trouble in paradise(s)

Posted October 9, 2007 on 2:05 am | In the category Uncategorized, Immigration, Europe | by Mackenzie Brothers

The ever more violent clashes between far right and far left political groups in Europe erupted in a most unexpected place on the weekend, Bern, the capital of Switzerland, which would probably win a popularity poll searching out the most peaceful place in Europe. But for anyone paying attention to the growing animosity between those in favour of a multicultural/multiethnic Europe reflecting the concept of free movement and settlement of people across borders, and those defending the idea that a piece of land occupied for millennia by a specific linguistic (and often ethnic) group should remain the domain of that group, this should not have been such a surprise. Switzerland has always had a strong nationalistic wing determined to keep Switzerland as Swiss as Wilhelm Tell would have liked it, and it is not only in recent years that there has been a strong far right party, which now however forms the largest party in the Swiss parliament.
The latest clashes took place when masked far left left wing demonstrators stopped a political march by 10,000 members of the arch-conservative Swiss Peoples Party under its leader, Switzerland’s finance minister Christoph Blocher. In the ensuing riots, 17 policeman were injured, some of them seriously, store windows were smashed, cars set on fire and dozens of protesters arrested. My brother and I have come up with a theory about the rise of big right wing parties in western Europe that are opposed to much immigration, namely that they are growing by leaps and bounds in small countries, where many citizens are afraid that their old national qualities will be threatened by immigrant groups preaching new religions, speaking exotic languages and demanding different social codes. Denmark, Belgium, the Netherlands, Switzerland, and Austria are all western European societies with long histories and short borders and they have all spawned far right parties with broad popular support drawing on the fears of large-scale immigration. It’s true that some larger countries, France comes quickly to mind, have had serious flirtations with such groups as well, but they seem to be able to swallow them up much more easily into moderately conservative parties than can those small nations who consider themselves under immediate threat.

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  1. The great 20th century satirist Tom Lehrer, once wrote a song entitled Who\’s Next. This song deals with which country will get a nuclear bomb next. One could paraphrase Lehrer\’s song and apply it to the situation in Switzerland. Which traditionally non-extremist country will be next to have issues with immigrants? Lichtenstein, Luxembourg or maybe even Vatican city? Switzerland, though famously neutral for hundreds of years, was no saint during WW2. Money,artifacts and works of art which were stolen by The Nazis were stored in Swiss banks and other buildings. Why is it that Switzerland is now showing signs of unrest? Could it be that these signs were always there, lurking beneath the surface? The Netherlands which is now one of the most liberal and tolerant countries in the world, during WW2 had its own Nazi party and had the highest numbers of volunteers for The Waffen SS. What does this tell us? It tells us that no Country is immune from the uglyness of racism . \”Who\’s Next\” indeed.

    Comment by preacher992 — October 9, 2007 #

  2. The Preacher hits the mark with his reference to Tom Lehrer, and mirrors the master when he suggests that Vatican city might be next. (Lehrer suggested that Alabama would be the Endstation, so to speak.) North America’s global paper, the Globe and Mail, has a lengthy article in the weekend edition covering the situation in Switzerland with pretty much the same light as the Preacher

    Comment by Mackenzie Brothers — October 16, 2007 #

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