By Charles C. W. Cooke
Friday, February 13, 2015
Attempting to throw a spanner into the humming rumor
mill, the wife of the Chapel Hill killer told the media on Wednesday that her
husband could not possibly be guilty of a hate crime because he was a committed
progressive. “This incident,” Mrs. Hicks insisted, “had nothing to do with
religion or victims’ faith but instead had to do with the longstanding parking
disputes that my husband had with the neighbors.” As evidence of her spouse’s
bona fides, she noted for the record that he “often champions on his Facebook
page for the rights of many individuals” and is in favor of same-sex marriages
and abortion. “He just believes that everyone is equal,” she concluded. It
“doesn’t matter what you look like or who you are or what you believe.”
Unless you park your car in his spot, of course. Then
you’re liable to be summarily executed.
It is, of course, entirely possible that the shooting was
the product of a quotidian parking dispute, and that Craig Hicks was a
terminally fussy busybody with a lethally short fuse. If anybody would know,
one would presume it would be his wife. But it is also possible that these were
merely proximate causes, and that Hicks really did have a sincere dislike of
Muslim Americans. Certainly, one does not wish to kick a grieving wife when she
is down. But it strikes me nevertheless that Mrs. Hicks’s blind rejection of
the latter possibility is worthy of comment, for as far as she is concerned,
the notion that her husband could have loathed Muslims to the breaking point is
an inherently impossible one. “He couldn’t have done this,” she seems to say;
“he supports all the right things.”
To acknowledge that this is a pathetic non sequitur is in
no way to indict progressivism or atheism or North Carolinians per se — and nor
is it to suggest that anybody other than the man who pulled the trigger is
responsible in the killing. It is, however, to note pointedly that people of
all ideologies and backgrounds can do terrible things, and that almost every
philosophy can be lethally twisted by its professed adherents. Statistically
speaking, almost all progressive atheists are peaceful people, and,
customarily, their preference is for reasonable debate and not for violence.
Nevertheless, it is entirely viable for us to acknowledge both that Hicks’s ostensible
views are not a cause for broader concern and that he did indeed hold them. As
is the case with anything else, both atheism and progressivism can be hijacked
by zealots and employed as an excuse for their whims. Disdain can boil over
into rank intolerance; restrained frustration can morph into a superiority
complex; and political disagreement can mutate into the spluttering conviction
that one’s ideological adversaries are responsible for screwing up the whole
world. If Mrs. Hicks has information proving that the killings were indeed the
product of a commonplace dispute — and not of her husband’s dislike of the
religious or the foreign — she should provide it to the authorities. It will
not do simply to presume that there is something intrinsic to progressivism
that renders its adherents free from bigotry.
By appealing to the presumed virtues of her husband’s
putative ideology, Mrs. Hicks is doing little more than indulging a form of the
No True Scotsman fallacy. A few years ago, the comedian Ricky Gervais imagined
a conversation between Adolf Hitler and Friedrich Nietzsche:
Hitler: Alright, NietzscheNietzsche: Good, what do you want?Hitler: Just read your book.Nietzsche: Yeah? What do you think?Hitler: Love it. Love all that. Man and Superman. Not everyone’s equal. Kill all the Jews.Nietzsche: Sorry?Hitler: Not everyone’s equal, so kill all the Jews.Nietzsche: I didn’t write that!Hitler: I read between the lines.Nietzsche: I didn’t mean that. That’s terrible. You haven’t been killing Jewish people, have you?
Peaceful men will always struggle to grasp exactly how
their political beliefs could be co-opted by the violent. Indeed, had he lived
to see it so appallingly cited, Nietzsche would have presumably spent the
latter years of his life making it clear to all and sundry that his work had
been wildly misappropriated. He would, no doubt, have had a point. But, really,
this serves only to underscore the point: Because we never know which of our
ideas evil men will pick up, pointing to the presumed virtues of those ideas is
futile. Hicks, the Huffington Post notes, had “openly expressed his
anti-theistic views on Facebook,” and he had expressed “his distaste for religious
beliefs, posting photos and quotes that mock religion.” Simultaneously, the
Post records, he “used the page to argue in support of equality and free
speech.” Is it not feasible — even if it was just for a moment — that the
former took precedence over the latter? And if it is, what relevance can his
support for gay marriage have? We do not find the accused innocent because they
keep the right company.
Had Hicks been a conservative, we would by now have been
subjected to an endless stream of half-baked thought pieces on the subject of
“right-wing terrorism.” (Which topic, amusingly enough, was a favorite of
Hicks’s.) Because he was not, the press has by and large managed to come to the
right conclusion: namely, that we are dealing with a bad egg, and that, there
being no critical mass of similar attacks, his politics did not matter much at
all. Although the double-standard grates, this, in my view, is a blessing, and
one that will save us a lot of useless partisan mud-throwing. Nevertheless,
while insisting that Hicks is in no way indicative of those with whom he chose
to associate, we might insist that we do not mistake one conclusion for
another. It is certainly the case that the murderer was a bad man first, and a
progressive atheist second. But progressive atheists can be bad men, too, and
we should not permit Mrs. Hicks to pretend otherwise.
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