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Thread: Congressional Hearings on American Muslims

  1. #16

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    Quote Originally Posted by ZippyTheChimp View Post
    What would that be?

    Seems to me that the message here usually leads to this.
    Because idiots (those protesters) take an issue and run with it...and use it for their own agenda does not mean that there cannot be...or should not be ... discussion.

    The article that Infoshare posted is excellent. Must there be a gag order...censorship... on the subject?
    Last edited by Fabrizio; March 7th, 2011 at 10:16 AM. Reason: clarity

  2. #17
    Disgruntled Optimist lofter1's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by ablarc View Post
    The video is repulsive, but infoshare has posted a level-headed antidote above.
    The crux of that antidote is found in the reply from Mr. Sina:

    A great number of Muslims realize there is something wrong with Islam, but they erroneously believe the problem can be solved through the miracle of reinterpretation ...

    Islam cannot be reformed. But it can be eradicated. Reforming Islam means adding more lies to lies. For how long this huge edifice of lies can support itself?

    ... You and I must not attempt resuscitating Islam. On the contrary, we must hammer a stake into its heart and make sure it never raises its head again. This beast was a bloodsucking monster from the start.

    Level-headed indeed.

  3. #18

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    LOL.

    Forgive me Father for I have sinned: that's what happens when you don't read down far enough.

    I got to "Nonetheless, the Jesus of the Bible is a saintly figure. He is the embodiment of goodness. So if you don’t mind believing in fairytales, Christianity can make you a good person." Sounded pretty levelheaded to me.

    But even so... if the authour had said that Christianity was a bloodsucking monster from the start... would it bother anyone here?

  4. #19

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    Quote Originally Posted by lofter1 View Post
    The crux of that antidote is found in the reply from Mr. Sina:
    That's it exactly.

    I said way back in the Cordoba thread that this would happen, that anger would be directed at all Muslims; in effect not only ignoring the actual problem, but fueling its spread. It's easy to direct your rage at people who you perceive to be fundamentally different [inferior]. That's the message of that webpage, under the guise of reasonable discussion.

    It's what happened to Japanese-Americans and aliens during WWII. Internment was done under the pretense of national security, but the actual threat was ignored. There was a Japanese spy network in Hawaii at the time, but it was impractical to confine a large percentage of the population. So it was done on the West Coast, where there was widespread resentment of Japanese, who had taken American jobs. The country had endured a Depression, not unlike now.

  5. #20

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    Now here's an antidote.

    Take my Koran please.....!


  6. #21

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    Quote Originally Posted by ZippyTheChimp View Post
    Seems to me that the message here usually leads to this.
    Nonsense.

    That simply tells me you didn't read the link.

    Can it be beneath you?

  7. #22

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    ^
    Actually, it seems you didn't read it...all of it.

    EDIT: Or maybe not even the rest of the thread?
    Last edited by ZippyTheChimp; March 7th, 2011 at 11:16 AM.

  8. #23
    Disgruntled Optimist lofter1's Avatar
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    White House Seeks to Allay Muslims’ Fears on Terror Hearings

    NY TIMES
    By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG
    March 6, 2011

    STERLING, Va. — As a Republican congressman prepares to open hearings on the threat of homegrown Islamic terrorism, President Obama’s deputy national security adviser visited a mosque here on Sunday to reassure Muslims that “we will not stigmatize or demonize entire communities because of the actions of a few.”

    The White House billed the speech by the adviser, Denis McDonough, as a chance for the administration to lay out its strategy for preventing violent extremism. But the timing was no accident; Mr. McDonough was in effect an emissary from the White House to pre-empt Representative Peter King of New York, the Homeland Security Committee chairman, who has promised a series of hearings beginning Thursday on the radicalization of American Muslims.

    “In the United States of America, we don’t practice guilt by association,” Mr. McDonough told an interfaith but mostly Muslim audience of about 200 here at the All Dulles Area Muslim Society, known as the Adams Center. “And let’s remember that just as violence and extremism are not unique to any one faith, the responsibility to oppose ignorance and violence rests with us all.”

    Mr. McDonough made no explicit mention of the hearings or Mr. King. But his speech came on a day when the back-and-forth over Mr. King’s plans crescendoed, from the airwaves of Washington’s Sunday morning talk shows to the streets of Manhattan to this northern Virginia suburb, an area packed with Muslim professionals, many of whom are extremely wary of Mr. King and his plans.

