Wednesday, June 13, 2018

But he IS racist, right?

Well, it’s complicated.
Part III of a series: Who is Tommy Robinson?
by Michael Isenberg.

Any mention of jailed anti-jihadi activist Tommy Robinson inevitably elicits two words from our left-of-center friends: fascist and racist (Come to think of it, mention of peanut butter and jelly elicits at least one of those words from our left-of-center friends). In my previous installment in this series, I addressed the first one. I concluded, “The idea that Tommy Robinson is a fascist is ludicrous….The snowflakes who shoot off their mouths about punching Nazis can only dream about the sort of genuine anti-fascist cred that Tommy Robinson has built over the course of his career.”

Frankly I did fascist first because it’s the easier of the two. As for whether he’s a racist—well, it’s complicated. There are things in his life which would seem to exonerate him completely from any charges of harboring racial animosities. But there are other things which are frankly disturbing. I’ve been round and round about this, but I don’t have some magic equation that I can plug all the variables into and have the answer pop out “racist” or “not racist.” So what I’m going to do is lay out all the facts and leave the drawing of conclusions as an exercise for the reader. After all, facts are my thing. It’s what I do. Well, facts and bourbon.

To complicate matters even more, it’s fair to ask whether it's even possible to be racist against Muslims. Islam, after all, is not a race — it’s an ideology. On the other hand, the practitioners of Islam are disproportionately non-white, especially in Tommy Robinson’s neck of the woods, where they’re predominantly Pakistani. So it’s hard to separate the two.

Certainly there is no evidence that Tommy Robinson is racist toward anyone other than Muslims. He has many friends who are black. I realize I’m on treacherous ground here. During the Civil Rights era, and maybe still today, it was said that a dead giveaway that someone is a racist is that he’ll say, “Some of my best friends are black.” But like I said, I’m just going to lay out all the facts and let you be the judges.

In Part II I recounted one episode from Mr. Robinson’s autobiography in which he brought his black friends to a white supremacist meeting. There are many similar episodes. Not that Mr. Robinson got any recognition for that from the press. Regarding the reporter who conducted his first interview with the national media, a piece in The Guardian, Mr. Robinson writes, “And he basically, again, called me, called us, racists. He completely did not mention the fact that I’d turned up with three black men who were clearly my close friends.”

We don’t just have to take Mr. Robinson's word for this; other people have met his friends and witnessed his relationships with them. For instance, Israellycool’s Brian John Thomas, who hosted Mr. Robinson during his 2016 visit to Israel, told me, “He brought two friends including a guy he's known since school (black guy).”

And speaking of his trip to Israel, Tommy Robinson has been a consistent friend to the Jews and the Jewish state. He has taken up the cause of Jews who have been victims of Muslim violence in the United Kingdom. This is encouraging. Throughout history, tolerance toward Jews has been a sound litmus test of an ideology. Concerning European Jews, during his wrap-up with Mr. Thomas, at the end of his Israel trip, he said,

I’ve seen myself how they’re treated, how they’re targeted. I’ve seen myself the security levels they have to take in every European country. I’ve seen myself the attacks on schools, on children, on rabbis, and all these different things…I met a Jewish lad in London, Israel Shalom…I found that he’d been targeted hundreds of times growing up in a Muslim community. He’d gone to the police, he’d gone to his MP, he’d gone to everybody, and just as grooming sexual exploitation of young, white English girls was a taboo subject that no one wanted to talk about, the other taboo subject they don’t want to talk about is the fact that the Jewish people are facing intense hostilities by Muslims.

Mr. Robinson understands the connection between persecution of Jews in Europe and the need for a Jewish state:

So then I thought if these people are going to be attacked and targeted, more and more now as we move forward as well, I think it becomes more relevant to have a homeland, because they’re going to come under intense hostility in Europe.”

And when it comes to the deep emotional connection the Jewish people have to their homeland, he just gets it:

We hear all the time that the Jews have invaded this land, and then as we’re walking around, as we’re going to all the tourist destinations, as we’re going to the historical sites, we find that there’s staunch history and connections, going back two thousand years, non-stop, from historic finds, to just everything, that always puts Jewish people as their land. And always says in their scripture that this is the Promised Land and they’ve been exiled from this land so many times, and they will come back from the land. It’s their homeland…I’ve always said I’m pro-Israel…I didn’t know really the true histories of the land. I’ve said that because the Jewish people deserve a homeland. I didn’t realize the historical points to it.

