The real threat to our way of life


The terrorist attacks in Paris and the rising tide of Islamist fascism have had dire consequences here in America. Erick Erickson is afraid to go to the movies.

I’m really glad I didn’t get tickets on opening day to see Star Wars. Seriously.

I have no confidence in this Administration to keep us all safe, particularly in light of President Obama’s statement today that there’s really no way to stop this stuff.

There are no metal detectors at American theaters.

I think I’ll wait till Star Wars is less a threat scenario.

I weep for you, Erick. The terrorists have won.

Comments

  1. says

    But surely if there were metal detectors on the way into the cinema, then that would mean nobody would be able to take guns in? What if somebody managed to get a gun into the place somehow anyway, and nobody else had a gun in order to be able to stop them?

  2. karmacat says

    So I assume Erikson will be advocating for more scrutiny of white males going into movie theaters.

  3. dianne says

    I’ve got to admit that I’m a bit scared to go to the theater in the US. Not because of “terrorists” but because of white “good guy” men with guns who might decide to shoot me for talking on my cell phone during the previews or maybe for no reason at all. Terrorists? Feh, they’re hardly worth worrying about. Random white male idiots with guns? That’s a real threat.

  4. Saad says

    I’m really glad I didn’t get tickets on opening day to see Star Wars. Seriously.

    I have no confidence in this Administration to keep us all safe, particularly in light of President Obama’s statement today that there’s really no way to stop this stuff.

    There are no metal detectors at American theaters.

    I think I’ll wait till Star Wars is less a threat scenario.

    What do the Paris terrorist attacks have to do with American white men shooting people in theaters?

  5. Nerd of Redhead, Dances OM Trolls says

    The terrorists win if you change your behavior because you are scared of shadows.
    The President of France has the right idea:

    President Francois Hollande says France will not “cede to fear” and is urging his compatriots to go back out to cafes and museums and live life to its fullest.

    He says “what would our country be without its cafes, concerts, sport events, museums?” Hollande was speaking to mayors from around the country Wednesday, after the country’s deadliest violence in decades last week.

    The French leader says “life must resume in full,” and is promising extra security to ensure that museums can reopen and “our tourists can be welcomed.”

    I’ll give the terrorists no satisfaction by being scared.

  6. Alverant says

    OTOH not going opening day is probably a good idea to avoid the crowds and find out if this is another “Episode 1”.

  7. dianne says

    So…I suppose it’s actually not as tacky as I thought that the partner and I were discussing going to Paris over the winter holidays? It can be justified under “not letting the terrorists win” and isn’t just exploiting the fact that many people are likely to be too scared to go and so it’ll be cheaper than usual?

  8. says

    Uhm, aren’t about as many ‘Muricans killed by guns about in a week as terrorists killed in France this year?

    And no, you cannot stop terrorism with lots of guns on the street. Look at the history of terrorism. The IRA wasn’t stopped by massive police and military presence in Northern Ireland. ETA wasn’t stopped by the Guardia Civil.
    Sometimes intelligence may allow you to stop an attack before it happens, as it probably happened in Germany last night, but you simply can’t stop it alltogether with force.
    Even if you cancel al sports events, public celebrations, close all museums, people still have to work, people still have to eat. You can’t check everybody who enters the underground like you check people who board a plane. THat’S a sad truth, but a truth nevertheless.

  9. slithey tove (twas brillig (stevem)) says

    Yes. Think about it. The goal of Terrorism is terror, not body count. To be filled with perpetual terror is what the terrorists are trying to achieve. so, yes, they have won. Best way to fight them is not with fists, nor bullets, but by refusing to be afraid, carry on as before the incident(s). I said this before (around 9/12/01 or shortly thereafter). I know it’s easier said than done, yet we could at least try.

  10. jerthebarbarian says

    I kept going to movie theaters after the Dark Knight Rises shooting in Aurora. I’m far more afraid of crazy white people assaulting my local theater than I am an attack by ISIS or whatnot – why would they bother to attack any of my local movie theaters? It literally does not make any sense at all.

    I’d accuse Erickson of acting like a 4 year old afraid of the monster in his closet, except that does a disservice to 4 year olds.

