Just look below the fold. Or check out this
link
The bottom line is, it's okay to say the left is in an "unholy alliance" with "islamofascists." But for God's sake, don't call our leaders fascists.
douchebag.
more...
David Horowitz uncovers the Left's true agenda
* How American radicals welcomed Iran's Islamic revolution, thus helping to create and inspire the Islamic radicals who confront America today
* The improbable -- but deadly serious -- agenda of the Islamic radicals who perpetrated the 9/11 attacks
* How Susan Sontag and other leading Leftist intellectuals blindly echoed Iraqi propaganda in their responses to 9/11
* "The flag stands for jingoism and vengeance and war" -- and other equally appalling liberal reactions to post-9/11 displays of patriotic fervor
* Why the protesters' decision to oppose the war in Afghanistan was a defining moment for the American left, analogous to its response to the signing of the Nazi-Soviet Pact in 1939
* How Leftist academics and pundits have consistently refused to concede that Americans have a right to defend themselves -- and displayed a puzzling willingness to defend a fundamentalist theocracy that oppressed women, homosexuals and non-Muslims in Afghanistan
* The "root cause" shell game: how analyses that purported to address the "real causes" of phenomena like terrorism has become a code for the utopian agendas of the Left -- and a declaration of war against the War on Terror
* Leftist icon Noam Chomsky: how his analyses depend on wildly distorted and selective readings of history and the contemporary scene
* The keynote speaker at a Capitol anti-war demonstration who declaimed: "I don't want to talk about bin Laden. I want to talk about a terrorist called George Washington. I want to talk about a terrorist called Rudy Giuliani. The real terrorists have always been the United Snakes of America"
* How the survival of a Neo-Communist Left long after the fall of the Soviet Union explains the otherwise inexplicable alliances that self-described progressives have made with Islamic fanatics in their war against America and the West
* The religious dimension of radical belief -- and how it led veteran radical Leftists to regard radical Islam sympathetically
* Ayatollah Khomeini: how he was cannily successful in rallying the support of the Left in Iran and abroad for his hardline Islamic revolution
* The little-noted shared belief that unifies the disparate factions and shapes the common agendas of the radical Left
* How the history of the Middle East refutes the myth that the Arab-Israeli conflict or the War on Terror in general is about a Palestinian state or land for the Palestinian Arabs
* The Leftist professor who, after 9/11, draped an American flag from his New York apartment window and felt a tinge of patriotism for the first time in his political life -- and promptly suffered the opprobrium of his Leftist comrades
* How the anti-war movement to oppose American policy in Iraq was actually launched internationally within weeks of the attack on 9/11, long before the lead-up to the war itself
* The anti-Iraq War movement: how it was a product of the same forces and organizations that had assembled the anti-capitalist riots against the World Trade Organization in Seattle and against the World Bank in Prague
* How Islamic radicals in America have deftly played the victim card when confronted by law enforcement or the media -- with the willing help of the Left
* Why Leftist legal groups were determined to prevent security officials from scrutinizing radical Islamic religious groups and political organizations aligned with radical Islam and its terrorist jihad
* How, in their defense of America's terrorist enemies, the organizations of the legal Left are reminiscent of Communist Party fronts of the Cold War era
* The Democrats' assault on President Bush's credibility in the Iraq war: how it rests on false pretenses
Today the war abroad is the most pressing concern for Americans who care about the security of their nation. But America can win a war against any external foe. It is the war at home that will ultimately decide America's fate, and which is the subject of Unholy Alliance. Horowitz answers tough questions that few others dare even to ask, including:
* What is the nature of the American left?
* How significant is the threat posed by its opposition to the war on terror?
* How powerful is its presence in the Democratic Party?
* What is its role in shaping the American future?
The chief lesson of Vietnam, Horowitz reminds us, is that when Americans are sufficiently divided, their government is significantly weakened. Those who believe that the exercise of American power is a bulwark of national security and a pillar of international order will not be so sanguine -- and should not miss the astonishing revelations of Unholy Alliance.
Astonishing
hink