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Mark Steyn: Stop frisking crippled nuns
The Spectator (U.K.) ^ | 06/01/2002 | Mark Steyn

Posted on 05/30/2002 8:23:31 AM PDT by Pokey78

New Hampshire

When political correctness got going in the Eighties, the laconic wing of the conservative movement was inclined to be relaxed about it. To be sure, the tendency of previously pithy identity labels to become ever more polysyllabically ornate (‘person of colour’, ‘Native American’) was time-consuming, but otherwise PC was surely harmless. Some distinguished persons of non-colour, among them Sir Peregrine Worsthorne, even argued that conservatives should support political correctness as merely the contemporary version of old-fashioned courtliness and good manners.

Alas, after 11 September, this position seems no longer tenable. Instead, we have to ask a more basic question: does political correctness kill?
Consider the extraordinary memo sent three weeks ago by FBI agent Coleen Rowley to the agency’s director Robert Mueller, and now, despite his best efforts, all over Time magazine. Ms Rowley works out of the Minneapolis field office, whose agents, last 16 August, took action to jail a French citizen of Middle Eastern origin. Zacarias Moussaoui had shown up at a Minnesota flight school and shelled out 8,000 bucks in cash in order to learn how to fly 747s, except for the landing and take-off bit, which he said he’d rather skip. On investigation, he proved to have overstayed his visa and so was held on an immigration violation. Otherwise, he would have been the 20th hijacker, and, so far as one can tell, on board United Flight 93, the fourth plane, the one which crashed in a Pennsylvania field en route, as we now know, to the White House. In Mr Moussaoui’s more skilled hands — Flight 93 wound up with the runt of Osama’s litter — it might well have reached its target.

Ms Rowley and her colleagues established that Moussaoui was on a French intelligence watch list, had ties to radical Islamist groups, was known to have recruited young Muslims to fight in Chechnya, and had been in Afghanistan and Pakistan immediately before arriving in the US. They wanted to search his computer, but to do that they needed the OK from HQ. Washington was not only unco-operative, but set about, in the words of Ms Rowley’s memo, ‘thwarting the Minneapolis FBI agents’ efforts’, responding to field-office requests with ever lamer brush-offs. How could she be sure it was the same guy? There could be any number of Frenchmen called ‘Zacarias Moussaoui’. She checked the Paris phone book, which listed only one. After 11 September, when the Minneapolis agents belatedly got access to Moussaoui’s computer, they found among other things the phone number of Mohammed Atta’s room-mate.

What was the problem at HQ? According to the New York Times’s William Safire, ‘Intimidated by the brouhaha about supposed ethnic profiling of Wen Ho Lee, lawyers at John Ashcroft’s Justice Department wanted no part of going after this Arab.’ Wen Ho Lee was a Taiwan-born scientist at Los Alamos accused of leaking nuclear secrets to the Chinese and arrested in 1999. His lawyers mobilised the Asian-American lobby, his daughter embarked on a coast-to-coast speaking tour, and pretty soon the case had effectively collapsed, leaving the Feds with headlines like ‘Investigator Denies Lee Was Victim of Racial Bias’ (the San Francisco Chronicle).

This was during an election campaign in which Al Gore was promising that his first act as president would be to sign an executive order forbidding police from pulling over African-Americans for ‘driving while black’. Dr Lee had been arrested, wrote the columnist Lars-Erik Nelson, for ‘working in a nuclear weapons laboratory while Chinese’. In August 2001, invited to connect the dots on the Moussaoui file, Washington bureaucrats foresaw only scolding editorials about ‘flying while Arab’.

Example number two: another memo from last summer, this time the so-called ‘Phoenix memo’ sent by Kenneth Williams. This is Kenneth Williams the crack FBI Arizona agent, not Kenneth Williams of Carry On Up the Khyber fame, though in the end it might just as well have been. Agent Williams filed a report on an alarming trend he’d spotted and, just to make sure you didn’t have to plough through a lot of stuff to get to the meat, the Executive Summary at the top of the memo read, ‘Usama bin Laden and Al-Muhjiroun supporters attending civil aviation universities/colleges in Arizona’.