  11. grumpyoldfart says

    As a good Christian he should not be surprised by this turn of events. God himself promised his followers that if they don’t live up to expectations: I will bring on you sudden terror … you will flee even when no one is pursuing you. (Leviticus 26:16-17)

  12. scienceavenger says

    I have no confidence in this Administration to keep us all safe

    Why not? He’s kept us safer than the previous administration, which contrary to popular rightwing lore, did not begin on 9/12/01.

  13. petemoulton says

    “I weep for you, Erick. The terrorists have won.”

    The terrorists had Erick and all the other rightwing bed-wetters beaten on 9-11.

  14. says

    It gets worse. At least one Republican wants to round up Syrians already in the USA and ship them to an immigration detention center:

    A Republican lawmaker in Tennessee on Tuesday proposed that the state round up any Syrian refugees currently living in Tennessee and return them to immigration centers run by the federal government.

    State Rep. Glen Casada (R), chairman of the House Republican caucus, told The Tennessean that the state should activate the National Guard to stop Syrian refugees “from coming in to the state by whatever means we can.”

    “I’m not worried about what a bureaucrat in D.C. or an unelected judge thinks,” Casada added. “We need to gather (Syrian refugees) up and politely take them back to the ICE center and say, ‘They’re not coming to Tennessee, they’re yours.'” […]

    “Tennessee is a sovereign state. If the federal government is forsaking the obligation to protect our citizens, we need to act.”

    Talking Points Memo link

  15. says

    This is a followup to Nerd’s comment #5.

    The rightwing in the USA is demanding that the U.S. refuse all Syrian refugees, that the country take in none, zero.

    France was just attacked, but President Hollande confirmed that France will take in 30,000 refugees:

    Pres. Hollande commits to taking 30,000 refugees in next 2 years; says France has duty to honor that commitment. “Life must go on.”

    When will the French start calling Republican governors cowards?

    Cross-posted from Moments of Political Madness

  16. says

    Part of President Obama’s recent speech is worth repeating:

    I cannot think of a more potent recruitment tool for ISIL than some of the rhetoric that’s been coming out of here during the course of this debate. ISIL seeks to exploit the idea that there is a war between Islam and the West. And when you start seeing individuals in positions of responsibility, suggesting that Christians are more worthy of protection than Muslims are in a war-torn land, that feeds the ISIL narrative. It’s counterproductive, and it needs to stop.

  17. says

    More details regarding France’s commitment to take in Syrian refugees:

    “Some people say the tragic events of the last few days have sown doubts in their minds,” Hollande said, but added that it is a “humanitarian duty” to help the throngs of refugees who have landed on European shores after fleeing conflict and hardship in countries like Syria and Afghanistan.

    In a speech to mayors from around France, Hollande said France would welcome 30,000 refugees over the next two years. That’s even more than the 24,000 he committed to accepting in September.

    Hollande said that he would invest about $53.3 million to develop housing for refugees.

    He added that that refugees will undergo thorough security checks before entering the country […]

    Think Progress link

    Are you ashamed, Erick Erickson?

  18. laurentweppe says

    Uhm, aren’t about as many ‘Muricans killed by guns about in a week as terrorists killed in France this year?

    You’re wrong: not as many ‘Muricans are killed by guns in a week as terrorists killed in France this year: it’s nearly Twice as many ‘Muricans who are murdered with guns in a week as terrorists killed in France this year and Four Times As Many once you count the suicides and accidental deaths.

    I often go to the US, I lived there for a while and my parents used to work there. I’ve never felt paranoid about crossing path with an entitled white manchild with a gun when I was in the US so I’m most certainly not going to start hiding under the blanket like a coward.

  19. Nick Gotts says

    The French leader says “life must resume in full,” and is promising extra security to ensure that museums can reopen and “our tourists can be welcomed.”

    Good. But we’ll see if he really means it in a few weeks, when I’m due to be in Paris, with thousands of others, to demonstrate against the inadequate agreement, or no agreement, at the climate change talks (or, of course, dance in the streets and watch the massed porcine aerobatics after serious measures to reduce emissions are agreed). There have been hints that a “march through the streets of Paris” will not be allowed.

