This Tide Of Anti-Muslim Hatred Is A Threat To Us All
by Seumas Milne
If young British Muslims had any doubts that they are singled out for
special treatment in the land of their birth, the punishments being meted
out to those who took part in last year's London demonstrations against
Israel's war on Gaza will have dispelled them. The protests near the Israeli
embassy at the height of the onslaught were angry: bottles and stones were
thrown, a Starbucks was trashed and the police employed unusually violent
tactics, even by the standards of other recent confrontations, such as the
G20 protests.
But a year later, it turns out that it's the sentences that are truly
exceptional. Of 119 people arrested, 78 have been charged, all but two of
them young Muslims (most between the ages of 16 and 19), according to
Manchester University's Joanna Gilmore, even though such figures in no way
reflect the mix of those who took part. In the past few weeks, 15 have been
convicted, mostly of violent disorder, and jailed for between eight months
and two-and-a-half years - having switched to guilty pleas to avoid heavier
terms. Another nine are up to be sentenced tomorrow.
The severity of the charges and sentencing goes far beyond the official
response to any other recent anti-war demonstration, or even the violent
stop the City protests a decade ago. So do the arrests, many of them carried
out months after the event in dawn raids by dozens of police officers, who
smashed down doors and handcuffed family members as if they were suspected
terrorists. Naturally, none of the more than 30 complaints about police
violence were upheld, even where video-evidence was available. . . .
[Brinkema found the three men guilty. As a result of the finding of being
labeled "terrorists," the men now face prison terms of fifty to one hundred
years.
[Joseph Stack deliberately flew an airplane into a building housing IRS
offices in Austin, Texas, in order to advance the political grievances he
outlined in a perfectly cogent suicide-manifesto.
All of this underscores, yet again, that Terrorism is simultaneously the
single most meaningless and most manipulated word in the American political
lexicon. The term now has virtually nothing to do with the act itself and
everything to do with the identity of the actor, especially his or her
religious identity. It has really come to mean: "a Muslim who fights
against or even expresses hostility towards the United States, Israel and
their allies." That's why all of this confusion and doubt arose yesterday
over whether a person who perpetrated a classic act of Terrorism should, in
fact, be called a Terrorist: he's not a Muslim and isn't acting on behalf
of standard Muslim grievances against the U.S. or Israel, and thus does not
fit the "definition."--Glenn Greenwald, "Terrorism: the most meaningless and manipulated
word," salon.com, February 19, 2010]
[One person crashes a plane into a building in an attempt to commit mass
slaughter and his crime gets some modest attention. Another expresses an
intention to kill someone, is arrested, and gets vastly more reporting and
discussion. That's quite a discrepancy. . . .
But then came Sept. 11, 2001, and the frame changed again. Terrorism was
about Islamic religious fanatics.
If Joseph Stack had done exactly what he did for the
same reason in 1996, the news coverage would have been massive and everyone
in the world would know his name. But he did it in 2010, when he and his
motives didn't fit the popular narrative of what terrorism is.--Dan Gardner,
"Jihad Jane is media catnip," Montreal Gazette, March
17, 2010]
[Words are powerful. They have meanings beyond the dictionary and impact
beyond their immediate use. Perhaps that's the lesson for all of us in the
Hutaree affair. Next time we see an irresponsible
label or epitaph and we do not protest, the same stone could ricochet and
hit us.--S. Amjad Hussain, "Labels have power that can rebound on user," Toledo
Blade, April 19, 2010]
[As Faisal Shahzad, a Pakistan-born American, grabbed international
headlines last week for an alleged terrorism attempt in New York's Times
Square, other suspected terrorists received much less media coverage as they
appeared before a judge in Detroit.--Bilal Randeree, "The US' home grown terror," aljazeera.net, May 9, 2010]
[The FBI claims that of the 83 terrorist attacks in the United States
between 9/11 and the end of 2009, only three were clearly connected with the
jihadist cause.--Franklin Lamb, "Congressman Peter King's Great Muslim
Scare," veteranstoday.com, March 12, 2011]
[Post-9/11, Muslims have been ruthlessly targeted. Paid informants have
infested mosques and their communities to entrap them. As a result, over 200
were persecuted on bogus terrorism related charges..--Stephen Lendman,
"Entrapping
Innocent Muslims," uruknet.info, June 19, 2011]
[The FBI has built a massive network of spies to prevent another domestic
attack. But are they busting terrorist plots - or leading them?--Trevor
Aaronson, "The
Informants, motherjones.com, August 25, 2011]