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Watchdogs
Exploit Terror Attacks
to Further their Agendas
By Adam McCabe
In the
weeks following September 11, various Watchdog
groups including the Anti-Defamation League
(ADL), the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC),
and the Center for New Community (CNC) began to
use the fear generated from the horrific attacks
to further their own agendas.
These Watchdog groups quickly updated their
Websites and made contact with various media
outlets to condemn "hate groups" and either
their connection to or their exploitation of the
terrorist attacks. Of course the "hate" label is
one that is attributed to various groups and
individuals whose one commonality is the degree
to which the Watchdogs hate them.
While the terrorists themselves might have
seemed a likely target for such organizations,
we found renewed rhetoric against their old
enemies in nearly every media outlet. Such
groups spewed out tabloid sensationalism
suggesting that "neo-Nazis" were making a "bin
Laden connection" and joining forces with
al-Qaida.
In a self-revelatory comment one ADL
spokesperson said, "these groups latch on to any
current event to try in some warped way to make
it work in their favor."
In several articles these champions of
freedom denounce the position of "hate groups".
Making "hate" clear to their audience spokesmen
like Brian Levin of the Center for the Study of
Hate and Extremism outlines hateful positions
regarding September 11:
"[some] groups insist Jews were responsible,
while others say Arabs did it because of the
government's support for Israel. And some
blame the country's lax immigration
policies, which they say have led to
multiculturalism and a destabilization of
traditional American values."
Similarly Devin Burghart of the CNC notes
that the strategy of "hate groups" since the
attacks is to "blame Jews for September 11, rile
up anti-Arab and anti-Muslim sentiment and blame
immigration as the root cause for the attacks."
There probably were those who "blamed Jews"
for the 9/11 attacks among the American right
wing. But so few must have made such comments,
that although some obscure quotes work their way
into recent articles and comments by the leading
watchdogs, no quotations blaming Jews made it
into the USA Today of 11/27 nor in
the Atlanta Constitution of 11/25.
Several such stories did cross my desk, however
each and everyone originated from Arab and or
Muslim periodicals. Although such stories
blaming Jews were in abundance following
September 11th in Arab publications, these are
not mentioned for example in the USA Today
story which condemns such positions presumably
held by predominantly White organizations in the
US.
In an attempt to blur positions and confuse
the public, the position that Bin Laden and his
followers carried out the attacks due in part to
US support of Israel is pinpointed as one of
irrational hate. However polls have shown that
more than 70% of Americans believe the attack on
the World Trade Center did have something to do
with US foreign policy in the Middle east and
especially our relationship with Israel.
Actually bin Laden himself has said this. Bin
Laden in various communications has cited the
plight of the Palestinians and that the US is
under the influence of Israel. The issue of US
foreign policy with regard to Israel has been
commented on by legitimate journalists all
across the US and Europe. To suggest that
reconsidering US foreign policy is hate is
nothing more than a grand-standing stunt of
organizations seeking to curb any and all
criticism of Israel.
It apparently is also "hate" to discuss US
immigration policy in light of the World Trade
Center attacks. Apparently it is fine to discuss
US immigration policy when the economy is
booming and the discussions surround allowing
more immigrants into the country. However, the
reverse position is "hate." As the economy is
suffering and more Americans are unemployed than
in recent memory and aliens are attacking our
landmarks and killing our people such a
discussion is forbidden. Perhaps one should
consider if it is a hateful position to allow
people into a country, any country, who are
hell-bent on killing that country's people and
attacking the innocent. An open-door immigration
policy could in fact be hateful to the
indigenous people of a region. How hateful was
the immigration policy of the colonial period
for the native Americans?
Realize Watchdog groups don't condemn policy,
they condemn debate and discussion. Such things
are not to even be considered! Legislation of
ideas is the order of the day. For even
expressing such an opinion, articles such as
this one, and its author will be recorded and
listed as "hate" or "miscellaneous hate" as the
ADL so likes to call it.
Finally attributing anti-Muslim sentiment to
the "hate groups" of the extreme right is rather
foolish. The fact that 19 hijackers were Muslims
and that they perpetrated the worst act of
terror ever on American soil stirred up more
anti-Muslim sentiment than the right ever could.
I've seen young children with t-shirts
emblazoned with Osama bin Laden's face in the
cross hairs of a gun-site. These were not being
sold by any "hate groups." We've all heard
President Bush say "wanted dead or alive."
Surely such sound bytes don't stir up
anti-Muslim sentiment - certainly, at least not
as much as the "hate groups" can. In fact, "hate
groups" express a wide range of opinions; the
New Republic recently marveled at
the fact that William Pierce, director of the
National Alliance has taken a pro-Muslim stance.
It is actually the Watchdog organizations
very critique of "hate groups" that they
themselves are guilty of. They have exploited
the events of September 11th for their own gain
and their own agendas. Articles are replete with
the number of "hate" groups - one would suspect
that the increase in such statistics is directly
proportional to the contributions such
organizations receive. It's as if the images of
the planes flying into the Trade Center towers,
the people throwing themselves out of windows
and hurling dozens of stories to their death,
the collapse of the towers, the faces of those
lost, and the images of those who carried out
the attacks are not horrible enough. If the
death and destruction and mayhem of September
11th doesn't keep you awake at nights, if it
doesn't still bring tears to your eyes, there
are those who strike up images of jackbooted
neo-Nazis joining arm-in-arm with the Al-Queda
network to destroy our way of life.
I'm sure images of Osama bin Laden hiding in
South America with an ailing Fuehrer whispering
into his ear can't be far behind. |