By Douglas Murray
Tuesday, October 23, 2018
It is amazing what societies can get used to. The latest
rape-gang case in the U.K. is a case in point. A gang of 20 men from
Huddersfield were last week convicted and sentenced for the rape and abuse of
girls as young as eleven. As in previous cases, the convicted men were of all
Asian origin and their victims all local underage girls.
This time, as in every previous such case (Rotherham,
Rochdale, Telford, Oxfordshire, Bristol, Keighley, Newcastle, Derby, etc.,
etc.) the stories are horrific. In the Huddersfield case one of the victims
reportedly cracked her head while jumping from a first-floor balcony to escape
the gang. Another deliberately burned her own house down so that her family
would have to move from the area. “It was the best thing I ever did,” she said,
“and that’s bad saying that burning your house down is the best thing you ever
did.”
There are many similar cases still to come, so the story
is not going away. As the BBC’s correspondent puts it, the backlog of cases are
“overwhelming our police and our courts.”
But when I say that Britain has gotten used to these
cases, it is true. They come up in the papers with considerable regularity, but
after the convictions there is no noticeable debate, let alone any shift in
political outlook. Nothing happens. Or at least nothing positive. Last year,
Member of Parliament Sarah Champion was fired from the Labour front bench just
for mentioning the ethnic component in these rape-gang cases. As the MP for
Rotherham, you would have thought, she’d be permitted to mention the gang-rape
of her constituents. But no. For the time being one can deplore the mass rape
of the nation’s children, but it is a bit much to want to actually address the
issue.
Meantime, the true attitude slips out only accidentally.
Last year the Labour MP Naz Shah shared a Twitter post saying, “Those abused
girls in Rotherham and elsewhere just need to shut their mouths. For the good
of diversity.” Shah — not the smartest cookie in the jar, it must be said —
didn’t seem to realize that the tweet was from a spoof satirical account. She
deleted her reposting after criticism. But her first instinct was the honest
one. Like many other people in positions of power across Britain, Shah finds
the victims of these crimes to be inconvenient to the national narrative.
This is that diversity is an unalloyed good and that the
more people you have from the more places then the more wonderful cultural
practices you will be able to enjoy. Even the contemplation that there might be
some rough with the smooth is brushed away. And what is anybody going to do
about it anyway?
Though we may have got used to the cycle of these
stories, I’d bet a fair amount of money that of all the cases that fill up the
news in any given year, those like Huddersfield are the ones that are going to
have the longest reach and impact. They detonate something very deep beneath
the dogmas and presumptions of our time. And the public will be thinking about
them, even if their politicians are all hoping otherwise.
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