog and elsewhere, in many parts of the West, the West is losing ground to radicalized forms of Islam, especially in Europe. That trend may already be irreversible, as well as the trends being seen in places like Pakistan, which even now teeters on the brink of falling into Islamist hands. When nuclear-armed nations like Pakistan fall into the hands of the , and when nations like begin to adopt an ever more Islamic character — and then of a decidedly Islamist bent — what will that do for the safety and security of the rest of the Western world?

Update: Welcome, Steynians!

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Pic of the Day #477

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The day after we saw the and the , Grace and I set out to see a few more archaeological sites in the middle of . The first place we set out for was an ancient graveyard, and along the way we had to pass down a rather busy, dirty, noisy road.

I couldn’t help but noticing that some of the buildings along the way were in…bad shape.

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We saw it on , and we saw it again here: a lot of buildings in look as though nobody has bothered to repair the bomb damage from . This was just one more example.

That said, I managed to capture the building from a pretty appealing angle. Edit-wise, I had to do some (clouds can make for a very bright background), as well as some fringe reduction. That was all in . I then tried to run the ‘Enhance’ option on the picture, but nothing really changed. It’s rare when that happens, but when it happens I usually take it as a sign that I got the post-processing almost exactly where it needed to be.

Where was this taken?
 
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