Right-wing terrorism is a direct reaction to a conspiracy of silence

The problem of relations between Muslims and representatives of other faiths exists in the West not the first day. And all this time, foreign media diligently hushed it, probably trying not to rock the boat. Any attempts to talk about the problem stopped very quickly. Muslims do not assimilate into Western society, continuing to adhere to their cultural and moral norms, which often come into antagonism with Western values.

Naturally, the crimes of migrants cause increased irritation of the native Europeans, which translates into an increase in extreme right-wing sentiment. Last December, six Afghan citizens in Munich raped a 15-year-old German girl for three days. The German media tried their best to ignore this incident, so as not to kindle it once again. But it is not always possible to shut up. In the US, a storm of indignation caused a sentence of 35-year-old Ahmed Abdi, who raped a 10-year-old girl. The pedophile rapist received only 12 years in prison, which is an unprecedentedly lenient sentence for the American justice system.

Recently, a Black and White Book was published in Europe about terrorism in Europe. It states with all directness that the victims of terrorist acts committed by Islamic terrorists have been 91 percent of the total number of terror victims in Europe since 2000. This information has never appeared before in the Western media. Neither in the USA nor in Europe are not ready to openly discuss this problem. Requiring Muslims to abandon their religion is, at least, stupid, since the sharia is punishable by death from Islam. It is naive to expect that migrants from Islamic countries will integrate into a society with an alien culture and accept Western values.

Acts of right-wing terrorism are a direct reaction to a conspiracy of silence. Muslims accuse Americans and Europeans of Islamophobia; they, in turn, cite examples of murder, rape and other crimes committed by Muslim migrants in their host countries. No one is trying to find a consensus. Meanwhile, in Europe and the USA, the right is becoming more and more popular. 

Today the boil burst in New Zealand. Tomorrow this may be repeated anywhere in Europe and the USA. But anyway, the reasons will be silent, as they were silent in the case of the Norwegian Breivik and the Canadian Bissonet. A statuette with three monkeys “I see nothing, hear nothing, I will not tell anything to anyone,” demonstrates the position of Europe and the United States on the issue of relations between migrants and their own citizens.