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The rise and rise of a pity-for-Osama lobby
Spiked Online ^ | 05/07/2011 | Brendan O'Neill

Posted on 05/07/2011 7:32:49 PM PDT by SeekAndFind

How did ‘I hate bin Laden and I’m glad he’s dead’ become the most shocking thing one can say in polite society?

This week we have shuttled from an atmosphere of congratulation, even muted celebration, over the killing of OBL to what Rowan Williams, Archbishop of Canterbury and High Priest of the Chattering Classes, describes as a ‘very uncomfortable feeling’ about the killing of OBL. Those who dare to celebrate his death – mainly young American jocks – have been denounced as ‘abhorrent’ and ‘sickening’, and now the main way you advertise your decency, your membership of the civilised, upstanding, oh-so-unAmerican classes, is by wondering out loud if poor old OBL shouldn’t have been arrested and put on trial rather than having a bullet planted in his head.

This pity-for-Osama lobby, this bishop-led congregation of ‘uncomfortable’ moral handwringers, might pose as radical, denouncing America’s military action in bin Laden’s compound as ‘Wild West-style vengeance’. Yet in truth it is fuelled by self-loathing more than justice-loving. These critics are not opposed to Western intervention in principle – indeed, most of them have demanded ‘humanitarian’, political or legalistic intervention in other states’ affairs at one point or another. No, it is a discomfort with decisive action, a fear of what such action might lead to in the future, and a belief that people in the West should douse their emotional zeal and learn to be more meek, which motors the creepingly conformist anti-Obama and pro-Osama (well, almost) brigade. There is little, if anything, in this outburst of concerned liberal moralism that is worth backing.

The most striking thing was the speed with which the great and the good of the Western liberal elite sought to distance themselves from those vulgar, excitable Yanks and to express a more erudite and PC view of OBL’s demise. Barely 24 hours had passed since the dumping of bin Laden’s body in the sea before observers were describing President Obama as a ‘mobster’. ‘Are we gangsters or a Western democracy based on the rule of law?’, asked has-been mayor (and wannabe mayor) Ken Livingstone, who is so used to doing politics in the rarefied environs of London’s mayoral office that he doesn’t realise that the rule of law might not be so neatly applied during a shoot-out in a compound in Pakistan. Elsewhere the killing of bin Laden has already been described as a ‘war crime’ (isn’t everything these days?) while human rights campaigners say it would have been a better advert for Western values if justice against OBL had come ‘from a legitimate court of law rather than the end of gun’.

It didn’t take long for these apparently decent lovers of justice over violence to expose their real fears: that the sight of a few young Americans chanting ‘U-S-A!’ in response to OBL’s death might invite even more Islamist retribution upon us. One writer described this ‘frat boy reaction’ as ‘abhorrent’ – it is ‘sickening’, she said, and, more revealingly, it has ‘no dignity’. A British columnist said the anti-OBL shindigs were the products of a ‘patriotic reflex’ – that is, a nationalist kneejerkism amongst America’s unthinking classes – which is apparently ‘intense and pervasive’. In response to the chant of ‘We killed bin Laden!’, the columnist said: ‘If “they” killed bin Laden in Abbottabad, then “they” also bombed a large number of wedding parties in Afghanistan, “they” murdered 24 Iraqi civilians in Haditha and “they” gang-raped a 14-year-old before murdering her, her six-year-old sister and their parents near Mahmudiyah.’ Yep, that’s right – if you celebrate the killing of OBL then you are also implicitly celebrating American atrocities overseas, including rape. Gang-rape-loving dunderheads.

The most telling phrase in that article was ‘they’, which was used again and again, always in quote marks, to refer to ordinary Americans. Because much of the ‘uncomfortable feeling’ over the killing of bin Laden is really an ‘uncomfortable feeling’ with, if not outright disgust for, ‘them’, the people who make up America, and for the ideals of modern America itself. This is ‘very much the American style’, sniffed Livingstone about the anti-OBL get-togethers (which, by the way, were only relatively small, party-style expressions of a fleeting emotion). Other commentators have said that they ‘recoiled’ at the ‘gloating that Americans went in for’. Behind the high-falutin’ expressions of passion for justice over shoot-to-kill, much of the pity-for-Osama lobby is really concerned with expressing its moral superiority over apparently vengeful Americans. Where ‘them’ Yanks still have an attachment to nationalism and war, ‘we’ Europeans are post-nationalist, cosmopolitan, empathetic rather than vengeful, and are far more comfortable with having a man in a wig rather than a man with a gun sort out our moral and political problems.