Three weeks ago, FBI director Mueller was asked why the Bureau had declined to act on the memo. He said, ‘There are more than 2,000 aviation academies in the United States. The latest figure I think I heard is something like 20,000 students attending them. And it was perceived that this would be a monumental undertaking without any specificity as to particular persons.’

A ‘monumental undertaking’? OK, there are 20,000 students. Eliminate all the women, discount Irv Goldbloom of Queens and Gord MacDonald of Winnipeg and Stiffy Farquahar-ffarquahar of Little Blandford-on-the-Smack and just concentrate on fellows with names like ...oh, I dunno, Mohammed, and Waleed, and Ahmed. How many would that be? 150? 200? Say it’s 500. Is Mueller really saying that the FBI with all its resources cannot divert ten people to go through 2,000 names apiece and pull out the ones worth running through the computer?

Well, yes, officially, he is. But what he really means is not that the Bureau lacked ‘any specificity as to particular persons’, but that the specificity itself was the problem. In August 2001, no FBI honcho was prepared to fire off a memo saying ‘Check out the Arabs’.

On 15 September Robert Mueller said, ‘The fact that there were a number of individuals that happened to have received training at flight schools here is news, quite obviously. If we had understood that to be the case, we would have — perhaps one could have averted this.’ Indeed. There weren’t a lot of dots to connect. Last summer, within a few weeks of each other, the Phoenix flight-school memo and Moussaoui warrant request landed on the desk of Dave Frasca, head of the FBI’s radical-fundamentalist unit. He buried the first, and refused the second.

Example three: On 1 August, James Woods, the motion-picture actor, was flying from Boston to Los Angeles. With him in the first-class cabin were half-a-dozen guys, four of whom were young Middle Eastern men. Woods, like all really good actors, is a keen observer of people, and what he observed as they flew west persuaded him that they were hijackers. The FBI has asked him not to reveal all the details, but he says he asked the flight attendant if he could speak to the pilot. After landing at LAX, the crew reported Woods’s observations to the Federal Aviation Administration. The FAA did ...nothing. Two of the four were on board the 11 September planes. There are conflicting rumours about the other two. Woods turned out to be sitting in on a rehearsal for the big day.

After 9/11, the standard line was that Osama bin Laden had pulled off an ingenious plan. But he didn’t have to be ingenious, just lucky. And he was luckiest of all in that the obviousness of what was happening paradoxically made investigating it all the more problematic. His men aren’t that smart — not in the sense of IRA smart, or Carlos the Jackal smart. The details Woods is permitted to discuss are in themselves very revealing: the four men boarded with no hand luggage. Not a thing. That’s what he noticed first. Everyone going on a long flight across a continent takes something: a briefcase, a laptop, a shopping bag with a couple of airport novels, a Wall Street Journal or a Boston Globe.

But these boys had zip. They didn’t use their personal headsets, they declined all food and drink, they did nothing but stare ahead to the cockpit and engage in low murmurs in Arabic. They behaved like conspirators. And Woods was struck by the way they treated the stewardess: ‘They literally ignored her like she didn’t exist, which is sort of a kind of Taleban, you know, idea of womanhood, as you know, not even a human being.’

