By Scott Taylor

Last Thursday’s deadly attack in London was a shocking act of violence resulting in five deaths and 50 innocent bystanders being injured along the famous Westminster Bridge and on the grounds of the British Parliament Buildings. It was also immediately deemed an act of terrorism and the Western world sent messages of solidarity to Britain in our common fight against radical Islam.

The weapons employed by Khalid Masood were nothing more than a rental van, a knife and his own fanatical beliefs. Masood drove through a crowd of pedestrians on the famous bridge and was in the process of stabbing a policeman to death when he was fatally shot by Metropolitan Police close protection officers.

In the hours following the tragedy, Daesh evildoers (aka ISIS or ISIL) announced that Masood was acting upon their recent call for radicalized Muslims to rise up in Western countries. There is no evidence that Masood was an actual Daesh foot soldier or that he ever had direct contact with that group, but Daesh’s claim of responsibility for the attack was good enough for the media to grant them what they sought: To spread the unfounded myth that Daesh is everywhere and able to strike us on home soil at any time.

For the record, Khalid Masood was born in Britain in 1964 and the name on his birth certificate is Adrian Russell Ajao. At the age of 19 he embarked upon a lifetime of violent crime, and it was while in prison that he converted to Islam. He is the quintessential homegrown nut job who just proved to us once again that no matter what security measures we take against terrorism, there is no possible defence against suicidal attackers using such common items as a car and a knife to kill unsuspecting civilians.

Since Masood ended up being gunned down in front of the Parliament Buildings, Canadians naturally drew a parallel to the October 22, 2014 attack in Ottawa by homegrown terrorist Michael Zehaf-Bibeau. Like Masood, Zehaf-Bibeau a the lifetime criminal and drug addict who shot and killed Corporal Nathan Cirillo at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier memorial before launching his solo charge into the Parliament Buildings. Like Masood, Zehaf-Bibeau was gunned down by security guards. There was no evidence that Zehaf-Bibeau had ever been in direct contact with Daesh, and even those evildoers claimed only that their movement had “inspired” the suicidal rampage of violence in Ottawa.

That incident was nonetheless rightfully declared an act of terrorism, as was the deliberate vehicular manslaughter of a Canadian soldier, Warrant Officer Patrice Vincent, in Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu two days prior to Zehaf-Bibeau’s attack.

That particular attack was also perpetrated by a homegrown nut job, Martin Couture-Rouleau, who had tried to head to the Middle East to join Daesh but who was instead stopped by Canadian authorities. After killing Vincent and injuring another soldier with his car, Couture-Rouleau was involved in a high-speed chase with Quebec police. After losing control of his vehicle and rolling into a ditch, Couture-Rouleau was shot seven times as he exited the damaged car.

The standard line in labelling those two incidents as ‘acts of terror’ was that Cpl Cirillo and WO Vincent were targeted because of the uniform they wore and, in turn, what that uniform symbolizes.