Bio
I earn a living as a professor of Religious Studies at Southern Methodist University. I'm a classicist and Arabist by training, with an interest in Islam, religious minorities under Islam, and Islamic law. I also do a bit of government work: mostly helping the good guys make sense of the bad guys, their book collections, and their internet histories. I've written some books, and a few were skimmed by literally dozens of people. Fortunately, my lovely wife has a real job. A former union buster, she now defends big health care from the depredations of aggrieved patients. When not reading books written in dead languages, I'm mostly trying to escape the consequences of faithful observance of the Torah's first commandment. In my forty-five years, I've met two U.S. presidents, talked to the late king of Jordan with morse code, and (I'm told) sat in a pew next to Jim Jones.


Re: Turkey and Israel - a Non-Academic, Personal Perspective (from an Israeli)
AngloCon
Do many people equate Turkey to Iran? That would seem to be a stretch that anyone familiar enough with the world to have an opinion would reject. · Sep 7 at 6:43am
There are lots of U.S. voices bewailing the return of the unspeakable Turk, whom they regard as indistinguishable from Iranian mullahs and Arab jihadis.
You can find them in every comments thread to a Turkey story on PJMedia or Breitbart's Big.* or the WSJ.
The same believe the US is at war with Islam -- a conflict that only ends only when one side is dead. Most want to deport all Muslims from the US. Some want to sterilize them first.
It's nasty stuff. There's a lot of it. It passes for common sense.
I don't imagine those saying such things have been to Turkey or even ever met a Muslim. I suspect they mostly fear monsters conjured by Gabriel, Shoebat, Bostum, etc.
If this is Claire's meaning, she's right. Turkey is now on their list of cosmic enemies.
How widespread is the view? Maybe 10% or 15% of the U.S., probably more.