U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May has called forgreater    regulation of the Internetto combat the growing    threat of Islamist extremism.Addressing the public after    the latest attack on Londonthe third act of Islamist terrorism    in the U.K. this yearMay rightly placed blame for the string    of recent attacks on the evil ideology of Islamist extremism.  
    Defeating this ideology is one of the great challenges of our    time, she said. But it cannot be defeated by military    intervention alone. It will only be defeated when we turn    peoples minds away from this violence and make them understand    that our valuespluralistic British valuesare superior to    anything offered by the preachers and supporters of hate.  
    To combat this evil ideology, May has proposed greater    regulation of the internet, imposed through international    agreements, in order to prevent the spread of extremist and    terrorism planning.  
    We cannot allow this ideology the safe space it needs to    breed, May said. Yet that is precisely what the internet, and    the big companies that provide Internet-based services    provide.  
    May is yet to outline the details of her proposal. But    ifinitial    reportsare anything to go by, it is likely to include    laws forcing companies to weaken their encryption    standardsmaking all online data less secureas well as a push    for new international agreements that require internet    companies to deny a platform to extremist propaganda. In other    words, it will be nothing short of a China-style regime of    internet censorshipa comparison May hasdeclined    to refute.  
    This proposal has alreadygained    the supportof Australian Prime Minister, Malcolm    Turnbull, after Australia suffered its own small attackon    Monday, when a lone gunmanclaimed    as a soldier of ISISkilled one man and took a women    hostage.The idea is also likely to gain support from    President Trump, who called for closing that Internet up in    some way,during    his campaign.  
    It is good to see a western political leader facing up to the    challenge posed by Islamist ideology. But increased internet    censorship is not the solution to this problem. It will only    make the problem harder to combat by infringing on legitimate    speech, pushing the problem further underground, and leaving    the real-life safe spaces untouched.  
    The internet safe space argument is compelling. Its    undeniable that groups like ISIS devote considerable resources    to online propaganda, and have motivated people in the west to    both join them and to carry out attacks in their homelands.    People are right to worry about lone wolves being radicalized    on the internet.  
    But this doesnt describe the perpetrators of the last three    attacks in the U.K., most of whom were already known to the    police. Nor does it describe the Australian terrorist, who not    only had a history of violence and connections to terrorism,    but was out on bail at the time of the attack.  
    More importantly, it ignores the far greater problem of the    safe spaces Islamist extremism benefits from in the real    world.For too long terrorist attacks have been met with    little more than stoic sympathy and willful blindness, as    leaders deny that repeated attacks are anything more than the    actions of a few maniacs, with no discernible connection to the    religion of Islam.  
    On the one hand, its understandable for political leaders not    to want to ascribe blame to the wider Muslim community, the    vast majority of whom have nothing whatsoever to do with the    barbarism carried out in the name of their religion.  
    On the other hand, this approach has only exacerbated the    problem by insulating the Muslim communityand therefore    Islamismfrom the sort of criticism that all other groups in    western societies are subjected to. In many European countries,    this bigotry of low expectations has led to the development of    entire suburbs that are de-facto no-go zonesareas of a city    that are completely disconnected from wider society, where its    dangerous for any non-Muslims to enter.  
    A prime example is the area of Molenbeek, in Belgium, where an    alleged participant in theNovember 13Paris attacks    (which left 130 people dead and 368 wounded) wasable    to hide outfor nearly four months, despite being the    most wanted man in Europe.Theres nowhere as bad as    Molenbeek in the U.K., but the British Muslim community has    nevertheless been afforded the kind of protection from    criticism that no other community enjoys.  
    The harm caused by this insidious political correctness was    highlighted in 2014, when anindependent    inquiryfound that police, community leaders, and    local politicians had systematically failed to prevent the    sexual exploitation of 1,400 children between 1997 and 2013a    figure described as a conservative estimatein the    north-England town of Rotherham (population 257,000).  
    The reason blamed for this failure was thefear    of being accused of racism, since these so-called grooming    gangs were mostly made up of Muslims of Pakistani origin. Even    when the crimes were eventually reported, the perpetrators were    described as mostly Asian men, rather than as Muslims.  
