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More
Than Lives Lost In Camp Massacre
By Diana West
7/28/2011
On
Tuesday, I read a New York Times
online report about a press conference held by Geir Lippestad, the
defense
lawyer for admitted Norwegian mass murderer Anders Breivik. I found one
of
Lippestad’s statements of interest, and saved it for future reference.
Little
did I know it would apparently disappear from the news website.
The
statement was: “Asked if the
rampage was aimed at the Labor Party or at Muslim immigrants, Mr.
Lippestad
said: ‘This was an attack on the Labor Party.’”
The
lawyer’s statement is the first
credible assessment of motive, and as such it is a significant piece of
the
story. So why did The New York Times cut it from the final version of
the story
online and in Wednesday’s newspaper?
The
answer, I think, has much to do
with how Lippestad’s opinion fails to accelerate the rush of Times
insta-spin,
and could even slow what looks like a swift-moving drive to limit free
speech
about Islamization in the West.
The
“updated” Times report that omits
Lippestad’s statement now features comments from Jonas Gahr Store,
Norway’s
foreign minister. Sure, Store’s comments are significant, but why they
obliterated the defense lawyer’s statement, I don’t know. But I can
guess.
Lippestad
believes his client was
attacking the Labor Party, not Muslim immigrants. The final version,
minus
Lippestad’s comment, reports on an official, post-attack event: the
foreign
minister’s visit to the World Islamic Mission, a large Oslo mosque, “to
express
solidarity,” as the Times explains, with Norwegian Muslims. Over the
weekend,
Store visited a church as well, but the Times doesn’t mention that. The
overall
patina to the mosque event then, certainly minus Lippestad’s
assessment,
becomes one of Muslim aggrievement -- an artificial creation given that
the
majority of Breivik’s victims are most likely non-Muslim. Such
aggrievement,
however, fits the Times’ anti-anti-jihad narrative to date, also
dovetailing
with machinations on the Left.
We
may assume Norway’s Labor Party,
like all parties on the European Left, draws votes from a majority of
Norway’s
Muslims for its support of Islamic immigration and the cultural, legal
and
financial accommodations that follow. Indeed, it’s the resulting
pattern of
Islamization across Europe that drove what has been absurdly glorified
as
Breivik’s 1,500-page “manifesto.” After I checked out the nine times my
own
name appears -- all in cut-and-pasted essays by the Norwegian blogger
Fjordman
-- I learned via counterterrorism expert Jarrett Brachman that the
“manifesto”
is partly plagiarized from the Unabomber. Jawa Report has now
identified
multiple other plagiarized sources throughout the first 350 pages (and
counting). This means the myth of the “manifesto” as some magnum opus
of
counter-jihad written by the killer over many years is a phony. Still,
I’ll
wager it’s pure Breivik where the “manifesto” notes his fave TV shows,
from
“Vampire Diaries” to “Dexter.”
“Dexter”
is about a police forensics
expert/serial killer. “Quite hilarious,” wrote Breivik, who killed
Labor Party
campers wearing a police uniform.
But
watch such tripe become a catalyst
for a clampdown. The Times reports: “While many in Norway do not want
Mr.
Breivik’s actions to affect politics here, Mr. Store said that was
inevitable,
too. Politics, once the mourning period passed, was the way to deal
with the
issues raised by the killings, he said.
“’What
kind of statements and actions
can lead to this?’ he said. ‘How can we have an inclusiveness that
brings all
views inside the camp of democracy while drawing lines in the sand
about
incitement and hatred?’”
Uh-oh.
I know what “statements” the
foreign minister means -- and it’s not the saying of Muhammad, “Whoever
changed
his Islamic religion, then kill him.” Store means the histories,
analysis and
reportage related to Islam copied into the phony “manifesto.” These, in
the
spin that Lippestad’s assessment doesn’t quite match, “led” to the
massacre --
not the madness or evil of a drugged-up killer.
Forgive
my cynicism, but I don’t see
how else to interpret the omission of highly relevant news, the
projection of
Muslim victimization, and the apparent elevation of a criminal
lunatic’s
pseudo-thesis to a means to silence “politically incorrect” critiques
of Islam.
Which is in itself a kind of tragedy. The cynics and manipulators,
eager for
political advantage, fail to see the attack for what it was: a
shattering blow
to all of civilized society.
Read
it at Townhall
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