June 25,
2008: While Moslem leaders insist that
Islam is the religion of peace, the history of Islam says otherwise. Islamic
radicals, and many sects of Islam, are anything but peaceful. These radicals
can easily dominate the majority of Moslems, and perpetuate a reign of terror
on local non-Moslems, as well as any Moslems who oppose this religious
violence. Most Moslems, and especially Moslem leaders in Moslem majority
nations, delude themselves that this "Islam Is Peace" mantra is true. The
result is that, when the Islamic radicals show up (and they have always been
there, since the founding of Islam 1500 years ago), the more moderate leaders
try to placate them. That doesn't work, and in a tragedy played out regularly
in the history of Islam, the radicals are either suppressed, or gain strength
until they are strong enough to fight a civil war. If the radicals win, they
establish a religious dictatorship that lasts a generation or two, but
eventually collapses from corruption and poor administration (running a
government and economy according to the Koran does not work, a fact that the
faithful keep denying despite evidence to the contrary). All this is playing
itself out in Indonesia, with a democratically elected government trying to
placate the radicals, while about half the population would like to at least
try a religious government, if only to reduce the rampant corruption and solve
some of the economic problems. That's a false hope that has never worked in the
past. But hope is like that, and the religious radicals are always ready to
take advantage of it.
June 24,
2008: A government prosecutor was
charged with accepting a $903,000 bribe from a crooked banker, to drop an embezzlement
case. While this showed that major criminals still believed they could buy
their way out of jail, it also demonstrated how the current anti-corruption
campaign is succeeding, and is not a complete sham, as so many anti-corruption
efforts have been.
June 20,
2008: As more Moslems move to Papua (the
western half of New Guinea, one of the largest islands on the planet, and home
of hundreds of Melanesian tribes that are very different culturally from the
rest of Indonesia, and are largely Christian and pagan, rather than Moslem),
ethnic and religious tensions have gotten worse. Along with these Malay (the
largest ethnic group in Indonesia) migrants (seeking farmland in thinly
populated Indonesia), come Islamic radicals, who promptly organize violence
against the non-Moslem Papuans. But the Papuans push back, and local police
have warned the national government that a major outbreak of violence is
possible.
June 18,
2008: A navy patrol seized a fishing
boat carrying a large quantity of fertilizer commonly used for making explosives.
While the fishermen claimed the stuff was for "fish bombs" (tossing explosives
into the water, to stun fish that can then be easily picked up), the quantity seemed
suspiciously large. Since the boat was headed for West Sulawesi, where Islamic
radicals were building bombs, for attacks on Christians, the fishermen were
arrested on suspicion of smuggling for the Islamic radicals there.
June 14,
2008: The police have arrested over a
dozen Islamic radical leaders, and are searching for more. The police believe
that these radical leaders are largely responsible for organizing the violent
demonstrations in favor of establishing an Islamic religious dictatorship in
Indonesia, and persecuting non-Moslems.
June 9,
2008: The government gave into Islamic
radicals and issued an order for members of the Ahmadiyah sect to either stop
practicing their religion (an Islamic variant that Islamic radicals consider
heresy) or face prosecution. It remains to be seen if the government will
actually follow up on this decree, which has been a major demand of Islamic
radicals lately.