Of course, such anti-Americanism is not confined to Europe. As we have seen in the 10 years since 9/11 it is rife within America itself, where the better-educated classes have long had an ‘uncomfortable feeling’ in relation to the antics and emotions of the American masses. And so it was that Time magazine, in keeping with the modern trend for explaining away every emotion as a product of evolution or of involuntary brain activity, said that human beings are ‘wired to perceive the punishment of rule-violators as rewarding’. In seeking to explain the appearance of frat boys outside the White House, Time cited scientific research showing that ‘when people witnessed snitches receiving painful electric shocks, the pleasure regions of their brains were activated (but only in men)’. Of course, some people – not ‘them’, but ‘us’ – are immune to this hardwired desire for vengeance and can rise above it to express a more considered ‘uncomfortable feeling’ with OBL’s death.

This is an explicit attempt to delegitimise the political and moral response of some American people to the killing of bin Laden. Their joy seems so alien to the better-minded classes that it can only possibly be explained as a ‘reflex’, an unfortunate ‘evolutionary trait’. It has ‘no dignity’, we are told, but rather springs from a base and instinctive ‘human taste for vengeance’. It is extraordinary, and revealing, how quickly the expression of concern about the use of American force in Pakistan became an expression of values superiority over the American people. The modern chattering classes are so utterly removed from the mass of the population, so profoundly disconnected from ‘ordinary people’ and their ‘ordinary thoughts’, that they effectively see happy Americans as a more alien and unusual thing than Osama bin Laden. Where OBL wins their empathy, American jocks receive only their bile.

There is nothing principled or properly anti-imperialist in the speedily rising critique of the killing of OBL. Indeed, many of those currently attacking Obama would have preferred it if bin Laden had ended up in one of the international courts, which themselves are political theatres for the expression of Western superiority over foreign peoples (usually black ones). If Obama’s troops really did mete out ‘military vengeance’ against someone they judged to be evil, then these courts continually serve up ‘legal vengeance’ against people judged to be war criminals. Also, it is striking that many of the critics of Obama express concern about the alleged emotions behind American militarism – vengeance, Wild West fury, a lack of basic decency – rather than being concerned about the moral question of whether America should have the right to intervene in other states. It’s the sentiment they hate, more than the use of military force overseas per se.

No, the now widespread ‘uncomfortable feeling’ with the shooting of bin Laden is really an expression of moral reluctance, even of moral cowardice, a desire to avoid taking any decisive action or expressing any firm emotion that might have some blowback consequences for us over here. It is the politics of risk aversion rather than the politics of anti-imperialism, the same degraded sentiment that fuelled the narcissistic ‘Not in my name’ response to the Iraq War in 2003.

So these critics fret that the killing of bin Laden, and the ‘scenes of jubilation’ it gave rise to, might heighten the threat of another terror attack. Watching Americans celebrate OBL’s death, Ken Livingstone said: ‘I realised that it would increase the likelihood of a terror attack on London.’ This is really a call to elevate precaution over action, meekness over passionate political feeling, staying at home over taking risks, all in the name of protecting ourselves from any possible future action by a hot-headed Islamist. In this sense, the disdain for America and its people is really an expression of angst about what America is perceived to represent: confidence, cockiness, self-possession, a willingness to take risks (little of which is actually accurate). The post-OBL ‘uncomfortable feeling’ is really a quite craven sentiment, a fear-fuelled desire for self-preservation over anything else, which is dolled up as a principled critique of American militarism.

Look, if you want to have a real debate about Western intervention in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iraq, bring it on. spiked bows to no one in the implacability of our principled opposition to foreign meddling in other states’ affairs. But if you want to tell me that bin Laden was treated badly, and that the allegedly morally unhinged reaction to his death might invite more terror upon us, then I have only one thing to say: ‘Fuck bin Laden.’

-- Brendan O’Neill is editor of spiked


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: ipitydafoo; osamabinladen; pity

1 posted on 05/07/2011 7:32:52 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

The one constant is that moslems, once shot in the head, cannot plan the next jihadi attack.

It’s simply impossible. They sit there, but try as they might, their (half-remaining) brain cannot plan well enough.

Everything else is debatable. But nobody can tell me that a dead moslem poses a threat.


2 posted on 05/07/2011 7:35:42 PM PDT by LyinLibs (Waterboarding caught Omoslem's buddy OBL)
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To: LyinLibs

Michael Moore weighed in, and said that we should live up to our highest ideals, etc. and should have taken him alive, to give him a fair trial.

I assume he means a civilian trial, not a military trial.

He said we are wusses if we don’t think our justice system can give a trial to even the likes of Bin Laden.

It sure seems that the developing liberal view is that we shouldn’t have gone after Bin Laden. But their president pulled the trigger on the operation.

Poor liberals, they must be soooo confused right now.


3 posted on 05/07/2011 7:39:51 PM PDT by Dilbert San Diego
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To: SeekAndFind

This is Barry’s version of “extending an open hand to a clenched fist”, much like the handling of the errant Somali Coast Guard volunteers/buckaneers....send in the SEALS to plunk them. Who’s next? Libyan leader, North Korea leader, Iran leader????


