Posted on 10/27/2001 7:25:06 AM PDT by Senator Pardek
Theres been much talk that the roots of Islamic terrorism are buried in Middle Eastern and North African poverty. This might seem odd to those who dont pay attention to the region when its sons arent flying passenger planes into buildings. After all, fuel prices often come close to $2.00 a gallon. We know how much gas our SUVs guzzle, and Middle Eastern countries sell a lot of oil. But poor is exactly what millions of people in the region are, with per capita incomes ranging from $18,000 in the United Arab Emirates to less than $400 in Yemen. Even the residents of relatively wealthy states have seen their lots decline, as population surges and oil revenues recede.
Yet if the root causes of terrorism are open to debate, the root causes of this poverty is no mystery: Thats what countries get when they combine socialist economists with totalitarian politics.
Every year, Freedom House publishes "Freedom in the World," a report which, among other things, details how North Africa and the Middle East have managed to buck a global trend toward democracy and civil liberties. Also annually, The Wall Street Journal and the Heritage Foundation team up to produce an Index of Economic Freedom. Here again, North Africa and the Middle East fare consistently poorly.
Lack of freedom has consequences. Saudi Arabia, our supposed ally, rates poorly both in civil and economic liberties, and has experienced a relative economic decline in recent years. Its 7,000 princes arent hurting, but the same cant be said of its quickly growing non-royal population, which has seen per capita income fall from $28,000 in the early 1980s to less than $7,000 today. This slide has destabilized the Saudi social contract, in which the subjects refrain from political agitation and the government refrains from asking them to work. Saudi leaders are currently trying to create productive jobs, which isnt easy in a country only partly open to outside capital and totally closed to outside ideas.
Similarly, Egypt, which pulls in nearly 10 percent of its budget in American foreign aid, is rated not free by Freedom House and mostly unfree in the economic index. Like anyone whos been sentient during the last 30 years, both regimes must understand the relationship between freedom and prosperity. And indeed, Saudi Arabia has recently opened some sectors of its economy to foreign investment, albeit with many strings attached. Egypt, meanwhile, has gradually moved away from complete socialism -- every university graduate, for example, is no longer guaranteed a government job.
But theres a critical relationship between economic freedom and political freedom, and neither government is willing to budge on the latter. Not a single country in the Arab world tolerates a free press. In Saudi Arabia and Egypt, the government controls the airwaves and hires and fires the editors of the print press. In Saudi Arabia, according to Freedom House, "Freedom of expression is severely restricted by prohibitions on criticism of the government, Islam, and the ruling family." In Egypt, those who criticize the government can wind up in jail.
While no one is allowed to criticize the regimes, the regimes are free to criticize whomever they want. To distract from their horrible political practices and economic shortcomings, they scapegoat. Muslims are poor because Jews are rich; the United States, which fought for Muslims in Bosnia and Kosovo, is actually an Allah-hating Great Satan. In this unreal world, the September 11 attacks were committed not by Islamic radicals, but by Israeli agents.
The lack of freedom cant completely account for the September 11 attacks and the others that are sure to follow. Nothing can. Bin Laden himself is wealthy, not poor, and many of the hit men were educated members of the middle class. The larger burden falls on a strain of Islam that dehumanizes the infidel.
But these factors arent mutually exclusive. The religious radicalism is certainly fueled by the pathetic performance of many closed Middle Eastern societies in the modern world. In a worldview that holds Muslims superior to infidels, its difficult to accept it if youre not measuring up in any visible way. If were so great, many an angry young Muslim must ask, why are we so miserable?
The popular answer is that foreign powers are screwing you. The correct answer is that your own political powers are screwing you. And that things wont get better until thats fixed.
The same phenonmenon shows up here, too ("The Japs/Krauts/Chinks/Wetbacks are destroying us economically").
The fail to realize the problems are caused by Washington.
Yep. Dubya's open borders "free trade" policies will drive compensation for American labor down to Third World levels.
That'll teach 'em!!! </sarcasm>
The population in Islam has exploded. There is no economic system that can keep up with it. The best correlation for a war-like state is having a surplus of men of military age.
The countries discussed are trying to live and produce by adherence to a seventh century prophet. They look strong and determined but they are on the edge of a catastrophe. Following their present course means an ever growing population of people who are ill prepared to live and survive in a modern world.
Also, Saudi Arabia now has a large national debt. To pay their debts and their princes they need an oil price of at least 24$ per barrel. It is now about 19$. They continue to run defiicits and only the "princes" and their immediate supporters have any kind of life at all.
When the radical masses there finally have enough of The House of Saud and take over, the world is in for a world of hurt. It will be like Russia c. 1917 all over again...
You are bitching about Mexicans.
Your hem is showing Willie, and it's white.
However, I'm still trying to figure out why Pat wants trade sanctions on every country on the planet besides Iraq ;)
Good point. You gotta do something to keep them busy,and sending the kids off to be used as cannon fodder is a tried and true tactic. As a sidebar of sorts,I remember reading somewhere that one of the reasons for the Norman Conquest was that William the Conqueror(a few years before he had "Conqueror" added to his name)had a surplus of knights and a shortage of manors. The shortage probably wasn't the only reason for the conquest,but having a war handy sure gave him something to do with the excess menfolk,and after the war was over,it kept them busy trying to pacify their new subjects,instead of troubling William.
I wonder if the irony (?) is lost on them when they post their insufferable screeds at FR on their incredibly affordable $800 PCs (thanks to "corporatism"), which are capable of most anything, except make them see "visions", or suck out the venom when the snakes they are handling bites them.
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