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Racists use “the facts” as cover for their bigotry

Deploying “facts” to justify and excuse hatred against minorities is often the favoured tactic of the far-right, yet when it comes to Jews, in steps the far left

November 15, 2024 09:44
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A headstone for George Floyd in the "Say Their Names" cemetery at George Floyd Square (Getty Images)
2 min read

Did you know that George Floyd was a criminal? In fact, Floyd had been to prison multiple times for a range of offences, the most serious being a violent robbery in which he held a woman at gunpoint in her apartment during an armed robbery. Drug offences, robbery, trespassing – this was George Floyd’s past, these are facts.

These facts were the favoured talking points of American white supremacists following Floyd’s now infamous murder at the hands of a Minneapolis police officer. For all intents and purposes, these weren’t lies – they were and are facts. However, the repeated promotion of these “facts” was widely understood to be a concerted attempt by anti-black racists to justify Floyd’s murder and to divert conversation away from the very serious and real problem of systemic anti-black racism and police brutality in the US.

Did you also know that in England, attacks on Muslim communities in certain parts of the country have been based on the fact that there have been multiple grooming scandals involving predominantly Muslim men? A report for the Institute for Strategic Dialogue stated that “Cases of ‘grooming gangs’ in the UK attributed to the perpetrators’ Pakistani heritage…has served as mobilisation for various demonstrations, as well as the foundation for violent attacks against Muslims”. You’ll often hear far-right bigots justifying attacks on Mosques or Muslim women by citing the “fact” that Muslim men have engaged in child sexual abuse.

Indeed, in medieval England the allegation that Jews engaged in coin clipping was often the basis for antisemitic violence and persecution. Was it happening? In many cases, yes – it was a fact. But it was also being done by Christians and was a widespread practice of the time.