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 FEATURES  The multicultural thought
police The BBC report on the racist
police recruits has given new ammunition to those who are curbing
our legitimate freedoms, says Leo McKinstry
In our modern secular society, we pride
ourselves on our supposed tolerance. We sneer at the bigotry of the
past, wondering how the monstrous cruelty of events such as the
Spanish Inquisition could ever have occurred. But we should not be
so smug. For in Britain today we have our own powerful creed —
multiculturalism — which is imposed on the public by a political
establishment that is brimming with self-righteous fervour. And
anyone refusing to accept this dogma is likely to be branded a
heretic, bullied and brainwashed until they change their opinions.
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Hell hath no fury like a
butler scorned | Only two decades ago, the central principle of
anti-racism was that all individuals in our society should be
treated equally, regardless of ethnic origin or religion. Yet
through multiculturalism, the malign ideological spawn of
anti-discrimination, we have moved far away from that stance. We are
now told that, in the name of ‘celebrating diversity’, we must
respect every aspect of every culture in our midst. Not only must we
act correctly in word and deed, but, more importantly, we must also
be trained to harbour no negative thoughts about the behaviour of
any other ethnic group.
This outlook is utterly inimical to
personal freedom and equality before the law, the very pillars of
our civilisation. Far from ignoring racial differences in the search
for harmony, it actually seeks to emphasise them. Such an attitude
was summed up by the 1999 report of Sir William Macpherson into the
death of the black teenager Stephen Lawrence: ‘Colour-blind policing
must be outlawed. The police must deliver a service which recognises
the different experiences, perceptions and needs of a diverse
society.’
The hysterical guilt-tripping that Macpherson
inspired was matched last week by the furore over the BBC programme
about a handful of racist police recruits in Manchester and North
Wales. Once more we heard the accusations that the British police
was riddled with ‘institutionalised racism’. Adopting the
quasi-religious tone that is characteristic of the multicultural
brigade, the Observer described racism as an ‘endemic evil’ within
the police.
The foul-mouthed, ignorant recruits exposed by
the BBC have, of course, no place in any police force. Apart from
the offensiveness of their views, several of them were caught
condoning serious crimes such as murder and assault against ethnic
minorities. The idea that such thugs could have any role in
upholding the law is grotesque.
But rather than dealing with
these cases on an individual basis, the establishment has used the
BBC footage as the cue for another Macpherson-like orgy of
breast-beating, followed by demands for sweeping reforms so that
every officer complies with the mindset of multiculturalism. Police
chiefs promise ever more intensive diversity training, ever more
rigorous assessment of recruits. The Metropolitan Police plans to
have a network of secret informers in every class at its college in
Hendon, who will check for incorrect opinions, while some have even
suggested that permanent hidden cameras be installed. The Greater
Manchester force is to use undercover black and Asian investigators,
posing as members of the public, to see if officers have the proper
levels of racial awareness.
Civil liberties campaigners
would be howling with outrage if such intrusive measures were
adopted in any other circumstances. But the creed of
multiculturalism is so powerful that almost any form of repression
and thought-control is justified in the name of ‘rooting out
prejudice’. What I find nauseating are the double standards at work.
Brutish conduct in private by a few officers is hailed by the media
and the government as chillingly representative of the entire police
force — hence the need for a wholesale change in attitudes. At the
same time, we are constantly warned against applying any
generalisations to the Islamic or black communities. We must not
think that Muslim clerics, pouring out their murderous hatred of the
West and Judaism, have anything to do with the overwhelming majority
of moderate Muslims. Similarly, we must not be trapped into the
dangerous fallacy that gun violence, drug-dealing and serial
fatherhood are somehow prevalent among young African-Caribbean men.
Yet this terror of stereotyping of anyone — except white
police officers — ignores the reality of modern British society.
Islamic fundamentalism and black criminality are not figments of a
twisted imagination. They are an integral part of the cultural
diversity we are all meant to celebrate. In 1941 George Orwell wrote
that ‘the gentleness of English civilisation is perhaps its most
marked characteristic’. It would be absurd to make such a remark
today. After decades of advancing multiculturalism, Britain is the
most violent country in Europe, with the highest rates of gun crime,
drug-taking and street robbery.
In such a context, it is
hardly a surprise if some white police officers, working in
crime-ridden urban areas, have a suspicious view of certain ethnic
minorities. That is not prejudice. It is just experience. I know
several university-educated, decent, churchgoing police constables
based in south London, who joined the force with an open mind and a
good heart. They are the very opposite of the bigots captured on
film by the BBC. But over the years they have been worn down by
continually having to deal with the aggressive, dangerous, vicious
behaviour of too many blacks. And it is not just white police
officers who feel that way. In a remark that should cause
embarrassment to even the most fervent multiculturalist, the black
American radical Jesse Jackson said in 1994, ‘There is nothing more
painful to me than to walk down the street and hear footsteps and
start thinking about street robbery, then to look around and see
someone white and feel relieved.’
