Friday, January 9, 2015

Charlie Hebdo, Hatred, Disrespect and Loss of Community

Dear Friends,

The news here in France is all about the terrorist attack on Charlie Hebdo.  In Villefranche-sur-mer, where I am, a small town far from Paris, a special ceremony to greet the mayor has been cancelled and all the townspeople are being encouraged to go to Nice for a silent vigil tomorrow.  There are flyers and signs everywhere in solidarity with Charlie Hebdo, the victims and their families.  They all read something like "Nous sommes tous Charlie." It is the worst terrorist attack on French mainland soil for 50 years.  I cannot help but feel the pain that the French are feeling.

Unfortunately, I also cannot help but think that those within France, the United States and other places that thrive on and encourage fear, hatred and disrespect play a role in the breakdown of civility which can lead to this type of attack.  These attacks are not attacks on free speech. They are part of a larger war by fundamentalists and extremists who are the subject of hatred, discrimination and disenfranchisement, none of which justify the actions but certainly explain why radicalisation occurs.

The far right in France, personified by the Front National, its most popular far right party that polled around 25% in the last elections in which the turnout was very low, has been fanning anti-immigrant, anti-Islam and anti-Semitic sentiments which has lead to a recent increase in Islamophobic and anti-Semitic attacks across France.  The other political parties are excluding the Front National from the idea of French unity after the attack and apparently did not issue an invitation to the FN to a public rally to show unity in the face of the Charlie Hebbo terrorist attack.  There is a significant feeling in France that it is the disenfranchisement of the immigrants, caused by the fear and hatred encouraged by the NF,  that has made it easy to radicalise people.

Even though the NF has been excluded, there is an incredible sense of solidarity in France in the aftermath of these attacks and the subsequent hostage situations that have just been resolved.  I only hope that in the days ahead, this unity is not squandered as it was in the United States after the 9/11 attacks.

Of course France is not the only country in which the far right relies on fear and hatred of those that are "others".  The far right in the United States does exactly the same thing.  A significant part of the Republican party does everything it can to make people afraid and particularly afraid of anybody that is not a "white American".  This approach is clear in such things such as immigration, but it is just as present in the economic discussions when the "others" are the poor and those who receive government assistance, a majority of which are non-white.

Republican candidates for President have dropped any pretence of being "compassionate conservatives".  Uniformly they are opposed to an increase in the minimum wage, they support the repeal of Obamacare, they oppose immigration reform, they are in favour of lower taxes on the rich, they are opposed to any effort to reduce the immoral economic gap between the rich and the poor, they want to suppress the vote of those that are "other", they want to eliminate the economic safety net, and the list goes on and on.

Relying on fear and hatred to obtain and retain power, leads inevitably to a complete lack of respect for those that are "other".  Representative Joe Wilson's shouting of "You lie!!" at President Obama during his State of the Union address, is a comparatively mild example of the disrespect that is engendered by the Republicans and others that stoke fear and hatred of "others".  Unfortunately the examples of public disrespect have been increasing including the recent disrespect by some of the New York City police who have turned their backs on Mayor de Blasio.  There can be no debate that disrespect has become epidemic in recent times, and I believe that the public stoking of fear and hatred is largely responsible for this epidemic.

The fear and hatred stoked disrespect for "others" leads to a lack of outrage when violence is committed against "others".  The incredible overreaction and use of excess force by police when a young black male is involved demonstrates a complete lack of respect for them as individuals and human beings.  If young white males were killed by police at the same rate and under the same circumstances as young black males, the public outrage would put an end to that practice immediately.  The same can be said for the number of innocent civilians being killed by the United States drone strikes in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Yemen, etc.  If the United States were killing that many civilians who were of northern European descent, the outrage would be immediate, intense and incredible.

This lack of respect has lead to a breakdown in the idea of community in the United States, and I am afraid throughout the world.  At the end of the day, it can only be a feeling of true community with all others throughout the world that can put a stop to this senseless violence.  We must remember that we are all human beings, and we must act and react accordingly.  We must not disenfranchise, hate or fear the "others".  We must embrace all, even and perhaps especially those that we disagree with.  If we can truly love and respect each other, the process of radicalisation can be dramatically slowed or maybe even stopped. We are all Charlie.  We are all Eric Garner.  We are all Michael Brown.  We are all Tamir Rice.  We are all the innocent people killed by drone strikes.  We are all each other.

Thanks for reading and please comment,
The Unabashed Liberal

3 comments:

  1. As always, I agree... well said.

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  2. Thanks for this post. Your last line will stay with me today.

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  3. beautifully articulated...
    Recently I have been thinking more about how the respect issue concerns an inability to accept the truth of the experience as expressed by the "other.". E.g., why not accept that indigenous people in this country are not and do not want to be mascots simply because they say it. Why do we not readily accept the proclaimed truth of the other? It's not my business to tell you what your truth is. But just this week I heard on PBS a different slant on the question. A person of white privilege needs to examine "WHY do I have to be right?"

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