• Streamwave
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    5 months ago

    There’s a lot of simmering anger, resentment and frustration in many communities in this country. It’s been building for years. The stabbing of those poor girls at their dance class by the son of Rwandan immigrants seems to have been the straw that broke the camel’s back.

    This isn’t just the EDL (an organisation which disbanded more than a decade ago), this is thousands of English people who are furious. We can try and understand the sources of that fury, and then begin the work to resolve it, or we’ll keep getting these sorts of horrid outbreaks of ugly violence.

    • jabjoe
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      5 months ago

      We don’t know the details yet. But, if this stabber was a white kid, we’d all be talking about mental health. Non-white kids of immigrants can also have mental health issue. But the worse of the country jump straight to racism, blaming the culture of the immigrant. If this lad grew up here, he has been surrounded by our culture. If there is mental health issues, it’s our fault it wasn’t caught in time. If he went mental for cultural reasons, we can’t wash our hands of that either. If we want assimilation, we can’t other people.

    • FarceOfWill@infosec.pub
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      5 months ago

      People imagining something awful for years will be triggered when it finally (allegedly) happens but their fears are ultimately based on fearmongering.

      Plenty of people are scared of the two assasinations of MPs by right wing lunatics.
      Or that mosque pipe bombing Or lots of other things that happen over and over because of these problematic communities you mention. Do we really need to understand the hate and intolerance to punish it? I don’t think so

      • Streamwave
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        5 months ago

        Plenty of people are scared of the two assasinations of MPs by right wing lunatics.

        One of them was a far-right lunatic, but the man who assassinated David Amess was a London-born radicalised Muslim affiliated with ISIL

        • TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          Fair point, although I’d consider islamic extremism to be pretty far right. It’s just a different branch of far right to the BNP/EDL-style nationalism.

          • Streamwave
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            5 months ago

            I think bundling the two together obscures more than it illuminates. I don’t think it’s any less serious (in fact in some regards it’s more dangerous), just that it doesn’t fit with normal far-right characteristics. To take one important difference, the far-right are ultra-nationalists, while Islamic fundamentalists are strictly anti-nationalist – they don’t recognise the legitimacy of nation-states to exist at all. They also tend to be pretty unconcerned with race or ethnicity in themselves, whereas that’s obviously a major thing for Neo-Nazis and other Fascists. And it makes it harder to identify and address the problem, because the sources and drivers of far-right extremism are separate and often unrelated to the sources of Islamic fundamentalism and radicalisation.

            • TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world
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              5 months ago

              That’s true. When I see “far right terrorism” it certainly conjures images in my mind of nationalist terrorism, despite islamic terrorism literally, by definition, being right wing.

              It’s probably indeed better to say “islamic terrorism” if you want to avoid ambiguity. Personally I think we should apply the same treatment to nationalist terrorism, but I think the boat has sailed on that one.

              • Streamwave
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                5 months ago

                despite islamic terrorism literally, by definition, being right wing.

                It’s neither right-wing nor left-wing. This sort of claim always strikes me as fairly cheap politics by people on the left. ‘When people do bad things it’s right-wing, when they do good things it’s left-wing.’ etc

                • TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world
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                  5 months ago

                  Nope. You’ve lost me there.

                  It’s neither right-wing nor left-wing.

                  They’re conservative religious views. Of course it’s right wing. Same as conservative Christians in the US or Uganda, or the Hindu nationalism we see in India.

                  This sort of claim always strikes me as fairly cheap politics by people on the left.

                  I disagree. It’s just calling a spade a spade.

                  From the Wikipedia summary on far-right politics, which I found to be a fair description:

                  “Far-right politics, or right-wing extremism, is a spectrum of political thought that tends to be radically conservative, ultra-nationalist, and authoritarian, often also including nativist tendencies.”

                  “Contemporary definitions now include neo-fascism, neo-Nazism, the Third Position, the alt-right, racial supremacism and other ideologies or organizations that feature aspects of authoritarian, ultra-nationalist, chauvinist, xenophobic, theocratic, racist, homophobic, transphobic, or reactionary views.”

                  “Far-right politics have led to oppression, political violence, forced assimilation, ethnic cleansing, and genocide against groups of people based on their supposed inferiority or their perceived threat to the native ethnic group, nation, state, national religion, dominant culture, or conservative social institutions.

                  Seems to me that islamism lines up with that very well.

                  'When people do bad things it’s right-wing, when they do good things it’s left-wing.’ etc

                  Respectfully, that’s not true.

                  You find very, very few people who call Stalin, Mao, Pol Pot, etc right wing. Far less than you see far-right people trundle out the tired “Nazis were left wing because National Socialists” nonsense.

        • FarceOfWill@infosec.pub
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          5 months ago

          It’s a fair point, thanks for the correction.

          Not sure how I got the wrong impression, probably heard he’d been killed for being too woke or something.

    • Wanderer@lemm.ee
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      5 months ago

      For a lot of people they voted for Brexit for lower immigration even when people said it would be bad for the economy. Instead they got more immigration from the third world.

      Consistently for decades the British have wanted less immigration and instead got more.

      Surprised it has taken this long really.