Billy
 
Buruma is a recognized Asian Studies expert and as I went to school in Japan 
and lived there for several years I am always interested in the Western view of 
Japan so I have read a couple of his books on Japan. They were interesting but 
not essential to the study of Japanese history but perhaps there is something 
for those interested in the popular culture. 
 
With this article one can see he certainly has his hand on the pulse of the 
subject. Like Wilders he is also Dutch but of the opposite take on the 
situation. However he has, more than many liberals, espoused  the dangers of 
radical Islam especially with regard to Europe. The article is pretty level 
headed but it still carries more of the appeasement and political correctness 
than I find necessary at this point in time. Of course the left is unhappy with 
the turn of events in Europe but they brought it upon themselves and precisely 
because of their, IMO unwise, political correct attitude toward Islam.
 
Here is a statement on the burqa problem in France that he made in a recent 
news article.
 
"Living with values that one does not share is a price to be paid for living in 
a pluralist society."
 
Normally I would agree with this statement but with regard to Islam and its too 
often unbending, uncompromising attitude I cannot agree with it in that 
context. Islam, so far, has shown for the most part, that it does not want to 
live in harmony with values it does not share. 
 
Tom
 



Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?


--- On Tue, 8/16/11, [email protected] <[email protected]> wrote:


From: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [RC] Europe moving Right --the Left doesn't like it
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]
Date: Tuesday, August 16, 2011, 1:55 PM




Tom :
Well, the article appeared in The Nation. Hardly a big surprise when the writer
follows the Left-line. Yes, the differences are profound. Breivik was a one man
wrecking crew even if, in a few places, he has "fans." Muslims have committed,
by one count, 170,000 jihadist attacks since 9/11. Breivik acted on his own
and had no support from any religious movement. Moreover, even if he claimed
to be a "Christian" there doesn't seem to be one Christian, anywhere, who
justifies his actions. While, for sure, not all Muslims approved 9/11 or many
subsequent actions, also for sure a large % of Muslims do support such things
and say so openly  --for which, with no problem at all, they can find all sorts
of justifications in the Koran.
 
This said, the article is fairly objective about what is going on in Europe.
Unless you have another take.  I  know that this is an area of your interest
and that you have your own sources of information. How does the article
--in terms of a roundup of facts about the rise of the Right in Europe--
stack up with reality ?
 
Billy
 
----------------------------------------------------------------
 
 
message dated 8/16/2011 11:35:09 A.M. Pacific Daylight Time, 
[email protected] writes:





Billy 
 
This phrase from the article is pretty telling.
 
" In which case we cannot blame right-wing, anti-Muslim populists directly for 
the murders in Oslo, just as anti-Western Muslim clerics can’t be blamed for 
9/11."
 
The difference is that these "Right wing anti-Muslim populists" are not 
carrying out their threats, murders and subversive actions in Muslim nations 
while The anti-Western, anti-Christian Muslims are carrying out their 
subversive and violent deeds in Christian countries, not their own. This is not 
lost on many thus the rise of leaders like Wilders, Le Pen. a revitalized 
Falange etc.
Surely the elite liberals did not think that the acts of violent Islam within 
European borders would simple go unanswered forever by the population. This is 
a logical backlash predicted a decade ago by those with common sense. 
 
Tom



Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?
 

--- On Tue, 8/16/11, [email protected] <[email protected]> wrote:


From: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject: [RC] Europe moving Right --the Left doesn't like it
To: [email protected]
Date: Tuesday, August 16, 2011, 1:14 PM



 
 
 
  



  





 








  

   




Europe's Turn to the Right 
Ian Buruma 
August 10, 2011   |    from the Aug 29 / Sept 5  issue 



Right-wing gunmen are a rarity in postwar Europe. There have, of course, been 
instances of right-wing violence. In the 1990s, gangs composed mostly of former 
East German youths, prey to neo-Nazi fantasies, set upon Turks and other 
clearly identifiable immigrants, beating people up in the streets and torching 
refugee shelters.


