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September 11th, 2010
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Muslims use dual strategy to silence critics

September 10th, 2010

By Vic Rosenthal

This morning I heard an interview with Fresno’s own Kamal Abu-Shamsieh, the director of the Islamic Cultural Center here, on a national NPR newscast. Abu Shamsieh discussed his mosque’s decision to not hold a carnival marking Eid al-Fitr on September 11.

We didn’t want any extremists out there to exploit the pain of our country by saying that Muslims are celebrating 9/11… locally a mosque was attacked. Out of fear for our, for the safety of our community, we decided not to have huge public gatherings.

The interviewer asked about the ‘attack’. Abu-Shamsieh responded,

The Madera mosque, which is about 25 minutes drive away from Fresno was vandalized three times in one week. At one time a brick was tossed through the window of the mosque, two signs were placed inside the compound, one was placed outside — that refers to the mosque in New York — and labeling the Muslim community as a terrorist community… Muslims are concerned [about their safety] every time we approach 9/11. That’s something that’s understandable. However, what we really don’t understand is the ongoing rhetoric that is being placed on [the] airwaves, especially during the month of Ramadan. We welcome the questions about our faith, but the comments that really put down our faith — that’s unwelcome.

A few things:

The ‘attack’ on the Madera mosque was not quite what Abu Shamsieh describes. The Fresno Bee reported that “a brick nearly smashed a window”. Several cardboard signs were placed on the property, but nothing was damaged — the ‘vandals’ didn’t even spray-paint graffiti on the property, as they often do to my back fence. Nothing is mentioned about anyone seeing the brick thrown, so it’s possible that a better description of the event is that “a brick was found near a window.”

Sheriff's deputy with Madera mosque signs. Courtesy Fresno Bee.

Sheriff’s deputy with Madera mosque signs. Courtesy Fresno Bee.

Do I have to say that such acts are despicable? But its interesting that when worse vandalism has been perpetrated against Jewish institutions in the area, the reaction has been to play down, not exaggerate the threat. Why is this?

As I wrote recently,

There is a campaign underway to define all speech critical of programs, projects or activities of Muslims as anti-religious hate speech, which is out of bounds.

Abu-Shamsieh wants to make it appear that criticism of the Ground Zero mosque plan, for example, is hate speech, the verbal equivalent of the brick that was [in some alternate reality] thrown through the window in Madera. And he wants everyone who objects to the behavior of Muslims or even the political platform of radical Islamism, to shut up.

Etymologically, the word ‘Islamophobia’ should mean ‘fear of Muslims’, but Abu-Shamsieh and others use it to mean ‘hatred of Muslims’, analogous to racism or antisemitism. Muslim groups are presently making a big deal about the massive ‘threat’ posed by Islamophobia in the latter sense. But they are quite happy to create fear, because fear is an excellent tool to silence criticism.

So the Quran-burning affair — not that it constitutes legitimate criticism — is presented as a possible trigger for anti-American violence around the world, including against American troops in Afghanistan. The Iranian Foreign Minister says that if they had succeeded in murdering Salman Rushdie or the Danish cartoonists, maybe the infidels wouldn’t be burning Qurans today. Of course they are trying to kill Americans in Afghanistan every day, not to mention burning our flags almost everywhere there are Muslims, but that’s to be expected.

In fact, Mr. Abu-Shamsieh himself participated in an attempt to intimidate critics by fear. In early 2009, the Islamic Cultural Center of Fresno was the main sponsor of a huge pro-Hamas demonstration here in Fresno.  They brought in literally hundreds of Muslim students from out of town who occupied three of four corners of a major intersection.

A small portion of the pro-Hamas demonstrators in Fresno, January 2009

A small portion of the pro-Hamas demonstrators in Fresno, January 2009

One of their signs. Courtesy KMPH-TV.

One of their signs. Courtesy KMPH-TV.

A pro-Hamas demonstrator wrests Israeli flag from counter-demonstrator. Courtesy Fresno Bee.

A pro-Hamas demonstrator wrests Israeli flag from counter-demonstrator. Courtesy Fresno Bee.

No more than 25 counter-demonstrators stood on the remaining corner, as waves of pro-Hamas students crossed the street, often threatening them verbally and sometimes physically. At one point when it appeared that verbal confrontations might escalate to violence, I called the police, to be told that ‘everything was under control’ (there were no officers visible). Apparently the Islamic Center had made an agreement with the police that they [the Muslims] would prevent violence, and soon one of their marshals appeared on the scene and restrained the more aggressive students. But it was made clear to us that our safety was entirely in their hands.

