Police were calling it a scene of mass casualties in Florida when the thought crossed my mind for the first time: “What if this lone shooter turns out to be a Muslim?”
Hours later, when it was confirmed he had killed 50 people before being shot dead in an operation, the attacker’s identity was revealed as Omar Mateen — born to Afghan immigrants in the United States.
“The shooter has won Donald Trump the presidency,” I said to a friend as I read bits and pieces of his profile.
How?
Trump has made no qualms about it. Radical Islamism is the problem, he asserts, and has very clearly mapped out a solution for his voters — which is not only easy to understand but also speaks to Americans.
Here’s a man who thinks in binaries — black and white — and his solution is exactly that. He proposed it right after the California shooting. And, he’s fine-tuned it right after the Orlando shooting.
His 'solution' of enforcing a blanket ban on US entry for Muslims who hail from areas with “proven history of terrorism, until we figure out how to deal with this threat [of radical Islamism]” has perhaps begun to strike a chord with many Americans.
Hillary Clinton has so far been the sane man’s favourite — both inside and outside the US. Up until the Orlando massacre, she had actively refrained from referring to radical Islam as the problem, and with good reason too.
Because once you pin the blame on radical Islamism, the next logical step would be to find the line between radical Islamism and non-radical Islamism — and then to differentiate between a radicalised and a non-radicalised Muslim — which can be problematic because these definitions are subjective; they mean different things to different people.
Clinton has continuously warned against demonising American Muslims. Yet, she may have ended up doing exactly that when she said: “We can call it [the Orlando shooting] radical Islamism.”
Not only did the shooting force Hillary to take a U-turn of sorts, this concession came just a day after Trump said: “If Hillary Clinton, after this attack, still cannot say the two words ‘Radical Islam’ she should get out of this race for the presidency.”
She obliged the next day. Perhaps not having done so would have made her look bad, which is an indication of public sentiment that becomes increasingly critical in the run-up to voting day. This, after she had refused to use these words to describe the California shooting.