  20. blf says

    There’s been a feckloads of people out in the cafes, restaurants, bars, etc. Tomorrow is Beaujolais Nouveau, and I am suspecting it will be busier than usual… There was an article in the International New York Times about people in Paris making a deliberate point to go out and be, well, French… I suspect Mr Hollande is slightly behind the curve here, but people do seem to be doing what he suggests.

  21. Bob Foster says

    Over 30,000 Americans are killed by guns every year. Over 1,000 of them at the hands of the police.

    Am I afraid that I’ll be a victim of ISIS? Not in the least. It’s all my fellow citizens with borderline personality disorder that have me worried.

    “An armed society is a polite society . . .” Robert Heinlein.
    I wonder what he’d say now?

  22. Gen, Uppity Ingrate and Ilk says

    It’s all my fellow citizens with borderline personality disorder that have me worried.

    Don’t do that. Most people who kill people are NOT, in fact, mentally ill, and the mentally ill are more likely to suffer violence than to cause it. It’s unnecessary to the point you are making.

  23. says

    Bob Foster @ 24:

    “An armed society is a polite society . . .” Robert Heinlein.
    I wonder what he’d say now?

    That not enough of the ‘right people’ had guns.

  24. says

    Some of the rightwing politicians and pundits are so extreme in their anti-refugee statements that major christian organizations are appalled. Christian organizations have started to publicly disagree.

    The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops released a statement expressing distress over calls by elected officials to halt the resettlement program.

    “These refugees are fleeing terror themselves — violence like we have witnessed in Paris,” said the statement by Bishop Eusebio Elizondo, chairman of the conference’s committee on migration.

    “Instead of using this tragedy to scapegoat all refugees, I call upon our public officials to work together to end the Syrian conflict peacefully so the close to 4 million Syrian refugees can return to their country and rebuild their homes. Until that goal is achieved, we must work with the world community to provide safe haven to vulnerable and deserving refugees who are simply attempting to survive.”

    Politico link

    And there’s this statement from the National Association of Evangelicals:

    “Of course we want to keep terrorists out of our country, but let’s not punish the victims of ISIS for the sins of ISIS,” said Leith Anderson, NAE president.

    NAE link

    And there’s this response from World Relief:

    A push by Republican presidential candidates to ban Syrian refugees “does not reflect what we’ve been hearing from our constituencies, which are evangelical churches across the country,” said Jenny Yang, vice president for advocacy at World Relief, an evangelical organization that helps resettle refugees. “Most of the people have been saying we want to continue to work with refugees, that what happened in Paris … doesn’t reflect who refugees are.”

    Politico link

  25. says

    Donald Trump has gone from saying that he would “strongly consider” closing mosques in the USA (yesterday), to saying that he definitely would close mosques (today). His reasoning? “We’re going to have no choice, absolutely no choice.”
    Link

  26. says

    Bill O’Reilly lectured Muslims on overcoming bad PR:

    […] “You have to understand, and I’m sure you do, that in this world there are so many radical Muslims, so many that it becomes difficult for unsophisticated thinkers to separate the good from the bad,” O’Reilly said. “It’s almost like Germany in—during the Nazi regime. Not all Germans were Nazis, but we had to kill them all and bomb the hell out of their cities to break that movement.”

    O’Reilly said that this kind of mass bombing campaign could be avoided because the world’s Muslims are geographically dispersed, but insisted that “there’s a lot of people who are getting a little fed up” with practitioners of the religion.

    Zafar nodded as O’Reilly spoke before pointing to the “good work” being done by Muslim activists to combat these stereotypes. But the Fox host held firm to his view that the Muslim community needed “a better PR arm.” […]

    Link

  27. Larry says

    Crippling RW cowardice seems to have become the latest disease to strike the US. Hopefully, the medical community can band together and devise a cure that will allow these poor, unfortunate souls to grow a pair, put on their big boy pants, and emerge back into the sunshine from beneath their beds.

  28. zenlike says

    Nick Gotts

    The French leader says “life must resume in full,” and is promising extra security to ensure that museums can reopen and “our tourists can be welcomed.”

