In
America, terrorism is a color-coded proposition, and white people
have the privilege not to be called terrorists.
The
bottom line is that it is hard to label white men as terrorists, even
when they are involved in terrorist activities. It all depends on the
race of the perpetrators and the skin color of the victims. A case in
point is the arrest of three members of the Crusaders,
a militia group accused of a plot to bomb an apartment complex and
mosque for Somali immigrants in Kansas.
The
three men — Curtis Allen, 49, Gavin Wright, 49 and Patrick
Eugene Stein, 47 — face
federal charges
for their alleged plan to use weapons of mass destruction to blow up
the complex in Garden City, Kansas. Their plan was to use bombs much
like Timothy McVeigh, who carried out the Oklahoma City bombing that
killed 168 people in 1995. And these domestic terrorists were intent
upon sparing no one, including the babies.
The
anti-Muslim group referred
to Muslims as “cockroaches”
and was going to carry out their plot the day after Election Day in
order to create a “bloodbath” to “wake up”
the country politically. These arrests were the end result of an
eight-month
FBI investigation
that led the feds “deep into a hidden culture of hatred and
violence,” according to acting U.S. Attorney Tom Beall.
According
to a federal affidavit, Stein said “the only (expletive) way
this country’s ever going to get turned around is it will be a
bloodbath and it will be a nasty, messy (expletive).” He added
that “unless a lot more people in this country wake up and
smell the (expletive) coffee and decide they want this country back …
we might be too late. If they do wake up … I think we can get
it done. But it ain’t going to be nothing nice about it.”
Stein
frequently posted his rabidly Islamophobic views on social media. One
day, while “on patrol” as the Southern Poverty Law
Center, Stein screamed out the window at Somali women in traditional
clothing, “f*cking raghead b*tches!” He also attacked
Hillary Clinton for “rigging” the election. Sound
familiar?
The
Crusaders — also known as the Kansas Security Force (KSF), an
affiliate with an antigovernment coalition in various states called
the Three Percent Security Force — had stockpiled explosives
and firearms and also contemplated attacks on churches that housed
refugees. A Georgia chapter of the group also threatened an armed
protest against the construction of a mosque
35 miles east of Atlanta.
These
hate-filled men should remind us of Dylann Roof, the white
supremacist and neo-Confederate sympathizer who went into Emanuel AME
Church in Charleston, S.C. last year and gunned down nine people. But
don’t call Roof or those of his ilk terrorists, some will say,
because they lack the dark complexion necessary to make that
connection. Because, after all, black and brown people are thugs,
criminals, murderers, rapists and terrorists. But white men who shoot
up or blow up a bunch of black folks are merely exercising their
Second Amendment rights, or at worst are troubled loners, and it all
came as a shock to everyone that this could happen.
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image on Twitter
But
when white domestic terrorists do what they do — which is to
intimidate, hurt and kill people of color — we are told there
is no cause for alarm. In a country that has normalized white terror
against black people for 400 years, should we be surprised that
terrorism is in the eye
of the beholder? And as Donald Trump inspires angry and armed white
men and encourages them to monitor the black community for “voter
fraud,” will we be surprised to hear that the people who commit
these crimes — including Trump himself — are not actually
terrorists?
We
need to get real. If these three men in Kansas were brown, the
terrorism label would not be in question.
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