ETCETERA NIGHTCAP We Need To Go On The Offense By Harry Kirsbaum think we're all sick of seeing behead- ing and burning videos. We're sick of the braggadocio and the gleefulness that the ISIS butchers show when they wield a knife or pull a trigger or strike a match. It seems every day we are assaulted with another video more brutal than the last. Every morning we wake up dread- ing turning on the television to find out what horrors took place while we slept. In the past few weeks, much has been discussed about President Barack Obama's reluctance to use the term "Is- lamic"when identifying terrorist groups in Iraq, Syria and Libya. Obama was holding meetings a couple of weeks ago with representa- tives of 60 nations in Washington, D.C. "Our war is not against Islam," he said. Of course — everyone in the room knew that. But they also knew that they weren't attending this summit because of a rampaging gang of Jehovah's Wit- nesses. Every terrorist group Obama men- tioned is rooted in a perverted form of I Islam, and to completely avoid the term "Islamic"when referring to them is as awkward as using it all the time. And all those nations agree that something needs to be done about this threat. Hell, even Al Qaida would agree. The root causes of extremism are found in "the anger that festers when people feel that injustice and corruption leave them with no chance of improving their lives,"Obama wrote in a recent Los Angeles Times op-ed."The world has to offer today's youth something better' Of course, there is a problem when 3,500 people living in Europe and North America are swayed by social media to join ISIS in Syria. But that problem is rooted in the tens of thousands of ISIS fighters who are already killing, behead- ing, burning, producing recruitment videos and raising their black pirate flag in Syria, Libya and Iraq. But enough about semantics. Speaking as just another American who is watching pure evil on the news every day, call it Islamic terrorism, Islamist terrorism or terroristic extrem- ist extremism — what are we going to do about it? We can't wait much longer, and we can't just fly sorties, either. We need to go on offense. ISIS is not a group that asks permis- sion to set up shop in a country like Al Qaida in Yemen. It conquers its own territory and raises its own pirate flag to claim it as part of the next Islamic caliphate. ISIS does not fight from the shadows like the terrorists did in Afghanistan and Iraq with IEDs. It wants territory. It proudly wears uniforms. It's right up our alley. So far, ISIS has overpowered most military forces it has engaged. But there's a difference between engaging American-trained-and-supplied Iraqi troops, and taking the fight to Ameri- can troops and their well-trained allies themselves. In part, I'm speaking about the 350 Marines at the Ain al-Asad air- base, west of Baghdad, who are training Iraqi soldiers how not to act like Chip- pendale dancers. ISIS assaulted the base rather unsuc- cessfully a few weeks ago, and I can only imagine what might happen to these "violent extremists" if they get within range of our highly trained Marines who can unleash a special kind of hellfire if given the opportunity. Some can say they are trying to coax us into a war, and we shouldn't take the bait. But this is a different animal. If they truly have the means to kill people and harvest their organs for sale in other countries to support their cause like the Iraqi government claims, then ISIS is more comfortably entrenched than we all thought. The danger is there, and it's just grow- ing to intolerable proportions. We need to get a Gulf War coalition in the form of Bush 41, or as the last resort, take the fight to them ourselves. Although some may call this a Whack- A-Mole solution that really doesn't solve the"root cause" of the problem, it's kind of hard to gain territory, film death-porn videos or harvest organs when you're taking a big life-ending chance by stick- ing your head out of your hole. Introducing NI Ftt A legacy of design and performance The days of pretty for pretty's sake are over. Now, more than ever, bathrooms need style with substance. TOTO bath fixtures save money and water without losing an ounce of performance, or sacrificing their good looks to do it. VADVANCE Plumbing and Heating Supply Company COME VISIT OUR OUTSTANDING SHOWROOM 1977 E. West Maple Road • Walled Lake, MI 48390 248-669-7474 • www.advanceplumbing.com 95 YEARS 1920-2015 1950600 40 March 2015 I RED THREAD