Zilch
This...is...Caketown!
100% I think it is equally clear that this works on both sides of the line...
I'm curious though, how effective we could be in an ideological battle. My point I guess is this... As far as a battle of ideologies goes, Communism ultimately lost the battle because of its failure as an economic system. People stopped believing in the Communist system because it didn't work in the end, and they didn't eat!
I'm not sure that we can hope to expect a similar result with hard-line Islamic fundamentalism. While I certainly think we can make headway here, it is one thing to convice someone that their government is ineffective when there is tangible proof of that. (Lack of food, hoarding by the Party elite etc...) It is quite another to prove to someone that their belief in a religion doesn't neccessitate the murder of those who don't share their beliefs. There is, I'm afraid, little to prove this.
Your point is well taken though...we can certainly make lots of headway among moderate Islam through some person to person understanding and compassion about what it is we do share...Kennedy said it pretty well a long time ago...
"Now the trumpet summons us again--not as a call to bear arms, though arms we need; not as a call to battle, though embattled we are--but a call to bear the burden of a long twilight struggle, year in and year out, rejoicing in hope, patient in tribulation--a struggle against the common enemies of man: tyranny, poverty, disease, and war itself."
The religion thing makes things very complicated, as if politics alone weren't bewlidering enough.
A loose anology here: I'm good friends with a guy who is very smart, rational, and generally the kind of guy you want at your back when things go sour. But, I'm keen to avoid topics which cross religious boundaries with him. He's very passionate about his faith and such, and won't listen to anything that does not line up completely with his beliefs. I've had some great, intelligent conversations with this man, but the instant his beliefs are challenged in some way his rational brain shuts off and he starts spouting rhetoric.
That said, I fully support him in believing whatever he sees fit. It's a personal matter, after all. He thinks the same way, and he's never tried to convert me to his beliefs. We have mutual respect for eachother's beliefs, even though we do not agree on many important matters. This, I think, is as good of a relationship two differing parties can have.
I won't say this is a direct analogy or anything, but religion does weird things to otherwise rational people. Even so, said different people can and do co-exist if they want to.
No offense to anyone's beliefs here, I hope.