Posted: 26 May 2013 10:22 PM PDT
Europe has many fine
traditions. Its newest tradition is the burning car. Why burn cars? Because,
as George Mallory once said of mountains, they're there. There are lots of
car around and if you're a member of a perpetually unemployed tribe that
wandered up north and forages on social services, you might as well do
something to pass the time.
Burning
houses is a lot of work and house fires spread. Car fires are simpler. In a
welfare state
everyone has houses but not everyone has cars. Burning cars is a way to stick
it to those who work for a living. It's also a way to drive off the members of
the sickly Swedish tribe and claim the area for your own. And it's also fun.
Either you have a plan for buying a car or for burning a car. Considering the
Muslim unemployment rates in Sweden, France and everywhere else, it's safe to
say the car burners don't have future plans that involve saving up for a car
or taking out a loan for a car or finding work. Cars are things that they
steal, either the usual way or by defrauding social services. They might get
a car by dealing drugs, but those cars are disposable. One day they'll have
to burn them anyway.
If you're the product of an industrialized culture, then you think of a car
as a product of work. You realize that it's the product of countless raw
materials, that the metals had to be dug out of the earth, that the machines
that make it had to be assembled and that men had to stand around putting
that into place. And you might be one of those men. And if you aren't, then
you might know someone who is.
But if you come from a pre-industrial culture which may have factories, PhDs
and cars, but no sense of the connection between product, innovation and
effort, then why not burn a car or a city? Things fall into the category of
that which you and your family own... and that which they do not. Anything in
the latter category may be stolen or vandalized because it has no value.
The notion of a painting in a museum or a scientific principle or an eagle
soaring over a lake having value is an abstract notion to you. Value to you
is your own identity. A painting is valuable if you own it. If it sits in a
museum, then you can either steal it or burn down the museum. The principle
is worthless unless you can cash in on it. The eagle is worthless unless you
can kill it or identify with it.
Some people would call that savagery, but that sort of talk is politically
incorrect. And we all know that there are no such things as savages. The true
savages are the people who use scientific principles to make cars and then
use the money to commission paintings of soaring eagles for museums because
they are greedy exploiters of the planet. On the other hand, the noble
savages whose herds of sheep and goats turn fertile land into desert, who
burned the great libraries of civilization and who believe that the hair of
women emits rays that passing airplanes have to be protected from are close
to nature.
A car is just a metaphor. You drive it to work because you work somewhere.
You drive it on family vacations because you don't get to spend enough time
with your family because you and they are all doing things. You're not
sitting around your house with your two wives and eleven kids plotting new
ways to scam social services. You go places because you're still the product
of a culture that likes the idea of new frontiers. Your car isn't exactly
Columbus' flagship, but it takes you places. It's a sign of progress. That's
why you own a car, instead of burning them.
Civilization is not a product, it's a process. You can't export
it. You can ship a bunch of cars to Somalia, but you can't ship the process
that makes a culture build a car. You can hand out PhD's to them based on
knowledge and test taking skills, but you can't endow them with a respect for
ideas. You can set up democratic elections in Afghanistan and Egypt, but you
can't export the process that explains why the elections shouldn't be
abolished after the side with the most guns wins.
That's just as true of a lot of the second and third generation immigrants
who are no more Swedes than the South Africans became Africans or the English
settlers of the American Colonies became Indians. They may own iPhones, dye
their hair and listen to the same music that you do, but they often don't
have the same assumptions. They bought the product, but not the process. They
can drive cars and when they get bored, they can burn them, because they
aren't their cars. They're your cars.
And the hair dye and the music and the democratic elections aren't theirs
either. Those are things they took from you and if they get bored with them,
they'll put on Hijabs, ban music and go back to tyranny, because what they
have is a product, not a process. They walked into the movie in the middle
and they like some of it, but it's confusing and they don't understand why
the hero doesn't just shoot the villain in the head, take his woman and then
raise a dozen children in his lair.
After the riots die down and the fires are put out, there will be more talk
about integrating them, but what are they being integrated into; a culture
that doesn't resist when their cars are torched? Why would they want to join
a culture that leaves you unable to protect what is yours? Why would anyone
join a culture that makes you so weak and impotent that anyone can come and
take what belongs to you?
It's a movie that makes sense if you were there back in the 19th, but not if
you suddenly walked in around 1965 or 1995. It's the outcome of a historical
process that is hard to explain to people who were never part of the process.
They know how the story came out, but not why it matters. And even if they
could, their priorities are different. They didn't come here to meld into
some gelatinous brotherhood of man but to make life better for their clans.
Most people plan for the future, they just do it in different ways. In
Sweden, they plan to buy a car. In Iraq or Somalia, they plan to have eight
kids. In Sweden, there isn't supposed to be a biological tribe anymore.
Everyone is meant to belong to the progressive transnational tribe which lets
you have the good things in life so long as you make some kind of vague
commitment to pay more and share them with others. But the savages of
Stockholm already have a tribe. And their tribe isn't big on sharing and is a
lot more useful in a tight spot.
While the Swedes save up for cars, the Iraqis scam social services for their
eight kids. And the demographics suggest that eight kids and no cars beats
two cars and one child. Keep multiplying those numbers and the future will
have fewer Swedes and fewer cars and a lot more bored Iraqi kids running
through what used to be genteel suburbs looking for Swedes or cars to burn.
The
native multiculturalists are post-tribal, but the multiple cultures settling
there aren't. It's a war that can't be discussed except with the usual
accusations of xenophobia and oppression. But those are useless crutches of
dogma. They don't do much to restore a burned Audi. This is a conflict
between cultures that make things and cultures that take them, between
cultures that live for the moment and cultures that live for the next
thousand years of manifest destiny.
The Western ideal has been reduced to a personal technocratic utopia built on
efficiency and it has collided in the night with an Eastern ideal of the clan
and a theocratic utopia built on total purity. That is the kind of conflict
that the creed of good fences for good neighbors was meant for, but there are
no fences tall enough to work it out within a single nation.
Both West and East have their own processes. And both processes are
colliding. The Swedes bring their cars and the savages bring their flames.
The burning cars are a metaphor for the impact of Muslim immigration on
Sweden and the West.
Daniel Greenfield is a New York City based writer and blogger
and a Shillman Journalism Fellow of the David Horowitz Freedom Center.
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