And lest you think he was merely pandering to his Jewish host, here’s what he said to the crowds of working class English soccer fans who attended his English Defense League (EDL) rallies. From the September 29, 2012 demo in Walsall:

I believe Israel has a right to defend itself. I believe it’s a sign and beacon of democracy surrounded by scumbags who want to wipe [it] off the face of the planet.

Nor does Mr. Robinson seem to harbor any prejudice against the Sikhs. Here he is at a May 2013 demonstration at Downing Street. A Sikh group happened to be holding a demo of their own nearby, and Mr. Robinson heaped praise on them and the sacrifices made by their co-religionists during World War I—and the EDL rank and file cheered them on.

And here he is engaging the Sikhs and shaking their hands after the same protest.

Indeed Mr. Robinson brought the same tolerant attitude that he’s had toward minorities in his personal life to the EDL—and demanded the same from the rank and file. From his autobiography:

We kept being called racists despite our black, Indian, and other ethnic members. I thought if we had a black bloke speaking, the media couldn’t ignore it, but they did anyway…At Dudley we had a dreadlocked black lad called James willing to get up and speak along with a Sikh girl Sareeta, who supported us. They were getting a bunch of shit from one of the football hooligan crews. One of them said, ‘What the fuck is this?’ when Dave and Sareeta came up. I told him if he didn’t like it, he was at the wrong demo.

He addressed the subject again at another rally. This one was in Newcastle after soldier Lee Rigby was brutally murdered by jihadis in cold blood on a London street (2013). Mr. Robinson said, "Everyone’s welcome in the English Defense League. All colors and races."

Mr. Robinson insists that his quarrel with Islam is ideological, not racial. At the same Newcastle rally he said,

This is not about color. This is not about race. This is about an ideology. Now, to the defeat this ideology it won’t be with punches, hits, bombs, or bullets—we need to win the hearts and minds of the people.

He repeats the point in his autobiography: “I do not apologise for having a problem with an alien ideology.” I wholeheartedly agree.

And yet, despite his insistence that his disagreements with Muslims are purely ideological, he sent out this racist series of tweets making fun of a physical characteristic shared by many Middle Eastern people, which he attributes to incest:

As you can see, the tweets were sent out over a period of eight months, so he can't even claim in his defense that he had a bad day (which we all do from time to time). Perhaps he can claim that he was just joking, and the tweets don't reflect his true feelings.

But he wasn't joking when he made a number of reprehensible statements in which he blamed all Muslims for the acts of grooming gangs and terrorists. From his autobiography again:

I began noticing events like [the] Beslan [school siege], becoming aware of Sayful Islam, of the drugs and prostitution gangs, all of it coming together to highlight a massive problem with one specific root cause — the Muslim community. And all the while there was a plentiful supply of people parroting the same old mantra — ‘This is a minority, the vast majority of Muslims are peace loving, the vast majority don’t agree with this and that….’

Really? I don’t see that. I didn’t then and I don’t now. Ordinary, peace-loving Muslims who just want to get on in life? I’m sure. But they don’t care enough about so-called community cohesion to lift a finger. If the vast majority are so offended at what the criminals and the extremists are doing from behind the protective veil of their culture and ideology, then why don’t they do something about it?

Why aren’t entire Muslim communities, as opposed to a few individuals (who happen to be making a good living out of their token gestures) taking on the extremists and the criminals? Until they do I don’t think you can use that ‘silent majority’ argument. Bullshit then and bullshit now.

In this video from a September 2011 EDL rally outside the heavily Muslim Tower Hamlets borough of London, Mr. Robinson not only seems to blame all Muslims for the July 7, 2005 jihadi bombings of three Underground trains and a bus, but he also threatens reprisals against “the Islamic community” for any future attacks:

We are here today to tell you quite loud, quite clearly, every single Muslim watching this video on YouTube: On 7/7, you got away with killing and maiming British citizens. You got away with it! Next time you think about it, you better understand, that we have built a network from one end of this country to the other end…And the Islamic community will feel the full force of the English Defense League if we see any of our citizens killed, maimed, or hurt on British soil ever again.

