(Tomorrowâs Monday Wake Up Call will appear on Tuesday)
Letâs talk about the religions that are implicated in two news items this week.
First, the attempted assassination of Salman Rushdie in upstate New York on Saturday. He was hospitalized after suffering serious injuries in a stabbing attack. We donât know for certain that this was someone carrying out the death threat that Iranâs then-leader Grand Ayatollah Khomeini put on Rushdie in 1989. But it seems to be the most likely explanation.
Police detained a suspect named Hadi Matar, 24, who is California-born, but moved to Fairview, New Jersey in 2014. NBC NY News reported that a review of Matar’s social media accounts showed he is sympathetic to Shia extremism and Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps causes. One of Matarâs former high school classmates told The Daily Beast that Matar âwas a very devout Muslimâ who participated in debate and had several friends.
If religion is behind this, the attempted revenge has occurred two generations later.
Second, Polio was found in wastewater samples from New York City. Polio has been eradicated in the US since 1988. Finding it in NYC water samples follows a confirmed case of Polio in Rockland County, NY, just 35 miles north of the City. The County announced that an analysis of more wastewater samples revealed that the polio viruses have been circulating in the area since May.
Worse, the 20 positive samples detected in the two counties are genetically linked to the virus that paralyzed the unidentified man in Rockland County.
The broader context of both stories is that religions played a part in each. The Polio case in Rockland was found in a resident of one of the orthodox religious towns where a predominantly Hasidic Jewish community lives. Rockland County currently has a polio vaccination rate of 60.5% among 2-year-olds, compared to the statewide average of 79.1%. This same group had a measles outbreak (312 cases) in 2019, and low COVID vaccination rates.
There is a strong anti-vaxx mentality in this community, and that helps create fertile conditions for a formerly eradicated disease to be revitalized. Polio is entirely preventable, and yet, many parents remain hostile to vaccination.
In the Rushdie attack, weâre speculating about the influence of religion. Saying the attacker is sympathetic to Shia Islam isnât sufficient to make it a religious attack. But Wrongo would be surprised if it turned out to be solely either personally or politically motivated.
On to cartoons. Despite the above, most of the news this week was about the FBI search.
The truth is revealed:
Trump explains:
Beach reading is different this year:
Reactions to IRS have changed:
GOP policy wonks are thinking they may need to change:
Sad to say, the pols cut the Hassidim a break because they vote in a block.