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COLUMN: Double standards and Fort Hood shooting

It’s a shock when I find insight in a right-wing letter to the Daily News, but sometimes it happens.
A Nov. 8 writer responded to the Fort Hood shooting by pointing out that “we have chosen to allow persons with suspect heritage, race, religion and national origin to advance to all levels of leadership in this country.”
As soon as I read it, I realized he was right: Our national government and military leadership is overflowing with white Americans.
The same race as the Columbine killers. The same race as Timothy McVeigh and the Unabomber, as anti-abortion terrorists Scott Roeder, Eric Rudolph and Paul Hill, as the KKK and the white supremacist movement. They’re the overwhelming majority of Congress, staff the executive branch, dominate the Supreme Court — why, even our president is half white!
I’m afraid!
Yes, I’m joking. Unfortunately the letter writer wasn’t and neither are vast number of far more prominent right-wing voices.
Pat Robertson, for example, has announced that American Muslims should be treated “as we would members of a fascist group.” Bryan Fischer of the American Family Association says Muslims should be banned from the military until they can prove they’re not terrorists: “You tell us who the ones are that we have to worry about, prove you’re right, and Muslims can once again serve. Until that day comes, we simply cannot afford the risk.”
Fox News’ Brian Kilmeade suggests that all Muslim soldiers have “special debriefings” because “if  I’m going to be sitting in an outpost, I’ve got to know that the guy next to me is not going to want to kill me.” On the National Review Web site, pundit Mark Steyn wrote that the shooter’s “Islamic impulses” overcame “his entire American identity.”
Don’t get me wrong, if Major Nidal Hassan was acting as a terrorist, it’s important to figure out why he wasn’t red-flagged as a threat earlier. But it’s a rather large jump from that to treating all Muslims in the military as potential murderers; the vast majority serve honorably and some (as Bush speech-writer David Frum has pointed out) have died for this country.
And if Hassan didn’t belong to an unpopular religious minority, you wouldn’t hear so many prominent mainstream voices suggesting otherwise.
The right wing took plenty of criticism after Timothy McVeigh’s terrorist attack on the Murrah Building, but nobody in the mainstream suggested all right-wingers should be banned from serving; even Homeland Security’s report on the potential for veterans becoming terrorists produced shrieks of outrage from the right.
Likewise, while Jim Adkisson’s murderous 2008 attack on a Unitarian church (to kill liberals, by his own statement) led to warnings about the potential for right-wing violence, nobody as prominent as Robinson or Kilmeade suggested that all right-wingers were potential killers (even most left-wing blogs didn’t go that far).
Kilmeade’s remark about worrying someone in your platoon wants to kill you could easily apply to a non-white soldier sharing a foxhole with a neo-Nazi (and we have a number of them serving in the military) but I haven’t heard that point made on TV either.
No surprise. Most of us look at whites and Christians and see individuals: The existence of white supremacists isn’t taken as proof about the essential nature of all white people. Because Muslims are a minority, however, it’s easy for anyone predisposed to bigotry to see Hassan as the face of all Muslims. If one Muslim is a terrorist, all of them should be treated as potential terrorists.
They’re not.
The vast majority of American Muslims are peaceful, respectable citizens, much like Catholics, Protestants, Jews, Wiccans and atheists.
When they’re not, they should be dealt with the same as we’d dealt with Rudolph, the Unabomber or McVeigh: As an individual, not as a spokesman for a group some of us desperately want excuses to hate.


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Reader's comments




You two need to get a room. I was going to make a comment and congratulate Fraser on a good column, but I see that other than Richard, this is a private party.

CLeigh - Nov 21, 2009 10:51:14 PM Remove Comment

 
Richard, CAIR, the largest Muslim activist group, has repeatedly condemned terrorist acts by Muslims. Like I said, if there were warning signs that were missed, we need to know why. But in a military that our government admits is accepting white supremacists and neonazis, the assumption that it is all about the Muslims does not hold up.

Fraser - Nov 21, 2009 12:04:39 PM Remove Comment

 
I think if anything good could ever come from this outrageous and unneccessary massacre of innocents soldiers is that now maybe we will wake up and take a hard look at political correctness and its ills. We are now learning each day more and more of what a hate monger this Major Hasan was and about all of his premeditation in carrying out this cowardly act. But hey what else is new, isn't that the way the majority of these acts of terror are carried out. You know strapping bombs to mentally challenged your women, road side bombs, flying planes full of American citizens into skyscrapers and on and on. Yet we are told we cannot say or do anything lest we be offensive to our peace loving Muslim brothers. Well it is time we wake up as a Nation and insist that the moderate Islamic community start to speak up and take a strong and out front opposition to those within their religious ranks that bring this dishonor to them. Until we are freed from the shackles of political correctness and this notion of all inclusiveness we will continue to see these horrific incidents continue and escalate in our country. When it walks like a duck, quacks like a duck, has feathers and webbed feet it usually is a duck. Continuing down this road that we can't call it a "duck" for fear of being called a bigot or hate monger or any of the other lables placed on us for calling it what it is without the filter of political corrctness, aka closing one's eyes to reality! Until we learn to speak up and tell it like it is, we are in for a long and dark ride into the world of barbarism all for the sake of fear of offending someone or some group.