    Good. But we’ll see if he really means it in a few weeks, when I’m due to be in Paris, with thousands of others, to demonstrate against the inadequate agreement, or no agreement, at the climate change talks (or, of course, dance in the streets and watch the massed porcine aerobatics after serious measures to reduce emissions are agreed). There have been hints that a “march through the streets of Paris” will not be allowed.

    And boom, the large marches at the beginning and the end of the climate conference have been banned. Don’t you hate being right all the time?

  29. Lady Mondegreen says

    It’s all my fellow citizens with borderline personality disorder that have me worried.

    Don’t do that. Most people who kill people are NOT, in fact, mentally ill

    Personality disorders are not mental illnesses. Though I suspect Bob Foster is thinking of ASPD, not BPD.

  30. RobertL says

    Well, I will be in Paris next week, doing plenty of touristy things. My wife and I are taking our 17 year old niece to Europe as an end of school trip. Of course we have been planning this for a while (you don’t just pop over to Europe from Australia) but we didn’t seriously consider cancelling the trip either.

    And there is a bit of “not letting the terrorists win” vibe about it now. Vive Le France! Allez!

  31. millssg99 says

    Anyone who is afraid of dying from terrorism or crazy white people committing mass murder in the U.S. is ignoring reality – understandable perhaps but nevertheless irrational. Statistically either of those things is a microscopic fraction of the overall causes of death that they should be near the bottom of our priority lists in staying alive. Of course as soon as the attacks in Paris occurred there were people all over the mass media pontificating on how this shows why we must live in a police state in order to be “safe”. Terrorists win whenever there is any overreaction to their evil deeds. The biggest fuck you one can issue is simply to ignore them. The worst thing we can do is to freak out and and start dropping bombs or flying drones – that is exactly what they want.

  32. says

    And boom, the large marches at the beginning and the end of the climate conference have been banned. Don’t you hate being right all the time?

    But don’t you understand, we got to abolish democracy for your own good! We can’t let the terrorists win!
    Now, if your attention span is slightly longer than that of a goldfish, you may remember the huge demonstration after the attacks on Charlie Hebdo. Apparently, when you’re demonstration for a government approved cause they can provide security. When they don’t agree with you you must stay at home…

  33. says

    BTW can I have a near fatal eyeroll at this wonderful commitment of France to accept 30.000 refugees over two years?
    That’s a country of 50 something million people. Just to give a comparisson: my German state, one of the smallest, 1 million people, accepted 2000 refugees in July.

  34. rorschach says

    you don’t just pop over to Europe from Australia

    Yeah you do. Just the elation of leaving central Queensland’s internet speeds behind when taking off is worth the money.

    PZ:

    the terrorist attacks in Paris and the rising tide of Islamist fascism

    I don’t think they’re fascists in any useful meaning of the word. Disenfranchised culturally isolated frustrated youth manipulated by talented soulcatchers, more like it. Even the leaders and handlers of those suicide bombers and attackers are fragmented, hiding in basements, caves and tents and using the internet to coordinate their lone wolfs. That’s not fascism. It’s terrorism a la 2015.

    Also, I’m sick and tired of the way terrorist attacks are reported with a heavy bias on white people victims. There are hundreds blown up or abducted in Nigeria, Kenya, wherever, every day of the week, but we don’t hold candle light vigils or light the opera house for them brown terror victims ever.
    Terror doesn’t discriminate between white or brown or black victims. Neither should we.

  35. millssg99 says

    Cancer – 584,881 dead

    When I worry about dying it isn’t from crazy people with guns not even terrorists with machine guns. Speaking of the theater I have to drive or ride in an automobile to get there where I live.

    Auto – 30,822 dead

    It’s not the crazy gun guy I should be worried about. I’m also pretty sure I’m more likely to be killed by a crazy in my home than in the theater.

    I guess the point is that regardless of the tragedy and senselessness of all of this violence one should act like the French and go about their lives without fearing these people. Life poses a lot more serious dangers than gun toting idiots in public places. And yes when you dwell on any of it it can be scary. That’s the way the human brain works especially when the media fills your mind with the actual horror of it.

