Geert Wilders: Marked for Death (FrontPageMagazine.com) by Fjordman 05/11/12)
Source: http://frontpagemag.com/2012/05/11/geert-wilders-marked-for-death/
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The courageous Dutch politician Geert Wilders released his book
Marked for Death: Islam’s War Against the West and Me in May 2012.
The foreword to this title was written by the eloquent Canadian-born
political commentator and cultural critic Mark Steyn, who has a
special talent for writing about serious topics in a humorous way. He
has published several books and written essays for publications
ranging from the Jerusalem Postand the Chicago Sun-Times to the
National Review, The Australian and Canada’s National Post.
Steyn is honest enough to admit that when he was first asked to
contribute to Wilders’ new book, his initial reaction was to say no.
The main reason for this is the potentially high cost of being
associated with a man who lives with constant death threats.
Yet, after taking a stroll in the woods, Mark Steyn felt ashamed at
the ease with which he was caving in to the enemies of freedom, and
decided to accept the offer after all. He recalled how the Canadian
Islamic Congress boasted that their attempts by legal aggression to
silence Steyn’s critical writings about Islam had cost his magazine
substantial sums, and thereby attained their “strategic objective” of
increasing the cost of publishing anti-Islamic material.
In the case of Geert Wilders, that cost is not merely limited to
money. Despite being an elected Member of Parliament in what used to
be one of Europe’s freest and most tolerant countries, he is
regularly vilified by Western mass media. When trying to enter
Britain, a nation that once was a champion of liberty, he was
detained by plainclothes border guards on arrival at London’s
Heathrow airport in February 2009 and deported from the country.
The democratic Dutch MP had been invited to the House of Lords, where
Baroness Cox and Lord Pearson wanted to show his 17-minute Islam-
critical film Fitna. The Home Office refused him entry on the grounds
he “would threaten community security and therefore public security,”
not because he threatened to use violence, but because Muslims might
use it.
Lord Ahmed from the Labour Party, Britain’s first Muslim member of
the House of Lords, the upper house of the British Parliament,
pledged to bring a 10,000 strong force of angry Muslims to lay siege
to Parliament. A spokesman for the Muslim Council of Britain claimed
that Wilders has been an open and relentless preacher of “hate.” At
the same time, London has become a notorious intentional center for
Islamic militants, who spew hate on a daily basis.
Geert Wilders accused the Labour government of Prime Minister Gordon
Brown of being “the biggest bunch of cowards in Europe.” He was later
allowed entry to the UK, however. He was also put on trial in the
Netherlands accused of criminally insulting religious and ethnic
groups. Wilders was eventually found not guilty in 2011, but the
entire process took several years.
As Mark Steyn puts it, “He is under round-the-clock guard because of
explicit threats to murder him by Muslim extremists. Yet he’s the one
who gets put on trial for incitement. In twenty-first century
Amsterdam, you’re free to smoke marijuana and pick out a half-naked
sex partner from the front window of her shop. But you can be put on
trial for holding the wrong opinion about a bloke who died in the
seventh century. And, although Mr. Wilders was eventually acquitted
by his kangaroo court, the determination to place him beyond the pale
is unceasing: ‘The far-right anti-immigration party of Geert Wilders’
(the Financial Times)… ‘Far-right leader Geert Wilders’ (the Guardian)
… ‘Extreme right anti-Islam politician Geert Wilders’ (AFP) is ‘at
the fringes of mainstream politics’ (Time). Mr. Wilders is so far out
on the far-right extreme fringe that his party is the third biggest
in parliament.”
Maybe those who are out on the fringe are the ones who think that
disliking Islam is “far-right.”
Yet it’s not just Wilders himself who is being attacked in this
fashion. Those who dare to meet him or support some of his views
could find themselves attacked by the mass media and the political
elites in a comparable manner. Cory Bernardi, born and raised in
Adelaide and currently representing the state of South Australia for
the Liberal Party in the Australian Senate, in 2011 came under fire
not only from members of other parties but also from his own —
allegedly conservative — party when he wanted to facilitate a trip to
Australia by Wilders.
