Gary Brecher writes:
If your  exterminator says he just killed 200 rats down in the basement, is that good  news or bad news?
On the one hand, it's good those rats are dead. On the other hand, I thought we  got rid of them years ago, and now there's hundreds? What's going on?
That's the Big Question everyone should be asking in Afghanistan. NATO's  claiming we killed 500 Taliban near Kandahar this month. That's a mighty  impressive body count, sure, but if Nam taught us one thing, it's that body  counts are a bad sign. For all sorts of reasons, starting with basic common  sense: if we're killing that many, how many more are running around out there?  ...
We were spoiled by initial success in Afghanistan; we got the Taliban down and  then just stopped paying attention. Dunno if you remember this far back, but  after 9/11, when it was obvious we had to go in there and root out Osama,  everybody was saying Afghanistan was unwinnable, "the graveyard of  empires," etc. And the campaign seemed to stall at first, till we took  Mazar-I-Sharif and sent the Northern Alliance rolling into Kabul. Boom, game  over, victory party, let's go home.
Except the new wars just don't work that way. The tough part was really just  beginning. The biggest problem once we took Kabul was tribal. Reporters are  always calling the Taliban "Islamic extremists," but it's way simpler  than that: the Talibs are Pushtun, and our allies in the Northern Alliance were  their old tribal enemies the Tajiks, Uzbeks and a few free-agent Hazaras.
The Pushtun are the biggest tribe in the country, if you can call it that, by  far. Afghanistan is 42% Pushtun, and the second-biggest group, the Tajiks, are  only 27%. Pushtuns are -- now how can I say this nicely? -- insane. The craziest  Taliban rules, like demanding every man have a beard that was at least ZZ Top  length, aren't Mohammed's rules; they're just Pushtun tribal ways.
It's like if the Baptists took over in Fresno, they'd make it God's rule that  every guy had to have an extended cab on his pickup, and if you asked where in  Scripture it says that, they'd shoot you. That's the Pushtun way: total tribal  insanity, all the time. They're so "sexist" that feminists might like  them, because they don't even think of women as "sex objects." To a Pushtun  guy, nine-year-old boys are the sexiest thing on earth.
Professor Victor Davis Hanson might approve, because from what I've read, his  classical Greek heroes felt the same way. The Pushtuns are so classical that to  them, women are just labor-saving and baby-making machines.
And never mind peace; these Pushtuns may be gay but they sure ain't sissies.  They love making war, and they're real good at it.
Also, they don't get the whole "literacy" thing. They're not  interested in becoming entrepreneurs or learning self-esteem or personal hygiene  or compassion or any of that crap. And let's be honest, the joy they felt  running around Central Asia blowing up Buddhas and blasting infidels is the same  joy a frat boy feels running around a 10-kegger party with a bra on his head.  It's pure fun 'n joy, Pushtun-style.
So once we'd taken Afghanistan we had this leftover problem, which was that  nearly half the population consisted of these lunatics who had no stake in  "peace," didn't want "peace," and thought "peace"  was a lot of newfangled nonsense only fit for heterosexuals, foreigners, and  assorted sissies. Especially because "peace" came to their town on  tanks and APCs driven by their old enemies the Tajiks and Uzbeks.
Worse yet, right behind those tanks came American do-gooders whose idea of  pacifying the Pushtun was doing incredibly naive stuff like starting a TV news  show with female anchorpersons or whatever you call them. I'm not making this  up. First thing the US occupation officials did in Kabul was start a news  station with some 19-year-old Pushtun girl as anchor. That was our idea of  winning hearts and minds. That's what was going to calm down those bearded angry  dudes: seeing a perfectly saleable daughter telling them the news, as if she was  the one laying down the law.
I get tired of having to say it, but: not everybody thinks like we think. Not  everybody wants what we want. The Pushtun want (a) somebody to kill; (b) women  kept in their place, which is somewhere between the clay oven and the livestock;  (c) nobody reminding them that there are other ways to live.   [More]
Ah, the Pushtuns (a.k.a.,  Pashtuns, Pathans)! Life just wouldn't be the same without them.
