By John Fund
Thursday, January 14, 2016
‘See something, say something.” We’ve all seen ads from
the U.S. Department of Homeland Security that ask people not to turn a blind
eye to suspicious activity. But all too often the reality, both in the U.S. and
even more so in Europe, is that neighbors, politicized police departments, and
the mainstream media act as if the slogan should be “See Something, Do
Nothing.”
After the two San Bernardino terrorists killed 14 people
last month, KNX Radio in Los Angeles reported that a neighbor didn’t report
suspicious activity at the couple’s apartment for fear of being accused of
racial profiling. Before he launched the 2009 Fort Hood massacre, Major Nidal
Hasan spouted violent Islamic rhetoric to his neighbors on the base, but they
ignored him for fear of being accused of “Islamophobia.” As part of a court
settlement with the ACLU, the New York City Police Department has just ended
its mapping program that allowed it to identify places in the city that an
Islamic terrorist might frequent. The settlement also required the NYPD to take
down from its website a 2007 report called “Radicalization in the West: The
Homegrown Threat.”
Ostrich-like behavior that puts political correctness
ahead of security concerns is even more prevalent in Europe. Just after German
chancellor Angela Merkel broadcast a New Year’s Eve welcome (with subtitles in
Arabic) to the million new migrants that had entered Germany during 2015, a mob
of a thousand men — largely of “Arab or North African” origin — sexually
assaulted more than 100 German women near Cologne’s train station. The number
of overall criminal complaints, including theft, stemming from that night now
stands at 561. Of the 31 people whom police are investigating in relation to
the Cologne attacks, 18 are asylum seekers. Similar attacks also occurred in
Hamburg, Stuttgart, and five other German cities. All told, there 167 reports
of sexual assault on New Year’s Eve.
At first, Cologne officials did all they could to avoid
reporting the politically awkward facts surrounding the crime orgy. Then police
reports leaked out. One man detained by police allegedly scolded them: “I am
Syrian. You have to treat me kindly. Ms. Merkel invited me.” Another tore up
his permit to stay in Germany and said: “You can’t touch me. I’ll just go back
tomorrow and get a new one.”
Cologne mayor Henriette Reker’s first response to the
assaults was to insist that “under no circumstances” should the crimes be
attributed to asylum seekers. Instead, she suggested that women follow a “code
of conduct” and keep “an arm’s length away” from men. After the public learned
that police had concealed full descriptions of the assailants, Reker was forced
to fire Cologne police chief Wolfgang Albers. After this move, however, she
continued to focus on the behavior of the women, rather than the attackers:
“One must behave wisely when moving around in a group. One behaves wisely by
not demonstrating exuberant joy to everyone you meet and who smiles at you.
Such gestures can be misunderstood.” Talk about blaming the victim.
Germany’s mainstream media were painfully slow to react
to the Cologne assaults. Jorg Luyken, a reporter for the English-language Local newspaper, noted that “the national
media also ignored the story until a wave of anger on social media made
covering it unavoidable.” This isn’t surprising “in a media climate which is
far more comfortable wringing its hands over the far right than offering
objective reporting,” he wrote. “Newsrooms are at one and the same time scared
of appearing racist and terrified of stirring up a latent racism they believe
still exists in German society.”
Germany’s government has its own priorities. This week,
it concluded an agreement with Facebook, Google, and Twitter to censor German
“hate speech” about migrants on social media — the very media that forced the
Cologne story into the open. Small wonder that a poll from the Allenbach
Institute found nearly half of all Germans are afraid to voice their opinion on
migrant issues, saying they feel they must be “very careful” about what they
say.
The same reticence exists in Sweden, which last year
alone admitted 163,000 asylum seekers, the equivalent of one in 60 Swedish
inhabitants. This week, an apparent cover-up of sexual assault allegations in
2014 and 2015 came to light. In those two years, during a well-known youth
festival in Stockholm, a gang of mostly Afghan youths groped and molested girls
as young as eleven and twelve.
Peter Agren, who headed the police unit at the 2014
festival, told the Swedish newspaper Dagens
Nyheter that the police withheld information for fear of inflaming public
anger at refugees and building support for the Sweden Democrats, a hardline
party that wants to restrict asylum seekers. “We sometimes don’t say it like it
is, because we think that’ll play into the hands of the Sweden Democrats.” Such
restraint may explain why Sweden today is the rape capital of the West.
Southern Africa’s Lesotho is the only country in the world where more rapes
occur.
For years, the Swedish media have largely failed Swedish
citizens by not giving them a true picture of the country’s growing crime wave.
As Soeren Kern of the Gatestone Institute reports:
The Internet radio station Granskning Sverige called the mainstream
newspapers Aftonbladet and Expressen to ask why they had described
the perpetrators (of recent crime) as “Swedish men” when they actually were
Somalis without Swedish citizenship. They were hugely offended when asked if
they felt any responsibility to warn Swedish women to stay away from certain
men. One journalist asked why that should be their responsibility.
Then there is the infamous Rotherham case that broke open
in 2014. That English town of only 110,000 people harbored a child sex-ring run
by men of Pakistani descent that abused some 1,400 English girls over a 16-year
period. An official government inquiry found that authorities had turned a
blind eye to evidence of abuse for fear of “giving oxygen to racist perspectives.”
Denis MacShane, the former member of parliament for Rotherham and a
self-described “liberal leftie,” lamented in retrospect, in the official report
that Rotherham produced after the crimes hit the news, that too many people in
positions of power were “not wanting to rock the multicultural community boat.”
All this is madness, even a form of suicide of the West,
to borrow James Burnham’s famous title. In the current issue of the National Interest, Malte Lehming, an
editor at Berlin’s Der Tagesspiegel,
wonders whether there is a revival of “a nasty theme in German history.”
He points out:
After the Second World War, the crimes of the Third Reich were
suppressed. During the Cold War, many did not want to acknowledge the crimes of
the Communists. Are Germans now suppressing what awaits their country thanks to
the high number of immigrants?
For Americans, the more pertinent question is this: Are
we allowing political correctness to destroy the very values of individual
responsibility and truth-telling that have helped immigrants assimilate
successfully throughout our history? Or, under the thumb of PC, are we
increasing the risk of terrorist violence? If the answer to both is yes, the
unhappy political conditions might be such that Americans would feel tempted to
rip up the welcome mat for foreigners.
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