    In Washington, Mr. King, who represents parts of Long Island, faced off on CNN with Representative Keith Ellison, a Minnesota Democrat and one of only two Muslims in Congress. Mr. Ellison said he would testify at Mr. King’s hearing on Thursday despite his deep conviction that it was wrong for Congress to investigate a particular religious minority.

    In New York, 500 people demonstrated near Times Square to protest the hearings and to call on Mr. King to expand his witness list to include other groups.

    “That’s absolute nonsense,” Mr. King said in a telephone interview, adding that Al Qaeda was trying to radicalize Muslims and that its effort was the leading homegrown terrorism threat.

    “The threat is coming from the Muslim community,” he said, “the radicalization attempts are directed at the Muslim community. Why should I investigate other communities?”

    As the Times Square demonstrators held up placards declaring “Today I am a Muslim too,” Rabbi Marc Schneier, president of the Foundation for Ethnic Understanding, and Feisal Abdul Rauf, the imam who is a co-founder of a project to develop an Islamic community center and mosque near ground zero, addressed the crowd.

    “To single out Muslim Americans as the source of homegrown terrorism and not examine all forms of violence motivated by extremist belief — that, my friends, is an injustice,” Rabbi Schneier said.

    Mr. King and Mr. McDonough each took pains on Sunday to say that he had no quarrel with the other. “We welcome any involvement in the issue,” Mr. McDonough said of the hearings. “It’s an important issue.”

    Mr. King said that he and Mr. McDonough had spoken recently and that he did not disagree with any element of Mr. McDonough’s speech at the mosque.

    For weeks, Muslims have been expressing deep anxiety over the hearings, which Mr. King has titled “The Extent of Radicalization in the American Muslim Community and That Community’s Response.”

    He said witnesses would include Mr. Ellison; Representative Frank R. Wolf, Republican of Virginia; and Zudhi Jasser, a Phoenix physician and founder of the American Islamic Forum for Democracy. (Dr. Jasser made headlines last year when he was publicly critical of Mr. Obama’s statement supporting Muslims’ right to build a mosque and Islamic center near ground zero.)

    In addition, Mr. King said on Sunday that he would call as witnesses two relatives of people who had been radicalized. He would not name them, but said that one had a nephew who was murdered and that the other had a son who committed “horrible crimes.” He said they would detail “how this happened, what it did to their families, what it did to the community, how this originated in mosques.”

    The congressman said additional hearings — he is not certain how many there will be — would most likely focus on topics like radicalization in prisons and the flow of foreign money into mosques. But because Mr. King has not been specific about his plans, rumors are swirling.

    “Everybody I talk to worries about it,” Mr. Ellison said during his Sunday morning appearance with Mr. King on “State of the Union” on CNN. He added, “It’s absolutely the right thing to do for the chairman of the Homeland Security Committee to investigate radicalization, but to say we’re going to investigate a — a religious minority and a particular one, I think, is the wrong course of action to take.”

    Yet for many Muslim leaders, the initial outrage and fear is giving way to a determination to participate in the testimony and shape the outcome. Rizwan Jaka, a board member of the Adams Center here, said leaders of mainstream mosques were eager to testify about their cooperation with law enforcement.

    “We’re ready to dialogue,” Mr. Jaka said. “We feel that we want to make sure we are part of the solution.”

    Many counterterrorism officials say maintaining the trust of American Muslims is critical to attracting tips and foiling plots.

    Republicans have accused the Obama administration of ignoring the Islamic nature of terrorism by preferring terms like “violent extremism,” a term that Mr. McDonough used frequently in Sunday’s speech.

    “We have a choice,” Mr. McDonough said. “We can choose to send a message to certain Americans that they are somehow ‘less American’ because of their faith or how they look.”

    “If we make that choice,” he added, “we risk feeding the very feelings of disenchantment that may push some members of that community to violent extremism.”

    Mr. Obama has said from the outset of his presidency that he wants to reach out to Muslims; during a major speech in Cairo in June 2009, he called for a “new beginning” with the Muslim world. But the decision to weigh in at this moment — days before Mr. King’s hearings — is a tricky one for a president. Many Americans erroneously believe that Mr. Obama is Muslim (he is Christian), and he seems to generate controversy whenever he dips into such waters, as with the Manhattan mosque last year.

    Mr. Jaka, of the Adams Center, said the White House had asked whether Mr. McDonough could come to deliver the administration’s message. Sunday’s event, in a brightly lighted gymnasium, was rife with interfaith symbolism; it began with a color guard ceremony led by Boy Scouts, followed by the Pledge of Allegiance and a reading from the Koran.

