-- 
-Time flies like the wind. Fruit flies like a banana. Stranger things have -
-happened but none stranger than this. Does your driver's license say Organ
-Donor?Black holes are where God divided by zero. Listen to me! We are all-
-individuals! What if this weren't a hypothetical question? [EMAIL PROTECTED]


---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Fri, 10 May 2002 01:20:06 -0700
From: Jon Callas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: The Eristocracy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Right, Left, Left, Right, Left

[Editor's note: van Hoogstraten over simplifies. It isn't just the American
media who have simply called him a right-winger -- the BBC was just as
guilty of that. And on the other hand, NPR in the US did a good piece on him
the day he was killed. They not only pointed out that while some of his
opinions might be in some sense "right-wing," the sort of right-winger who
wants to limit immigration because he's afraid that Muslims will undermine
traditional Dutch values like allowing gay marriages isn't exactly what most
of us think of as a "right-winger." Me, I suppose that being a Dutch
right-winger is therefore a lot like being a French Socialist. They also
pointed out that he had been receiving death threats and was complaining
about not getting bodyguards from the government. They even said that while
they were there (nine days before his assassination) taping an interview, he
received a phone call that was a death threat. So -- like Fortuyn himself,
the situation is more complex than than the surface indicates. -- jdcc]


http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2002/05/08/fortuyn/index.html

The smearing of Pim Fortuyn
American media mislabeled the slain leader a fascist, when he really
represented a threat to an antiquated European political elite.

- - - - - - - - - - - -
By Diederik van Hoogstraten



May 8, 2002  |  Pim Fortuyn would have loved all the international
attention. The erratic, quirky populist who single-handedly shook up Dutch
politics and who was shot and killed last Monday, was always happiest in the
spotlight. CNN, the New York Times, even the American government have paid
tribute. He would have loved it.

But he would have objected fervently to being swept into one corner with
French Jean Marie le Pen, Austrian Jorg Haider and other
"hard-right-wingers" or "neo-fascists" who are "flooding" Europe, as the
American media have been happy to report with great alarm. In a piece just a
day before his death in the New York Times, a reporter made reference to
"Mr. Le Pen and others who have modernized their fascism, like Jorg Haider
of Austria and Pim Fortuyn of the Netherlands." It's a mischaracterization
some European political elites may try to cling to, but they will be wrong.

Fortuyn had a weekly column at Elsevier Magazine (which is also the magazine
I write for) from 1994 until 2001, and Fortuyn, who was 54, built his
reputation there as a political hell-raiser. A bold, bald, sharply dressed
and very gay one at that. He was much alarmed by rising crime, unemployment,
decay in the big cities, deteriorating public services, and the perceived
loss of national identity in the face of European unification and
bureaucratization. All of this became clear and more widely known during the
election campaign. Fortuyn had left Elsevier to enter politics, and to
become prime minister, as he always said. He never cared much for modesty.

More than anything, he was concerned about Islam being the fastest-growing
religion in an otherwise secular society. He found it amazing, and alarming,
that Mohammed had become the most popular name for newborn boys in
Amsterdam. Clearly, Islam was being "imported" by newcomers, and Fortuyn
didn't like it. As a gay man, he was unafraid of calling Islam "backward."
There was never any nuance to that opinion, but from his perspective, it
made some sense, especially when one Dutch imam recently called homosexuals
"less than pigs." 

Fortuyn did not want to send people back to where they came from, but he did
argue for limits on immigration. He called on the government to force people
to learn the Dutch language, embrace basic democratic principles, work real
jobs rather than lean on the welfare state, and actively integrate if they
chose Holland to be their new home.

The man simply refused to play the racially sensitive or politically correct
role. (He never asked anyone to be careful or sensitive about his sexual
identity either. The imam's pig comment merely made him smile in disbelief
-- and he enthusiastically defended the spiritual leader's right to speak
his mind.) 

Fortuyn was among the first in Holland to wonder out loud how an open
democratic country should balance the fundamental value of religious
tolerance with the threat conservative Islam poses. In a modern, pluralist
society, is it all right to have a new religious "pillar" where women (and
gays) are considered lower figures? How to handle leaders who in mosques
call for the destruction of Jews, or groups of young Moroccan men who freely
vandalize subway stations and gang-rape girls? Those are pointed questions
in a country that basks in all the international talk of liberalism,
advanced feminism, and the legalizing of soft drugs and the gay marriage.

Fortuyn was far from subtle. He ranted, yelled, mocked and insulted. But the
Dutch public now agrees that he did something important to the sleepy
political culture of the Netherlands. He forced people to argue and debate,
out in the open. That was his main feat, and it was also the greatest threat
to the establishment, which had not been used to street-fighting with words,
and hence tried to shut him out for long.

The Dutch and now the international media did not know where to place this
odd man. He evaded characterizations. But more than anything, he took on the
role of a strong, eloquent opposition, something he accused the "real"
parliamentary opposition of failing to do. Most shocking, perhaps, is to
realize now how the powerful managed to ignore and mock Fortuyn for so long.
If we believe in democracy, how can we automatically dismiss critics of
power as lunatics on the right fringe? (Interestingly, the chief suspect in
Fortuyn's shooting is a far-left environmentalist.)

Calling Fortuyn a neo-fascist is in line with seeing every voter for Le Pen
or Berlusconi as a dumb xenophobe. The European left, in power but out of
touch, has done exactly that for years. But the issues that Fortuyn and
other addressed, have needed urgent attention from the social-democrats in
office. To call those who planned to vote for him a bunch of fascists is, to
say the least, strange, as many of them had voted for leftist parties in
prior elections. It's safe to say that the ruling class of today helped
create the electoral base for populists whom they still do not know how to
fight. 

The frightened establishment is not responsible for Fortuyn's death, of
course. But fighting him openly and honestly with words might have taken the
sting out of the often cold and nasty exchanges with "Professor Pim," as his
supporters lovingly called him. And, who knows, he might have lived to be
86, as he recently predicted he would.

salon.com



- - - - - - - - - - - -
About the writer
Diederik van Hoogstraten is the American correspondent for Elsevier, the
largest Dutch news magazine.

 
 


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