
Don't Mince WordsThe London car-bomb plot was designed to kill women.
Posted Monday, July 2, 2007, at 1:11 PM ET
Why on earth do people keep saying, "There but for the grace of God …"? If matters had been very slightly different over the past weekend, the streets of London and the airport check-in area in Glasgow, Scotland, would have been strewn with charred body parts. And this would have been, according to the would-be perpetrators, because of the grace of God. Whatever our own private theology or theodicy, we might at least agree to take this vile belief seriously.
Instead, almost every other conceivable explanation was canvassed. The June 30 New York Times report managed to quote three people, one of whom attributed the aborted atrocity in London to Tony Blair's foreign policy; one of whom (a New Zealand diplomat, at that) felt "surprisingly all right about it"; and one of whom, described as "a Briton of Indian descent," was worried that "if I walk up that road, they're going to suspect me." The "they" there was clearly the British authorities, rather than the Muslim gangsters who have declared open season on all Hindus as well as all Jews, Christians, secularists, and other kuffar or infidel filth.
On the following day, July 1, the same newspaper informed us that Britain contained a "disenfranchised South Asian population." How this was true was never explained. There are several Muslim parliamentarians in both houses, often allowed to make the most absurdly inflammatory and euphemistic statements where acts of criminal violence are concerned, as well as several districts in which the Islamic vote keeps candidates of all parties uneasily aware of what may and may not be said. True, the Muslim extremist groups boycott elections and denounce democracy itself as profane, but this does not really count as disenfranchisement.
Only at the tail end of the coverage was it admitted that a car bomb might have been parked outside a club in Piccadilly because it was "ladies night" and that this explosion might have been designed to lure people into to the street, the better to be burned and shredded by the succeeding explosion from the second car-borne cargo of gasoline and nails. Since we have known since 2004 that a near-identical attack on a club called the Ministry of Sound was proposed in just these terms, on the grounds that dead "slags" or "sluts" would be regretted by nobody, a certain amount of trouble might have been saved by assuming the obvious. The murderers did not just want body parts in general but female body parts in particular.
I suppose that some people might want to shy away from this conclusion for whatever reason, but they cannot have been among the viewers of British Channel 4's recent Undercover Mosque, or among those who watched Sunday's report from Christiane Amanpour on CNN's Special Investigations Unit. On these shows, the British Muslim fanatics came right out with their program. Straight into the camera, leading figures like Anjem Choudary spoke of their love for Osama Bin Laden and their explicit rejection of any definition of Islam as a religion of peace. On tape or in person, mullahs in prominent British mosques called for the killing of Indians and Jews.
Liberal reluctance to confront this sheer horror is the result, I think, of a deep reticence about some furtive concept of "race." It is subconsciously assumed that a critique of political Islam is an attack on people with brown skins. One notes in passing that any such concession implicitly denies or negates Islam's claim to be a universal religion. Indeed, some of its own exponents certainly do speak as if they think of it as a tribal property. And, at any rate, in practice, so it is. The fascistic subculture that has taken root in Britain and that lives by violence and hatred is composed of two main elements. One is a refugee phenomenon, made up of shady exiles from the Middle East and Asia who are exploiting London's traditional hospitality, and one is the projection of an immigrant group that has its origins in a particularly backward and reactionary part of Pakistan.
To the shame-faced white-liberal refusal to confront these facts, one might counterpose a few observations. The first is that we were warned for years of the danger, by Britons also of Asian descent such as Hanif Kureishi, Monica Ali, and Salman Rushdie. They knew what the village mullahs looked like and sounded like, and they said as much. Not long ago, I was introduced to Nadeem Aslam, whose book Maps for Lost Lovers is highly recommended.
He understands the awful price of arranged marriages, dowry, veiling, and the other means by which the feudal arrangements of rural Pakistan have been transplanted to parts of London and Yorkshire. "In some families in my street," he writes to me, "the grandparents, parents, and the children are all first cousins—it's been going on for generations and so the effects of the inbreeding are quite pronounced by now." By his estimate and others, a minority of no more than 11 percent is responsible for more than 70 percent of the birth defects in Yorkshire. When a leading socialist member of Parliament, Ann Cryer, drew attention to this appalling state of affairs in her own constituency, she was promptly accused of—well, you can guess what she was accused of. The dumb word Islamophobia, uncritically employed by Christiane Amanpour in her otherwise powerful documentary, was the least of it. Meanwhile, an extreme self-destructive clannishness, which is itself "phobic" in respect to all outsiders, becomes the constituency for the preachings of a cult of death. I mention this because, if there is an "ethnic" dimension to the Islamist question, then in this case at least it is the responsibility of the Islamists themselves.