4 posted on 05/07/2011 7:46:25 PM PDT by SERKIT ("Blazing Saddles" explains it all......)
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To: Dilbert San Diego

Look on the bright side.

Maybe they’ll come to utterly loathe their ‘Murderous Messiah’ and not vote for him again....:)


5 posted on 05/07/2011 7:47:55 PM PDT by Salamander (Can't sleep....the clowns will eat me.)
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To: SeekAndFind

6 posted on 05/07/2011 7:49:40 PM PDT by Travis McGee (Navy SEALs: They'll shoot your eyes out.)
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To: SeekAndFind

7 posted on 05/07/2011 7:58:21 PM PDT by smoothsailing
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To: SeekAndFind

It’s really rather simple, IMO. Those who express such “pity-for-Osama” sentiments and particularly those who express disdain for our reaction to the news of his death, are cowards at heart.

Their reactions are very predictable and expose their lack of courage, IMO.


8 posted on 05/07/2011 8:07:57 PM PDT by Pox (Good Night. I expect more respect tomorrow.)
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To: SeekAndFind

The only other option that I like other than shooting OBL on site would be to capture him, put him in chains, and then take him around the country in a cage to be pelted with eggs, raw fruit, and bacon rinds. Then shoot the bast... No trial please.


9 posted on 05/07/2011 8:10:30 PM PDT by driftless2 (For long-term happiness, learn how to play the accordion.)
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To: SeekAndFind

The only other option to shooting OBL on site would be to capture him, put him in chains, and then take him around the country in a cage to be pelted with eggs, raw fruit, and bacon rinds. Then shoot the bast...


10 posted on 05/07/2011 8:12:05 PM PDT by driftless2 (For long-term happiness, learn how to play the accordion.)
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To: smoothsailing

LOL. That is fantastic.


11 posted on 05/07/2011 8:23:02 PM PDT by Lazlo in PA (Now living in a newly minted Red State.)
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To: SeekAndFind

The Left is only celebrating (and it looks like briefly celebrating) because Obama is claiming to be the trigger man. If this had been W Bush, his dad, or Reagan they’d be howling about cowboy diplomacy, war crimes, secret hit squads, and Kucinich would be filing impeachment papers again.

They’ll sort out their conflicting emotions when they can converge on a target for their rage that is not Barry Soetero.


12 posted on 05/07/2011 8:29:06 PM PDT by DBrow
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To: SeekAndFind

The people who are wringing their hands over the demise of Bin Laden are the same people who live in gated communities, want your guns taken away, and would puke at the thought of having to defend their own lives, much less anyone elses. They are content sending us, the common man, to the hell holes of the world to defend their cowardly asses. They have no clue what it means to sacrifice, to leave your family behind, to see your friends die, or to feel the gut wrenching fear of combat. They are for lack of a better word, pussies. They know it, and they hate themselves for it. Nothing more, nothing less.

This old Marine despises these people with a passion!


13 posted on 05/07/2011 8:32:30 PM PDT by sean327 (God created all men equal, then some become Marines!)
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To: sean327

“We live in a world of walls....”


14 posted on 05/07/2011 8:38:22 PM PDT by DBrow
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To: SeekAndFind


15 posted on 05/07/2011 8:43:44 PM PDT by txroadkill ( We're sooooooo screwed!)
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To: SeekAndFind

What were we expecting from Keystone Kops who had no idea that OBL had been camping out for five years just down the road from the Pakistani Pentagon? Even if OBL was wanted alive, Obummer was bound to screw it up.


16 posted on 05/08/2011 12:12:19 AM PDT by HiTech RedNeck (Hawk)
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To: DBrow

If anyone was the cowboy, it probably was Leon Panetta. Obummer couldn’t make up his mind.


17 posted on 05/08/2011 12:13:41 AM PDT by HiTech RedNeck (Hawk)
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To: smoothsailing

LOL! You posted just what I was thinking when I saw them showing BL doing the same.


18 posted on 05/08/2011 12:21:23 AM PDT by antceecee (Bless us Father.. have mercy on us and protect us from evil.)
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To: Dilbert San Diego
"I assume he means a civilian trial, not a military trial. He said we are wusses if we don’t think our justice system can give a trial to even the likes of Bin Laden."

I am willing to be corrected here, but doesn't the Constitution only provide for a fair and speedy trial for AMERICAN CITIZENS? Did I not read it correctly? Are we supposed to extend our civil rights to foreigners, enemy combatants, etc?

19 posted on 05/08/2011 1:41:59 PM PDT by redhead (Get the GOVERNMENT out of our BUSINESS!!)
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