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By Way
Of Le Pen:
How Political
Correctness and Immigration Are Destroying the West
VDARE.COM
http://www.vdare.com/gottfried/060816_west.htm
August 16, 2006
By
Paul
Gottfried
According to recent reports,
French politician
Jean Marie Le Pen is
being summoned to a French court to stand trial a second time for remarks made
to a reporter from the rightwing newspaper
Rivarol in
January 2005.
In his
controversial interview,
Le Pen expressed the opinion that the
German occupation of France
"wasn’t particularly inhumane, even if there were some blunders, which were
inevitable."
The new suit for group defamation
and, by implication, for criminally denying the official facts about the
Holocaust that were issued by the international
Nuremberg Tribunal in 1946, is being brought by
the
Sons and Daughters of Jewish Deportees of France,
an organization with long-standing and transparent connections to the French
Left.
A convenient peg for suits of this
kind is the Loi Gayssot, legislation, passed with the help of the
Mitterand government in July 1990. It builds on a law against collective
defamation going back to the early 1970s. This important law,—both sponsored by
and named for a Jewish Communist deputy in the National Assembly,
Jean-Claude Gayssot—criminalized
speech that might offend self-designated victim minorities, while making sure
that denials of Communist mass murder, however explicit, would be exempted from
prosecution.
In a response to anti-Communist
critics in the French Assembly in November 1997 (see Le Monde, November
17, 1997), French premier Lionel Jospin
refused to condemn the
mass killing done by the
"anti-fascist"
Joseph Stalin. Nonetheless, Jospin did not run the risk of being accused of a
délit d’opinion (a
crime of opinion). The premier, by this act, was not condoning
anti-Semitic or
anti-Islamic deeds or opinions but doing something deemed less reprehensible,
refusing to be judgmental about
Stalin’s efforts to deal with a
class enemy.
Although most of the Loi
Gayssot designates and criminalizes hate speech against religious and ethnic
groups,
Article 9, Title 2
condemns specifically the public expression of views that conflict with the
condemnation of genocide and crimes against humanity enumerated by the Nuremberg
Tribunal. In this postwar judgment by,
among others, Stalin’s
handpicked judges, only certain kinds of mass murder and violence could incur
legal action. In fact, only those crimes that the Communist condemned as "fascist"
would be subject to criminal prosecution.
If the
Communists, who were the coalition allies of
Jospin’s Socialists, had
nothing unkind to say against Stalin’s or
Mao’s campaigns to rid
their countries of "fascist" collaborators, what right then do French
progressives have to raise objections?
In his response to the national
Assembly, Jospin accused his critics of treating on an equal basis two "incommensurable
phenomena": a set of not particularly blameworthy Communist blunders and the
most evil of all evils, "fascist racism."
In Germany, such vile mistakes can
bring legal actions in addition to professional ruination. Those with
insufficiently anti-fascist opinions can be listed as a "danger to democracy"
by the
governmental Protectors of the Constitution or
else be dragged into court for "trivializing the Holocaust." This last
misstep might include paying excessive attention to Stalin’s mass murders, which
has been interpreted as deliberately diverting public attention from the
inexpiable enormity of German fascist crimes.
Whatever may have been Le Pen’s reason
for uttering his statements— including an irresistible urge to rattle Jewish
(and other leftist) practitioners of a double moral standard—his historical
judgment is certainly defensible.
The Nazi occupation of France was
not exceptional for twentieth-century occupations carried out by unfriendly
invaders. A comparison with the Soviets’
takeover of
the Baltic countries may be instructive. There
the French Left’s "anti-fascist" former Big Brother,
then allied to Hitler,
succeeded in carrying out a far higher proportion of political murder and
deportation than those committed in France during the German occupation.
