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Mona Charen
Mona Charen
14 May 2013
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The Hatred in the Heart of White America

Comment

It was cool and rainy Sunday morning when the bomb ripped through the building. At 10:22, a group of children was just heading into the basement to hear a sermon at the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Ala. According to a Washington Post account at the time: Dozens of survivors, their faces dripping blood from the glass that flew out of the church's stained glass windows, staggered around the building in a cloud of white dust raised by the explosion.

Four girls were killed. The head of one little girl was found far from her body. Twenty-two others were injured. Wandering through his devastated church, the Rev. John H. Cross found a megaphone and asked the enraged and stunned crowd to disperse. "The Lord is our shepherd," he sobbed, "we shall not want."

This week, Congress marked the 50th anniversary of that terror attack by posthumously awarding the Congressional Gold Medal to Denise McNair, Carole Robertson, Addie Mae Collins and Cynthia Wesley.

We Americans are not confused about the morality of what happened in Birmingham that September morning in 1963, nor during the Jim Crow era in America generally. We do not hesitate to condemn utterly the behavior and the beliefs of the Ku Klux Klan (the perpetrators of this bombing and others) and their white supremacist fellow travelers. We do not worry that reviling white supremacists and their grotesque deeds will somehow taint all white people.

But when it comes to other groups and other motives for the same kind of terrorism — we lose our moral focus. Bill Ayers, Bernadine Dohrn and Kathy Boudin have become honored members of the faculties at leading universities. Ayers is even the friend of the president of the United States. Regarding his own record of setting bombs that kill and dismember innocent people, Ayers told The New York Times on the ironic date of Sept.

11, 2001 that "I feel we didn't do enough ... (there's) a certain eloquence to bombs, a poetry and a pattern from a safe distance." So says a retired "distinguished professor" at the University of Illinois at Chicago.

Today, American liberals are obsessed not with terrorism but with the color and ethnicity of terrorists. They can readily enough attribute violent tendencies to groups they dislike — the tea party, for example, which hasn't committed so much as a littering offense. But when it comes to Islamic terrorism, their voices falter.

Attorney General Eric Holder, asked whether three attacks on the United States (the underwear bomber, the Times Square bomber and Maj. Nidal Hassan) could be attributed to "Islamic" radicalism, refused to say so. Asked repeatedly whether religious motives played a role, Holder would say only, "there are a variety of reasons why people have taken these actions." Janet Napolitano has been quick to dismiss terror attempts as "one offs." Would Holder and Napolitano say the same about white supremacists? Each one had his own motivations and we can't surmise what those factors were?

There is a tendency among many on the left to temper their disgust and indignation at political violence (i.e. terror) if the terrorist is from the "correct" group. "Muslim ... means not being white" Peter Beinert writes in the Daily Beast.

Beinert and other liberals imagine that the U.S. is a cauldron of teeming racism with the lid barely kept down. At the first acknowledgment that Islamists (some, but by no means, all of whom are dark skinned) present a continuing threat, the lid will fly off and white American vigilantes, given permission, will start shooting black and brown people on the streets, burning their shops, and bombing mosques.

The hatred that Islamism preaches, lauds and inspires is a nuisance, liberals may concede. But the hatred in the heart of "white America" is the greater danger.

To find out more about Mona Charen and read features by other Creators Syndicate columnists and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2013 CREATORS.COM



Comments

3 Comments | Post Comment
The opinion piece, "The Hatred in White America" is utterly breathtaking in its incoherence.
First of all, it is impossible to read this article and understand who hates what in America. I believe that the writer is trying to indicate that folks that she describes as liberals hate...our country? This is apparently because folks that she considers liberal aren't willing to concede that the acts of terrorism that she describes can all be laid at the foot of the Muslim religion.

A parallel is drawn between violent actions that were taken by the Ku Klux Klan during the 1960s in attempt to stop integration in the south. These actions were universally condemned at the time, and rightly so. However, the comparison doesn't hold up. No one, be they liberal or conservative, is making the case that the terrorist acts against our country should be overlooked or not vigorously prosecuted.

And yes, the KKK was under suspicion and being investigated during the 1960s, but crimes such as the church bombing in Alabama were not laid at the feet of the KKK entity. Instead, prosecutions were conducted to identify individuals that committed the crimes, and charge the individuals involved, not the KKK.
Actually, to follow this line of argument to its logical conclusion, I guess that for anti-black violence that took place in the 1960s, the Baptist church in the south should be held responsible. Most KKK members, if they practiced religion, were Baptists.

In any case, to expect that prosecutors would automatically decide that terrorist acts of this century should be laid at the feet of the Muslim religion is simply nonsense. You would have to presume that there was some form of central cabal of the Muslim church that coordinates these horrific attacks. Yet no proof of that exists, nor is it present in this column.

It would seem that without significant evidence that these acts are a conspiracy of the Muslim religion, there is no value for our justice system in attempting to tie criminal prosecution of these acts to the faith.

I completely believe that if there is smoke, there may be fire, and that our government should be investigating these attacks to unearth any and all conspiracies that may be taking place to commit them. However, I am not convinced that somehow, we need to hold all Muslims responsible for the acts of a few deranged individuals.

Somewhere in this ramble, the author implies that people in this country are being derided as racists for believing that the Muslim religion is organized against the West, or if they don't agree with the President's positions. I certainly do not feel that is proper to call someone a racist, because I can't know that. However, I do not pretend to understand the outrage and incoherent arguments that are made by conservatives and Republicans over the last decade. I can see why someone might lay blame on racism for positions taken by otherwise intelligent people that just don't make sense.
Comment: #1
Posted by: John Dunsmore
Fri Apr 26, 2013 10:38 AM
Far from rambling, the article is succinct and spot on. Charen's keen eye and ear for hypocrisy argues not from moral superiority, but moral certainty. Dunsmore's rambling, verbose response only enhances Moan's incisive brevity and precision.
Comment: #2
Posted by: Mark Orr
Fri Apr 26, 2013 11:52 PM

"However, I am not convinced that somehow, we need to hold all Muslims responsible for the acts of a few deranged individuals."

So you don't believe white Americans are inherently racist and should not be held accountable for the actions of others whites, dead or alive. Explain affirmative action based upon your "coherent" argument.

Let me get salt for that pretzel your about to make.
Comment: #3
Posted by: Tom
Sat Apr 27, 2013 4:48 PM
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