Feature, Musings —01.01.2025 04:03 PM
—My latest: the enemy within
Texas born and raised. All-American.
U.S. Army veteran, too, and a member of the Army Reserve. Senior Information Management Officer in the Army. Army team leader and human resources supervisor. Member of Army Corps of Engineers. Honors graduate. U.S. Army combat training. And on and on.
How did Shamsud-Din Jabbar go from all that, from serving under the American flag, to murdering ten people under the ISIS flag? How did he decide he would kill innocent New Year’s revellers with a rented truck in New Orleans in the early hours of 2025? How did he reach that point?
Those are questions that will be asked many times in the days ahead. Answers are so far elusive. Jabbar’s act of mass-murder happened just hours ago, so we don’t know yet the names of the web sites the “Senior Information Management Officer” was frequenting. But we can hazard a guess.
They are likely the same web sites and social media platforms favoured by the masked figures who have shot up and firebombed synangogues and Jewish schools multiple times in Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver in the past year. They all use the same source material, after all. The only qualitative difference is that Shamsud-Din Jabbar was much more effective at spilling blood than his fellow monsters up here.
Now, this writer does not ever profile mass-murderers, or even name them. The victims are the ones who deserve to be remembered, not their executioners.
But like Timothy McVeigh before him – another medalled U.S. Army veteran, who would go on to murder 168 men, women and children in Oklahoma City in April 1995 – Jabbar became radicalized somewhere along the way. And, like McVeigh, he was an American who had sworn allegiance with these words: “I do solemnly swear that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic; that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same.”
So how did Shamsud-Din Jabbar, having sworn an oath to defend the United States against all enemies, become one himself?
The Internet, almost certainly, will be the reason. Because the Internet – social media platforms, mostly, but also old-fashioned Internet platforms, like YouTube or web sites – have been the recruitment office for Islamist terror groups for a generation. From al-Qaeda to ISIS to Hamas and Hezbollah and back to ISIS again: the Internet has provided terrorists – McVeigh’s neo-Nazis and Jabbar’s Islamists – with an abundant source of funds, recruits and public relations muscle.
Al-Qaeda, ISIS and Hamas don’t merely use Internet platforms – they actually are Internet platforms themselves. On TikTok, X, Facebook, Instagram, Telegram, Discord and many other variants, Islamic terrorists address two distinct audiences. One is found in the West, and they use horrifying images – Hamas slaughtering 1,200 Israelis on October 7, 2023, or al-Qaeda slaughtering 3,000 people on September 11, 2001 – to terrorize us, often in English with slick production values.
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https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/tesla-cybertruck-explosion-trump-hotel-las-vegas-1.7421476 supposedly rented from the same place. Connected? who knows.
Yet that didn’t stop the Mango Mussolini from quickly issuing a statement on Truth Social (the most ironically-named website in the world), right after the New Orleans incident, claiming that it proved he was right all along about “…criminals coming in are far worse than criminals we have in our country…”
Just like the people-eating-pets nonsense during the debate, this sort of thing appeals to simple-minded voters who don’t really want to think about much other than what their Dear Leader tells them.