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Islamosocialism: European left makes common cause with Muslim right

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  • Islamosocialism: European left makes common cause with Muslim right

    Opinion Journal, NJ
    March 18 2007

    Islamosocialism
    The European left makes common cause with the Muslim right.

    BY BRET STEPHENS
    Sunday, March 18, 2007 12:01 a.m. EDT

    "It is a profound truth," declared the British Socialist Party in a
    1911 manifesto, "that Socialism is the natural enemy of religion."
    Not the least of the oddities in the subsequent history of
    progressive politics is that today it has become the principal
    vehicle in the West for Islamist goals and policies.

    Caroline Lucas, a member of the Green Party faction in the European
    Parliament, is a longtime activist in anti-nuclear, animal-rights and
    environmentalist causes, and not someone likely to describe herself
    as an anti-feminist. Yet in June 2004, she joined British MPs Fiona
    Mactaggart of Labor and Sarah Teather of the Liberal Democrats for a
    press conference in the House of Commons organized by the Assembly
    for the Protection of Hijab. The Assembly, better known as Pro-Hijab,
    is a pan-European organization formed "to campaign nationally and
    internationally for the protection of every Muslim woman's right to
    wear the Hijab in accordance with her beliefs and for the protection
    of every woman's right to dress as modestly and as comfortably as she
    pleases."

    Once upon a time, feminists and socialists alike would have
    translated that as "subservience to the patriarchy." Now they seem to
    have rediscovered their roots as civil libertarians, at least when
    it's politically expedient. Consider the issue of the Armenian
    genocide. In 1998, the French-speaking wing of Belgium's Socialist
    Party (PS) co-sponsored legislation to criminalize denial of the
    Ottoman Empire's murder of an estimated 1.5 million Armenians, much
    as Holocaust denial is also against the law.

    Yet for the past several years, the same PS has been blocking the
    process of criminalization it helped initiate, presumably in the
    service of free speech. "Additional legal and historical research,"
    says Belgian Deputy Prime Minister Laurette Onkelinx, remains to be
    done in ascertaining exactly what happened in Anatolia in 1915.

    Progressives have also been remarkably mindful of civil liberties in
    matters of immigration. When the German state of Baden-Wüttemberg
    last year required applicants for citizenship to answer a series of
    questions regarding their personal views, the leader of the German
    Green Party, Renate Künast, denounced it as "immoral." "A country
    governed by law," she argued, "cannot ask questions about moral
    values." Among the questions: "Where do you stand on the statement
    that a wife should obey her husband and that he can hit her if she
    fails to do so?"





    Curiously, however, Europe's progressives have been somewhat less
    tolerant on other issues concerning moral values and personal belief.
    Take "Islamophobia," which progressives often consider akin to racism
    and have, in some instances, sought to ban by legal means. In Britain
    last year, Tony Blair's government enacted the Racial and Religious
    Hatred Act, which criminalized "threatening" comments against
    religious persons or beliefs. Comedian Rowan Atkinson and author
    Salman Rushdie, among others, warned that the law undermined basic
    rights of speech. But for London Mayor Ken Livingstone it was not
    enough: He defined "Islamophobia" as "discrimination, intolerance or
    hostility towards Islam and Muslims," and regretted that criminal
    acts were not more broadly defined by the legislation.
    Since coming to office nearly seven years ago, Mr. Livingstone has
    become a symbol of the marriage of the European left and the Islamist
    right. It's a marriage of mutual convenience and, at least on one
    side, actual belief. In the Netherlands, a recent study by the
    University of Amsterdam's Institute for Migration and Ethnic Studies
    found that 80% of immigrants--the overwhelming majority of whom are
    Muslims--voted for the Labor party in recent elections, while the two
    main center-right parties received a combined 4% of the immigrant
    vote. In neighboring Belgium, the left-wing sociologist Jan Hertogen
    credits immigrants for "[saving] democracy" by voting as a bloc
    against the secessionist and anti-immigrant Vlaams Belang party.

    For Muslim voters in Europe, the attractions of the Socialists are
    several. Socialists have traditionally taken a more accommodating
    approach to immigrants and asylum-seekers than their conservative
    rivals. They have championed the welfare state and the benefits it
    offers poor newcomers. They have promoted a multiculturalist ethos,
    which in practice has meant respecting Muslim traditions even when
    they conflict with Western values. In foreign policy, Socialists have
    often been anti-American and, by extension, hostile to Israel. That
    hostility has only increased as Muslim candidates have joined the
    Socialists' electoral slates and as the Muslim vote has become ever
    more crucial to the Socialists' electoral margin.

    More mysterious, however, at least as a matter of ideology, has been
    the dalliance of the progressive left with the (Islamic) political
    right. Self-styled progressives, after all, have spent the past four
    decades championing the very freedoms that Islam most opposes: sexual
    and reproductive freedoms, gay rights, freedom from religion,
    pornography and various forms of artistic transgression, pacifism and
    so on. For those who hold this form of politics dear, any long-term
    alliance with Islamic politics ultimately becomes an ideological, if
    not a political, suicide pact. One cannot, after all, champion the
    cause of universal liberation in alliance with a movement that at its
    core stands for submission.





    This is not, of course, the first time such a thing has happened in
    the history of the progressive movement, or in European history. On
    the contrary, it is the recurring theme. In the early 20th century,
    the apostles of Fabianism--George Bernard Shaw among them--looked to
    the Soviet Union for inspiration; in the 1960s the model was Mao; in
    the late 1970s, the great French philosopher Michel Foucault went to
    Iran to write a paean to Khomeini's revolution. In nearly every case,
    the progressives were, by later admission, deceived, but not before
    they had performed their service as "useful idiots" to a totalitarian
    cause.
    But the stakes today are different. At question for Europeans is not
    the prevailing view of a distant country. The question is the shaping
    of their own. Europe's liberal democrats were able, sometimes with
    outside help, to preserve their values in the face of an outside
    threat. Whether they can resist the temptations of Islamosocialism
    remains to be seen.

    Mr. Stephens is a member of The Wall Street Journal's editorial
    board. His column appears in the Journal Tuesdays.

    http://www.opinionjournal.com/wsj/?id=110009802
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