So I Guess We're All Terrorists Now?
By: Rachel Marsden
Lone Nordic nutbar, Anders Behring Breivik, kills 90 people in a terrorist
attack linked to his frustration with growing multiculturalism. Suddenly media
reports around the world are mistakenly calling it an alarming trend and a sign
of far-right extremism sweeping Europe. Meanwhile, back in America, a
21-year-old U.S. soldier of Muslim Palestinian origin, Naser Abdo, is arrested
for planning a terrorist attack on Texas’ Fort Hood military base, with police
finding enough material in his hotel room to make at least two bombs. Had he
succeeded, he would have been the second American military member of Muslim
origin in as many years to attack the same base—the first being Nidal Hasan, who
murdered 13 people there in 2009. If one incident is enough to constitute a
“trend” of violent far-right extremism, then why aren’t we hearing the same
concern about attacks on military bases and elsewhere by all these people of a
certain common cultural and religious background?
Despite what the media says, far-right extremism isn’t significantly on the rise
in Europe. People can be legitimately frustrated with imposed societal
reengineering by leftists and want to conserve the social and cultural cohesion
that has traditionally made Europe a nice place to live without being considered
extreme. To suggest that increased support for legitimate parties is dangerous
is nothing more than an attempt to stigmatize real and valid concerns.
For example, about 25% of French at any given time over the past several years
could be considered “far-right,” and French President Nicolas Sarkozy was able
to win the 2007 election by tweaking his policies to specifically target these
voters. And as with other European nations, if center-right leaders like Sarkozy
appear to be suffering from waning popularity, it isn’t because their
right-leaning policies have failed—it’s because they haven’t been implemented as
promised. Leftist policy and thinking has so horribly permeated every aspect of
society and daily life that the results of a rightward correction are feared for
the mayhem it might cause, from strikes to riots. So Europeans end up looking
for a bolder, more fearless option in the form of a leader or party that will
make the necessary reforms without fearing the fallout. Is this phenomenon
violent or radical? Not in the least. If anything, it's just a sign of rejection
of leftist extremism.
Why is it that when the French Socialist Party leader, Martine Aubry, announced
this week that if elected to the presidency she’d blow a billion Euros on
“French culture” at a time when the cash flow is running pretty dry, do people
not decry that as “fiscal terrorism”? Why, when Greeks riot in the streets in
protest to necessary budget cuts, is that not considered “violent extremism”?
And why, when groups like the European Network Against Racism (ENAR) issue
statements tying passive right-wing politics to the acts of a single, isolated
loon, does no one consider their logic an example of racist extremism in itself
According to ENAR: “Indeed, most of the people from the European majority
community have remained relatively insensitive to the numerous victims of
extreme-right movements that often stemmed from minority communities: Jews,
Blacks, Muslims, Roma, among others. However, the Oslo killings dreadfully
demonstrate that extreme-right ideologies are a danger for the whole society and
not only for minorities. Anyone can become victim to the violence of
extreme-right fanatics, intent on wiping out diversity from our societies.”
ENAR would have us believe that it’s a steep, slippery slope indeed from, say,
controlling illegal immigration of Roma gypsies to literally “wiping out
diversity.”
I have a question for ENAR: How many violent acts by people of an ideology or
origin must be committed before it’s considered a disturbing trend? Because it
would seem from this statement that it only takes one. Why aren’t they at least
equally concerned by the rampant violent acts committed by people from the same
“minority” groups they cite?
As a peaceful white conservative, I find their statement strongly implies that
I’m at best a quisling vis-à-vis humanity, and at worst a mere frustration away
from going postal. I reject this stereotype foisted upon me by the bigots in the
anti-racist company, and feel they are trying to hurt my feelings, marginalize
me and turn me into a social pariah. I’d start my own victim industry around
this traumatic development, but I’m kind of busy right now.
COPYRIGHT 2011 RACHEL MARSDEN