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Fiction Chronicle

June 2004

Fundamentalism isn't the problem

by Kenneth Minogue

Like Yossarian in Catch 22, I’m exercised by the fact that people are trying to kill me. You may remember that Yossarian was flying bombers over Italy in 1944 and German gunners were trying to shoot his plane down. Yossarian and I are in a similar spot. You might well think we ought not to take it personally. My enemies are also out to get any civilian they can blow up throughout Europe, America, and other Western places. Anyone will do. Indeed, statistically speaking, their main success has been in blowing up luckless Muslims who get in their way. They are obviously a dumb and nasty lot, but how shall we describe them? President Bush calls them “terrorists” and has declared war on them. Other people call them “Islamicists” because what goes through their rather defective minds as they blow us up has something to do with verses from the Koran. “Terrorists” is probably the preferable designation, if only f ...

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Kenneth Minogue is Emeritus Professor of Political Science at the London School of Economics
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This article originally appeared in The New Criterion, Volume 22 June 2004, on page 17
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