I've used it before, but here's a quote  from Churchill's great memoir for boys, My Early Life: A Roving Commission,  about his experience in the 1890s in a punitive expedition against the Pushtuns  near the Khyber Pass:
Except at  harvest time, when self-preservation enjoins a temporary truce, the Pathan  tribes are always engaged in private or public war. Every man is a warrior, a  politician, and a theologian. Every large house is a real feudal fortress made,  it is true, only of sunbaked clay, but with battlements, turrets, loopholes,  flanking towers, drawbridges, etc., complete. Every village has its defense.  Every family cultivates its vendetta; every clan, its feud. The numerous tribes  and combination of tribes all have their accounts to settle with one another.  Nothing is ever forgotten and very few debts are left unpaid… The life of the  Pathan is thus full of interest…
Into this happy world the nineteenth century brought two new facts; the  breech-loading rifle and the British Government. The first was an enormous  luxury and blessing; the second, an unmitigated nuisance. The convenience of the  breech-loading, and still more of the magazine, rifle was nowhere more  appreciated than in the Indian highlands. A weapon which could kill with  accuracy at fifteen hundred yards opened a whole new vista of delights to every  family or clan which could acquire it. One could actually remain in one's own  house and fire at one's neighbor nearly a mile away.
One of the oddities of  cultural anthropology is that, despite 2000 miles of rough country in-between,  the Pushtuns are quite similar in many ways to the desert Arabs from whom  Mohammed arose.
In my reductionist way, I see Mohammed as a public-spirited reformer trying to  get his fellow desert raiders to stop being so bloody awful toward each other.  The problem with living in the desert is there is no law and order. Recall the  early scene in "Lawrence of Arabia" when Lawrence and his Bedouin  guide spot camels on the horizon, so the guide immediately drops behind the brow  of a sand dune to spy out whether his fellow Bedouins are his friends or whether  they would try to kill him if they caught him. The life of the Bedouin is thus  full of interest.
This jihad thing is a way to turn the violence outward, thus preserving a sphere  of peace at home. It's been used a thousand times down through history all over  the world, and it often works fairly well.
One problem with Islam, however, is that while it tries to curb the worst  excesses of desert bandit cultures, it also, sort of by osmosis, also preserves  those cultures and promulgates their values to places where they aren't  inevitable in the landscape. For example, Egypt had been an orderly farming  nation-state for 3,500 years when the Arabs showed up with their desert  religion.
A reader writes:
In  contrast to the silly ideas of people like Dawkins and Dennett, isn't this the  real problem with religion, that its greatest strength, binding people together  to do good, also shades into its greatest liability? Given what human nature is,  you can only make people so good by preaching and teaching. Given also that the  best way to make people get along is to have them fight a common external enemy,  isn't any group or ideology that tries to make people good going to be tempted  to take the easy way out and have its members go out an fight some common enemy?
Example. We've all heard of something called the Crusades. But what we seldom  hear about is the Peace and  Truce of God movement. During the Early Middle Ages the Pope spent massive  amounts of energy across centuries trying to keep the warring rulers/thugs  across Europe from fighting their fellow Christians. [The Peace of God exempted  clergy, peasants, widows, and virgins from attack. The Truce  of God required warriors to take weekends off, and ultimately reduced the  number of legal fighting days per year to 80.]
Needless to say this was a lot more in keeping with the actual teachings of  Christianity than Crusading, but, human beings being what human beings are, it  was almost a complete failure. Then, Pope Urban II comes up with the wonderful  idea of attacking the Muslims. In contrast to the reaction to Peace of God, this  idea almost instantly captures the imagination of all Western Europe. While it  didn't completely stamp out fighting among the Christian rulers, it did reduce  it by quite a bit. Given the anti-religious polemics of our time, we tend to  hear a lot about the Crusades and the wickedness of religious warfare, but we  hear almost nothing about the much more massive efforts the papacy put behind  its Peace of God initiative.
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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