What I see is a two-pronged strategy to make it impossible to criticize Muslims:

  • Define criticism of Muslims, their actions or politics as bigotry akin to burning crosses; and if that doesn’t work,
  • scare the hell out of the critics.

This is why they want everyone to think there is a large amount of bigoted Muslim-hatred out there (although FBI figures show that the number of anti-Muslim hate crimes is less than one-tenth the number of anti-Jewish ones), while at the same time doing their best to create a healthy fear of the consequences of saying things that Muslims don’t like.

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Short takes: Iranian craziness, Palestinian personality disorders

September 9th, 2010

Iranian craziness

I suppose you are not surprised to find out that the evil forces behind Pastor Terry Jones and his plan to burn Qurans on Saturday are… Israel and George W. Bush! Who else would be ‘devilish’ enough?

Tehran, September 9, IRNA — Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki on Thursday severely warned against the outrageous bid of an American priest [sic] to burn copies of the Holy Quran to mark the anniversary of the September 11 attacks…

Mottaki strongly criticized the plan and said such an irrational act is rooted in the minds of extremists who try to impose their opinion on others while Islam invites all to logical dialogue in order to promote peace, justice, kindness and humanity.

Condemning the American priest’s disgusting bid, the Iranian foreign minister said that if decisive measures had been taken against apostate author Salam Rushdi or the European caricaturist who had insulted the prophet of Islam under the guise of freedom of speech, we would have never witnessed re-occurrence of such sacrilegious acts.

Warning those masterminding such conspiracies, he said there is no doubt that the failed policies of former US president George W. Bush to fan the flames of sectarian war following the September 11th incident, will be responded by the Muslim world and true followers of other divine religions, Mottaki underlined…

The recent move is now regarded as a plot hatched by the Zionist regime to make good on its humiliating defeats in its struggle with Muslims, Mottaki underlined.

So, in other words, if Muslims who want to “promote peace, justice, kindness and humanity” had succeeded in murdering Salman Rushdie or the cartoonists responsible for the notorious Danish cartoons, then the infidels would have learned to be more respectful in the future!

This is the regime that is about to become a nuclear power!

Palestinian personality disorders

This quote encapsulates absolutely everything you need to know about why the present peace negotiations will go nowhere:

Palestinian chief negotiator Saeb Erekat released a statement on Thursday in which he alleged that his televised address to Israelis asking that they be his “peace partner” was altered, according to a Palestinian news agency Ma’an report.

“Unfortunately, my statements were altered and interpreted as if I were apologizing to the Israeli nation. This is the opposite to what I said. I was speaking as a negotiator and I meant that, as Palestinian and Israeli negotiators, we hand been unable to come up with a solution after many years,” Erekat said about the video promoting the Geneva Initiative.

He continued, “I never intended to apologize to the Israeli nation, they are the ones who should apologize for what they have done to the Palestinians and all the actions that have humiliated our nation. Palestinians are the nation who deserve an apology.”

God forbid we should think a Palestinian Arab is sorry for anything! From the pogroms and war incited by the Nazi Mufti, through the headline-grabbing terrorism of Arafat, to the recent murderous drive-bys, the long, long list of atrocities they’ve committed — they aren’t sorry. It’s all somebody else’s fault. They are victims of Israel, the West, etc. They deserve an apology! Doesn’t it sound like Narcissistic Personality Disorder, with a touch of Antisocial Personality Disorder thrown in?

Just to make sure we understand that Palestinian honor demands that we give everything and they give nothing, PA negotiators have made it clear that they won’t give a centimeter on recognition of Israel as a Jewish state or the removal of ‘Jewish occupiers’, and that they will not give up the “right of return” for Arab ‘refugees’ to Israel.

If you don’t think that there are psychological issues in Arab and Muslim culture, consider the unbelievable horror of honor killings.

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Mosques, Qurans, nutcases and useful idiots

September 8th, 2010

The controversy about the Ground Zero whatever-it-is (supporters say it is not a mosque and not at Ground Zero, but it includes a mosque and is two blocks away) has left the realm of rational discourse. Once you have The Opposition — Sarah Palin and Newt Gingrich — weighing in on one side, you could have expected that the administration and its friends would take the opposing view with both feet. The latest broadside comes from the liberal Jewish establishment:

SAN FRANCISCO (JTA) — Jewish groups have stepped up efforts to combat anti-Muslim bigotry, with several national initiatives announced this week and supporting statements coming in from a range of Jewish voices.

In Washington, officials from several Jewish organizations took part Tuesday in an emergency summit of Jewish, Christian and Muslim leaders that denounced anti-Muslim bigotry and called for a united effort by believers of all faiths to reach out to Muslim Americans.

