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kausfiles: Does welfare
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today's papers: Drop the
Anthrax or I'll Shoot
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Anything
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Political commentary and more.
Does Welfare Cause Terrorism? You knew Mickey's Assignment Desk would come to
this. By
Mickey Kaus Posted Monday, December 17, 2001, at 5:49 AM PT
Here are some suspected terrorists in the news:
Zacarias Moussaoui, the French North African charged with conspiracy
in connection with the 9/11 attack, became an Islamic radical living in
London "while drawing welfare benefits and studying
economics," Newsday reports.
Ahmed Ressam, the member of Algeria's Armed Islamic Group who was
arrested crossing the U.S. border with bombs designed to blow up L.A.'s
airport, moved to Canada in 1994 where he "survived on welfare
payments" and petty crime, according to terrorism expert Peter
Bergen.
Metin Kaplan, who heads a German radical Islamist sect suspected of
attempting to fly a plane into the Ataturk mausoleum in Turkey, "claimed
social [welfare] benefits in Cologne for many years
until 2m Deutschmarks ($1.2m) in cash was found in his flat," reports
the BBC.
Abu Qatada, the cleric who taught Moussaoui and is accused of having
links to al-Qaeda agents in 6 countries, avoided extradition to Jordan
on terrorism charges by settling in England, where "[l]ike many other
London-based Arab dissidents, [he] has received regular welfare
checks from the British government – and government subsidized
housing," according to the Washington Post. Abu Qatada's
welfare payments were stopped when it was discovered he controlled a
secret bank account containing approximately $270,000.
Do you see a pattern? There's a story here! And it's not as crazy or
demagogic as it seems.
The point isn't simply that many terrorists take advantage of Western
welfare states, the same way they take advantage of Western freedoms and
Western technology. The point is that extreme antisocial terrorist
ideologies (radical Islam, in particular) seem to breed in "oppositional"
cultures supported by various government welfare benefits.
This is particularly evident in France, where – as this (non-free) Los Angeles Times piece describes –
unemployed and alienated North African Arab immigrants in subsidized
public housing projects turn to crime and violence in a vicious cycle
familiar to students of the African-American "underclass." Except that in
France, in the "violent neighborhoods, the housing projects where the
young men can be recruited" into terrorism, an "ironic thing" happens,
according to a French intelligence officer quoted by the Times'
Sebastian Rotella:
"When the extremists take control, violence goes down. Islam brings
discipline. But then we have to watch that neighborhood for a different
reason."
Such North African Arabs make up "the backbone [of] Islamic terrorist
groups in Europe" reports Peter Finn of the Washington Post --
although the 9/11 hijackers seem to have been a separate, elite al-Qaeda
group drawn largely from Persian Gulf states.
What do you want to bet that the French pattern is visible in Britain,
which has been (in the Post's words) "a haven for fundamentalists
who enjoy traditional British liberties and a generous social welfare
system even as they rail against the culture that has given them refuge"?
In fact, there's a good argument that "welfare benefits + ethnic
antagonism" is the universal recipe for an underclass with an angry,
oppositional culture. The social logic is simple: Ethnic differences make
it easy for those outside of, for example, French Arab neighborhoods to
discriminate against those inside, and easy for those inside to resent the
mainstream culture around them. Meanwhile, relatively generous welfare
benefits enable those in the ethnic ghetto to stay there, stay unemployed,
and seethe. Without government subsidies, they would have to overcome the
prejudice against them and integrate into the mainstream working culture.
Work, in this sense, is antiterrorist medicine. (And if you work all day,
there's less time to dream up ways and reasons to kill infidels.)
Appetite-whetting precursor:OpinionJournal.com has posted several items on "terrorist welfare queens" but hasn't made the
larger point about entire alienated subcultures being sustained by
welfare.
Assigned to: Lawrence Mead, who claimed in his 1992
book, The New Politics of Poverty, that Europe is "about a
generation behind the United States" in confronting the social problems
created when a discriminated-against group becomes dependent on state aid.
Alternatively: Heather Mac Donald, John Podhoretz, John
O'Sullivan. … If I knew a neolib who might write this, I'd assign it to
them. But I don't. [Bill Clinton?-ed. Not a bad idea! It would
make his U.S. welfare reform campaign look globally relevant.]