WhatFinger


Narrative-killing time.

Dear Left: No one is 'giving in to fear and hatred' so you can put a sock in that lecture



Before we go any farther in the current discussions about ISIS and how to fight them, we need to take a quick pause and destroy a rising narrative on the left. It’s the one where they lecture you not to “give in to fear.” The premise here is that people who should be proceeding with compassion and love have become so frightened of being attacked by terrorists that they’ve embraced hatred of Muslims, and as a result they’re not only having bloodthirsty fantasies about bombing Ahmed and Abu, but they’re also turning cold and hard-hearted toward the plight of innocent women and children. All because they’re irrationally afraid.
This has led to some of the most condescending and vomit-inducing lectures from everyone from left-wing politicians to media figures to people on social media who somehow manage to get their screeds widely shared. The best/worst example I’ve seen comes from a fellow named Dave Hogg, who lives in the same city as I do, is a Detroit-area sportswriter and self-identifies on Facebook as “very liberal” and “atheist.” Here’s the money quote from his lecture (emphasis mine):
If we take any refugees, they will be screened more closely than anyone else who is allowed into our country. Will that catch every Daesh member? It will catch a vast majority of them. The Turkish screening process did catch eight of them, and ours is more sophisticated. Is that a guarantee that no Daesh members will get onto US soil? No, it isn't. One might get through as a refugee, and they might move to your state and something bad might happen. There's almost certainly a better chance that you'll get hit by a meteor. You're certainly more likely to get killed by an American on a rampage than a refugee. The part the fear mongers want you to forget, though, is that Daesh isn't hiding among refugees. The attackers in Paris were European nationals, one of whom had a fake Syrian passport. If they want to attack us, why change tactics? Why not try to recruit an American or a Canadian or a Western European? Those people are much more likely to pass through our borders than someone applying for refugee status. We can't erect a magic bubble over the United States and keep Daesh out. That's not how the world works. If they want to get someone into this country, they will. So we have two choices. The first choice is to let Daesh win. We give in to fear and we choose to stand with the people who argue that Islam is our true enemy. We don't gain in that scenario, and we certainly don't get safer. We simply widen the split between Islam and the West, we hand away the moral high ground and we make the world a more dangerous place. The other choice is to stand with humanity and live up to the words on that statue in New York.

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I'll pass in debating him about whether ISIS (or "Daesh" as he prefers) really has people hiding among refugees, because that's not really the point I'm making here - although I think his point is both incorrect and largely irrelevant. And I'm not so much looking to take on Dave Hogg specifically as I am quoting him because his piece here encapsulates the larger message of the left about as completely as anything I've seen. So let's consider this argument: Because you personally are statistically very unlikely to be the victim of a terrorist attack - which is no doubt true - everything you're demanding be done to prevent the next attack is irrational. Hey. Someone might get through and "something bad might happen," but it probably won't happen to you, so stop worrying about it. The premise of his entire argument is that those demanding stronger action to prevent an influx of terrorists into the United States are being driven solely by personal fear. They don't just think a terrorist might kill someone. They think a terrorist might kill them. And if they realize they're more likely to be killed by an asteroid or whatever, they'll just relax about it. Let's consider that. If this premise is true, why would anyone have been horrified about what happened in Paris? It wasn't you, after all! What do you care? Is this what motivates you? Fear of yourself being killed by a terrorist? Or do you actually possess a lot more concern for others than Hogg and his fellow liberals would like to give you credit for, such that your concern is not just for yourself but rather over the prospect that anyone would be the victim of the sort of thing that happened in Paris? Questioning the importation of 10,000 or more Syrian refugees is not about fear, and it's certainly not about people thinking that they personally and specifically will be killed. It's also not about hating or refusing to care about the refugees. It's about taking seriously the idea that these threats are real and that it's horrible when anyone has to suffer as the victim of one of them. Maybe very liberal atheists like Dave Hogg are gellin' like Magellan so long as it's not them getting riddled with bullets in a concert hall. I'm not, and I don't think most of you are either. It doesn't matter to me whether the victim is someone I know or 125 total strangers. I don't want it to happen. And if the government is about to make a decision that could make it more likely, I want the government not to make that decision - or at the very least to take the risk a hell of a lot more seriously than Obama is taking it. That has nothing to do with fear. It has to do with compassion - compassion for the would-be victims of such an atrocity and their families, not to mention the communities in which they occur, not to mention the people who will be asked to put their lives on the line in response to such an attack. When you're the guy who dismissively informs us "something bad might happen" - as if we're all supposed to relax and accept it - I don't think you've got a lot of room to lecture anyone else about compassion, chief. It also has nothing to do with hating anyone. You know what I hate? Not Muslims. Not refugees. Not widows and orphans. You know what I hate? This:
Dear Left: No one is 'giving in to fear and hatred' so you can put a sock in that lecture I do not want this to happen to any more people. Yes, I understand that it's impossible to prevent all evil before it happens, but many such attacks are thwarted because people take seriously their duty to try. That duty often involves making some difficult moral choices. Yes, there are people who have done nothing wrong and need help, and we would like to help them. But as we consider how to help them, might it be necessary to eliminate or modify certain options so as not to put our own nation at unnecessary risk? To listen to some people on the left, you'd think any consideration at all about the well-being of our own people represents a complete capitulation to hatred and evil. "It's the right thing to do," Obama says, to bring 10,000 refugees here. Oh? The right thing to do for whom? The people he's supposed to be serving and protecting? Has he really thought that through? And for God's sake, can we dispense with the dumbass comparisons to other ways you can be killed, like traffic accidents and slipping in the shower? Yeah. All that can happen. And you know what? We do what we can within reason to prevent that stuff too. We enforce traffic safety laws. We establish safety standards for showers. And we do other things. We build storm sewers so a flood won't sweep you away. We make Little League teams sit in their dugouts for 20 minutes after someone spots a lightning strike, so they won't get struck by lightning. For just about every way you can be killed, we do what we can to lessen that risk. Not because of fear. Not because of hatred. Just because it would be nice if people were not killed. So wanting to do whatever we can to prevent a terrorist attack is not about "giving in to fear." It's about recognizing that a threat exists in the form of people determined to kill the innocent, and not wanting to just bend over and take it as some sort of preferable alternative to "fear." That is about the dopiest narrative the left has ever come up with, and it needs to be destroyed. Today. Then we can get serious about making ISIS fear us, which is what we should have been doing all along.


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Dan Calabrese -- Bio and Archives

Dan Calabrese’s column is distributed by HermanCain.com, which can be found at HermanCain

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