Bear with me as I use the etymologically absurd word "Islamophobia" in the way that it has been misused by the mainstream media. That is, to have it mean "hatred of Muslims" rather than what its etymology should mean as fear of Islam or those practicing Islam. It's a nonsense word, but it has common usage so I'm running with it for now. Literally, Islamophobia, as a fear, is rational for many....
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Just like with 9/11, 7/7 and every other terrorist attack in the West, the narrative that the so-called "liberal" left presents is familiar. It goes like this:
1. The use of violence is never justified and we empathise with the victims and their families, this should never happen again; but..
2. We have to realise that US foreign policy and/or poverty and disenfranchisement and/or the plight of the Palestinians and/or anything else other than the declared motives of the terrorists, can incite these sorts of reactions. If only we change those policies, we can stop this happening; and
3. We must first and foremost guard against mass Islamophobia. This isn't the fault of Muslims or anything to do with Islam, it's a perversion of Islam.
So after showing faux concern for terrorism, and blaming anyone but the perpetrators for it, the key concern is that there will be mass violence or threats against Muslims.
Tim Black at Spiked points out that after past events, there is barely any such response, and most of what is recorded involves abuse online, which while vile and inexcusable, is not anything like the pogrom of attacks Jews now fear in France.
Quite simply, the numbers of people who blame other people for the actions of the terrorists are very few. Most people reject the immoral notion of collective guilt, or in any way diluting or transferring blame for crimes from the perpetrators to those who had nothing to do with it. In France, of course, there may be more reason for concern, given the popularity of the fascist Front Nationale, although it has tried to distance itself from those who would undertake such attacks.
After the Boston Marathon bombings there were loads of media panic about the“ignorance and prejudice [that arise] in the aftermath of a terrorist attack” and concern that Muslims in America would get it in the neck. But Muslims have not been assaulted en masse by stupid Americans in recent years, including in the wake of 9/11. According to federal crime stats, in 2009 there were 107 anti-Muslim hate crimes; in 2010, there were 160. In a country of 330 million people, this is exceptionally low. After the Lindt café siege in Sydney at the end of last year, there was once again heated fear on the pages of the broadsheets about dumb Aussies going crazy and attacking brown people. Nothing happened. No mob emerged. Muslims were not attacked.
Those warning against so-called Islamophobia may be well motivated. Who can argue against calls for there to be no attacks against innocent Muslims or their property? However, there is something more to all of this. It's the application of the Orwellian post-modernist doctrine of structural identity politics, a theory that makes all politics and relations about power, and classifies everyone into pre-defined groups that either have power or don't.