Almost half of the Balts were
deported and/or killed under Stalin,
a figure that was reached in France only for foreign born Jews during the German
Occupation. Most of the French Jewish indigenes (over 190,000) managed to escape
with their lives, and the vast majority escaped deportation, largely because of
French Christian
assistance. Of the 330,000 Jews who were in France before the War, 170,000
stayed in France and almost all of them survived the Occupation. Moreover, the
German occupation was far less destructive for French Christians than the German
presence in Poland or Russia was for inhabitants there. And if one takes into
account during WWII, the hideous slaughter wrought by the
Japanese on the
Chinese
and
Filipinos, or the
far
worse slaughter of Jews in the East than in
France, Le Pen’s statements were not as outrageous as one might guess from
looking at the press.
Certainly they are not the sort of
thing that a
civilized country should
throw someone in jail or threaten with a huge fine and public disgrace for
uttering.
Note, Le Pen’s assertions are also
far less questionable as historical statements than the Holocaust-denial that
they are imagined to illustrate. They should not be compared to those greatly
reduced figures for the Holocaust that were
associated with British
historian David Irving, before his recent arrest and incarceration in
anti-fascist
Austria. This comparison
is worth making, despite the fact that Irving’s fate for his politically
incorrect history was both outrageous and typical. It was outrageous, given the
self-promotion of Western
"liberal
democracies," which have become controlled
hothouses of
politically correct opinion.
And this jailing of an aged scholar for his historical judgment made in a
different country at a different time is all too typical.
Such facts are, not surprisingly,
the stuff of my last two books,
Multiculturalism and the Politics of Guilt
and
The Strange Death of Marxism,
both of which deal with the political victory
of political correctness.
What I argue in both—but more
explicitly in my last book—is that the victory of
multiculturalism in the "Western democracies"
has given rise to a totalitarian domination as loathsome and intrusive as the
real Marxist-Leninism that it is replacing. Whether it goes by the name of
multiculturalism,
sensitivity-training, or
cultural Marxism, this
combination of ideas and sentiments has taken over Western administrative states
and their cultural industry.
There is no way of combating this
danger, save for an angry mass rejection of what the destroyer preaches, and a
disempowering of the mind-snatching states that impose
"tolerance" by
force and through
public education.
Immigration
from the non-Western world
and particularly of
Muslims, who are now
streaming into Western
and Central Europe, has been a tool for breaking down the pitifully little that
remains of Western social and cultural authorities.
My books try to understand
immigration expansionists for what they are. Not all of them are misguided
fools. Many of them dislike or fear what Western societies were and did in the
past, and have set out to reconstruct it by supplanting its old core population.
Others of those who are now engaged in this enterprise are, of course,
useful idiots. Here, one
thinks of the leadership of the
Republican Party, who seem to be reaching out
in the
wrong direction even
strategically, as Steve Sailer points out, by joining the vanguard of the
immigration expansionists.
But the effect of such politics, no
matter what the motivation, is to aggravate the trend toward cultural breakdown,
thereby helping along the multicultural experiment that is now unfolding
throughout the West.
The demographic erosion of Western
peoples, the war waged by state and culture against inherited structures of
authority, and the "celebration of diversity" all belong to the same
process of orchestrated change that has contributed to the legal difficulties of
Jean Le Pen.
It would be an oversimplification
to present his problems exclusively as the result of Gallic chutzpah, the return
of
French Communism, or the
never-ending parade of Jewish special pleaders who are eager to flail Christian
countries for Nazi crimes.
My works try to contextualize such a
development, and I apologize for the discomfort that they might cause
movement conservatives who bother to read them. Like the majority of the
opinion-makers here and in Europe, these "moderate" conservatives and
Republican cheering galleries are on the wrong side of the real cultural war.
As my late friend
Sam Francis never tired of pointing out, the
stupid party may have
become an even greater obstacle to
Western
survival than the
evil party it formally
opposes.
Paul Gottfried
is Professor of Humanities at Elizabethtown College, PA. He is the author of
After Liberalism,
Multiculturalism and the Politics of Guilt
and
The Strange Death of Marxism.
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