Fionola
Meredith writes an opinion column in The Belfast Telegraph,
one of Northern Ireland's leading daily newspapers. In today's
edition (20.11.2015), she is angry. She is forceful, polemical and
vehement. Writing trenchantly, under the headline
Mealy-mouthed
excusers of terror should just shut it
she
draws readers in, with an appeal to a shared experience.
You
know what people mean when they talk about that Friday feeling.
She,
quite rightly, castigates the people who committed the atrocities in
Paris and locates the responsibility for the deaths and injuries with
them.
The
truth is the terrorists who committed last Friday's outrages don't
care whether their victims are anarchic old cartoonists or little
boys at a rock concert with their mum.
She
is right. The actions of the perpetrators are wrong and can be
universally named as wrong. Her ire in today's column is directed not
at the perpetrators of the atrocities but at people who might, as she
sees it, equivocate about them.
Her
article highlights a real problem for people living in the Developed
North of the world. Events unfolding in Bamako, Mali, where guests
and staff at an hotel are being held under threat of violence further
underline this problem. In raising the Bamako events here, in the
context of the aftermath of the atrocity in Paris, this article may
face Fionola Meredith's ire.
but
failing to mention Beirut or Syria sees you instantly slapped down as
a crass cultural imperialist.
Her
most vehement challenge is to
the
default recourse to equivocation
What
is the appropriate response then, apart from the unequivocal
assertion that they were wrong, to the recent atrocities in Paris,
Beirut, Syria, Bamako and elsewhere?
There are language problems here. The use of the term 'we' to imply
all-inclusive circumstances is often unfounded. The use of the word
'you' to imply a collective experience of the world is complex, even
if by 'you' is meant 'the readership of The Belfast Telegraph,
in print and on-line', for it includes people who do not share the
experience Fionola Meredith uses to lead us into her column. Her
anger heats her language and narrows her assertions.
Later
that night 129 of them were cut down by barbarians with Kalashnikovs,
and scores more injured. What had they done to deserve this? Nothing,
except live a life of liberty in Paris, the first home of free
thinking.
The
term 'barbarian' poses problems. Certainly the people who did this
are cruel, violent and death-dealing. And as human as Fionola
Meredith and this writer. There are no monsters out there. Only
people.
Who
benefits from the use of such language by public writers in the press
of a liberal democracy like Northern Ireland? Readers across the
world may wonder at the special privileging of Paris as a home for
'free thinking'.
Fionola
Meredith has no time for the
awful
sanctimonious, supercilious piety which passes for modern liberalism
and
wonders, in listing some of the victims,
What
reasons could be found for their murders?
Fionola
Meredith's appeal is to Reason, in the Enlightenment values of liberty
and democracy. She fears 'we' are in danger of 'going under'. One of
the problems with many people's experience of these values is that
they are not all they claim to be.
Fionola
Meredith, towards the end of her column, encounters this problem, but
shies away from it. She is not alone in that. It is thoroughly scary
and complicated. It is a problem of language and of action.
When
are the excuses going to stop? Hand-wringing appeasement or
well-meaning attempts at understanding do nothing to restrain
nihilistic death cults (neither does a mad blitzkrieg of bombing, but
that's another story).
There
isn't 'another story'. There are many millions of stories and they
are all linked and they are all human and live.
Ironically,
on the same web-page as Fionola Meredith's opinion piece, there is an
advertisement for no-risk investment opportunities in France. Might
this include arms manufacturers? The world goes on and the atrocity
in Paris can be used as fuel for the ad-makers.
To
end. A small language note for equivocators and, thus, for all
people. It's not 'either/or'. It's 'and/all'. Consider the word 'but'
and try the word 'and'. As in.
The
killings in Paris are wrong.
And so is the French arms' industry.
http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/opinion/columnists/fionola-meredith/paris-attacks-mealymouthed-excusers-of-terror-should-just-shut-it-34217085.html
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