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Europe’s Moral Decadence Fuels Spread of Islamic Fundamentalism
Pajamas Media ^ | 9/20/2011 | Bruce Bawer

Posted on 09/20/2011 5:21:10 AM PDT by IbJensen

On September 15, PJMedia ran a piece by me about the famous Muhammed cartoonist Kurt Westergaard, who a couple of days earlier was scheduled to have taken part in a press conference in Oslo, Norway, to celebrate the publication of a new children’s book for which he had drawn the illustrations. Instead of attending the conference, however, Westergaard rushed back to his native Denmark the day before. The reason originally given for his cancellation was that he had taken ill; but it then emerged that there had been concerns about his safety, and that the report of illness was a cover story. Reports were inconsistent: while the Norwegian security police, the PST, claimed that Westergaard himself had made the decision to return to Denmark, Geirr Lystrup, author of the book for which he had done the illustrations, said that the PST had made the call. Meanwhile the nature of the threat that had led to Westergaard’s departure remained murky.

Since then there’s been a bit more news, though contradictions, and questions, remain. Two days after my article appeared, the Norwegian daily Dagbladet reported that the reason why Westergaard was hustled out of the country was that “a known Norwegian criminal had acquired automatic weapons and explosives” with which he intended to kill the cartoonist in a devastating act of Islamic terrorism. This criminal was arrested on the morning of September 13 — the day on which the press conference was to take place — for a traffic violation. But despite the arrest, Westergaard was asked to return home, apparently because the PST still feared that associates of the “known criminal” — who has not been named — would carry out the planned attack. Why those associates, too, were not placed under arrest remained unclear. So did the reason why the “known criminal” was arrested for a traffic violation and not for planning an act of terrorism. Indeed, there was a great deal that remained unclear.

The September 17 article in Dagbladet contended that the decision to leave Norway was Westergaard’s own. Yet on the same day the Danish daily Jyllands-Posten reported that Westergaard had told a TV interviewer that the PST had “urged” him to go, and in an article posted at the website of Norwegian state television, NRK, on the evening of September 16, Lystrup appeared to indicate that the PST did indeed tell Westergaard to leave.

Both Westergaard and Lystrup confirmed that the cover story about Westergaard being sick had been the PST’s idea. Lystrup called this stratagem “pathetic” and argued that, rather than asking him and Westergaard to lie, the PST should have admitted publicly that it was faced with a terrorist threat from which it did not have the resources to protect them. For his part, Westergaard lamented in his TV interview that the whole episode represented a step backwards for freedom of expression.

Then, on September 18, Dagbladet reported that it had been in contact with the “known criminal” and that he had denied any involvement in a planned terrorist attack against Westergaard. He had also denied that he was a criminal, describing himself instead as a “former criminal.” Dagbladet said that the “known criminal” was “well known by both the regular police and the security police,” had been convicted of crimes several times, and had ties, according to PST, to “an extreme Islamist milieu.” There was no mention of whether the “known criminal” was still in police custody when he spoke to Dagbladet, or of what legal measures, if any, were being taken against him. Nor was it clear why the PST was consistently refusing to answer reporters’ questions. Why hadn’t the police held a single press conference about this sensational near-calamity? Indeed, the whole situation seemed surpassingly odd.

It wasn’t just the PST’s conduct that was puzzling; it was the Norwegian media’s conduct, too. The Westergaard story was getting a degree of media attention in Norway — but not as much as it should have been getting, given that the planned terrorist act, which was to have taken place in a good-sized downtown Oslo auditorium during a high-profile press conference, could well have claimed the lives of dozens of Norwegian movers and shakers. The Norwegian media, while scarcely able to ignore such a major story, seemed to be downplaying it. Why?

Here’s my guess. The Westergaard incident took place only weeks after Anders Behring Breivik, an opponent of multiculturalism and Islamic immigration, murdered seventy-seven people in Oslo and on the nearly island of Utøya. In the wake of those atrocities, the murderer’s political views have been cynically used by left-wing ideologues to demonize — and attempt to silence — pretty much every critic of multiculturalism and Islam in the country. As a result of this campaign, it has become riskier than ever in Norway to address Islamic terrorism head-on. If there is relatively little sign of vigorous investigative journalism into the Westergaard story, this may be why: Norwegian reporters, for fear of being accused of Islamophobia, are now actually loath to remind readers that there is such a thing as Islamic terrorism. The left, in short, seems to have done its job well.