Also Tuesday, the Anti-Defamation League announced the creation of an Interfaith Coalition on Mosques, which will monitor and respond to instances of anti-Muslim bias surrounding attempts to build new mosques in the United States.

Meanwhile, six rabbis and scholars representing the Reconstructionist, Reform, Conservative and Orthodox streams have launched an online campaign urging rabbis to devote part of their sermons this Shabbat to educating their congregations about Islam.

The efforts come in response to what organizers describe as a wave of anti-Muslim sentiment resulting from the impending ninth anniversary of 9/11 and the controversy surrounding efforts to build a Muslim community center and mosque near Ground Zero in Manhattan. Jewish bloggers and pundits, mostly on the right, have become more vocal in opposing the center and calling for greater scrutiny of American mosques. [my emphasis]

There are still plenty of good reasons to want the mosque to be built somewhere else, and they don’t include “anti-Muslim bigotry”. There are questions about the Imam’s support of radical Islamism, the funding of the project, and the understanding of its significance in the Muslim world. This is not changed by some drunk and mentally disturbed student stabbing a cabbie or a nutcase burning copies of the Quran in Florida.

I’ve been denounced more than once as a ‘bigot’ who is against to free exercise of religion for opposing the project. The people who denounce me are remarkably obtuse, so what follows may be hard for them to understand. But I’ll say it anyway.

There is a campaign underway to define all speech critical of programs, projects or activities of Muslims as anti-religious hate speech, which is out of bounds. Islam is, of course, a religion, but like the Christianity of the 11th – 13th centuries, it — more correctly, a significant faction within it — has a political program. This program includes aggressive expansion of Islamic rule, by violence, by subversion, or even by democratic processes. It’s called “Islamism,” to distinguish it from Islam in general.

Arguably the most significant political conflict in the world today is  the one between more traditional conservative Muslims and radical Islamists. Radical Islam is championed by the Sunni Muslim Brotherhood — to which some American Muslim groups are linked — and the Shiite Iranian regime. Saudi Arabia funds radical Islamist groups, mosques and schools the world over, perhaps buying temporary protection for its monarchy from the radicals.

A large number of the world’s Muslims — including, in my opinion, Imam Abdul Rauf of the Ground Zero mosque, as well as the main organizations purporting to represent Muslims in the US, such as CAIR, ISNA, MPAC, etc. — support the Islamist project. Insofar as it envisions the ‘conquest’ (in a violent or nonviolent way) of the United States and the replacement of its Constitution with Islamic law, it is imperative that Americans be able to express their opposition to it. Defining speech critical of this political idea as ‘hate speech’ makes it impossible to do so.

The Islamic Society of North America (ISNA), which convened the ’emergency summit’ to deal with the “wave of anti-Muslim sentiment”, does not want to make this distinction, in my opinion, because they support the goals of Islamism. They want to conflate the religion of Islam with the political program of Islamism.  And they have an interest in exaggerating the degree of anti-Muslim prejudice, because they want to create an atmosphere in which nobody can say anything negative about anything Muslims say or do, short of actual violent terrorism.

Incidentally, one way to tell if an organization or individual is an Islamist is to ask him how he feels about Hamas or Hizballah. Islamists may deplore the terrorism that these groups engage in, but they will not condemn their goals, and usually they will ‘understand’ why the resort to terrorism even if they don’t approve of it (Abdul Rauf won’t even call Hamas a “terrorist group”).

In many ways, they couldn’t buy the kind of help they are getting from Terry Jones. First, he makes the case that there is a huge wave of Muslim-hatred out there — even though Jones supposedly has a congregation of only about 30. Second, he provides an excuse for Muslims around the world to fly into a rage, to burn and destroy and maybe kill people — thus reinforcing the idea that anti-Muslim speech is not only bigoted but downright dangerous.

Our own ‘useful idiots‘, particularly the Religious Action Center of the Union for Reform Judaism, which co-sponsored the ‘summit’, have been front and center in helping the Islamists by blurring the very important distinction between anti-religious prejudice and opposition to a radical political program.

These are not unintelligent people, so I can only conclude that the opportunity to display their moral superiority to the supposedly bigoted Right — and their leaders, Palin and Gingrich — has been so irresistible as to short-circuit their faculty of analytic thinking.

Our administration, much of the media and the liberal religious establishment is using this issue as a political weapon against what they view as the threat from the right wing, which they apparently see as more dangerous than radical Islamism.  That’s a mistake.