  36. laurentweppe says

    I don’t think they’re fascists in any useful meaning of the word.

    In this case, the term is used accurately (for once): in Syria and Iraq, Daesh has similar goals and methods than the european fascist states of yesteryears: territorial expansion, bloody extermination of dissenters, compliance obtained through the threat of harsh and painful punishment, monopolizing of the ruled territories resources and revenues by an aristocratic state, conquered population being used as slaves and rape-toys, children indoctrination that drive wedges between the kids and their own families, etc, etc, etc… while in Europe, it’s recruitment drive: the revanchist rhetoric targeting disenfranchised and/or alienated youths, the promise that once Daesh has destroyed the “decadent” and hypocritical western order They will belong to the elite of the new “virtuous” empire is similar to the demagoguery used by fascists before they conquered power.

  37. Gen, Uppity Ingrate and Ilk says

    Lady Mondegreen Personality disorders are not mental illnesses. Though I suspect Bob Foster is thinking of ASPD, not BPD.

    Excuse me? Since when? I mean, I see it’s apparently cool these days to shit on people with Bordeline Personality Disorder, but to claim it’s not a mental illness seems really… shortsighted, and like, a justification for stigmatization.

  38. John Horstman says

    Metal detectors at movie theaters? Isn’t Erickson one of those assholes always howling any time someone CAN’T take zir precious gun everywhere? OUR terrorists here in USA are overwhelmingly pro-racist and/or pro-(hetero/cis)sexist White men. Was Erickson making a veiled threat of violence?

  39. slithey tove (twas brillig (stevem)) says

    first: advocate universal gun ownership to make the world safe.
    2nd: refuse to go anywhere arguing that the world is too dangerous with everybody with guns.
    3rd: blame the contradiction on liberals.
    I think I got a bingo ;-(

  40. Okidemia, fishy on the shore term, host reach in the long run says

    Nick Gotts #22

    But we’ll see if he really means it in a few weeks, when I’m due to be in Paris, with thousands of others, to demonstrate against the inadequate agreement, or no agreement, at the climate change talks

    You must be kidding. The message is to go have a drink in bars or go the theater, not to agitate for action against climate change. They don’t want you to ask for a change and will use the event to prevent people from demonstrating.

    This is just the basic decency way to have fewer voices up for actual environmental actions.

    Lynna #15

    When will the French start calling Republican governors cowards?

    Well, don’t you begin cowardice olympics once you need a gun anyway?
    .
    Mom told me she’s about to house Syrian refugees the time they need to make their way in their new country. Go Mom!

  41. anteprepro says

    Gen beat me to it. I know it is kind of a tangent, but still the claim personality disorders aren’t mental illness when personality disorders are explicitly a type of mental disorder is just utterly baffling.

  42. birgerjohansson says

    The coverage of the Paris attack has been extremely myopic, even in Europe.
    People in Pakistan, Iraq and Afghanistan have to endure recurring attacks that claim more lives than the Paris attack, and western media hardly mention it. Brown-skinned and distant, those victims do not quite count…

    “Terror suspect ‘planned attack in Stockholm’ http://www.thelocal.se/20151119/sweden-terror-suspect-held-after-police-raid
    Boliden -where he and others were arrested- is a small town not far from the village where my mom grew up. Not smart to hide in a place with only 1600 inhabitants where you inevitably will be spotted by someone watching TV.
    The media coverage here has been a bit overwhelming, to put it politely.

    But I assume we are all a bit parochial in how we react to news.
    “Islamo-Nazis detonate atom bomb, flatten Gothenburg”. Meh, it is south of the Dala River so no skin off my nose. Besides those odd southerners just dance around palm trees and eat missionaries all day long, good riddance.
    “Global warming makes sea flood Stockholm!” –Schadenfreude time! The post-glacial recoil will raise the land here in the north faster than the seas can rise, besides, the Stockholm-based lumber companies scammed all the people in the north of their timber in the 19th century, so f*ck them!

    “Asteroid injures reindeer”. Now it is time for headlines! That Erickson feller would be right, provided he had been talking about asteroids instead of terrorists, and been concerned about Arctic mammals instead of movies.