HOUSE OVERSIGHT 024390 transfer of responsibility for our Islamic Enemy's hate and resultant actions onto us with our response framed essentially as an effort to do what we can to try to address the Enemy's grievance. (Your book, United in Hate, describes this addiction to hate in detail. The key to the Inner Jihad is to learn to transfer responsibility for our Islamic Enemy's hate and resultant actions back to it and take responsibility back for our own situation. We must learn all we can about the enemy. We must unwind our inappropriate projections and introjections and rediscover who we are and are not. We must speak up. We must support those Muslims who promote expressions of Islam that are consistent with our principles. And we must stalk the C ontrol Factor, constantly be on guard for its intrusion. This is an individual endeavor as each of our Control Factors uses its own methods. The book gives plenty of examples of each maneuver discussed but it is important for each of us to discover the unique workings of his own mind. That takes the work of the Inner Jihad. FP: Share with our readers what you mean by the "Turnaround Moment." Siegel: There is a moment in typical horror films where the central characters have been pushed to their limit. They then change and fully embrace the willingness to be as ruthless as the threat they face. No more moral high ground; no more futile attempts to ignore or change the threat's essence. As Lee Harris described in The Suicide of Reason, it is the willingness o r license to be (not necessarily actually being) as ruthless that is critical. It is a mental state that sheds all the prior counter-productive efforts at denial to finally clearly focus on the threat faced. Part of the Inner Jihad is to reach that Turnaround Moment sooner rather than later. FP: You suggest that "mirroring" should be used as part of our arsenal. Tell us about it. Siegel: Mirroring is a literal approach to transferring back to the