So they weren’t masters of disguise, adept at blending into any situation. They weren’t like the Nazi spies in war movies, urbane and charming in their unaccented English. It apparently never occurred to them to act natural, read Newsweek, watch the movie, eat a salad, listen to Lite Rock Favourites of the Seventies, treat the infidel-whore stewardess the way a Westerner would. Everything they did stuck out. But it didn’t matter. Because the more they stuck out, the more everyone who mattered was trained not to notice them. The sort of fellows willing to fly aeroplanes into buildings turn out, not surprisingly, to be fairly stupid. But they benefited from an even more profound institutional stupidity. In August 2001, no one at the FBI or FAA or anywhere else wanted to be seen to be noticing funny behaviour by Arabs. In mid-September, I wrote that what happened was a total systemic failure. But, as the memos leak out, one reason for that failure looms ever larger. Thousands of Americans died because of ethnic squeamishness by federal agencies.

But that was before 11 September. Now we know better ...don’t we? The federal government surely wouldn’t want to add to that grim body-count ...would they?

Well, here’s an easy experiment that any Spectator reader can perform while waiting to board at Newark or LaGuardia. Fifteen of the 19 hijackers were young Saudi males, Osama himself is (was) a youngish Saudi male, and some 80 per cent of all those folks captured in Afghanistan and carted off to Guantanamo turn out to be young Saudi males (though, out of the usual deference to our Saudi friends, the administration is keeping studiously quiet on the last point). So you’re at Newark standing in line behind a young Saudi male and an 87-year-old arthritic nun from Des Moines. Who’ll be asked to remove his or her shoes? Six out of ten times, it’ll be the nun. Three out of ten times, you. One out of ten, Abdumb al-Dumber. Even if this is just for show, what it’s showing is profound official faintheartedness.

Norm Mineta, the transportation secretary, is insistent that fairness demands the burden of inconvenience be spread among all ethnic and age-groups. ‘Any specificity as to particular persons’ is strictly forbidden. Meanwhile, his colleagues have spent the last three weeks assuring us that another catastrophe is now inevitable. ‘There will be another terrorist attack,’ Robert Mueller told the National Association of District Attorneys the other day: ‘We will not be able to stop it.’

We must, I suppose, take him and Cheney and Rummy and all the rest at their word. They wouldn’t scare us if they hadn’t done all they believe they can do. So, naturally, the mind turns to all the things they haven’t done: as I write, young Saudi males are still arriving at US airports on routinely issued student visas. If it lessened the ‘inevitability’ of that second attack just ever so slightly, wouldn’t it be worth declaring a temporary moratorium on Saudi visitors, or at least making their sojourns here extremely rare and highly discretionary? Oh, no. Can’t be done.

Ask why the Saudis are allowed to kill thousands of Americans and still get the kid-gloves treatment, and you’re told the magic word: oil. Here’s my answer: blow it out your Medicine Hat. The largest source of imported energy for the United States is the Province of Alberta. Indeed, whenever I’m asked how America can lessen its dependence on foreign oil, I say it’s simple: annex Alberta. The Albertans would be up for it, and, to be honest, they’re the only assimilable Canadian province, at least from a Republican standpoint. In 1972, the world’s total proven oil reserves added up to 550 billion barrels; today, a single deposit of Alberta’s tar shales contains more than that. Yet no Albertan government minister or trade representative gets the access in Washington that the Saudis do. No premier of Alberta gets invited to Bush’s Crawford ranch. No Albertan bigshot, if you’ll forgive the oxymoron, gets Colin Powell kissing up to him like ‘Crown’ ‘Prince’ Abdullah and ‘Prince’ Bandar do. In Washington, an Albertan can’t get ...well, I was going to say an Albertan can’t get arrested, but funnily enough that’s the one thing he can get. While Bush was governor of Texas, he even managed to execute an Albertan, which seems to be more than the administration is likely to do to any Saudis.

So it’s not oil, but rather that even targeting so obvious an enemy as the Saudis is simply not politically possible. Cries of ‘Islamophobia’ and ‘racism’ would rend the air. The Saudis discriminate against Americans all the time: American Jews are not allowed to enter the ‘Kingdom’, nor are American Episcopalians who happen to have an Israeli stamp in their passports. But America cannot be seen to take any similar measures, though it has far more compelling reasons to.