(An aside—the police tried to prevent Mr. Robinson from attending this particular demo; doing so violated his bail conditions from a previous arrest. To get past them, he donned a characteristically outrageous disguise:

After the demo, he evaded the police again by hopping on a public bus. They eventually caught up with him at his home and arrested him.)

More recently, in the wake of last year’s suicide bombing at the Ariana Grande concert in Manchester, Mr. Robinson delivered an epic rant in front of a mosque in that city. It was a mixed bag. The gist of it was that British politicians are selling out the British people. He touches on ideology: “The reality is if we want to stop what happened last night, and we want to really get to grips with it, we got to start identifying what is happening. And it’s happening because the Quran, in over a hundred verses, incites murder and war against us! That’s the reality. That’s the truth. These are facts. Facts are not hate speech.” But toward the middle he points to the brick apartment blocks around him and says, “When you see these communities and you see these houses, you think this is a British community where you might have British Muslims. They are enemy combatants in these houses! In these houses are enemy combatants who want to kill you, maim you and destroy you! They want to destroy our way of life.”

The best thing I can say in Mr. Robinson’s defense is that he’s inconsistent. He does, on some occasions anyway, recognize that not all Muslims are responsible for terrorism. He even has good personal relationships with some Muslims. “I invited Muslim friends to my wedding,” he wrote. “What’s more, they came.” Comedian Omar Hamdi sat down to a civilized dinner with him and wrote in The Independent that they “broke the ice quickly.” And in the Brian John Thomas wrap-up interview, Mr. Robinson said that he wanted to seek out Muslim views, and he showed a willingness to admit when his preconceptions weren’t met:

The general theme which surprised me with the Arabs as well was there’s no attitude. I didn’t sense any attitude. Or hostility. Which should feel more hostility and attitude from Muslims in the UK…

One of the most surprising things for me was when we went to a—we were driving past and there was a Arab camel oasis, we pulled in…There was well over a thousand young Muslim men and we walked straight into the middle of it. We walked straight in and to be honest nobody batted an eyelid. We walked in there was what? Five of us? And then in the middle of all of this I seen a young Jewish family sitting, having a picnic, with their children, with their family…If you had a Jewish family in the UK, very visible that they’re Jewish, sitting in a field, with a thousand young Muslim men, there’s going to be trouble—for that Jewish family…That’s not what I’d have expected to see.

The Arabs I’ve met and spoke to were all pro-Israel, which again would be completely the opposite to what I’d expect to find...As we’ve gone places, and I’ve gone out, and I met different people, I’ve just pulled them aside and tried to ask them for their own view because more than anything…I didn’t want to just come here and spend time with Israeli Jews showing me completely everything from an Israeli Jewish perspective, which is why I took the risk—I was very nervous when we were in the back of the taxi going into a Palestinian refugee camp. I was very nervous. My head was going, ‘What the hell? The pros outweigh the cons of this.’ The cons are that if someone recognizes me, I’m gonna be killed. But at the same time, without getting into that refugee camp, without meeting those Palestinians who live there, without talking to them about who they're angry with, about who’s oppressing them, about what the problems are, I’d only have one perspective which is the whole reason why we took that risk to do that, and by going in there I met I’d say one of the most best men I’ve met or I relate with, how he was, how he spoke, and I related with him.”

In the Newcastle rally which I mentioned earlier, he even demanded that the crowd not attack innocent Muslims for the acts of criminals and terrorists.

It is honorable to oppose terrorism. It is honorable to oppose shari’ah law. It is honorable to oppose Muslim grooming gangs. One thing we do have to point out, it is not honorable to shower an individual Muslim women or attack individual Muslims because at the same time there are Muslims serving in the British armed forces. We have to identify and separate Muslims from Islam. Muslims are the first victims of Islam.