The Sydney Morning Herald simply labeled Geert Wilders “an
Islamaphobic Dutch politician.” The Melbourne-based The Age claimed
that Wilders’ “objectionable” and “poisonous anti-Islam views”
are “abhorrent and plainly wrong” and that his ideas are self-
evidently “repugnant.” The newspaper continued to suggest that if
Senator Bernardi did not dissociate himself from Mr. Wilders’ views,
then perhaps his own party should demote him.
Wayne Swan, Treasurer and Deputy Prime Minister of Australia under PM
Julia Gillard, said Bernardi has right-wing extremist views. Other
senior Labor Party members indicated that Opposition Leader Tony
Abbott should discipline the senator and remove him from his
portfolio responsibilities. Labor frontbencher Peter Garrett declined
to say whether he believed Abbott should have Bernardi expelled from
the Liberal Party, or copy the way former Prime Minister John Howard
had Pauline Hanson disendorsed as a candidate ahead of the 1996
national election due to her vocal opposition to non-European mass
immigration. Australian Greens senator Richard Di Natale also
condemned Bernardi’s associations with Wilders. “Multiculturalism is
one of this country’s great successes and it must be defended,” he
stated.
Wilders commented in an essay published in The Washington Times on
May 4 2012 that “As I write these lines, there are police bodyguards
at the door. No visitor can enter my office without passing through
several security checks and metal detectors. I have been marked for
death. I am forced to live in a heavily protected safe house. Every
morning, I am driven to my office in the Dutch Parliament building in
an armored car with sirens and flashing blue lights. When I go out, I
am surrounded, as I have been for the past seven years, by
plainclothes police officers. When I speak in public, I wear a
bulletproof jacket. Who am I? I am neither a king nor a president,
nor even a government minister; I am just a simple politician in the
Netherlands. But because I speak out against expanding Islamic
influence in Europe, I have been marked for death. If you criticize
Islam, this is the risk you run. That is why so few politicians dare
to tell the truth about the greatest threat to our liberties today.”
Wilders received his first death threats in 2003 after asking the
government to investigate a radical mosque. In November 2004, after a
Muslim fanatic murdered filmmaker Theo van Gogh, policemen armed with
machine guns pushed him into an armored car and drove him off into
the night. That was the last time he was in his own house. Since
then, he has lived “in an army barracks, a prison cell and now a
government-owned safe house.” The security detail has become part of
his daily routine, but it must still be hard getting used to being a
virtual prisoner in your own country and unable to visit a restaurant
or cafe in a normal manner.
Hostile journalists often denounce Wilders and his Party for Freedom
as “populists,” but they are popular for a reason: They state
uncomfortable truths that the ruling elites want to sweep under the
carpet. The natives are rapidly being turned into a harassed minority
in Amsterdam, Rotterdam or The Hague, a pattern that can now be seen
in far too many European cities.
Fifty-seven percent of the Dutch people say that mass immigration was
the biggest single mistake in Dutch history. Yet what is arguably the
greatest change their country and their continent have experienced in
historical times is beyond honest discussion in the mainstream media.
Wilders goes on to note that “I have read the Koran and studied the
life of Muhammad. It made me realize that Islam is primarily a
totalitarian ideology rather than a religion. I feel sorry for the
Arab, Persian, Indian and Indonesian peoples who have to live under
the yoke of Islam. It is a belief system that marks apostates for
death, forces critics into hiding and denies our Western tradition of
individual freedom. Without freedom, there can be no prosperity and
no pursuit of happiness. More Islam means less life, less liberty and
less happiness.”
Geert Wilders has sacrificed his personal freedom of movement and the
prospects of a normal life in order to warn his country, his
continent and his civilization against serious threats to their
freedom. We should honor that sacrifice by listening carefully to
what he has to say. (Copyright © 2012 FrontPageMagazine.com 05/11/12)
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