CSotD: They came for the Muslims, but I wasn’t Muslim …
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It is not a difficult thing to understand, if understanding is your goal.
Brian Gable provides a simple graphic depiction. I like the use of real shell casings, but, that touch aside, he comments not just on the assault on the consulate but also the ongoing tragedy of Syria and the atmosphere of extremist dissent that hangs over the entire Middle East.
Other cartoonists, commenting on the deaths in Libya, have not been able to differentiate dissidents from governments, or one government from another, or even one Muslim from another. It is a shameful, harmful, hurtful lack of perspective.
But, then, Gable is Canadian, and one of the benefits of being from a smaller nation is the knowledge that it's not all about you.
One of the problems with being American is that, while it's not all about you, sometimes you end up in the crosshairs, literally. At those times, the fact that they're also doing it to each other can be hard to keep in mind.
However, perspective is something required of leadership, and yet we are being led down a very dark alley by people with no more sense of social responsibility than the Egyptian TV host — apparently a sort of Glenn Beck of the Arab world — who dug up that amateurish, irresponsible piece of video bigotry and presented it to his audience as typical.
But seeing the growing number of amateurish, irresponsible pieces of anti-Muslim bigotry floating around the Internet these days makes me wonder: Maybe the real racism is thinking there is some reason Americans should be harder to lead around by the nose than people in the Middle East.
We have, on the one hand, people from the Middle East who assume that, because the video came from America, it is sanctioned by the American government. And they are countered by Americans who assume that, because the violence occurs in the Middle East, it is sanctioned by governments there and is part-and-parcel of Islam.
Am I being arrogant in picturing some under-educated Arab peasant being driven by bigoted commentary into a violent passion, while believing that Americans are uniformly bright enough to recognize bigotry and ignorance, and to know when someone is trying to stir them into destructive, racist fury?
What possible evidence have I seen to make me think that?
The quality of prime time TV shows that achieve ratings success here?
The fact that large numbers of Americans continue to doubt evolution?
The number of Facebook postings about non-existent kids who will get medical help if only you hit "share"?
The fact that the irresponsible, mob-baiting idiots on Egyptian TV wear robes and turbans while our irresponsible, mob-baiting idiots wear suits and ties?
Wait, what was that last one again? Hmm.
Okay, not every Middle Eastern terrorist is some tent-dwelling 19th century Mahdist. And not every American bigot is an illiterate backwoods hillbilly.
Some really stupid, hateful people have nice clothes and good educations and are simply gullible pawns. It's true there, it's true here.
But there I go, apologizing again, just like the consulate in Egypt that said people shouldn't produce bigoted garbage in order to hurt the feelings of religious people.
Or George Bush, when he apologized for soldiers mistreating the Qu'ran.
Or George Bush, when he apologized for the mistreatment of prisoners at Abu Ghraib.
Anyway, I'm sorry that Americans, despite all the economic and educational advantages we enjoy, are just as easily duped into bigotry as anyone else.
And I'm sorry that I continue to think — against all experience — that, with some reasoning and some logical discussion, they could be persuaded to behave otherwise.
That said, I won't apologize for having no patience with bigots, because being patient with bigots is how very, very, very bad things happen in a society.
We're not allowed to mention any particular modern, Western society in which hard economic times sparked a great deal of social unrest and insecurity which was then exploited by demagogues in order to create scapegoats and seize way too much power. If we mention that example from history, we have to apologize.
But check it out: They came for the illegal aliens, and you weren't an illegal alien, so you said nothing.
And now they're coming for the Muslims.
Saying something now might avoid having to make some apologies later.
Here, Bill Schorr gets it right. But does anybody out there care enough to also speak up?
Confront bigotry. Silence implies consent.

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