Monday, July 25, 2011

The Norway Terrorist


by Mark Tapson

A year or two ago I was at a dinner party where a gentleman and his wife confronted me about my writing on Islamic terrorism. “Why is it,” he asked irritably, “that terrorism is always called ‘Islamic’? What about ‘Christian’ terrorists?”

“Well, name a Christian terrorist,” I replied. I wasn’t being combative; I was genuinely curious to know whom they considered to be someone committing politically-driven murder and mayhem in the name of Jesus. The sentence was barely out of my mouth before the wife shot back, “Timothy McVeigh .”

McVeigh’s bombing of a federal building in Oklahoma City took place sixteen years ago. Unlike Muslim fundamentalists who theologically justify their acts of terrorism, McVeigh can not rightly be characterized as a “Christian terrorist,” because he was, by his own admission, not a committed Christian, and he carried out the attack not because God or the Bible commanded him to, but because he hated the U.S. government. And yet after all these years his name remains virtually the sole flimsy example that people have at the ready to challenge what they consider to be the stereotype of Islamic terrorism.

No more. Now a new McVeigh has arisen, a symbol that the Left and Islamic supremacists themselves will use to bludgeon Christian conservatives and critics of jihad for the next sixteen years – Anders Behring Breivik. Breivik is in police custody for carrying out what some are calling Norway’s “Oklahoma City,” a reference to McVeigh’s 1995 bombing, of course. Breivik, who claims to have acted alone, set off a massive bomb that devastated an Oslo government building and killed seven, then traveled to a nearby youth camp for hundreds of teen children of Labour Party politicians, where he proceeded to massacre as many as 90 of them with ruthless, methodical gunfire.

As the news began leaking out about Europe’s deadliest terror attack since the 2003 Madrid train bombing, there was a predictable – and perfectly reasonable – assumption on the part of terrorism experts, the media, and possibly anyone who follows the Clash of Civilizations , that the perpetrators were Islamists. After all, there were plenty of reasons to suspect initially that these were acts of Islamic terrorism: at least one Islamist group initially claimed responsibility (but later retracted it); Muslim extremists cheered the attacks in online chatrooms; Norway is still a target of Islamists burning to avenge the Muhammad cartoons; legal action was finally taken against the radical Mullah Krekar whom Norway has been sheltering for years, and he threatened retaliation; al Qaeda tried to attack Oslo last year; and, frankly, most terrorism carried out worldwide today is at the hands of jihadists.

But the truth was a stunning reversal. Not only is the perpetrator a well-educated, boyishly blond, ethnic Norwegian, he is a self-described Christian conservative bent on sparking a Pan-European resistance movement to oppose – by violence if necessary – the corrosive forces of multiculturalism, Islamic immigration, and “cultural Marxism” that are destroying the fabric of European society and culture. It’s too soon to have all the facts –speculation, as usual, began flying at light-speed over the rumor-mongering internet, including the mystery of a fake Facebook page and the musing that Breivik is himself a jihadist posing as a Christian conservative. But as of this writing, the coldly rational Breivik has apparently confessed to what he described in a 1500-page manifesto as the “systematical and organized executions of multiculturalist traitors.”

But the tragedy won’t end at the lives lost in Norway. Bruce Bawer, the author of Surrender: Appeasing Islam, Sacrificing Freedom who lives in Norway, notes the broader concern that “legitimate criticism of Islam, which remains a very real threat to freedom in Norway and the West, has been profoundly discredited by association with this murderous lunatic.” As the European anti-jihad blogger Fjordman puts it, Breivik

has scored a major victory for his opponents. An agent provocateur seeking to discredit the right-wing conservative sliver of the European political spectrum would have a hard time doing a better job… It is the perfect excuse to persecute and silence opposing voices… We’re heading for dark days.

