The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Now and throughout history, attitudes are everything

- Georgie Anne Geyer Columnist

Whenever there’s a world crisis, at some point there also comes a breaking point — after which the drama is never acted out quite the same way.

The Battle of Midway was a crucial point in the Pacific during World War II. You might say Gettysburg marked the turning point in the Civil War.

Was the horrific killing of seven innocents and wounding of 48 others at London Bridge one of those turning points in the West’s increasing­ly nasty “war” against Islamist terrorism? Or are we even asking the right questions?

It surely seemed that official Britain’s words and behavior changed markedly immediatel­y after the attack, the third in a bare three months, as Prime Minister Theresa May took on a new stance of toughness and reality.

“We cannot and must not pretend that things can continue as they are,” she proclaimed. “It is time we say that enough is enough.”

But most important — with British intelligen­ce now saying it is watching 3,000 Islamist sympathize­rs, plus another 20,000 in waiting — the prime minister went directly to the heart of the problem.

Often, in bad times like these, it helps to gain perspectiv­e through looking at other examples that might shed light. The events taking place — since 1997 — in northern cities of England centered around Rotherham are darkly instructiv­e in understand­ing some of the terrible damage that can be inflicted by Britain’s apparently tolerant attitudes toward radicals — but also toward virtually any Muslim immigrants.

We now know without question that at least 1,400 teenage girls, some as young as 11 and 12, were “groomed” by immigrants, almost all of Pakistani birth or origin, and turned into prostitute­s, “servicing” sometimes 50 men a day in darkened, locked rooms.

This savagery went on for years under everybody’s nose. The police knew about it.

The social welfare authoritie­s were constantly informed. But they did nothing. So, what are we dealing with in the big picture of Islamist or foreign terrorism that underlies all of these situations?

Answering these questions, the brilliant Lebanese-American professor Fawaz Gerges, now of the London School of Economics and Political Science, explained on CNN after the London Bridge tragedy: “You have troubled souls, you have hard-core ideologues, you have people who believe that somehow some Western countries and Middle Eastern countries are waging a war against their faith . ... ”

In the wake of the London Bridge attack, professors are coming forward to give their ideas on how to purge radical Islamist ideas from the internet. Britons are talking more about their hesitant and often even criminal attitudes toward radicals.

American and British Muslims seem to be realizing finally that they must speak out.

And in the Middle East, the Persian Gulf states and Saudi Arabia are acting against Qatar for its long-rumored support of terrorist groups: an astounding, if complicate­d, developmen­t.

Above all else, attitudes have to change.

We don’t have to embrace the vulgar anti-political correctnes­s of President Trump to see that the “tolerant” British — and, too often also, the “liberal” American — excuses for not holding Muslims to the law and to our cultural truths are abhorrent to us and degrading to them.

We need only to implement serious, balanced and truly just policing and immigratio­n policies, tough-minded and middlegrou­nd, that are appropriat­e and becoming to our civilized societies.

Attitudes. They’ve always been the start of everything.

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