‘Lone Wolf,’ ‘Self-Radicalized': Islamophobic Buzzwords never applied to White Terrorists [View all]
http://www.juancole.com/2015/02/radicalized-islamophobic-terrorists.html
Lone Wolf, Self-Radicalized': Islamophobic Buzzwords never applied to White Terrorists
By Juan Cole | Feb. 12, 2015
Did a self-radicalized lone wolf white terrorist kill three young Muslim students in cold blood in Chapel Hill? It is a kind of a stupid question, but its stupidity is just more apparent when asked of someone with an English last name. What does self-radicalized or lone wolf even mean?
Craig Hicks constantly shared anti-Muslim and anti-Christian links on social media and proclaimed to believers, I have every right to insult a religion that goes out of its way to insult, to judge, and to condemn me as an inadequate human being which your religion does with self-righteous gusto
I think we may conclude that he didnt like Muslims, and one of the victims told her father that before her death. While he may have been provoked to his rage by a parking incident and while he clearly is one egg short of an omelette, the new atheist discourse of believers as oppressive and coercive per se is part of his problem.
Terrorism has been racialized in the American press and law enforcement community, marked as having to do with Muslims
but almost never used to refer to people of northern European background. A few years ago, when a police spokesman said that We have concluded that event was not terrorism, likely what he meant is that no Muslims were involved or that no cell or organization was.
Racializing dissent has an old genealogy in American politics. In the early twentieth century, Jewish-American immigrants were suspected of socialism and Italian-Americans of anarchism. In the Red Scare of 1917-1920, workers who joined labor actions were falsely accused of Communism and were targeted for mob violence, especially if they had foreign names. African-Americans who had come north to work in factories during the war, filling a domestic labor shortage, were likewise tagged as subversive. Somehow persons of English ancestry with names like Worthington even if they were blue collar workers were not assumed to be Communists or foreign agents or radicals. Russian-Americans were deported. In
Illinois after the war, a mob attacked Italian-Americans and razed their homes.