Breivik
Blaming victims, individuals or social structures?
When the Swedish politician Erik Hellsborn of the rather xenophobic Sweden Democrats party blogged that the massacre in Norway was really due to mass immigration and islamization that had driven the killer to extremes (link in Swedish), he of course set himself up for a harsh reprimand from the party chairman Jimmie Åkesson: “I do not share this analysis at all. One cannot blame individual human actions on social structures like this.”
While it is certainly politically rational for the party to try to distance themselves as far as they can from the mass-murderer Breivik (who mentioned them positively by name in his manifesto) this is of course a rather clear deviation from many previous comments from the party that do indeed seem to blame bad actions by people, such as terrorism, as due to Islam or other (foreign) social structures.
It is of course always enjoyable to see political movements you disagree with struggle with their internal contradictions. But this is an area where most of us do have problems: how much of the responsibility of an action do we assign to the individual doing it, and how much do we assign to the group the person belongs to?
Recent Posts
- Guest Post: High Risk, Low Reward: A Challenge to the Astronomical Value of Existential Risk Mitigation
- The Daft Discussion of Dangerous Dogs
- Perceptual diversity and philosophical belief
- From Experience to Insight – the Personal Dimension of Philosophy
- Video Interview: Introducing Academic Visitor Dr María de Jesús Medina Arellano
Recent Comments