Parking Space Terrorism:
Time For Action After Killing Of Three US
Muslims
Chapel Hill police claimed that the “ongoing
dispute over parking may have led to a
triple shooting”. The media embraced the
statement with little questioning
By Ramzy Baroud
February 15, 2015 "ICH"
- "MEE"
- The
murder of three American Muslims at a
University of North Carolina condominium on
Tuesday, 10 February, was no ordinary
murder, nor is the criminal who killed them
an ordinary thug. The context of the
killings, the murder itself and the media
and official responses to the horrific event
is a testimony to everything that went wrong
with our country since it unleashed it’s
long-drawn-out “war on terror”, with its
undeclared, but sometimes declared enemy,
namely Islam and Muslims.
Horrific as it was, the
killing of a husband and wife, Deah Shaddy
Barakat, Yusor Abu-Salha and her sister,
Razan Abu-Salha, by homegrown terrorist,
Craig Stephen Hicks, is the kind of violence
that can only fit into a greater
media and
official narrative, which designates
millions of innocent Muslims, in the US or
across the world as enemies or potential
terrorists.
Countless television hours
and endless space in numerous media has been
dedicated to vilify and demonise Muslims
throughout recent years. Muslims’ attempts
to distance themselves from every militant
grouping, ideology and tendency has done
them no good. A Muslim is a terrorism
suspect until proven innocent, especially if
a bearded, brown man, or a headscarf-clad
woman.
The end result of that
dehumanisation has been racism,
racial profiling,
extra-judicial killings and war. It was
only a matter of time before that violence
reached the nominally safe Muslim
communities in the US itself.
The skewed
narrative
The episode of
dehumanisation is long, complex and
protracted; also, quite clever, for it
involves billion-dollar media outfits and
Hollywood itself, which already has an awful
track record regarding
negative and stereotypical representation
of Arabs and Muslims.
The outcome is a whole
industry that is predicated on double
standards and half-truths.
Imagine if a member of the
Iraqi resistance, an Iraqi sniper, if you
will, killed 164 US soldiers, who were armed
to the teeth and present in his country as
part of an invading force.
Imagine an Arab country
financing a massive movie production
detailing the story of that Iraqi sniper,
portraying him as a hero, and US soldiers as
savages.
How would US media,
government and audiences react?
It would be an
Arab-bashing fest. Few, if any, would dare
rationalise his deed, suggesting perhaps
that he was a man defending his own country.
What would be emphasised thoroughly is the
“savage nature” of the Arabs and their
innate hate for America and its noble
values. The whole Arab creed would be
brutalised, those who made the movie, and
those who celebrated the heroics of the
sniper.
An American Sniper,
however, is not a fictitious illustration of
a point, but a bloody reality, itself a
representation of the killing of millions of
Arabs and Muslims in America’s wars.
Even relatively
muted criticism of the evil deed of
Chris Kyle - the hero of the reality-turned
movie, The American Sniper, who
made a 164 confirmed “kills” during his four
tours in Iraq because they were “savages”
who deserved to die - were shut out by a
massive outcry from media and members of
society. American killers are heroes,
regardless of what they do or stand for.
The
enthusiasm for more military interventions
and such heroics, as that of Kyle, however
vile, means that supposed “moral awakening”
inspired by the advent of President Barack
Obama rarely registered in the collective
psyche of the nation. While there is ample
evidence that Americans are “tired” of war,
that very war fatigue should not be
conflated with a departure of the type of
dialectics that rationalised war in the
first place.
In fact, while the
cheerleaders for war might change political
camps, ideology or even religious
philosophy, ultimately, they are the same
breed of people: a mostly white, male
dominated and chauvinistic tribe of
well-funded politicians and media pundits,
with an unquenchable thirst for
“intervention”.
The ‘New
Atheists’
Hicks, the terrorist who
killed the three young Muslims, subscribes
to a school of thought known as New Atheism,
what religious scholar Reza Aslan refers to
as the school of “anti-theism”. It is, in
part, another hate-filled platform, and
despite its supposed disdain for all
religions,
their malicious energy mostly targets
Muslims.
They, of course, are
different from the majority of atheists, who
don’t use that designation to foment hate
against a specific religious group.
The anti-theist gods include the likes of
Richard Dawkins and Sam Harris, who,
according to Aslan, respond “to religion
with the same venomous ire with which
religious fundamentalists respond to
atheism”.
In one of his Facebook
posts, Hicks, a lover of guns,
quoted Dawkins:
“The last vestige of
respect for the taboo disappeared as I
watched the ‘Day of Prayer’ in Washington
Cathedral, where people of mutually
incompatible faiths united in homage to the
very force that caused the problem in the
first place: religion.”
But of course, not any
religion, but Islam. Let alone that such
ignorant breed pay no heed to any relevant
political context, they so foolishly blame a
whole religion for what is essentially a
political conflict. Did they ever pause to
wonder if it might be possible that invading
countries, killing, raping, pillaging,
destroying mosques and churches, and
urinating on the dead, have something to
do with why many Muslims hate US foreign
policy and are willing to use violence in
response?
Hicks too hated the three
Muslim kids based on that same foolish,
murderous logic.
