Tuesday, April 2, 2019

Christchurch Murders: The Real Accomplices


Christchurch Murders: The Real Accomplices

by Guy Millière  •  April 2, 2019 at 5:00 am
Facebook  Twitter  Addthis  Send  Print
  • Two days before the tribute to the victims and the broadcasting of the call to prayer, New Zealand's Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern invited an imam to read the Koranic verses of Surah al Baqarah before the opening of a parliamentary session. Surah al Baqarah speaks of "those who are killed in the way of Allah" and evokes a "great punishment" for "those who disbelieve". Do New Zealanders really deserve a great punishment because an Australian came to New Zealand and committed a mass murderer?
  • In Saudi Arabia, the good news is that in 2018, a few laws were changed to allow women to drive. The bad news is that women are still not allowed to travel, get married or divorced, file a police report, or even leave prison, without the permission of a male guardian. If they try to flee, they risk being arrested or killed. In November, "dozens" of activists involved in the "right to drive" campaign were arrested and are currently on trial. Apple and Google, in their app stores, offer a Saudi Arabian government app that "allows Saudi men to track women under their sponsorship."
  • The real accomplices of Christchurch mass murderer are not those who sounded the alarm about Muslim immigration to the West, but those in the West who embrace this passive submission, weakness and cultural suicide and refuse to see the potential storms ahead.
Christchurch, New Zealand. (Image source: Andrew Cooper/Wikimedia Commons)
The Christchurch massacre -- in which dozens of innocents were slaughtered in cold blood because of their religion, as they were assembled to pray -- was a despicable, indefensible act. The murderer, Brenton Tarrant, is a criminal. The manifesto text he left to justify his act is in no way a justification.
The reactions that followed were marked by legitimate indignation. Unfortunately, the attack was also used to launch a campaign both dangerous and treacherous.
Tarrant, in his manifesto, defined himself as an "eco-fascist" and wrote that he admires British Nazi Oswald Mosley and China's communist regime, and that he rejects conservatism. Even though US President Donald J. Trump condemned the murders, the killer's remarks were used to attack him.
Facebook
Twitter
RSS

Donate




No comments:

Post a Comment