As if all that weren’t depressing enough, here, in closing, is an excerpt from a reader comment on Dagsavisen‘s September 18 article about the Westergaard case, which reflects the views of all too many people in Norway (and elsewhere in Europe, for that matter):

Freedom of expression is a good cause but one should use it with common sense and not engage in unnecessary provocation. … I don’t feel sorry for Westergaard. … I’ve never seen any overview at all of what it costs to guard him at home in Denmark. … If Westergaard gets one in the face, it’s his own fault.

The greatest menace to Europe in our time is not Islam. No, it’s the mentality reflected in this comment — a moral decadence, born of multiculturalism, that is utterly incapable of perceiving either the peril of Islam or the preciousness of freedom.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: evilreligion; muslimoctopus; terrorists
Bonjour, Paris City of Lights! Marseilles has already been overriden by the muslim occupiers who now comprise the majority of the population.

“My house is their house” (Mitterand), inside “Europe whose roots are as much Muslim as Christian” (Chirac), because the situation is moving irreversibly towards the final tumble in 2050 which will see French stock amounting to only half the population of the country (the oldest members), the remainder composed of black Africans, North Africans and Asians of all sorts from the inexhaustible reserve of the Third World, predominantly Islamic, understood to be fundamentalist jihadists, this dance is only the beginning. The comments by Mitterrand and Chirac could have been spoken by the inarticulate, imbecilic Marxist Barack Hussein Barry Soretoes Obama who believes that muslims where on the Mayflower and helped build this declining Relpublic.

All of Europe marches to its death.

“No amount of atomic bombs will be able to dam up the tidal wave of millions of human beings that will one day leave the southernmost and poorest parts of the world, to invade the relatively open spaces of the wealthy northern hemisphere, in search of survival.” (President Boumediene, March 1974.)

“The thousand years are accomplished. And the nations at the four corners of the earth, that are equal in number to the sands of the sea, are going out. They will march to battle on the surface of the earth, they will invest the camp of the saints and the beloved city.”

1 posted on 09/20/2011 5:21:13 AM PDT by IbJensen
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To: IbJensen

We are locked in a 1,400 year old war, and we are losing, badly.


2 posted on 09/20/2011 5:23:25 AM PDT by Travis McGee (www.EnemiesForeignAndDomestic.com)
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To: IbJensen

It’s actually a culture unwilling to face and dela with the unpleasant. Everyone is always looking for someone else to do it for them, to take care of the ‘nasty’ things in life.


3 posted on 09/20/2011 5:24:27 AM PDT by Niuhuru (The Internet is the digital AIDS; adapting and successfully destroying the MSM host.)
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To: IbJensen
The 1960s are a period of death and decline in my eyes. It was before my time, but it seems as if the world began turning upside down at that point, and we're only part of the way there.

The problem with Europe?

Norway has historically been called a Christian country, but according to the most recent Eurobarometer Poll 2005 only 32% of the Norwegian population say they believe there is a God. A majority of the population are members of the Church of Norway. Many Norwegians are secular; while 70% of the population say they have a faith, only 32% practice their respective faith. One need not go further back than the beginning of the 1900s to find a much more religious atmosphere. At numerous times in history, Norway sent more missionaries per capita than any other country. This changed considerably from the 1960s. Today, only 12% of the population attend church services each month.
4 posted on 09/20/2011 6:13:20 AM PDT by CaspersGh0sts
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To: CaspersGh0sts
A nation is doomed when it is unwilling to kill an enemy, but the enemy is willing to die for its faith and the destruction of the nation.

In other words, how do you expect to win when your foe is willing to die for his faith, but you are unwilling to kill for your own?

5 posted on 09/20/2011 6:45:57 AM PDT by Thommas (The snout of the camel is in the tent..)
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To: IbJensen

Norwegian reporters aren’t afraid of the left. 90% of them vote for the leftists. -They *are* the left, and the annihilation of our civilization is their project too.


6 posted on 09/20/2011 7:53:34 AM PDT by LastNorwegian
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