The essential
terrorism logic
But hating Muslims is not
your everyday racism and prejudice, which
has been “as American as apple pie and
Napalm” (a funny, sad line from the American
comedy, M.A.S.H). It is a readily available
fodder for the ongoing war and future war in
Muslim countries. It is the required amount
of dehumanisation needed to wage war.
This is why Islam and
Muslims are equated with terrorism, and why
terrorism is used almost exclusively to
describe violent acts committed or allegedly
committed by Muslims.
This logic strips every
act of violence carried out by a Muslim or a
self-proclaimed one from its immediate
context, however rational, and lumps it into
a larger taxonomy reserved exclusively for
Islam and Muslims. It refuses to use the
same categorisation for any other act of
violence, thus the irritating insistence on
the correlations between
politically-motivated violence and Islam.
The same champions of this invalid logic are
those who constantly push the line: "All
Muslims are not terrorists, but all
terrorists are Muslims."
The assumption might be
inane, but the intention is anything but. It
absolves the war criminals, who planned,
executed and justified the war; the soldiers
who did the fighting, and those who ensured
that there can be no legal accountability
for its numerous awful deeds – millions
being killed, maimed and all.
Instead,
it puts the onus on ordinary Muslims who
are set up to prove their innocence to no
avail, to absolve themselves from a crime
they never committed, in fact, to answer for
someone else’s crimes.
Hicks, the
parking space terrorist
But Hicks, who walked into
the flat of three students in Chapel Hill,
NC and shot them, execution style, was not a
Muslim. He comes from Christian heritage. He
is not black or brown, but white. His name
is not Ahmed, but Craig.
That changes everything.
Neither the police
nor the media would describe his crime as a
hate crime, let alone terrorism, although
his terrorism is unique in a way. His type
resides on the top of the food chain in
terms of race, gender and other criteria.
Yet, somehow he is politically frustrated.
Go figure.
He is not a member of a
radicalised generation born into oppression,
foreign invasion, poverty and other untold
humiliation. If that was the case, one can,
at least to a degree fathom the hate,
deconstruct the anger, or even rationalise
that violence is a natural outcome of a
certain reality.
Hicks is of the Fox News
demographic, gun touting unreasonably and
immeasurably angry, white American.
Self-proclaimed atheist or otherwise, it
matters little.
Police and media
whitewashing
To add insult to injury,
the
Chapel Hill police reacted mere hours
after the terrorist act saying that an
“ongoing dispute over parking may have led
to a triple shooting”. The media embraced
the statement with little questioning. That
was clearly Hicks’ statement to the police,
which was adopted as fact. The term
terrorism was
completely absent from mainstream media
discourse.
Obama finally reacted to
the heinous crime, but
only after being urged on by a visibly moved
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
“As political leaders, we have
responsibilities for the murders committed
in the countries where we are in charge. We
have to show our stance. If you stay silent
when faced with an incident like this, and
don't make a statement, the world will stay
silent towards you,” Erdogan said.
Obama, belatedly issued a
shot statement,
vague and uncommitted.
The media’s insistence on
the parking dispute story has become the
dominant narrative. The tastelessness and
insensitivity reached new heights when a US
Inside Edition TV show produced a report
on how to “safely” find a parking spot while
avoiding dispute.
“Finding a parking space
can be one of the things that pushes people
over the edge, but there is always a way to
find a spot at the mall,” said the show host
Deborah Norville. Behind her, on a large
screen, the three murdered Muslims. She
didn’t even bother to mention their names,
or list their contributions to their
community. Their charity work alone was more
than all the good that Hicks and his
gun-touting “atheists” types can ever do for
their community in a lifetime.
If the murderer was a
Muslim or a black man, Norville’s report
would have had a different title: “How do
you spot a terrorist?” maybe, or “What to do
about gang violence in my neighbourhood?”
perhaps.
Holding US media
accountable
But if the victims are
Muslims, which could be millions of Iraqis,
thousands of Palestinians, or three Muslim
students in North Carolina, the discourse
shifts away from generalisations, politics
or any context that may in fact help us
understand the issue better.
So Hicks, we are told,
killed the students “execution style”
because of a dispute over parking spaces.
The same way that Chris
Kyle – “The American Sniper” - made 164
confirmed “kills”, killing “savages” because
that’s what national heroes do.
And US wars and sanctions
on Iraq killed, starved and wounded millions
to bring democracy to the Arabs.
This selectively insane
logic will persist however, because there
are millions of unrepentant politicians,
extremist media pundits and well-armed men
and women who refuse to see the recklessness
of their “logic”.
They will continue to feed
violence - which unlike what Hicks is led to
believe - didn’t start on 11 September 2001
- and spit out the most dangerous of
militant phenomena: al-Qaeda, IS and all the
rest.
It is time for Muslims to
demand that Obama issue more than a
statement, but call the United States
government and hate-filled media to account.
These outrageous double standards must end,
before more innocent lives are taken.
-
Ramzy
Baroud – www.ramzybaroud.net -
is an internationally-syndicated columnist,
a media consultant, an author of several
books and the founder of
PalestineChronicle.com. He is currently
completing his PhD studies at the University
of Exeter. His latest book is My Father Was
a Freedom Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story
(Pluto Press, London).
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