Author: Daniel Pipes
Publication: FrontPageMagazine.com
Date: April 24, 2006
URL: http://www.danielpipes.org/article/3544
Who would have thought that Belmont University
of Nashville, Tennessee, would apply the Islamic law to its staff? But just
that happened earlier this month.
Bill Hobbs, a Republican political advisor,
blogger, and news writer for Belmont, which bills itself as "the largest
Christian university in Tennessee," was upset in February 2006 about
the cowardice of the American media in not publishing the Danish cartoons.
So he drew a primitive cartoon of his own and posted it on his personal site.
It sat in obscurity until April 5, when a Democratic political operative,
Mike Kopp, wrote about it, calling it
a bizzare page with the heading Draw Mohammed
that spotlights a stick drawing of the Prophet Mohammed holding a bomb. The
cartoon is entitled "Mohammend Blows." Under the cartoon Hobbs issues
an invite to "exercise your right to free expression by drawing pictures
of Islam's Prophet Mohammed". He ends the post with the phrase "Here's
my first mo-toon." All this was posted at 12:40 pm, on Friday, February
24, 2006.
Hobbs responded within a few hours on Kopp's
website, writing (spelling mistakes uncorrected):
I live in America, and am blessed to have
the First Amendment, and am angry that the American media is too cowardly
in the face of Islamofacists to run the cartoons. I posted that cartoon, and
invited others to draw their own cartoons, as a way of protesting both American
media cowardice and Islamist attempts to suppress free speech via threats
of bombs and bullets and burning and beheading. But then I never publicized
the site and, quite frankly, forgot is was up until today.
P.S. I am insensitve toward religions that
have a large number of adherents who are running around blowing stuff up and
threatening to kill non-believers over cartoons. Yes, I plead insensitivity.
I would prefer my children not grow up in a world governed by Islamofacists.
On April 13, John Spragens of Nashville Scene
picked up on this story in an article titled "One local blogger's crude
cartoon, posing as principle, betrays little more than tackiness." He
included a miniature version of the page in question (see illustration). As
his headline implies, Spragens (who, another blog notes, is leaving the Nashville
Scene to work for a Democrat, U.S. Representative Jim Cooper) came down heavily
on Hobbs:
by deliberately desecrating Islam's central
figure-"the 'Prophet Mohammed' " as Hobbs sneered, using quote marks
for sardonic emphasis-he attacked an entire religion, not a group of fanatics
who pervert the religion's teachings. Then he drew him as a bearded stick
figure holding a bomb and said he "blows." It seems bearded Muslim
terrorists are the new big-nosed, money-grubbing Jews. The more things change
.
[ellipsis in original]
On the other side, Roger Abramson, Spragens'
predecessor at Nashville Scene, defended Hobbs early on April 14.
Nonetheless, the damage had been done. Hobbs
announced in the late morning at NashvilleFiles.com, "I am resigning
from Belmont University in an amicable and mutual parting of the ways, effective
Monday[, April 17]."
A week later, the university has let calls
from the press asking for more information go unreturned and has made no statement
about Hobbs' resignation. Its silence attracted notice in the blogosphere
(for example, from Hugh Hewitt) but still not a word was forthcoming.
Although it was an article in the Nashville
Scene that prompted the resignation, that publication's editor, Liz Garrigan,
came down hard on Belmont:
Belmont's action here-assuming this was a
forced resignation, and I think everyone believes it is-is cowardly. I mean,
Hobbs' political views haven't been a secret. Why is the school suddenly putting
stock in what we have to say about one action by one individual? The school
shouldn't sacrifice him just because we happen to think that something he
did was pretty tacky.
"Pretty tacky" is putting it mildly;
Belmont's actions have real consequences. Like the Danish corporation Arla
Foods denouncing the cartoons or the Swedish foreign minister forcing the
cartoons off a website, this firing in Tennessee amounts to a capitulation
to Islamic law. Each surrender means the Shari'a will move inexorably forward.