Sweden, immigrants and Trump’s post-Enlightenment world
Sweden,
immigrants and Trump’s post-Enlightenment world
By Anne Applebaum
Taken from: The Washington Post
The Enlightenment
belief that we can know and understand reality — that we can measure it, weigh
it, judge it, use reason to explain it — underlies all of the achievements of
Western civilization, from the scientific revolution to the Industrial Revolution
to democracy itself. Ever since René Descartes asked himself how it was
possible to know that melting wax is the same thing as a candle, we have
believed that reason, not mythology, sensibility, emotion or instinct, provides
a superior way to understand the world. But is that still true?
If the strange
case of Sweden and its immigrants is anything to go by, then the answer is
probably no. This odd story began last month, when President Trump began
ranting, memorably, about dangerous immigrants at a rally in Florida: “You look
at what’s happening last night, in Sweden! Sweden! Who would believe this,
Sweden!” The following morning, puzzled Swedes woke up to find the world’s
media asking them what, actually, had happened last night. The answer — other
than some road closures — was nothing.
In an
Enlightenment world, that would have been the end of the story. In our
post-Enlightenment world, things got more complicated. Trump explained that
what he had seen “last night” was not a terrorist attack — though that was
certainly implied in his speech — but a filmmaker named Ami Horowitz who was
interviewed by Tucker Carlson on Fox News. The interview was indeed terrifying:
For those unfamiliar with the techniques of emotional manipulation — and they
are the same, whether used by Fox News or Russia Today — it should be mandatory
viewing. As the two were speaking, a clip of an aggressive, brown-skinned man
hitting a policeman, presumably in Sweden, alternated in the background, over
and over, with a clip of a burning car. The repetitive, frightening images were
bolstered by more clips from Horowitz’s film, in which Swedish police officers
appeared to be confirming a massive rise in crime linked to immigration.
Carlson, meanwhile, marveled at the stupidity and naivete of the Swedish nation
helpless to confront this menace. No wonder the president was upset.
But the next day,
the Swedish police officers protested: Horowitz had never asked them about
immigration, and had cut their interviews to make it seem as if they were
answering different questions. Moreover, while Sweden did — generously and
admirably — accept 160,000 refugees in 2015, and while there are genuine
problems absorbing and acculturating them, Swedish crime rates remain low,
particularly if you compare them with crime rates in, say, Florida.
A faked film had
inspired the president to cite an imaginary crisis — but the story didn’t end
there.
A few days later,
searching for a way to justify the president’s language, another Fox News
journalist, Bill O’Reilly, interviewed a “Swedish defense and national security
advisor” called Nils Bildt, who again repeated the allegation that naive Swedes
are overwhelmed by foreign crime. But Nils “Bildt” turned out to be Nils
Tolling — he may have taken the name Bildt to sound like a relative of the
Swedish former prime minister Carl Bildt — and he too was not quite what he
seemed. Tolling does not live in Sweden, is not an “advisor” to anyone and is
reportedly himself a criminal immigrant , having been convicted of a violent
offense in the state of Virginia.
A faked film had
inspired the president to cite an imaginary crisis, the existence of which was
confirmed by a fake expert — and the story didn’t end there either.
A few days later,
a Danish news team visited a Swedish immigrant neighborhood to investigate the
alleged crisis — the same neighborhood where an American journalist claimed he
had been escorted out by police, a report which the police once again deny. The
Danes met a group of young immigrants who said they had just been approached by
yet another news team — that one from Russia — who asked if they would riot on
camera, for money. Like Carlson and O’Reilly, the Russian team was apparently
keen to make reality fit the president’s description of reality, even if it
cost them a few Swedish krone.
And so: A faked film
inspired the president to cite an imaginary crisis, the existence of which was
confirmed by a fake expert — and which now inspired another television team to
try to create a real crisis using real people (in a neighborhood crawling with
both real and fake journalists) to make it all seem true.
All of this leaves
viewers, and voters, in a difficult place. Sooner or later there will be actual
violence in response to an imaginary crisis. Sooner or later, a Swedish suburb
or an American city will erupt because someone needs it to erupt to justify a
demagogue’s speech. But will it be “real” violence or fake? Sooner or later, we
won’t know the difference at all.



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