James Woods puts it very well: ‘Nineteen of 19 killers on 11 September were Arab Muslims — not a Swede among them.’ But au contraire, in a world where the EU officially chides the BBC for describing Osama as an ‘Islamic fundamentalist’, we must pretend that al-Qa’eda contains potentially vast numbers of Swedish agents, many female and elderly. Even after 11 September, we can’t revoke the central fiction of multiculturalism — that all cultures are equally nice and so we must be equally nice to them, even if they slaughter large numbers of us and announce repeatedly their intention to slaughter more. National Review’s John Derbyshire calls this ‘the reductio ad absurdum of racial sensitivity: better dead than rude’.

Last October, urging Congress to get tough on the obvious suspects, the leggy blonde commentatrix Ann Coulter declared, ‘Americans aren’t going to die for political correctness.’

They already have.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: marksteynlist
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To: Cyber Liberty
The fact that you chose to respond the way you
just did probably says more about you than you realize.

I am what I am.  If people think criticizing
the democratic package Bush has enacted,
and criticizing him for doing so is somehow
'bashing', then so be that.  What I have learned
from all this is the difference between conservatives
and Republicans.  It is not pretty.

61 posted on 05/30/2002 12:54:25 PM PDT by gcruse
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To: gcruse
Then, you admit you'd rather have a 'Crap in office, with the wholesale destruction that goes along with it.

Yes, thing's aren't perfect. Bush could be better. I happen to think that he will before this is all over. But you'd make things a whole lot worse. That's when we go from "criticizing" to "bashing".

62 posted on 05/30/2002 1:03:09 PM PDT by Cyber Liberty
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To: ThinkDifferent
You have been added.
63 posted on 05/30/2002 1:07:13 PM PDT by Pokey78
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To: moneyrunner
Done.
64 posted on 05/30/2002 1:09:00 PM PDT by Pokey78
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To: surely_you_jest
You got it!
65 posted on 05/30/2002 1:10:40 PM PDT by Pokey78
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To: MeeknMing
Thanks for the ping, Meek.
66 posted on 05/30/2002 2:03:13 PM PDT by Victoria Delsoul
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To: Cyber Liberty
 
Then, you admit you'd rather have a 'Crap in office,
with the wholesale destruction that goes along with it.

And the difference would be...?

As to the difference between conservatives
(limited government interference in the economy,
 free market, anti-special interests) and Republicans
(big government, deficit spending, anything to
  stay in office), I see the contrast between
ideals and grasping for power.  More and
more of those who voted for Bush are
coming to the same conclusion.

"'Crap", IMO, is like "sheeple," a braying
jingoism by the blinkered.

67 posted on 05/30/2002 2:17:39 PM PDT by gcruse
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To: gcruse
U.S. Dept of Education Budget in 1993 (Clinton) $32 billion

(the department the Republicans were going to eliminate when they swept into power in '94)

U.S. Dept of Education Budget in 2002 (GW Bush) $54 billion

(the budget of this department is target by legislation to double within the next six years)

Growth in Social and Welfare Spending First Two Years of GW Bush = $96 billion

Growth in Social and Welfare Spending First Six years of Clinton = $51 billion

68 posted on 05/30/2002 2:54:24 PM PDT by NoControllingLegalAuthority
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To: Cyber Liberty,NoControllingLegalAuthority
 

U.S. Dept of Education Budget in 1993 (Clinton) $32 billion

(the department the Republicans were going to eliminate when they swept into power in '94)

U.S. Dept of Education Budget in 2002 (GW Bush) $54 billion

(the budget of this department is target by legislation to double within the next six years)

Growth in Social and Welfare Spending First Two Years of GW Bush = $96 billion

Growth in Social and Welfare Spending First Six years of Clinton = $51 billion

          ____________Posted by NoControllingLegalAuthority

Thanks, man.  This is stunning.