The Left – including the mainstream media, and stealth jihadists themselves, like the ubiquitous Muslim Brotherhood legacy group CAIR, the Council on American-Islamic Relations – won’t even bother to contain its collective glee over the fact that Breivik is a “right-wing Christian.” The narrative is already being constructed that will use him to tar everyone on the Right, particularly vocal critics of Islamic fundamentalism. This is the same Left that hijacks any and all discussions of Islamic terrorism by jumping up to insist that all Muslims must not be smeared because of the actions of a “tiny minority of extremists,” that not all terrorism is committed by Muslims and not all Muslims are terrorists. Of course, no responsible anti-jihadist has ever made such claims, but the Left never bothers to concede this. By contrast, instead of living by the standards they demand of the Right,lLeftists will now be perfectly happy to politicize Breivik’s terrorism and use him to tar everyone on the Right – Christians, conservatives, anti-jihadists, the Tea Party – everyone. And in fact, they have already begun attempting to link the Norway terrorist to Sarah Palin, of all people.

Breivik is a terrorist. His targeting of helpless schoolchildren makes him no better than the slaughterers at Beslan. But that doesn’t make everyone concerned about unfettered Islamic immigration, jihad, or the rapid disintegration of Europe’s cultural heritage a terrorist or even a sympathizer. There is no connection between the legitimate, courageous, lawful work of notable anti-jihadists and such evil. No true Christian, conservative, or responsible critic of jihad would condone Breivik’s despicable, cowardly acts or deem them to be in accordance with our beliefs and values. Much less would we celebrate those acts, unlike our Islamist counterparts. But denouncements of Breivik will be purposefully ignored by the Left.

Nor does it make Islamic terrorism any less of a threat. But the Left will use Breivik to divert attention from worldwide jihad, to advance their cultural Marxism, and to demonize the defenders of freedom. To echo Fjordman, we are facing dark days. We must face them with the truth.

Mark Tapson

Source: http://frontpagemag.com/2011/07/25/the-norway-terrorist/

Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.

1 comment:

salubrius said...

Eugene Robinson in the Washington Post is claiming that Daniel Pipes and Pamela Geller and other writers on Islamism are responsible for the deaths in Norway. It is undisputed that they did not intend those deaths. But were they negligent to write about the evils of Islamism?

Facts about stealth jihad (Robert Spencer) or jihad by migration instead of by violence (Bernard Lewis) are available in the Team 2B report on Shariah presented to Congress and are based on documents admitted in evidence in the Holy Land Foundation trial on terrorism without any objection to their authenticity. It is available from Amazon and it is also on the internet. Are those who prepared a report containing facts that appear to be true for the purpose of petitioning Congress to be tarred with negligence for having caused the deaths in Norway? That's what the author of this article claims. To decide that one must first determine if there is not only "but for" causation, but also "proximate causation".

To understand the difference, one must read, and understand the court's opinion in Palsgraaf v. the Long Island Railway that has terrified many a first year law student. In that case the complainant claimed the Long Island Railway was negligent because a conductor pushed a man into the railway car who dropped a package that happened to contain fireworks. They exploded and many yards down the platform, a heavy scale placed high on a shelf fell on poor Mrs. Palsgraaf. But for the conductor pushing the passenger onto the railway car, poor Mrs. Palsgraaf would have remained unscathed. But the US Supreme Court decided there was no proximate causation.

Two lessons can be learned from this. 1. If an act cannot reasonably be anticipated to be the cause of another act, the first act is not the "proximate cause" of the second. 2. Mrs. Palsgraaf's lawyer made a mistake in the complaint. He should have sued the railroad for negligently placing a heavy scale on a shelf in a RR Station where vibration might shift it and it might fall on somebody.

So are the US writers negligent in writing about the evils of Islamism. No. They have an even stronger case than the Long Island Railway. In addition to not being the proximate cause, making them responsible for the deaths would cut off their rights to write about Islamism and publish their views in the free marketplace of ideas, a First Amendment right under the Constitution. In the case of the Team 2B report, it would cut off their Constitutional right to petition Congress.

Breivik cited John Locke and Winston Churchill too. Should they be tarred with negligence in their writing and therefore responsibility for the deaths in Norway?

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