We are trying to live our lives in our nation while running two sets of accounts. On one side of the ledger -- as on the BBC page -- are the facts that are happening. On the other side is the recounting of punishments for those who have identified the facts.
Britain is in the midst of a
breakdown. It comes from trying to live a double-life. As with everybody
who leads such a life, at some stage it will inevitably crack under the
stress of its own contradictions.
Take just one day's worth of news on the BBC website this past week. On one side of the page was the headline: "Tory candidate quits over homophobic and anti-Islamic tweets." On the other side of the page was a headline about the alleged Islamist take-over of schools in Birmingham and the North of England.
The first article involves a
council candidate who retweeted several tweets that someone could
potentially have deemed offensive. As usual in modern Britain, the
likelihood is that nobody actually did find them offensive, but that
someone decided that someone else might find them offensive, and
therefore decided to get rid of the culprit. For what it is worth, the
"homophobic" tweet consisted of a lame joke asking: "How CAN a gay guy
keep a straight face?" Not the best gag in the world, but sure as
anything not the precursor to some anti-gay pogrom, nor, in any sane
society, a matter to cause a resignation.
But then of course we get to
the far more serious matter of a tweet which might be regarded as being
(cue drum roll) "anti-Islamic." This tweet cited the arrest of four
Muslim men over the rape of a girl of 14. It then added, in its
entirety: "#Islam 'the religion of peace' & rape." Not perhaps the
wisest thing for a man elected to be a candidate for a council position
just two days earlier to have tweeted. But was it really worthy of him
immediately apologizing "for the real offense caused" and stepping down
from the election, saying, "I recognise that someone standing for public
office should show leadership and seek to unite communities, not divide
them. I hope the residents of Brentwood South can forgive my lack of
judgement in time."
The darkly amusing thing about
all this was that on the opposite side of the page ran the story about
the apparent attempt by certain fundamentalist Muslims to take control of schools
in the north of England. This most certainly appears like a story of a
group of people very much intent on causing division. Indeed it is the
story of people trying to divide our society along purely religious
lines.
The scandal, which was thought
at first to include only schools in the city of Birmingham, but has now
spread to schools across the north of England, has been followed across
the British press. The story -- known as the "Trojan Horse" -- concerns a
letter of dubious authenticity purporting to discuss how to take over
schools in England from within. This story has become one of the biggest
scandals of recent months. An official investigation is underway, but
already the press stories of what has apparently been going on at some
of the schools in question is enough to have caused serious public
concern.
There are accounts of schools
where girls are being made to sit at the back of the class, of Christian
children being left to teach themselves so that their teachers can
concentrate on teaching Islam to the Muslim students. There are accounts
of celebrated hate preachers who teach the stoning of gays and others
they do not like coming to the schools to address children in assembly.
The letter that spurred the investigation may or may not be true. But
the stories coming out seem very much to be so and are worthy of
investigation and comment. But that is exactly what is now being clamped
down upon.
The
former headmaster of Saltley School in Birmingham resigned following a
plot by Islamist fanatics to oust him. (Image source: Screenshot from
BBC video)
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Most weeks in Britain there are
stories like this. Sometimes they are about the teaching of extreme
Islamic views at a school. Sometimes they are about British Muslims
going to Syria and blowing people up with truck bombs. Sometimes the
story is about Muslim men who, yes, are convicted of systematically
raping young, underage, non-Muslim girls, and the general public then
reads the story and the account of a judge saying during sentencing that
the men chose their victims explicitly because of their ethnic and
religious background.
And all the time, as these
stories come out, instead of there being a fervent and growing desire
from politicians and the general public to do something about these
abuses, there is instead an attempt to stop any interpretation of the
facts or even any dot-connecting over these messy facts. The stories are
reported, but the facts on the ground continue. Instead of trying to
tackle the problem, the decision appears to have been made that the
general public, and certainly anybody wishing at any point to represent
them, must never mention anything about all this. Other than to say that
it signifies nothing and that there is nothing to see here.
It is the same most days. We
are trying to live our lives in our nation while running two sets of
accounts. On one side of the ledger -- as on the BBC page -- are the
facts that are happening. On the other side is the recounting of
punishments for those who have identified the facts. At some point, as I
say, this will break down. At some point the two sides of our
collective national life will inevitably meet. The sooner it happens,
the better.
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