 


Soccer hooligans, too, from a number of countries—especially Germany, Britain 
and Russia—like to scream racist or nationalist slogans while brawling in 
stadiums or smashing city centers. There is even evidence of some 
organizational links between political fringe groups, such as the English 
Defence League, and gangs of soccer hooligans.
Anders Behring Breivik, who murdered seventy-six people in the name of his war 
against “Islamization” and “multiculturalism,” was never, so far as we know, a 
soccer hooligan. But he did have relations with the English Defence League. His 
rambling manifesto, titled “2083—A European Declaration of Independence,” 
contains a lot of gobbledygook about medieval knights, but also negative views 
on Muslims and liberals (“cultural Marxists”), which echo to a disconcerting 
degree what certain populists closer to the European mainstream are saying. He 
quotes Dutch politician Geert Wilders, among others, as an inspiration, 
especially on the evils of multiculturalism. One or two politicians on the far 
right have returned the compliment. Francesco Speroni of Italy’s Northern 
League, which is part of Silvio Berlusconi’s government, claimed that 
“Breivik’s ideas are in defense of Western civilization.” A new anti-immigrant 
Romanian party has
 even accorded him the singular honor of borrowing his name.
Even so, most right-wing populists who share many of Breivik’s opinions, such 
as Wilders, have quickly distanced themselves from the killer and dismissed him 
as a madman. Wilders tweeted: “That a psychopath has abused the battle against 
Islamization is disgusting and a slap in the face of the worldwide anti-Islam 
movement.” This is a smart way to avoid being tainted, but is it right? Is 
Breivik just a crazy loner, or is there a link between his murderous acts and 
the ideas that inspired them?
Even if far-right violence in postwar Europe has been sporadic so far, and 
without serious political significance, there have always been radical 
right-wing parties, mostly operating on the margins of national politics. The 
nature of these parties differs from country to country, depending on national 
histories and traditions. The National Front in France, for instance, was 
founded by Jean-Marie Le Pen, a veteran of anticolonial wars, whose views on 
World War II (the Nazi occupation was “not especially inhumane”) are in line 
with an antiliberal, anti-Semitic tradition in France.
The Flemish nationalists in Belgium owe much of their animus against foreigners 
to a long socioeconomic struggle with the French-speaking Walloons, who 
dominated them for much of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. During the 
war, this made many of them sympathetic to Nazi ideas of Aryan supremacy. Now 
it is immigrants, especially Muslims, who are seen as the enemy by the 
far-right Vlaams Belang party.
In Germany, especially, it has been impossible to escape from the past. The 
right-wing Republikaner Party was founded in 1983 by the late Franz Schönhuber, 
a former officer in the Waffen SS, who blamed foreigners for most of the 
problems in West Germany. In the ’90s he had hoped to merge his party with the 
even more radical, but equally marginal, German People’s Union, whose leader 
advocated racial purity and violence against immigrants.
Even though Austrians had an easy ride after the war, absolving themselves from 
German war guilt, a certain nostalgia for Nazi times still lurks in right-wing 
corners there too. The late Jörg Haider, former leader of the Austrian Freedom 
