“Solidarity and anger. Those were my immediate emotions.” So I wrote three years ago after Islamist gunmen wreaked carnage on the streets of Paris. And they were my immediate emotions – indeed of most people, I assume – on hearing of the horror in Christchurch, New Zealand.
“Beyond solidarity and anger,” I added, “we need also analysis.” That’s even truer after Christchurch. The issues raised by the barbarous terror are many and urgent – the rise of the far right and how to combat it; how mainstream commentators talk of Muslims and immigration and whiteness; the boundaries of free speech; the regulation of social media. And so on. I will no doubt have my say on these issues in the coming days.
The rawness of anger inevitably clouds judgment. The grammar of social media inexorably leads to polarised confrontation
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