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Palestinian Arabs are defined in opposition to Jews

September 6th, 2010

Very revealing:

Defining Israel as a Jewish state is something that arouses concern, according to Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit who spoke to the Al Arabiya network on Monday.

Aboul Gheit feared for the fate of Israeli Arabs in the case that the UN approves a decision to define Israel as a Jewish state.  “Would they give them all the citizens rights that they deserve? Would they remain a minority or could it be that they would be deported?” Aboul Gheit said in the Al Arabiya report. — Jerusalem Post

[As an aside, there’s a bit of hypocrisy here. While the Egyptian constitution calls for the protection of religious and other minorities, in practice this is not realized. Discrimination against Christian Copts and members of the Bahai faith are widespread and ignored by authorities.]

Aboul Gheit isn’t the only one. Our ‘partner’ Mahmoud Abbas also worries about the danger posed by an explicitly Jewish state:

Abbas said that in recent meetings with leaders of the Jewish community in the US, he made it clear that the Palestinians would not recognize Israel as a Jewish state. “I told them that this is their business and that they are free to call themselves whatever they want,” Abbas said. “But [I told them] you can’t expect us to accept this.”

Abbas said that by raising the issue of Israel’s right to be a Jewish state, Netanyahu was seeking to “strip” Israeli-Arabs of their rights and turn them into illegal citizens. He said that Netanyahu’s goal was also to block any chance of Palestinian “refugees” from returning to their original homes inside Israel.

On the face of it, the charge is ridiculous. After all, Israel has defined itself as a Jewish state since its founding. And during that time Israel’s Arab minority has had full civil rights, if not the national rights that they demand. When Meir Kahane’s Kach party advocated the transfer of Arabs out of Israel — including Israeli Arabs who did not agree to follow the seven Noachide Laws (which would preclude terrorism) — his party was categorized as ‘racist and undemocratic’ and banned from participating in the 1988 election.

So is this just the usual Arab delegitimization of Israel? Yes, in part, but something else is going on here that is worthy of note. It’s what I call ‘political projection’.

Here’s an explanation of the psychological concept of projection:

According to Sigmund Freud, projection is a psychological defense mechanism whereby one “projects” one’s own undesirable thoughts, motivations, desires, and feelings onto someone else. Emotions or excitations which the ego tries to ward off are “spit out” and then felt as being outside the ego…perceived in another person… To understand the process, consider a person in a couple who has thoughts of infidelity. Instead of dealing with these undesirable thoughts consciously, they unconsciously project these feelings onto the other person, and begin to think that the other has thoughts of infidelity and may be having an affair.

Sound familiar? It should. In fact, I would say that you can often tell what the Arabs want to do to the Jews by what they claim the Jews are doing to them.

They accuse Israel of being a racist, apartheid state, of ethnic cleansing, even of genocide. But think about Arab attitudes, their leadership and their behavior.

To modify a famous remark by Tip O’Neill, in the Arab world all politics is ethnic and religious. Ethnic cleansing is the rule rather than the exception. When the Jordanians captured Judea and Samaria and East Jerusalem in 1948, all the Jews living their were driven out at gunpoint. Does anybody doubt that one of the conditions for the state of ‘Palestine’ will be that it will not have Jews living in it?

Evacuated Jewish homes in East Jerusalem, looted by Arabs in 1948

Evacuated Jewish homes in East Jerusalem, looted by Arabs in 1948

The part about the ‘refugees‘ is interesting. It seems as though Abbas believes that there is some chance that Israel can be forced to permit the entry of millions of hostile claimants to ‘Palestinian nationality’, although everyone knows that this would be suicidal.

But not only do the Palestinians project on the Jews their own bloody designs, they also do the reverse — they usurp themes from Jewish history and apply them to themselves. In this story, ‘return’ makes sense.

According to them the ‘nakba‘ can be compared to the Holocaust (President Obama believes this one), there was a great Palestinian civilization that goes back centuries, and the  descendants of former inhabitants have a right of return. They spend a great deal of energy trying to deny Jewish provenance in the land — Arafat claimed that there never was a Jewish Temple on the Temple Mount — and inventing their own (including a ridiculous theory that Palestinian Arabs are the descendants of biblical Canaanites).

The realities of Palestinian Arab history, from the recent beginnings of nationalism in the 1920’s through their self-definition as a ‘people’ after 1967, and all along the effort to prevent the assimilation of the refugees or the amelioration of their condition, as well as the embrace of murder and terrorism (even suicide terrorism) as a preferred tactic — all this is ignored, as is the true nature of their racist founding fathers, al-Husseini and Arafat.

The Palestinian Arabs, despite everything they say about their culture, have only managed to define themselves in opposition to the Jews.

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