Party, a far more mainstream party than the German Republikaner, pandered to 
older members by praising the virtues of the wartime generation, especially the 
Waffen SS.
At least two important radical right-wing parties emerged directly from the 
sump of Mussolini’s Italy. The National Alliance, under Gianfranco Fini, and 
the Tricolor Flame came from the Italian Social Movement, founded by 
neo-Fascists in 1946. Before tacking more to the center in the ’90s, Fini was 
given to such statements as “Fascism has a tradition of honesty, correctness 
and good government.”
The Netherlands and the Scandinavian countries are less tainted by the past, 
even though they produced their share of National Socialists and Nazi 
collaborators. Right-wing fringe parties in the postwar Netherlands were 
antiliberal and sometimes nativist. One notorious figure, Hans Janmaat, spoke 
out against immigrants. But neither he nor other right-wingers could be 
described as fascists. In Denmark, Sweden and Norway, right-wing parties, until 
recently, were more interested in lowering taxes than in the threat of 
foreigners to the purity of the native folk.
One reason radical right-wing parties were marginalized for a long time in 
Europe is that they were simply too disreputable. It was worse than uncouth to 
agitate openly against minorities, let alone to flirt with ideologies that had 
caused the death of millions. Even to suggest that large-scale immigration 
could be a problem was considered racist until not so long ago. In such 
countries as Belgium, Austria, the Netherlands and France, mainstream parties 
have tended to gang up against radical right-wing parties, blocking them behind 
what the French call a cordon sanitaire. On the whole, voters for the far right 
hovered between 10 percent and 15 percent—more than is desirable, perhaps, but 
few people worried that they would ever get much more.
The cordon first began to crack in Austria and Italy, during the ’90s. This was 
not so much because Austrians were rediscovering their Nazi sympathies. Indeed, 
by the late ’90s most politicians on the democratic far right in Europe had 
tried to distance themselves from Nazi or fascist antecedents. The reason for 
the Freedom Party’s success was that the Social and Christian Democrats had 
been in government too long. People voted against a sclerotic establishment. 
Many Italians felt the same way about the Christian Democrats, who had been 
propped up for decades, with the help of the United States, to keep the left 
out. But once the Christian Democrats finally lost power, it wasn’t the left 
that leapt into the vacuum but Berlusconi, backed by neo-Fascist and 
anti-immigrant parties, such as Fini’s National Alliance and Umberto Bossi’s 
Northern League.
Governments of the European Union were outraged in 2000, when the Austrian 
Freedom Party garnered enough votes to form part of a coalition government. 
Boycotts were threatened. Austrian officials were snubbed. This was a mistake. 
It only helped to burnish the right’s anti-establishment credentials. After 
all, the AFP was democratically elected, as were the right-wing Italian parties 
in 1994.
Perhaps being part of a government had a civilizing effect. In 1995 Fini 
disavowed his party’s Fascist heritage. But when it comes to immigration and, 
especially, “the Muslim problem,” Fini and his right-wing allies in 
Berlusconi’s coalition, as well as the Austrian AFP, are if anything even more 
ferocious than before. In this, they are not alone.
* * *
 
