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Muthana like so many others is not — or is not just — the mindless murderer of the tabloids' imagination. His religious ideology is genuine. Nor is he a voice of the oppressed. He once gave every appearance of being a fine young man. His father described him as "quiet and well-educated". Four universities offered him a place to study medicine. You could not find a less likely example of the left-wing fantasy of the misguided extremist driven to violence by the "root causes" of poverty, disenfranchisement and marginalisation.

I and, I suspect, the government will ask different questions about his career and the careers of his fellow killers. When in his journey towards barbarism did he hear liberal arguments against radical Islam? Where would he have encountered a fightback against men who are so sexist that they rape and enslave women? So sectarian that they condemn heretics to death because they do not share their version of Islam? So homophobic, paedophile, anti-democratic, anti-Semitic, sectarian, vindictive and violent that they might have stepped out of a liberal nightmare?

Hundreds, maybe thousands, of young British citizens are committing crimes against humanity. The politicians are responding with their usual crackdowns — and I turn queasy when I imagine what new laws and trouble in the streets there will be when and if Islamic State recruits bring their war home.

Culture matters as much as laws, however. It may not have the power to arrest and punish, but it is more persistent and ubiquitous. It seeps into the corners the police can never reach. For the young in particular, what their friends argue against and deride will have more effect on them than the lectures of government ministers. And the truth is Britain, Europe and the United States do not have an anti-fascist culture.

There are anti-Islamic and racist subcultures everywhere. From the British National Party to the tabloids via UKIP, prejudice against Muslims because they are Muslims flourishes. The Left will condemn it, and rightly so. But it will not as a general rule stand with liberal Muslims and ex-Muslims fighting against their own religious Right. In Britain today friends of mine live like dissidents in a dictatorship. They meet in secret. They vet new arrivals to ensure they are not spies. They are ex-Muslims living in a supposedly free country who fear their enemies will damn them as apostates and kill them. How extraordinary that they must hide their true beliefs from all but intimate friends for fear of the consequences. And how shameful that they have no anti-fascist Left worthy of the name to defend them.

The Left will fight the white far-Right. In Britain, groups like Hope not Hate organise protests against UKIP. Think what you will about UKIP — and I think nothing but ill about them — but it is not actually recommending the rape of enslaved women. On Twitter and in the universities there are constant demands to ban and punish those who show the smallest disrespect to women — scientists who wear racy shirts, men who argue against abortion, pop singers who promote a rape culture, and pick-up artists who instruct men on seduction techniques. But with honourable exceptions, leftists will not argue against armed misogyny. On the contrary, they will ban those who try to take it on.

A few weeks ago, the Lawyers' Secular Society was due to present a report to law students at the University of West London on the Islamic supremacists who have spoken at British campuses in 2014. The university banned the society from holding its meeting. (It would produce "bad publicity", apparently.) In other words, while extremist preachers stalked the campuses, students who wanted to argue against them were thrown out.

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Bob-B
December 18th, 2014
8:12 AM
An excellent piece. I hope it will change at least a few minds on the Left.

amcdonald
December 18th, 2014
6:12 AM
All very true, Mr Cohen. We are indeed very far away from voting like the people of Uruguay. Who the hell wants to live in a green, prospering, cultured, musical, bohemian country ? "Liberal England in it`s decadence"- it`s dreary, mean spirited neo-Victorianism more like ! How come Russell Brand and Nick Cohen (and the political parties) never mention Uruguay ? No muslims ever will either. The fun,career choice offered by Islamic State in jihad-porn production is a temptation the dumbfuck scum of the earth cannot resist. It`s heartening to read Douglas Murray,Nick Cohen and Julie Burchill`s enlightening articles on Israel and the enemy totalitarian islam. `Wordy` literary types ignore the young female artists of this century- but that`s a different subject and one Standpoint could make a new year resolution to highlight.

Mark Lambert
December 17th, 2014
9:12 PM
I've taken a growing interest in all this for a few years now, and with the growing interest comes growing concern. Concern about who the media use to represent Muslim views. Concern about university Islamic Societies inviting the types of speakers, along with the demands for segregated seating. Concern for the ridiculous blow-up against Majid Nawaz for posting the Jesus & Mo picture with a tagline of, "this doesn't offend me." I've left out the obvious terror-threat. So I might post stuff on Facebook, either to get frustrations off my chest, or in some cases, let others know what is going on - a case in point was the Nawaz cartoon debacle that didn't hit mainstream news for at least two and a half weeks. I might post an article (like this one), with a tagline of my own thoughts, many times pointing out the "problem" we all have with things like this, is a problem for liberal Muslims too. Hardly any "friends" (and I do know them all) respond to these posts, but in proper communication, I did get this: A Jewish friend said I should be careful, and he may be right. He's concerned about the "traditional" far-right rise (mentioning UKIP a lot), a bit more so than what I'd call an Islamist far-right rise. But he gets my point, but would never reply on Facebook - fair enough, he has international work colleagues as friends there. A cousin said, "you seem to have a downer on Muslims." After my heavy sigh and words of, "I'm sure I've explained what it is I'm absolutely concerned about," she said she agreed, and we had a long conversation in agreement. So I was stumped as to her first point, and then wondered how everything might be coming across to other friends and family. Was I explaining myself enough? Did they actually read the articles (probably not). Did they think, after giving a cursory glance, that I'd turned into an EDL/BNP type? Did they have the same concerns, or were they ignorant, or even didn't care? Or were they scared to reply? Ok, I do know a few are just concerned about sharing pics of fluffy cats, but I expect nothing of any substance from them politically. It's difficult to navigate this with accusations of "Isamophobia" and even "racism" after certain people have managed to marry-up the two words. Because I am interested, I know Muslims can be called "Islamophobes" for a challenge on the conservative orthodoxy. I doubt many of my Facebook friends know this, and I find this frustrating and annoying. I find I have to convince myself that I'm correct to be concerned and if anyone gets the wrong idea, I can easily explain myself, and it's worth carrying on being concerned and being interested.

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