Richard FL - Nov 21, 2009 10:36:49 AM Remove Comment

 
If Im sniveling and nasty, why are you the one who does all the name calling? And since I write these on company time, obviously there is a market for it.

Fraser Sherman - Nov 20, 2009 02:01:57 PM Remove Comment

 
any more "by the way"s? you're a snivelling little fire starter who deserves no debate, I just want you to explain why you imagine there is a market for your nastiness? are you auditioning for a bigger paper? or is your ego that inverse to your stature?

destinista - Nov 20, 2009 09:59:06 AM Remove Comment

 
By the way, destinista, I am perfectly aware you are not the sort who cares about bigotry on your side of the fence. But despite your denials, you care very much when I point out that it exists.

Fraser Sherman - Nov 20, 2009 09:18:58 AM Remove Comment

 
By the way, I know you claim you cannot be bothered because my arguments are beneath you, but I at least presented an argument. You have yet to come up with anything but namecalling or calling me intolerant without any examples. I know you pretend you cannot be bothered to refute me, but if I was that inconsequential, why comment at all? But I will still give you that sympathy hug when you feel the need, you poor thing.

Fraser Sherman - Nov 20, 2009 09:15:13 AM Remove Comment

 
Oh, I agree there is plenty of looniness on the left, but in the right, the lunatics, bigots and hatemongers are the mainstream. Pat Buchanan, Glenn Beck, Pat Robertson and so forth. As I pointed out once before, to find a leftie justifying 9 11 you had to go to Wade Churchill, a nobody. On the right wing, James Inhofe, Pat Robertson and Jerry Falwell all said America deserved it.

Fraser Sherman - Nov 20, 2009 09:11:56 AM Remove Comment

 
bigotry of the right wing? why would I care anything about that. There is plenty of lefty bigotry as well, your smug myopic attitude is far more close minded than you imagine a "birther" to be. nothing is less tolerant than a sanctimonious lib like yourself. the question stiull stands, why do you write like you're hoping to impress Katrina Vanden Heuvel or Graydon carter or some equally vapid squishy brained elitist when you work for the local paper? Take a risk and go be an imprudent snarky jackazz somewhere that it might actually count, nobody laps up the pablum here like they would in a "big" city.

destinista - Nov 19, 2009 10:33:40 PM Remove Comment

 
And I do think pointing out the absurdity of treating all Muslim soldiers as potential terrorists might enlighten a few people.

Fraser Sherman - Nov 19, 2009 10:05:29 AM Remove Comment

 
Destinista, I feel for you. It must be very painful to have the bigotry of some of the right wing pointed out to you and be unable to refute me. So I understand why you lash out in such pain and call me names. Would you like a sympathy hug?

Fraser Sherman - Nov 19, 2009 10:03:04 AM Remove Comment

 
You're short? no idea, anyway I don't "counter argue" because your column is nothing but a Rachel Maddow transcript, it's too silly to argue with a bomb throwing bobble head, you hope to provoke people here not enlighten them so I consider you simply a mental midget regardless of your height.

destinista - Nov 18, 2009 05:38:10 PM Remove Comment

 
Destinista, telling me I am short does nothing to prove my argument wrong. It does suggest that as usual, you have no counter arguments, and have to fall back on ad hominem. And the people I take pot shots at are the ones who seem to think being Muslim is suspicious in itself. With terrorists Rudolph or Schoeder, I do not recall anyone suggesting that their Christian identity was in conflict with their Americanism, so why should Nasar be any different?

Fraser Sherman - Nov 18, 2009 02:04:47 PM Remove Comment

 
You used the news of a muslim murderer to take some more pot shots at whites and Christians, your hyperbole and hostility is too ridiculous to bother debating. Once again I only ask why are you wasting your petty immature snarkiness on our small paper, doesn't the Daily Kos need a liliputian door stop?

destinista - Nov 18, 2009 01:25:54 PM Remove Comment

 
Which part is the appeasement. where I said, accurately, that most Muslims are not terrorists. Or where I said we shouldn't treat them as if they were. Or where I pointed out the double standard. If those constitute appeasement in your mind, you are, as always, dead wrong.

Fraser Sherman - Nov 18, 2009 11:29:28 AM Remove Comment

 
wow, Fraser and an article of appeasement and apology? I'm shocked. Destin's own diminutive Neville Chamberlain.

destinista - Nov 18, 2009 10:55:11 AM Remove Comment
 

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