In all fairness, Tommy Robinson is not an intellectual. He didn’t go to college. He doesn’t worry a whole lot about philosophical consistency. He has little patience for nuanced distinctions such as the difference between Islam and Islamism. “It’s an invention to make us feel better about things,” he writes. “We’re pretending that someone who is an ‘Islamist’ is a separate variety of Muslim that we can neatly blame for all the wider woes the ideology brings. We’re deluding ourselves.” He has even less patience for people who make such distinctions (You know, people like me!) Regarding one such individual, he wrote “I can understand how that theory was well received at his university and in his debating society, but he’d never stood in Luton town centre on a Saturday, listening to them spewing their hatred. This kid, so wet behind the ears, was full of this ridiculous idea that you can negotiate with people who delight in seeing innocent people getting their heads sawn off with a knife.”

Mr. Robinson is willing and able to engage intellectuals. He's even willing and able to learn from them. But as a former(?) football brawler, he is far more comfortable taking to the streets, shooting from the hip, and maybe getting into a "ruck" to confront the criminals and terrorists who overran his hometown and his country. “Ban them, shut them up, get tough on them,” he writes, “and try to make it impossible for radical Muslims to exist in British society.”

So what do you think? Tommy Robinson: racist or not? Please leave a comment, either here or on my Facebook page.

Next up: Part IV—Most Shameful Hour

Michael Isenberg drinks bourbon and writes novels. His latest book, The Thread of Reason, is a murder mystery that takes place in Baghdad in the year 1092, and tells the story of the conflict between science and shari’ah in medieval Islam. It is available on Amazon.com

2 comments:

  1. Good post. Clearly you are trying to be fair. You write, "To complicate matters even more, it’s fair to ask whether it's even possible to be racist against Muslims". Robinson has always said that his argument is NOT with Muslims, but with radical Islam. Again and again he has said he is not racist against Muslims. Again and again he has tried to point out that it is the radical and clearly political Islam ideology that foments violence against non-Muslims and moderate Muslims alike that he vehemently opposes and is the root cause of the violence it breeds in his community. This is the same message that Ayann Hirsi Ali tries to deliver to a much better educated audience with little more success than Robinson has with his own, quite different, audience. Correct or not, what seems to be the case, is that the politics of the game is stacked against Robinson and his cause. It seems very clear that the governing class throughout Europe is loath to say or do anything that might derail their vision for a new world order. A new world order where the votes will come from a burgeoning population of people who will keep them in power whether it be to the detriment of a long standing way of life for native citizens or not. Tommy and his minions are not stupid. They can see their way of life being threatened by the hostile invasion of another culture which, in a very few years, will offer up a solid voting block that will empower any government that bends to their will. This is NOT an empty threat. It is real. Ordinary guys like Tommy can see what is happening and they can only use the tools available to them to try to stave off this prospect. Already many communities throughout the UK and Europe are granted permission to enforce Sharia laws within their own communities. Read about Malmo in Sweden. Ask yourself why Norway and Denmark have suddenly banned the Hijab. Watch the video – The Banality of Radical Islam with Dr. Elham Manea, an associate professor at the Political Science Institute at the University of Zurich if you think the threat is exaggerated or unrealistic. Listen to Sam Harris on this topic. Listen to Thomas Sowell and his take on multiculturalism and diversity. People from across the political and philosophical spectrum and speaking out and it’s time to listen to them. Tragically, most people are so brainwashed with the dictates of political correctness that they will line up and sing out the popular ideologies of the far left until the bitter end. Right or wrong, the working people of the west feel they have been sold out and the democracy that they thought would protect them is clearly unable or unwilling to do so. Tommy Robinson is no more or less pure in his goals, then anyone else. Why do we have to constantly pick through the minutiae of his life to decide whether or not to listen to his very reasonable call for help? Are we sifting through the landfill of the lives of Theresa May and the peers of the UK to see if they should have credibility? Not so much, I assure you. So – here’s the bottom line. If Tommy Robinson is wrong, then we’re headed for a future that is more or less the same as the past and nothing to dread. But if he’s right, we are in deep, deep trouble. And to answer the question…NO, he is NOT a racist…or like the rest of humanity, at least he’s not 100% racist.

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  2. Thanks, Sharon. Definitely scary times. We need the Tommy Robinsons of the world to point it out.

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