    It obviously goes without saying that these appalling crimes    are not the fault of all British Muslims, most of whom would be    horrified by such behavior. Nevertheless, it highlights the    failure of British society to hold the Muslim community to the    same standards as everyone else.  
    Its undeniable that appallingly illiberal views have been    allowed to persist in the British Muslim community. In    a2015    pollof 1,000 British Muslim, 27 percent said they    have some sympathy for the Charlie Hebdo attacks in Paris.    Anadditional    2016 pollfound that two out of three British Muslims    would not report someone they knew to the police, if they    became involved with terrorist sympathizers. These sentiments    arent new. A2006    pollfound that 20 percent of British Muslism had    sympathy for the motivations of the London bombings of July 7,    2005 (which left 52 people dead and784injured).  
    Its unlikely that these attitudes, which are alarmingly out of    step with the rest of British society, would still exist if not    for their safe spaces, created by the taboo on    criticism of Islam. The first step to combating Islamist    extremism is to remove this taboo.  
    Not only will increasing internet censorship do nothing to    remove the safe-spaces that exist in the real world, it may    even make the problem worse.  
    There is simply no way to completely censor anything in the    internet age. All states can do is push ideas and discussions    further underground, where the ideas are harder to combat and    where it is harder for intelligence services to keep track of    thema point stressed by the U.K.s leading digital advocacy    organization, theOpen    Rights Group.  
    There is also a long track record of anti-free speech    lawsdesigned to protect the public from harmful speechbeing    used suppress discussion of important issues, simply because    they are controversial and may offend some people.In    2016, Dutch politician Geert Wilders wasfound    guiltyof violating Hate Speech laws for comments he    made in 2014 that were demeaning and thereby insulting towards    the Moroccan population. Wilders had asked a roomful of his    supporter if they wanted to have more or fewer Moroccans in    the country. When the crowd shouted back Fewer! he replied,    Well, well take care of that.  
    In the recentMarch 15election, Wilders party got    over 1.3 million votes (13.6 percent), so he clearly represents    a significant proportion of the Dutch population. He would not    have this support if the issues he talks about didnt resonate    with the public. Ironically, these are the same issues that    Mays proposal is attempting to addressnamely, the spread of    radical Islamism.  
    People might disagree with the solutions Wilders proposes, but    this is not the way to combat unwanted ideas. No one is served    when we collectively decide to stick our heads in the sand. The    problem will not magically disappear.  
    There is every reason to expect that Mays internet censorship    proposal will also be used to suppress more than just Islamist    propaganda. Perhaps the best evidence of this is a private    conversation between German Chancellor, Angela Merkel, and    Facebook CEO, Mark Zuckerberg, which waspicked    up by a hot micin 2015. Merkel was    overheardasking Zuckerberg what he was doing about    anti-immigrant posts on Facebook. Zuckerbergs response was,    We need to do some work. Make no mistake, this was nothing    short of an attempt to reduce opposition to Merkels    unprecedented decision to open Germanys borders to a seemingly    unlimited number of refugees and migrants from the Middle East    and North Africa.  
    Mays internet censorship proposal will create the    infrastructure for politicians like Merkel to not just ask    internet companies to act, but demand it.  
    Several European countries introduced Hate Speech laws in order    to prevent the sort of anti-Semitism that led to the Holocaust.    However, not only have these laws failed to eradicate    anti-Semitism, it is now widely reported to be on the rise    throughout Europe. The situation has gotten so bad, some people    are now discussing whether itstime    for the Jews to leave Europe, for good.  
    The situation could not be more different in the United States,    which has become arguably the safest country for Jews on earth.    The U.S. is also significantly better than Europe at    integrating its immigrant population, including its Muslim    population. This is because of the First Amendment, which helps    ensure the existence of a vibrant and robust marketplace of    ideas in which extremist propaganda can be combatted. This is    an important lesson for western societies to learn: Free speech    is the best way to combat unwanted ideas.  
    The western world needs to combat the ideology of radical    Islamism. But this is only possible if we can openly discuss    issues, free from the kind of politically correct taboos that    have insulated the Muslim community. Mays internet censorship    proposal will only make this more difficult.  
  Patrick Hannaford is an Australian writer based in Washington DC.
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Why Censoring The Internet Would Make It Harder To Fight Terrorism - The Federalist