5 Feet of Fury

‘Three Cups of Tea’ scandal: if liberal causes are so just and urgent, why do they have to lie to get us to care?

I’ve written about this phenomenon before.

Here we go again:

Writer Ann Marlowe questioned some of the “anti-military nonsense” in a 2008 Forbes commentary. Mortenson claimed that during his stint as an Army medic in Germany, Vietnam veterans were hooked on heroin and died “in their bunks and we’d have to go and collect their bodies.”

Marlowe suggested that readers take his tales with “three grains of salt.”

Instead, he sold 3 million books. Why?

Through the pouring of “Three Cups,” Mortenson came to personify every liberal conceit.

He pushed books, not bombs. He had a nuanced take on Islamic extremism. He’s not afraid of terrorism; for him, “the enemy is ignorance.”

Marlowe observed, “The implication is that this solitary do-gooder’s work is a better model for helping the rural poor in areas that are a breeding ground for Islamic extremism.”

While to the contrary, the U.S. Army built more schools in just one Afghan province in 15 months than CAI built in a decade. (…)

Global Fund for Women Vice President Shalini Nataraj warned about any memoir that hails “the white savior who’s going to come in and save the local people.”