It’s Time to Attack White Nationalism for the Terror Group It Is

Authored by thedailybeast.com and submitted by melinda2020
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PARIS—Donald Trump was right. The special pleading around the question of whether to call terrorism by radical Muslims “radical Islamic terrorism” clouded a critical issue. The fight against extremism must start with ideas, and with language that is clear and unequivocal. Which is why we should be perfectly blunt about what Brenton Tarrant, the 28-year-old monster of Christchurch, claimed to represent, and did and does represent, which is white nationalist terrorism.

Tarrant may have been a lone shooter when he slaughtered 50 people at two mosques in New Zealand on Friday, but he was not a “lone wolf.” He was part of a much wider movement that is every bit as extensive as Al Qaeda was when it attacked the United States in 2001, and potentially much more dangerous to the future of Western democracies.

Now, before it grows any stronger, should be the time to move against it with the same kind of concerted international focus of attention and resources that were trained on Osama bin Laden. Now is the time for a global war on white nationalist terrorism.

But that’s not likely to happen. As The Daily Beast reported on Friday, fewer than one in five FBI cases target white supremacists.

Nobody can claim, as the George W. Bush administration did, that “we’re going to fight them over there so we don’t have to fight them here,” because they are already “here” with a vengeance, steadily increasing their power and presence in Western democracies.

Networks of white nationalist apologists, sympathizers, supporters and facilitators—vital to any terrorist movement—are deeply embedded in the political and social fabric. They are literally the enemy within. As an apologist, it should be said, President Donald Trump is in a class by himself. Trump is “a symbol of renewed white identity and common purpose,” as Tarrant wrote in his manifesto.

The obsession with the border wall, the attempts to ban all Muslims—such measures are trending in Tarrant’s direction because Trump’s base buys into them. And when it comes to feeding the basic instincts of the base in order to hold on to power, it is not at all clear how far Trump will go.

One of the most chilling moments in the congressional testimony last month of Trump’s consigliere, the infamous Michael Cohen, came when he said, “I fear that if he loses the election in 2020, that there will never be a peaceful transition of power.”

I have been told by a very senior former U.S. intelligence official that he is concerned if Trump is impeached and removed, the result could be violence tearing the country apart. And Trump himself likes to feint in that direction, as he did in his Breitbart interview last week.

In a weird aside, in the middle of an otherwise soporific dialogue about former House Speaker Paul Ryan, Trump declared, “I have the support of the police, the support of the military, the support of the Bikers for Trump—I have the tough people, but they don’t play it tough—until they go to a certain point, and then it would be very bad, very bad.”

That was widely interpreted as a veiled threat of violence because, clearly, it was one.

So, if we are going to think seriously about a global war on white nationalist terrorism, we have to admit that the American president is an enormous obstacle.

But let’s say he has a radical change of heart or is defeated in 2020 and the American government decides that the time has come to remove those elements from the military and the police that Trump is talking about, those who support his thinly disguised racist agenda—because, let’s be clear, there are many of them, even if they are not in command.

“ I have been told by a very senior former U.S. intelligence official that he is concerned if Trump is impeached and removed, the result could be violence tearing the country apart. ”

Could that be done? Putting aside the treatment of the Japanese during World War II, among white people there are only a couple of precedents for such a purge in U.S. history: the removal of military officers, diplomats and other officials with real or suspected Confederate sympathies during the American Civil War (many of whom left of their own accord), and the ugly campaign against alleged communists in the McCarthy era of the late 1940s and early 1950s.

Provocateurs like Tarrant are hoping for draconian measures, looking to provoke a conflagration. “Civil war in the so called ‘melting pot’ that is the United States should be a major aim in overthrowing the global power structure and the Wests’ egalitarian, individualist, globalist dominant culture,” Tarrant’s manifesto tells us. He’s hoping “the conflict over the 2nd amendment” will lead to that fratricidal fight and “eventually balkanize the U.S. along political, cultural and, most importantly, racial lines.”

When Tarrant writes in all caps “THE MYTH OF THE MELTING POT MUST END, AND WITH IT THE MYTH OF THE EGALITARIAN NATION” he is not coming up with his own lunatic theory, but parroting ones that have been disseminated for years by American racists, and developed into an ideology in Europe as resonant of terror today as Mein Kampf was in the 1920s.

Vladimir Putin and his ideologues are apostles of ethnic and linguistic nationalism, and promote it both overtly and covertly in Western European countries to disrupt and divide their democracies.

Parties running on anti-brown-or-black-immigrant platforms are now significant players in the politics of Britain, the Netherlands, Germany, Austria and Italy. We know that Tarrant recently traveled to Spain, Bulgaria and other countries where there are active ultra-right movements. In Hungary, where the government of Viktor Orban is rabidly anti-immigrant and obviously anti-Semitic, the New Zealand shooter probably felt right at home.