Instead of facing up to
reality, the multiculturalists are becoming more authoritarian in
their suppression of negative thinking. In their eagerness to impose
the ideology of diversity, they are like the old Soviet Politburo,
which pretended that communism had created an earthly paradise and
that anyone who claimed otherwise was either a crank or a criminal.
Over the last three years, there has been a raft of new regulations
designed to crack down on dissent. So the Race Relations Act of 2000
imposes a statutory duty on all public bodies to ‘promote’ racial
equality, which requires every one of them to introduce race action
plans. Moreover, the Commission for Racial Equality has been given
wide-ranging powers of investigation to check on compliance. Under
new rules introduced this year, any job candidates who feel that
they have been victims of discrimination have the right to demand
that an employer organise a questionnaire of the entire workforce to
find out if there is a pattern of hiring. Moreover, internal
promotion within a company can now be interpreted as a form of
discrimination. The fixation with racism has also over-turned one of
the essential principles of justice, that the accused is innocent
until proven guilty. The race regulations of 2003 have shifted the
burden of proof in employment-tribunal cases from the accuser to the
alleged discriminator. In sinister, bureaucratic language, the
Commission for Racial Equality warns that ‘for the discriminator,
the consequences of the new burden of proof will be significant. Any
failure to provide a satisfactory or adequate explanation may be
determinative since the courts and tribunals must find in favour of
the complainant.’
Freedom of speech and rights of
association are also disappearing. At this year’s Labour party
conference, the Secretary of State for Trade and Industry, Patricia
Hewitt, promised, to resounding cheers, that a new law will soon be
passed allowing trade unions to expel members of the BNP.
Ironically, the police, so widely condemned for their supposed
racism, are now being turned into instruments of social control.
Gloucestershire Police, for instance, have employed undercover
plain-clothes officers to observe the behaviour of diners in Indian
and Chinese restaurants, in an exercise called ‘Operation Napkin’.
In the wake of 9/11, the government created a new offence of
‘religiously aggravated threatening behaviour’, which can be used
against anyone who challenges the anti-Western outbursts of Muslims.
Indeed, an Exeter man, Alistair Scott, was sentenced to 200 hours’
community service in October 2002 on just such a charge, after he
had rowed with a Muslim neighbour who called bin Laden a great man,
9/11 a ‘glorious day’ and Mr Scott a ‘Zionist pig’. Inevitably the
Muslim, Mohammed Hudaib, was not prosecuted. A month later, the
television presenter Robin Page was arrested — though never charged
—for opening a speech at a countryside rally with the words ‘If
there is a black, vegetarian, Muslim, asylum-seeking, one-legged
lesbian lorry-driver present, then you may be offended at what I am
going to say, as I want the same rights that you have got already.’
But perhaps most worrying of all is the attempt to
reclassify racism as a mental illness. In the United States there is
now a serious debate over whether those accused of being racists are
actually suffering from delusions which require treatment by the
state, including the use of anti-psychotic medication. Dr Alvin
Poussaint of the American Psychiatric Association has said, ‘If we
want to do any kind of prevention, psychiatrists have to know and
believe themselves that this is a serious mental disorder.’ Another
psychologist, Dr William von Hippel, even claims to have located the
part of the frontal lobes in the brain that makes people racist. Von
Hippel has argued that, especially among older people, changes to
the brain’s structure result in loss of ‘cognitive ability’ to be
tolerant.
Psychiatry has often been used to silence those
who refuse to accept the official doctrines of the state. The Soviet
Union was notorious for branding political dissidents as ‘mentally
ill’, incarcerating them in psychiatric institutions. In communist
China it has been estimated that 15 per cent of psychiatric inmates
may be in custody for political reasons, many of them suffering from
what the gruesome Ministry for Public Security calls ‘political
abnormality illness’.
We should remember that, even in our
own country’s past, single parenthood and promiscuity in women were
sometimes treated as signs of insanity. And today, tens of thousands
of children who would once have been seen as boisterous are said to
be suffering from Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder and are
treated with the chemical cosh of the drug Ritalin.
In some
ways, multiculturalism is a reaction to the barbarity of Hitler’s
Nazi regime. The sorry paradox is that, in its myopia over race and
its hysterical intolerance of dissent, this doctrine is dragging us
along the road towards tyranny.
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