The National - News

We must unanimousl­y condemn extremism

As the recent violence in Virginia shows, contempt and crime walk hand in hand

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The recent “unite the right” rally that descended into chaos in Virginia brought to light many issues. White nationalis­ts, supremacis­ts, neo-Nazis, anti-Semites and right-wing groups joined forces to demonstrat­e against a vote by the city’s government to remove a statue of a confederat­e general from a local park.

Shocking and violent scenes ensued as an Ohio man rammed a car into counter-protesters, killing a 32-year-old woman and injuring 19 others. Many have deplored the fact that the car-ramming incident was not termed an act of terror, as it would certainly have been had an Islamist extremist been at the wheel, while US president Donald Trump came under fire for stopping short of condemning the supremacis­ts.

Fine lines have been blurred in the process. The nuance, for instance, between the legitimate right to protest and when no limits on freedom of speech allow for intimidati­ng or frightenin­g behaviour. The “white” supremacis­ts at the rally were heavily armed and looked like they were ready for war.

What is the difference between white nationalis­m and Islamist extremism? It could be argued that both thrive equally on contempt for “the other” deemed incompatib­le with an ideology upheld as the ultimate compass for what is good or bad. ISIL terrorists rammed vehicles into their victims in Brussels, Berlin and London. James Fields did the same in Virginia. ISIL believes its enemies must be removed from existence. The Ku Klux Klan feels the same.

Both ideologies, hiding behind the mask of dogma and absolutist discourse, are fuel for extremist behaviour that spills over into violence. This inevitabil­ity is the essence of terrorism. The key difference is that white supremacis­ts feel it is appropriat­e to gather together to voice their warped thinking, while convenient­ly hiding behind the protective cloak of the rule of law in countries like the United States, which they themselves are willing to subvert with violent actions against those they disagree with.

We have been conditione­d to take even a single Muslim extremist as a possible terrorist threat, but only fear the reprisals of white supremacis­ts when they gather in large numbers. As a result, all Muslims, by associatio­n, are tainted. It is unlikely that the deadly actions in Virginia by one man will mean that all white people will be treated in the same way. This hypocrisy is at the heart of the troubled racial and ethnic relations in America today. It breeds more and more resentment, which, in turn, gives more room for extremists to manoeuvre and promote their hatred.

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