69 posted on 05/30/2002 3:02:47 PM PDT by gcruse
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To: Cicero
Agreed. Bush should throw Clintonoids like Mineta and MaGaw out on their ears.
70 posted on 05/30/2002 3:03:53 PM PDT by driftless
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To: Pokey78
Even after 11 September, we can’t revoke the central fiction of multiculturalism — that all cultures are equally nice and so we must be equally nice to them, even if they slaughter large numbers of us and announce repeatedly their intention to slaughter more.

This guy is great!

I can hear Lefty's hearts' breaking.

71 posted on 05/30/2002 3:13:08 PM PDT by Madame Dufarge
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To: gcruse
You convinced me. I'm voting Hillary! in 2004.
72 posted on 05/30/2002 3:16:44 PM PDT by Cyber Liberty
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To: KC_Conspirator
I am convinced that Wen Ho Lee was a definate spy, but the PC crowd never let the case happen. I wonder whatever happened to that Chicom spy? Someone shoudl write a book about it. (Oh yeah, I see that Lars Nelson got a mention in the article - I can't say that I'm sad that he died)

No one would publish it -- the Asian-American lobby would front Lee a lawyer for a billion-dollar defamation lawsuit, the moment word leaked out about the project, which would scare off any publisher.

73 posted on 05/30/2002 3:58:16 PM PDT by mrustow
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To: MeeknMing
Once again stating the obvious with humor and style Steyn ping. Thanks, Meek. (^:

An un-PC change in the military re. women in combat:
Good news for the good guys.

Could truth be making a comeback? That would spell the end for the DNC. I love being able to say to an AP reporter, "I found the story right here on this legitimate government webpage. We all know. Why don't you?" (^:

74 posted on 05/30/2002 5:10:39 PM PDT by Ragtime Cowgirl
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To: Pokey78
Please add me to your ping list. Thanks.
75 posted on 05/30/2002 7:10:50 PM PDT by Aunt Polgara
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To: Pokey78
So you’re at Newark standing in line behind a young Saudi male and an 87-year-old arthritic nun from Des Moines. Who’ll be asked to remove his or her shoes? Six out of ten times, it’ll be the nun.

My husband and I are seniors and when we flew from Philadelphia this week-end they chose our luggage to x-ray before they took it to the plane. Then later the screeners pulled me out of line to wand me and then they patted down my pants legs. We often get pulled out to have carry ons opened and checked and to get wanded. I don't really mind, but I really don't fit the mold. If they were looking for someone who might be carrying grits they would be right on.

76 posted on 05/30/2002 8:14:16 PM PDT by AUsome Joy
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To: Thinkin' Gal
What does 'The Sound of Silence' have to do with this?
77 posted on 05/31/2002 2:57:04 AM PDT by Cian
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To: KayEyeDoubleDee
"...anyone else heard this..."

Yep !!

78 posted on 05/31/2002 6:24:27 AM PDT by Alabama_Wild_Man
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To: KayEyeDoubleDee
Huh? Has anyone else heard this?

I hadn't and you wouldn't believe the amount of things I read by Steyn (and elsewhere on FreeRepublic) that simply don't get reported in Britain and Ireland (I'm from Ireland). Here are a few:

1) INS gives visas to 2 of the (dead) 9/11 terrorists 6 months after the attack. I gave my Dad Steyn's article on this and he thought that Steyn had made it up.

2) Clinton saying "I'm a loser and you made me one" to Arafat after he wouldn't agree to the peace deal he had brokered.

3) Finally, there must have been about 50 different profile pieces written on John Walker discussing his family background and how he ended up in the Taliban. Not one of them mentioned that his dad had left his mother for another man.

79 posted on 05/31/2002 12:18:44 PM PDT by Cian
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To: MeeknMing; Pokey78
Are there two MSPLs now?
80 posted on 06/04/2002 12:20:08 PM PDT by badfreeper
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 53 | View Replies]


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