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Enough is enough?

...on serious topics that don't fit anywhere else at present.
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Alan H
Posts: 24067
Joined: July 3rd, 2007, 10:26 pm

Enough is enough?

#1 Post by Alan H » June 4th, 2017, 8:50 pm

That was Theresa May's statement this morning after last night's London Bridge/Borough Market attack. "Theresa May says ‘enough is enough’ following latest terror attack
We believe we are experiencing a new trend in the threat we face, as terrorism breeds terrorism and perpetrators are inspired to attack not only on the basis of carefully constructed plots after years of planning and training and not even as lone attackers radicalised online but by copying one another and by often using the crudest means of attack.

We cannot and must not pretend that things can continue as they are."

May said tackling ‘the single evil ideology of Islamist extremism’ was one of the great challenges of our time’ – and one that cannot be achieved through military intervention alone. She said terrorists must not be given a safe space online and that there was ‘far too much tolerance of extremism in our country’ – adding that embarrassing conversations must now be had. The government’s counter-terrorism strategy will also be reviewed, with the possibility of increased government powers and longer sentences for those who commit terrorism offences.

What was striking about the statement was its focus on Islamist ideology. May struck a much more robust tone than customarily adopted following an attack like this.
But what can and should be done?

It's clear that successive - and in particular recent - governments have failed to provide the necessary effective legislation: since 2000, the UK has averaged a new terrorism statutes every two years - they have been pouring out of Westminster, including:

Terrorism Act 2000
Anti-terrorism, Crime and Security Act 2001
Prevention of Terrorism Act 2005
Terrorism Act 2006
Counter-Terrorism Act 2008
Terrorism Prevention and Investigation Measures Act 2011
Data Retention and Investigatory Powers Act 2014
Counter-Terrorism and Security Act 2015
Investigatory Powers Act 2016

Plus there have also been about 100 statutory instruments since 2000 with "Terrorism" in title alone.

It's debatable whether some of these (or at least some parts of these) had anything to do with fighting terrorism, of course, but where do we go from here?

How to tackle the terrorist threat: four steps we must now consider
For the second time in this election, political campaigning is suspended because of a terrorist attack. Given the volume of terrorist attacks—three in the last three months and five other plots disrupted—you might think that the issue would have dominated the campaign. But it hasn’t. Until Theresa May’s statement today talking about how there has been too much tolerance for extremism, there has been remarkably little discussion about how this country should deal with this problem.

Now, you can say that we shouldn’t allow the terrorists to set the agenda. But I fear that the main reason for the absence of debate is that no one is quite sure what to do. However, it is imperative that we start talking seriously about the steps we can take. This problem isn’t going away and, as the Prime Minister acknowledged this morning, it is currently getting worse.

There are those talking about internment. I think this is a flawed idea, and one that won’t work. But there are things we need to do. Ideologically we need to accept that these terrorists believe that they find justifications for their action in their faith, and saying that the attacks have nothing to do with Islam is actually counter-productive. As the historian Tom Holland has pointed out, only once we appreciate this link and the fact there is schism within Islam can we start to really deal with this threat.

Then, we need to consider whether leaving the UK for certain states that have a particular terrorist problem, for example Libya, should require an exit visa. We don’t yet know whether the London Bridge attackers have links with any other countries. But we know that the Manchester attacker went to Libya multiple times and the New York Times is reporting that he used these visits to meet with Islamic State commanders. Exit visas would make it easier for the security services to keep an eye on these kind of trips and to arrest anyone who went to these places without permission and charge them with an imprisonable criminal offence.

We also need to consider whether we need Singapore-style rules to prevent public housing from becoming racial or religious ghettoes. In diverse towns and cities, is it really sensible to have estates that are made up almost exclusively of people from one ethnic or faith group? By this logic, I wonder if we should pause before allowing faith schools to be made up solely of pupils of that faith.

We need to be having a public debate about whether we need an Islamic version of the Maynooth Grant, the money the British state sent to the Maynooth seminary in Ireland in the 19th century to create a cadre of Roman Catholic priests who were more sympathetic to the British state. A modern-day Maynooth Grant would help foster a British version of Islam, one that is more easily compatible with our society. If we go down this road, it should be accompanied by a tightening of the rules on foreign funding of religious institutions in Britain and on preachers coming here from abroad.

The answers to the terrorist problem we face aren’t simple. This isn’t about foreign policy, it is about the hatred a small—but significant—number of Islamists have for the very basis of our society. Tackling it won’t be simple. But ignoring the problem isn’t going to solve it. So, as a matter of urgency, we need to start having a grown-up–and frank–debate about what we are going to do.
Then there's the proliferation of religious schools under the Tories. Yes, they're inspected, but we already know the damage they do to society, yet more are rolled out - taxpayer funded - every year.

Then there's the question of the UK Government cosying up to the Saudi's...and the influence of Wahhabism...

What's the answer(s) - or ar least what's the strategy - and where do we even start from?
Alan Henness

There are three fundamental questions for anyone advocating Brexit:

1. What, precisely, are the significant and tangible benefits of leaving the EU?
2. What damage to the UK and its citizens is an acceptable price to pay for those benefits?
3. Which ruling of the ECJ is most persuasive of the need to leave its jurisdiction?

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animist
Posts: 6522
Joined: July 30th, 2010, 11:36 pm

Re: Enough is enough?

#2 Post by animist » June 4th, 2017, 11:11 pm

Alan H wrote:That was Theresa May's statement this morning after last night's London Bridge/Borough Market attack. "Theresa May says ‘enough is enough’ following latest terror attack
Then there's the proliferation of religious schools under the Tories. Yes, they're inspected, but we already know the damage they do to society, yet more are rolled out - taxpayer funded - every year.

Then there's the question of the UK Government cosying up to the Saudi's...and the influence of Wahabism...

What's the answer(s) - or ar least what's the strategy - and where do we even start from?
you are obviously right on these points. But somehow there needs to be more aggressive questioning of dogmatic religion (really of Islam, but of course it would have to be ostensibly non-denominational). Athena can relate to the following, since we communicated about the time that I joined TH - what I refer is the so-called debates in various university Islamic clubs a few years ago (for all I know they still continue) in which some notable unbeliever (often a pretty renowned philosopher) "debated" with a pig-ignorant Islamist. What infuriated me about these events is that they were organised by the Islamists themselves, and I wish the other side had been less polite and tolerant. I can't be more specific about how anything like an alternative and more challenging approach to discredit Islamism could begin, I wish that I could

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