    Mr. McDonough opened his speech by talking about his own Roman Catholic roots; his parents had 11 children, one of whom is now a priest.

    “The bottom line is this,” Mr. McDonough said. “When it comes to preventing violent extremism and terrorism in the United States, Muslim Americans are not part of the problem, you’re part of the solution.”

    Joseph Berger contributed reporting from New York.

    This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

    Correction: March 7, 2011

    An earlier version of this article mistakenly referred to Representative Keith Ellison as the only Muslim in Congress. There is another, Representative André Carson of Indiana.

    © 2011 The New York Times Company

  9. #24
    Disgruntled Optimist lofter1's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by lofter1 View Post

    ... the reply from Mr. Sina:

    Islam cannot be reformed. But it can be eradicated.
    Imagine a World Without Islam

    THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
    The Informed Reader Blog

    By Robin Moroney
    JANUARY 3, 2008

    What would the world be like without Islam? No clash of civilizations? No 9/11? No holy wars?

    Actually, all of these events would likely have occurred, says Graham Fuller, a professor of history at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, British Columbia, and a former long-range forecaster for the Central Intelligence Agency. Take away Islam, and the world would still be left with the main forces that drive today’s conflicts, including colonialism, cross-national ideologies, ethnic conflicts and terrorism, says Mr. Fuller in Foreign Policy.

    Mr. Fuller ponders a litany of history’s major battles to drive home his message that while Islam might be a convenient culprit, but global strife, past and present, can’t be blamed on any one religion. Europeans would still have wanted the spoils of the Middle East and launched the Crusades, he says, albeit under a different banner. The West still would have tried various ways to get control of oil-rich areas. The French would still have gone into Algeria for its farm lands. The creation of Israel would still have displaced Palestinians, no matter what their religion.

    The inhabitants of the Middle East wouldn’t be more comfortable with these events if they belonged to Eastern Orthodox Christianity, the Middle East’s predominant religion when Mohammed arrived. In fact, a religious fissure between Western Europe and the Middle East would probably still exist, says Mr. Fuller, noting that Eastern Orthodox Christianity has an anti-Western narrative of its own dating back to the sacking of Constantinople in 1204.

    True, without Islam, the people of the Middle East would lack a powerful, cross-border unifying force that sometimes is co-opted by a small number of people inclined toward violence. But the Middle East would have access to similar forces, such as Marxism or ethnic nationalism, that have served that purpose in other parts of the world. Indeed, in 2006, the European police force Europol said that only one of the 498 terrorist acts in the European Union was Islamist. The rest were largely committed by separatist and left-wing groups.

    Copyright © 2011 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

  10. #25
    Chief Antagonist Ninjahedge's Avatar
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    It's not about Catholics... it's about the people in charge.
    That is what I said. You really like to start fights.

    Since when are "the people in charge" not the ones with power in the ranks? Not the "rank and file" mind you, but in the "Ranks" of the administrative and religious staff?

    Not all statements are in contradiction to yours.

    I was agreeing with you ya numbskull. (And disagreeing with your 'OTOH' statement after that)

    So who needs work on Comprehension?

  11. #26
    Chief Antagonist Ninjahedge's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by lofter1 View Post
    would still be left with the main forces that drive today’s conflicts[/URL], including colonialism, cross-national ideologies, ethnic conflicts and terrorism[/B], says Mr. Fuller in Foreign Policy.
    Science be Praised!

    (Southpark ref, for those who needed the clue...)

  12. #27

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    Ninja: well OK...I read the exchange again. I think some one is not getting it. It might be me...but it could be you. I guess when someone says "I think the problem is how you stated it." and then proceed to repeat exactly what I said, well, I tend to get confused.
    Last edited by Fabrizio; March 7th, 2011 at 01:50 PM.

  13. #28

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    About that video of the nut case protesters wrapped in American flags: they were protesting a meeting of ICNA (Islamic Circle of North America).

    Here's a video about ICNA (produced by ICNA).

    It's a heartwarming jump to the past... back when men were men and women were chattle:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cBK8ntGHtpc

  14. #29

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    Quote Originally Posted by scumonkey View Post
    The rally is centered around the slogan: Today, I am a Muslim Too,
    As an openly gay man does that include me as well?

  15. #30
    Forum Veteran MidtownGuy's Avatar
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    I have two good friends who are gay and Muslim and we all attended the rally together (along with an Eastern Orthodox friend). You might have missed the point.

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