From Pine View Farm

Enemies’ List 0

At Asia Times, Matthew Harwood wonders why law enforcement focuses on the American Muslim community when evidence shows that the danger of domestic terrorism lies elsewhere. A nugget.

The idea that American law enforcement’s mass surveillance of Muslim communities is a necessary, if unfortunate, counter-terrorism tool rests with the empirically false notion that American Muslims are more prone to political violence than other Americans.

This is simply not true.

According to the National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism (START), right-wing terrorists perpetrated 145 “ideologically motivated homicide incidents” between 1990 and 2010. In that same period, notes START, “al Qaeda affiliates, al Qaeda-inspired extremists, and secular Arab Nationalists committed 27 homicide incidents in the United States involving 16 perpetrators or groups of perpetrators.”

Last November, West Point’s Combating Terrorism Center published a report on America’s violent far-right extremists. Its numbers were even more startling than START’s. “The consolidated dataset,” writes report author Arie Perliger, “includes information on 4,420 violent incidents that occurred between 1990 and 2012 within US borders, and which caused 670 fatalities and injured 3,053 people.” Perliger also found that the number of far-right attacks had jumped 400% in the first 11 years of the 21st century.

Don’t think it could have anything with how easy it is to single out persons who are different, now, do you?

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