In what is a squalid and
somewhat pathetic attempt to win votes off Muslims in this tight election, Ed Miliband's
credibility and integrity has sunk to even further depths as he promises to outlaw
Islamophobia:
"We are going to make Islamophobia an aggravated
crime. We are going to make sure it is marked on people's records with the
police to make sure they root out Islamophobia as a hate crime."
Everything….and I mean
absolutely everything is wrong with this idea. I'll pick just my top four
reasons why.
1) It's a dystopian example of thought crime; the very
epitome of an Orwellian nightmare. Phobia
literally means a fear of something. If you have claustrophobia you are afraid
of confined spaces. If you have arachnophobia you have a fear of spiders. If
you have a fear of Islam you have a fear of its growing socio-political influence
in society, and of the way people anxiously pander to it, and of the extent to
which its extremities stultify minds, and of the spectre of increased
radicalisation that leads to hate speech and sometimes murder and terrorism (all very
understandable fears, I'm sure we'd all agree). Of course we should be wholly
tolerant and kind towards moderate Muslims, but far from wanting to criminalise
this anti-extremist phobia, we should actively encourage it, and come down even
harder on those Muslim leaders radicalising young people.
2) It's a contemptible infringement of our civil
liberties and our freedom of speech. To
outlaw the ability to criticise, mock, ridicule, campaign against and intellectually
challenge Islam is to rob us of vital tools for enquiry and progression, and
will at the same time create an even greater culture of trepidation whereby people
are forever afraid to speak openly for fear of being criminalised.
3) It's ambiguous to the point of being
useless. How the heck is this ridiculous legislation even going to be
properly enforced anyway? The boundary line between what constitutes the
Miliband version of Islamophobia is blurry. Am I an Islamophobe if I write a
blog saying that I don't think the Qur'an is anything other than an inept
man-made creation? Will I be outside the orbit of the Islamophobia law if I demonstrate
outside a Mosque known to be radicalising young Muslims, or if I tell the
police about a Muslim grooming operating above a local kebab shop (that's hypothetical
by the way - I know of no such place in my city)? In terms of the law, Islamophobia is so ambiguous
it is nigh-on impossible that it could be enforced with any consistency or in a
way that doesn't stifle our free expression and genuine concerns about the
darker elements of Islam. This leads me nicely onto point 4 - perhaps the most frightening
prospect of them all.
4) It empowers the very people we actually want
to disempower. Even aside from the very serious problem of making people
reluctant to speak out against radical Islamist preaching
in mosques, extremism in schools and hate speech in public places, the law will
only help the despicable child-sex gangs that groom, entrap, rape and exploit
young British girls. The majority of these offenders are Muslims of Pakistani origin (recall
infamous cases in Doncaster, Rotherham, Manchester, Blackpool, Oldham, Derby,
Newcastle, Rochdale, Bradford and Oxford as horrible cases in point). The reason
so many of these young girls were subjected to the perverted exploits of the organised
Muslim gangs for so long is because numerous agencies and authorities
(including the police) were cravenly fearful of being labelled racist or prejudiced
if they enforced the law against these perpetrators.
The truth is, this proposed
law is highly irresponsible and gravely hazardous, as it comes with the danger of creating a greater freedom
for already dangerous Muslims and potentially dangerous Muslims, and also the danger of
creating a culture of trepidation and spinelessness for most other UK citizens.
When looking up the number of places (mentioned above) in which Muslim gangs have been responsible for child-sex grooming, I also happened to find this interesting piece of information from the Henry Jackson Society - "British Muslims could have the decisive vote in a quarter of constituencies, analysis shows. In 159 of the 632 seats, the number of Muslims is greater than the margin of victory in 2010. And this is true among almost half the 193 marginal seats."