The most noticeable thing about all theocracies is their sexual repression and their directly related determination to exert absolute control over women. In Britain, in the 21st century, there are now honor killings, forced marriages, clerically mandated wife-beatings, incest in all but name, and the adoption of apparel for females that one cannot be sure is chosen by them but which is claimed as an issue of (of all things) free expression. This would be bad enough on its own and if it were confined to the Muslim "community" alone. But, of course, such a toxin cannot be confined, and the votaries of theocracy now claim the God-given right to slaughter females at random for nothing more than their perceived immodesty. The least we can do, confronted by such radical evil, is to look it in the eye (something it strives to avoid) and call it by its right name. For a start, it is the female victims of this tyranny who are "disenfranchised," while something rather worse than "disenfranchisement" awaits those who dare to disagree.












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Remarks from the Fray:
I'm sorry -- when somebody says that 70% of all birth defects in a city are caused by 11% of the population, I hear Adolf Hitler talking. This is the sort of thing Hitler had to say about the Jews and gypsies, and Hitchens musters little more evidence to justify his rant than Hitler did.
Oh, sorry. He found a Muslim writer who said it. Well, then it must be true. But Hitler, no doubt, could have probably found a Jew or two to agree with him, and his American counterparts would have found that an easy task. Many of America's early Jews -- the ones who came before, say, 1880 -- were deeply ashamed of those Jews who arrived from Eastern Europe in the new century. The early Jews were from Western Europe and were modern in dress and thought. Those who came after 1900 (including my grandparents) were rural, backward, and slower to assimilate. It would not have been difficult to find a Jewish writer of 1905 to claim that inbreeding among these people (who, like my first cousin maternal grandparents, came from a small rural backwater where the pool of marriage partners was limited) was causing birth defects. Hitchens' soul brothers in the social sciences would argue, as late as the 1920s, that tests administered by the Army during WWI "proved" that upwards of 70% of Italians, Hungarians, and Jews were "feeble-minded." Like Hitler, these people were not afraid to use the word "sterilization." And they dominated immigration policy in the USA for decades.
I guess what bothers me more than anything else is that Hitchens is making wildly inflammatory statements about an entire population and giving no more than anecdotal evidence to back it up. Are honor killings really common in England today, or is this the magnification of an incident or two? After all, incest and honor killings -- not to mention racially motivated murders -- were commonplace in certain regions of the United States right up to the latter part of this century. I can still recall hearing Sunday sermons which justified these events completely. Eventually, the United States did something about these backwaters -- some of which were not so back -- without demonizing white Protestants as a class.
But to take it yet another level deeper, does Hitchens really want to argue that the racial slur "wog," in today's Brtiain, is only applied to fundamentalist Muslims? That no Hindu or Sikh need fear racist attacks, because racial violence, as we all know, is only committed by those who make careful distinctions about those who they are attacking? Or is he not, with this kind of argument, giving aid and comfort to those who simply don't like dark-skinned people, or immigrants? We've all heard, I'm sure, about attacks on people of color here in the United States whose only crime was that they looked something like the 9/11 criminals. Hitchens' rant implicitly justifies this, and if he doesn't know it, he's like a child playing with an Uzi.
--the_slasher14
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While I'm sure Hitchens cares for women and supports their intellectual growth and economic advancement --in a very gentlemanly, proper and paternalistic way, mind you-- his article reminds me of nothing so much as the sudden concern for the rights of Afghan women that the Bush administration developed in the days following the 9/11 attacks.
It's interesting how these folks suddenly discover how much they really care about women and their rights and liberties when such caring can be used as a pretext to justify their own jihads against the jihadists.
--dsf3g
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At least Hitch has that element of reticence prevalent in the public as well as press nailed down. Compare the freedom of this forum with the heavily moderated BBC Boards where even the title of this post will get you censored. The UK is now caught in a death spiral that is partly due to its failed imperialism and partly due to its staunch PC and progressive policies which are doing nothing but eroding the very progressiveness it is trying to push. That's what happens when you condone and protect cultures, behaviors and people that do not respect them. This is also why such progressive policies are ultimately self-destructive.
--Pooty Pants
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No one who takes democracy and freedom seriously believes that honor killings and dowry have any place in a modern society. It is people of "Asian descent" - as Hitchens vaguely and euphemistically puts it - who understand this danger better than anyone else. We've looked this intolerance in the face and realize it needs to be stamped out, post-haste.
But Hitchens' article has a disappointing "get out your guns, they're coming for our women" tone. […] Of course terrorists target women. In America and England, women are equal participants in free society, which means we come under equal fire. Just like men, we exercise our rights. And naturally, women's equality offends religious extremists of all stripes. But the widespread "shame-faced white liberal refusal to confront these facts" - I'm neither white nor liberal, and I'm certainly not ashamed or afraid. Religious belief moves in cycles, and I have every faith that Islam, like Christianity in the past, will overcome this current distasteful interpretation. It will do so because Muslims like Rushdie and Ali and Asra Nomani and Mukhtar Mai (and hundreds of young brown people all over the world) will accept nothing less from their own religion.
--AnikaG
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