But as the popular French daily Le Parisien headlined on Saturday morning, “49 Dead in New Zealand: Everything Started in France…”

In 2017, Tarrant came here to watch the presidential election between Emmanuel Macron, who represents everything from globalization to higher education that the Tarrant crowd hates, and far-right Marine Le Pen, who, he concluded, was just not racist enough for his tastes.

But the key to Tarrant’s thinking and to his connections is in the title of his manifesto, “The Great Replacement,” drawn directly from the work of far-right French author Renaud Camus, who has written that the fecund peoples of Africa and the Muslim world will overwhelm and replace European populations.

As the daily Le Monde pointed out, the fantasy of this sinister replacement plot originally was based on the notion that the Jews were out to diminish or subjugate the white population of Europe—a notion that endured in right-wing circles even after World War II and the revelations of the Holocaust. And it is still a common trope among Americans on the far right. When neo-Nazis marched in Charlottesville in 2017, they were vowing that they would not be replaced by Jews.

But here in Europe in the 21st century, where many countries treat expressed anti-Semitism as a crime, Renaud Camus put a new spin on that replacement fable following Sept. 11, 2001, by claiming Muslims were colonizing Europe.

On Friday, Camus denied any incitement to terrorism in his own particular way. “The colonized,” he wrote, meaning the embattled white Europeans, “ought not to imitate the methods of the colonizer,” meaning the immigrants to Europe, by adopting terror tactics. “That is to become like him already and give in to colonization.”

It might be possible to silence such voices of hate. Many European governments have tried. But would that be enough to stop the spread of white nationalist terrorism?

At the end of the day, and as difficult as the task may be, the war on white nationalist terrorism must be fought as a war of law enforcement and a war of ideas.

Police and prosecutors loyal to democratic values have to pursue investigations into white nationalist groups with the same zeal that has been applied to radical Muslim terrorist organizations.

Voters in Western nations have to understand that the fellow travelers of white nationalist terrorism are not acceptable participants in modern democracies, and vote them out, or see that they are prosecuted, or both.

And the very first step in that process is to quit making excuses or inventing euphemisms. The fight is not against conservatives, the right wing, the alt-right—it is against white nationalist terrorism and its apologists.

sparkreason on March 17th, 2019 at 10:50 UTC »

It's more than "white nationalism" as someone who is middle eastern I will describe exactly how to fix the problem and explain just how screwed up things have gotten and what is the actual solution.

1st of all "White Nationalism" has always been around, but what is different now is that it has become socially acceptable and the foreign policy of the United States and western countries has lead to this disaster. When you combine the internet as a means for pyschos to connect. Well, no there is a means and a path for this.

But the problem isn't just white nationalists, or racists, it's that the foreign policy has pushed people into this way of thinking, the media has pushed people into this way of thinking.

Let's start with foreign policy. The reason muslims are targeted is because Saudi Arabia that perpetuates a radical ideology is celebrated as "some sort of ally" and allowed to promote and fund one end of religious extremism. Not all muslims commit terrorism because not all muslims subscribe to Saudi Arabia's insanity. They are the only country in the world that promotes the hanbali fiqh strict literal intepritation of Islam, and they control the Hejaz (Mecca, Medina, Jeddah) . That's like giving the west boro baptist church control of the Vatican. (What could possibly go wrong?) ... Everything.

Because Saudi Arabia is never held accountable the spread their backwards interpretation all over the globe. This spreads radicalism. From Afghanistan, to Iraq, Libya, Syria, Pakistan, Europe, America, even the fucking Caribbean. That's why when ISIS popped up (Same ideology as Saudi) and called for jihad you had terrorist attacks all over the world, and Al Qaeda with 9/11. It doesn't make you islamophobic to not like that. Hitler/KKK were Christians... not liking them doesn't make you anti christian. You are just anti asshole. Which is FINE.

But not knowing that Saudi Arabia is the source, and not isolating them for their actions just allows them to continue to promote their far far far far far right interpretation of Islam.

Now let's take a look at Israel. Netanyahu and the Likkud's whole strategy is to vilify Arabs and middle eastern people. Cause them to try and lash back, and point and say... See..they are terrorists and evil and we should kill them and be able to take their land. If Arabs / middle eastern people aren't seen as dangerous / bad then Likkudland Israel can't make the "security excuse" to kill choke and steal land.

So here we have 2 major "allies" of the United States that bring out the worst in Islam for alternative reasons. Saudi wants control for its far right totalitarian agenda. Israel wants the vilification of Arabs/Middle Eastern people so they can kill them and steal land.

