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by Giulio Meotti
• November 19, 2016 at 5:00 am
- "The
better young people are integrated, the greater the chance is that
they radicalize. This hypothesis is supported by a lot of
evidence". — From a report by researchers at Erasmus University
in Rotterdam.
- "The
proportions of [Islamic State] administrators but also of suicide
fighters increase with education," according to a World Bank
report. "Moreover, those offering to become suicide bombers
ranked on average in the more educated group."
- Britain's MI5
revealed that "two-thirds of the British suspects have a
middle-class profile and those who want to become suicide bombers
are often the most educated".
- Researchers
have discovered that "the richer the countries are the more
likely will provide foreign recruits to the terrorist group
[ISIS]."
- The West seems
to have trouble accepting that terrorists are not driven by
inequality, but by hatred for Western civilization and the
Judeo-Christian values of the West.
- For the Nazis,
the "inferior race" (the Jews) did not deserve to exist;
for the Stalinists, the "enemies of the people" were not
entitled to continue living; for the Islamists, it is the West
itself that does not deserve to exist.
- It is
anti-Semitism, not poverty, that led the Palestinian Authority to
name a school after Abu Daoud, mastermind of the massacre of Israeli
athletes at the Munich Olympics.

Terrorists seem to be models of successful
integration. Mohammed Bouyeri (left), the Moroccan-Dutch terrorist who
shot the filmmaker Theo van Gogh (right) to death, then stabbed him and
slit his throat in 2004. "[Bouyeri] was a well-educated guy with
good prospects," said Job Cohen, the mayor of Amsterdam.
"There is a stereotype that young people from Europe who leave
for Syria are victims of a society that does not accept them and does not
offer them sufficient opportunities... Another common stereotype in the
debate in Belgium is that, despite research which refutes this,
radicalization is still far too often misunderstood as a process
resulting from failed integration... I therefore dare say that the better
young people are integrated, the greater the chance is that they
radicalize. This hypothesis is supported by a lot of evidence."
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