Already by the late ’90s, anti-immigrant feelings were simmering in several 
European countries, where relatively large numbers of “guest workers,” former 
colonial subjects and refugees were beginning to make the native majorities 
feel nervous. Neighborhoods were changing. Jobs were thought to be in peril. 
Welfare states were felt to be under strain.
And then 9/11 happened, and the murder of the Dutch filmmaker Theo van Gogh, 
and the bombings in Madrid and London—all these atrocities perpetrated by 
terrorists acting in the name of a violent Islamist revolution. This finally 
gave right-wing populists a cause with which to crash into the center of 
European politics.
European civilization, frightened citizens were being told, had to be defended 
against “Islamization,” against fanatical aliens who breed so fast that white 
Europeans will soon be outnumbered. And the promoters of this cause were not 
nostalgic old SS men dreaming of the good old days, or neo-Fascists pining for 
black shirts and military marches, or skinheads itching for a brawl. Quite the 
opposite: Europe’s new populists are smartly dressed modern men and women who 
claim to be defending our freedoms. And they are persuasive because people are 
afraid and resentful, blaming economic and social anxieties on “liberal 
elites.” But if the fears are vague and various, the focal point is Islam.
The most successful politician of this new type is Geert Wilders, whose Freedom 
Party was described by Anders Breivik, the Norwegian killer, as “the only real 
conservative party in existance.” There are sane reasons to be worried about 
mass immigration, Islamist extremism or the failures of multiculturalism. But 
Wilders goes much further than that. He likes to speak in apocalyptic terms, of 
“lights going out over Europe,” of “the final stages of the Islamization of 
Europe,” of the “threat to America and the sheer survival of the West.” And all 
this not just because of a particular strain of violent revolutionary Islam but 
because of Islam itself: “If you want to compare Islam to anything, compare it 
to communism or National Socialism—a totalitarian ideology.”
Yet the Europe to be fought for, in Wilders’s rhetoric, bears no relation to 
the dreams of Hitler or Mussolini. It is modern, and at the same time ill 
defined. Sometimes it is “Judeo-Christian civilization” that must be defended, 
sometimes “the Enlightenment” and sometimes liberal values mostly achieved 
since the 1960s, such as gay rights and gender equality. These are not the 
kinds of ideals typical right-wingers normally espouse, but since conservative 
Muslims tend to oppose them, they can be held up as pillars of Western 
civilization.
The perception of a Muslim threat allowed the populist right to turn the tables 
on the old liberal elites. Now it was the new right who were defending the West 
against the new fascists. And the liberals were the “collaborators” of 
“Islamofascism.”
Wilders and others in the “anti-Islamization movement” have even replaced 
anti-Semitism, associated with the old European far right, with what looks like 
its opposite, a fervent form of Zionism. Indeed, they are great friends of 
Israel—that is, of a certain kind of Israel, the one associated with figures 
such as right-wing foreign minister Avigdor Lieberman. Wilders makes frequent 
trips there, dining with Lieberman and telling settlers on the West Bank that 
“Judea and Samaria” are rightfully theirs. So does Heinz-Christian Strache, of 
the Austrian Freedom Party. What they like about the Israeli government is its 
anti-Arab militancy. Israel, in Wilders’s phrase, is on the “front line” of the 
war to save Western civilization.
Even the new leader of the French National Front, Marine Le Pen, daughter of 
Jean-Marie, would not dream of defending French fascism or indulge in her 
father’s barely veiled anti-Semitism. And yet, in an odd way, the legacy of 
World War II still haunts us, which is why critics of the apocalyptic view of 
Islam in Europe are routinely denounced as “appeasers.” Europe, in the words of 
an American admirer of Wilders, has entered another “Weimar moment.”
In short, we are facing another war. The new right-wing populists in Europe see 
not only Muslims as their enemies but also “liberal elites,” 
“multiculturalists” and “appeasers” who are fatally undermining the West and 
selling Europe out to the Islamofascists.
So far, this is just a war of words. Wilders’s Freedom Party, as well as the 
Danish People’s Party and the Austrian Freedom Party, are not advocating 
violence. On the contrary, by playing by the rules of democracy, they have 
successfully pushed more centrist parties to the right. Neither the Dutch nor 
the Danish government could survive without the official support of the 
populists. And Marine Le Pen’s National Front appears to be gaining strength in 
France. In Norway, the right-wing Progress Party, of which Breivik was a member 
until 2006, is the second-biggest party in the country.
This move of right-wing populist parties to the mainstream could be a reason 
for the kind of savagery displayed by the Norwegian terrorist. Violent 
extremists might feel that parties they once admired are losing their purity by 
tacking toward the center. But this explanation lets the populists off the hook 
a little too easily. Even though they don’t promote violence, they are 
exploiting fears in a dangerous manner. When the right claims that the future 
of our civilization, our democracies, our countries, is at stake, and that all 
the Muslims living in our midst are driven by “a totalitarian ideology,” it is 
surely not surprising that some people might interpret this as a call to arms.
Perhaps Anders Breivik is a madman, even though there is no evidence so far of 
clinical insanity. Maybe the men who flew airplanes into the Twin Towers, who 
stabbed Theo van Gogh to death, who laid bombs in the London subway, were crazy 
too. But different times produce different pathologies. If the hateful words of 
radical Muslims bear any relation to extreme acts, carried out in name of 
Islam, then surely the words of people who warn us that we are at war with 
Islam and its liberal appeasers must be held accountable too.
Ideology can be random. In other times, Breivik might have killed in the name 
of fascism, anarchism or communism. Some murderous dreamers, Muslims as well as 
Christians, might well use any ideological excuse to perpetrate their crimes. 
In which case we cannot blame right-wing, anti-Muslim populists directly for 
the murders in Oslo, just as anti-Western Muslim clerics can’t be blamed for 
9/11. But hate-filled words surely have an influence on murderous minds, and on 
the targets they pick.
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org


 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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