Now in America the only real exposure most Americans get about muslims/middle eastern people is through the media. TV, Movies, News Reports, etc. all depict muslims/arabs as terrorists, villains, evil, bad, constantly. 247. That is what most Americans exposure to muslims/arabs is. Most of them don't know any. there are roughly 3.7 million Arabs at most in the U.S. and a lot of them aren't muslim. But still if we assume that all are that's just maybe 1% of the population. So most Americans only depiction and understanding of 1% of the population is through the media that constantly over and over and over shows that as terrorists/villains. CONSTANTLY.

Now add in a refugee crisis in Libya/Syria where millions of Arabs/middle eastern people are seeking refuge (Because of horrible U.S. policy trying to overthrow governments) and you have the global terrorist attacks of ISIS (A by product of again HORRIBLE U.S. policy trying to overthrow governments), and in the news around the world it looks like an invasion of people that the public has only really been shown to be evil by the media.

What did people expect to happen?

The public was conditioned to be afraid, the allies create the fundamental problem, and then everyone looks surprised that White Nationalism all of sudden cropped up. That someone like Trump came out of nowhere? This hatred was being distsilled, over years, over every horrible foreign policy decision, over every single movie and TV shoe depicting muslims and Arabs as villains, over every pass that Saudi Arabia and Israel got to continue doing the things they wanted to do for their own selfish reasons.

I ask again. What did people expect to happen?

If you prop up and give blind support to one country that exports religious zealots, and another that wants to vilify Arabs to ethnic cleanse them, and the media just shows Arabs/muslims as evil/bad and then you go around cracking countries open ruining them spilling refugees everywhere...

Once again. WHAT THE FUCK did you think was going to happen?

Of course racist people who have been conditioned to be fearful of muslims/arabs are going to attack them. They don't know any better. They haven't been exposed to any other sort of messaging or insight. The foreign policy blunders, the unchecked "allies" promoting the problem, and the media sowing fear made this all possible.

Add the internet to connect the fearful and create echo chambers and there you have it. White Nationalism and people gunned down just because of who they are.... in New Zealand of all places.

But it happens in America too.

It happens in Canada

All these "beacons" of freedom and equality right? It's bullshit. America made this problem. It made it with ARAMCO and making the Saudis filthy rich while they spread their ideology, It made it with Israel and giving them cart blanche to keep stealing land, killing Arabs. It made it with the media and every movie and TV show depicting Arabs/muslims as terrorists. It made it with every horrible foreign policy decision from Afghanistan and the mujahadeen, to the Iraq War, Libya, Syria etc. etc. etc.

So what's the solution? What is going to solve this mess?

1st of all Foreign Policy. That being Saudi Arabia and Israel are NOT allies. There is nothing in the constitution that says freedom of religious supremacists. It says life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. Neither of those countries think that way about people outside their borders. And the biggest mistake is us in the United States ensuring that we never send 1 dollar to any country who doesn't. And most certainly don't consider them "allies", and DEFINITELY don't go smashing countries with a hammer thinking someone it will make those people better off.

2nd. The media has to stop showing only the worst sides of Muslims/Islam on TV and in Movies. Education is important. Most Americans don't know who ibn Taymiyyah is. He wrote the Mein Kamf of Islam, and he's Saudi's favorite scholar. They don't know what an Alawite is, or Druze, or Sufi, or Asheri, Shia, Maliki, Hanafi. They don't know that Islam isn't a monolith, because they've never been shown that it is a monolith. They don't know what Salafi jihadism is or how it is different than the ideology of scholars like ibn Rush and ibn Tufayl. All the media has shown Americans in their only window into Islam is that muslims are bad and are all terrorists. Education is critically important to understand exactly where Islamic extremism comes from and it should be stomped out just like the KKK, just like Hitler's Christian Nationalism, just like far right Zionism... it is all the same. It doesn't make you Islamophobic, or Anti Jewish, or Anti Christian to call out religious extremism/supremacy. It can be found in all of them, and ALL are BAD. Religion is fine. Using your religion as an excuse to attack others or hurt others is NOT.

That's what it will take to fix this.

No stupid foreign policy.

No more depicting muslims as terrorists in TV/Movies

No more making excuses for any religious supremacists. Christian/Jewish/Islamic all of them are bad. Extremism comes in all colors, and if you want a stop to all, then we have condemn them all equally without hesitation.

viva_la_vinyl on March 17th, 2019 at 10:37 UTC »

Nobody can claim, as the George W. Bush administration did, that “we’re going to fight them over there so we don’t have to fight them here,” because they are already “here” with a vengeance, steadily increasing their power and presence in Western democracies.

Networks of white nationalist apologists, sympathizers, supporters and facilitators—vital to any terrorist movement—are deeply embedded in the political and social fabric. They are literally the enemy within. As an apologist, it should be said, President Donald Trump is in a class by himself. Trump is “a symbol of renewed white identity and common purpose,” as Tarrant wrote in his manifesto.

EveSpeaks on March 17th, 2019 at 10:22 UTC »

But Reddit and Twitter make so much money from exploiting Trump's Gang of Incels!