November 8, 2005
ROOT CAUSES
Intifada a la francaise (Nidra Poller, National Post, November 8th, 2005)
Until now, the angry Muslim men who constitute the bulk of the rioters have been allowed to masquerade as victims. It is a common refrain that these second- and third-generation North African immigrants have been marginalized by a racist French society. But much of what goes under the name of harassment is simply the half-hearted intrusion of the forces of order into territories that have been conquered by another system of values. In Muslim ghettoes, pimping, drug dealing, theft, terrorism and Islamic law mix and match. The block of working-class suburbs, or banlieues, in the Seine St-Denis region outside Paris, is especially lawless.These areas are hardly dismal, dilapidated hellholes. Most of the housing and infrastructure is decent. Those who wish to pursue clean, honest lives have plenty of opportunities to do so. The insurrection spreading through France cannot be understood through the traditional Marxist prism of poverty, unemployment and discrimination. These problems exist in all nations. What is different in France's Muslim ghettoes is a tradition of hate and xenophobia, one which the state has until now either ignored or encouraged.
In June, 2004, a huge demonstration was staged in Paris to protest the arrival of U.S. President George W. Bush, who made a brief visit to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the D-Day landings. Posters depicted Bush as the world's worst terrorist. By my first-hand observation, roughly one-third of the marchers came from hard-left parties and organizations: communists, socialists and ecologists, labour unions and wilted flower people. Another third were militant Muslims, many of them with checkered kaffiyehs. The other third were raunchy nihilists high on drugs and beer, marching with pitbulls and Rottweilers, calling for death and destruction. They painted graffiti on lowered store shutters and bus stop shelters, promising "a Paris comme a Falluja la guerilla vaincra" (In Paris as in Falluja, guerrilla warfare will triumph).
The same media that are now tallying up the number of cars torched and lecturing Sarkozy on the virtues of tolerance didn't seem much put out by such displays. The hard words were aimed at Bush, after all -- so the hatred expressed was seen as unremarkable, even admirable.
In the same way, much of France ignored the cries of "death to the Jews" that went up in the pro-Palestinian demonstrations that began in 2000, and which eventually blended in with the anti-war demonstrations of 2003. Incendiary, sometimes bloodthirsty slogans against Israel and the United States became commonplace.
For five years, resentful French Muslims have been fed a steady diet of romanticized violence -- jihad-intifada in Israel, jihad-insurgency in Iraq, jihad-insurgency in Afghanistan. When they started firebombing synagogues and beating up Jews in the fall of 2000, the media dutifully reported that these thugs were products of the "frustration" felt in regard to the treatments of Muslims in the Middle East and Central Asia. France's own government was full of hectoring words for the Americans, after all. The protesters were very much on message.
Clearly the riots are Bush’s fault.
They were shocked even though people like Mark Steyn, Ralph Peters and Theodore Dalrymple have been predicting in for years.
As Lord Melbourne said in similar circumstances,
"What all the wise men said would happen has not happened and what all the damn fools predicted has come to pass."
Posted by: Jeff at November 8, 2005 1:18 PMWe now have a large-scale example of the saying: "Too stupid to live."
Posted by: Luciferous at November 8, 2005 1:37 PMThe sound you hear is the chickens coming home to roost.
Posted by: Robert Schwartz at November 8, 2005 1:46 PMUntil the rioting threatens either to close the roads to the airports or spreads to violent acts in the areas where the "root causes" crowds live, the excuses won't disappear.
Posted by: John at November 8, 2005 2:37 PMWhen the Louvre is torched I am certain that it will be our fault for not having provided sufficient guards. ;)
Posted by: Mikey at November 8, 2005 2:43 PMChickens coming home to roost never made me sad; they only made me glad.
Posted by: Lou Gots at November 8, 2005 3:29 PMI salute the French Freedom Fighters, the cousins of our Minutemen forefathers!
Posted by: Palmcroft at November 8, 2005 4:16 PMIn one sense, Bush did instigate this, at least in the timing: Iraq is such an Islamist failure that they had to foolishly advance their plans to attack on a 2nd front somewhere, and given that France had already showed such weakness against Saddam....
For me the French riots are like watching your favorite team's two most bitter rivals playing each other. It doesn't really matter which side wins and you find yourself simply wanting them to inflict the maximum amount of damage on one another.
Posted by: MB at November 8, 2005 5:54 PM